Shavuos
By Rabbi Heshy Grossman
KABBALAS HaTORAH
"Barich Rachmana - who has given us a Torah of three, to a nation of three,
through [a man] who is third, on the third day, in the third month..."
(Shabbos 88a)
"a Torah of three - Torah, Neviim, Kesuvim"
"a nation of three - Kohanim, Leviim, Yisraelim"
"through [a man] who is third - Moshe was born third; Miriam, Aharon and
Moshe."
"on the third day - after separation" (Rashi, ad. loc.)
"in the third month" - Sivan
"...because the Torah is threefold, teaching us that it is eternal. For
all matters that have an interruption have an end, for when it
deteriorates, that it is its end. But when it is threefold, the middle
between them has no end at all, and a matter that has no end, will not
cease. Because the Torah is eternal, and it has no end, therefore it is
threefold....." (Maharal, Tiferes Yisrael, Ch. 50)
The Torah is three, the nation of Israel is three, and Kabbalas HaTorah
takes place through three. Three is solid, consistent and eternal. In our
shiur this week, we will explain why the number three supports and defines
all of Klal Yisrael.
1
We are accustomed to using numbers as a means of arranging, counting or
categorizing groups of varied items. Understood thus, the numerical system
is an artificial construct, agreed upon by all men as a helpful convenience.
The Torah teaches however, that true numbers are actually concepts, with
each integer reflecting a different aspect of creation, one that is brought
into existence by G-d. It is the idea behind each number that forms the
basis of each subsequent worldly development, and these essential
characteristics define all worldly elements.
For example, G-d is One. This means more than attesting to the existence of
one G-d. Rather, it teaches that Hashem defines the very nature of One;
that His unity encompasses all of creation, and that all of existence is
part of His being. He is One, and there is nothing else - 'Ain Od Milvado'.
From here follows the number two - the creation of an other, and the
possibility of an alternative entity, one that is separate and distinct
from the Divine. Every number two touches this idea, the notion of two
disparate items that remain apart.
For this reason, the second day of creation is marked by the absence of
good, and is the onset of evil and dispute, for all troubles begin when the
world sees itself as an independent existence, surviving on its own and
apart from its Maker. Every couple must navigate this chasm, learning to
merge together in harmony rather than focusing upon their differing identities.
Again, two is an idea, not a mere number.
All this underscores a well-known song, which was not intended for little
children: "Who knows One? I know One! One is our G-d of heaven and earth!"
Two are the Luchos HaBris - the tablets of the covenant. While one tablet
prescribes the behavior of man towards his Creator, the second tablet
governs all human interaction, defining the dimensions of a corporeal
existence. This is two, the dual aspect of creation, G-d and an other.
But two entities that co-exist side by side will forever be unable to
unite. This is the purpose of three.
In order for the two extremes to be reconciled, a third element must be
introduced that will consolidate the two entities into one amalgamated
whole. Three is a chain - hence, the word 'Shalsheles' - from the root
'Shalosh'. It strings together the past and the future, blending heaven and
earth; man's actions and G-d's will.
Let us explain.
The act of creation presents humanity with a choice, allowing for the
possibility that man may follow an errant path. To the extent that he
cleaves to the materialistic world, he loses all connection to the world of
the spirit.
Every side has an extremity, and every border has its edge. Were man to
follow either alternative, be it heaven or earth, his time would be
limited, bound by the two rims that frame his every move. Man's role is to
navigate his own middle way; to forge a path between left and right that
will incorporate all other directions.
Klal Yisrael is called 'Yeshurun' - as in 'Yashar' - straight and true.
While a circle has no identifiably unique area, and every point of
reference is similar to any other, a straight line, in contrast, has a
beginning, middle, and end.
When one's path is crooked, he may leap ahead with abandon, following any
direction he chooses, and stray farther and farther from his source and
origin. But to walk a straight line, one step must flow from another, and
with each succeeding stride, man actualizes all his energies, utilizing the
forces that pull in different directions to create his own way, in harmony
with his Creator.
This is the number three. A middle, with no rough edges. It is the
connecting glue that links heaven and earth. It is an internal compass, one
that has man aware of his innermost drives, and yet, at the same time, it
leads him to pursue his own path in the external world that surrounds him.
Two-legged chairs cannot stand on their own, but the addition of a third
pole solidifies its base. For this reason, the Torah validates the strength
of three: "On three things the world stands....." (Avos 1:2), or, in legal
terms: true ownership requires possession of three years to be accepted as
solid proof, a Chazakah.
"Who knows three? I know three! Three fathers!" - the three Avos are the
righteous men around whom G-d can build a holy, strong and everlasting people.
The Torah is given here - on the third day.
The Torah is G-d's word directed towards man, and it enables man to
accomplish what angels cannot, the creation of a middle path, one that
encompasses all of creation to produce a new and independent line of
action. Connected to G-d, but deserving on its own, man actualizes his own
Torah, and recreates the world in a new form.
3
The man who observes the Torah does than more than behave properly, and
deserves more than credit for past performance. He is a Tzelem Elokim, and
he brings to life the will of G-d in a different dimension - not G-d alone,
and not man - a third way.
When Klal Yisrael receives the Torah at the foot of Har Sinai, they are not
merely expressing their acquiescence. Rather, they bring down to earth the
Dvar Hashem, and henceforth, their every experience must be measured in
threes. For them, each occurrence is threefold, and is a
measured statement of G-d, man, and Torah.
This is true on an individual level as well, where each man is made up of
three distinct elements - body, heart, and soul, or, alternatively, in the
language of Chazal: Nefesh, Ruach, Neshama. His life becomes a living
manifestation of Torah, and in this way, he manages to achieve a taste of
eternity.
Man is the center of the universe, and all of life revolves around his
words and deeds. He is the fulcrum of existence, and is the catalyst for
the Divine providence that mirrors his own relationship towards G-d.
This is the middle path, the power of three. Man has the ability to
assimilate this force into the very fiber of his being; to accept and
receive the capability of molding heaven's word to a physical world.
This is Kabbalas HaTorah - accepting the burden and responsibilies of the
center of existence.
"...a Torah of three, to a people of three, through a man who was third,
on the third day, in the third month."
Have a good Yom Tov.
JerusalemViews, Copyright (c) 2002 by Rabbi Heshy Grossman and Project
Genesis, Inc.