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"A Mitzva is a lamp, Torah is light; and reproofs of (moral)
discipline are the the path of eternity". G-d put man on this
earth in a physical body, which provides a murky environment in
which the soul must dwell. To free himself from this darkness,
man looks for light to illuminate a path that will lead him in a
direction towards the Divine. His intellect can serve as a
guiding light, but it is limited in its ability. While it is
equipped to help man choose and navigate his personal path and
direction in worldly pursuits, it is not able to clearly discern
the path that will lead man closer to G-d.
The Torah commands us to pursue just such a path. "You
shall walk after the L-rd your G-d...and you shall serve him, and
cleave to Him" (Deut. 13:5). This requires man to correctly
differentiate between activities that G-d desires and activities
that distance man from G-d, something not accurately determinable
by the human intellect. [See more on this idea in the
introduction to Tiferet Yisrael.] Only the Torah and its
commandments can accurately provide this illumination, "For a
commandment is a lamp and Torah is light."
A lamp is dependent on physical substances in order to
produce its light -- the wick, oil, a reflector -- and that light
can be said to be "attatched to" and dependent on something
material. Because of this dependence, its purity is diminished
compared to a pure and more abstract form of light. A
commandment is an act performed by man using the medium of his
physical body. Through this act a Divine light is able to
attatch itself to that physical body and cast illumination from
it, since the act is based on Divine wisdom and the will of G-d.
The quality of the Divine illumination of this Mitzvah act
parallels the illumination of a lamp.
Torah wisdom, on the other hand, is completely abstract and
independent of the material, as is pure light. It is a
completely intellectual and spiritual activity, which transcends
the physical boundaries of man. Therefore the Torah is compared
to pure light.
The Talmud (Tr. Sotah 21a) teaches that Rabbi Menachem the
son of Rabbi Yossi expounded on the verse that compares a
commandment to a lamp and the Torah to light. Just as a lamp
illuminates only temporarily so, too, does a commandment protect
(from the yeitzer hara) only temporarily; just as pure light is
ongoing illumination, so, too, does the Torah provide ongoing and
lasting protection".
This is understood by recognizing that man, as a physical
being bound by time, is finite, and commandments which are
performed by man using his physical body will have their effect
limited by time. Therefore a commandment's protection is only
temporary. Torah knowledge, however, is abstract, and being of
an intellectual and spiritual nature, it is transcendant,
infinite, with no physical attatchments or limitations. Through
his connection to Torah knowldege, man is the recepient of
eternal protection, since Torah is not bound by the time
limitations of the finite.
(What is meant by "protection from the yeitzer hara?" I
would suggest that the yeitzer hara be understood as the forces
of confusion and external dependencies that exist within man,
making him susceptible to sin. When man has a clarity of what is
expected of him, and he has the independence to act on that
vision, he has freed himself from the yeitzer hara. While man is
performing a mitzvah, he is in a temporary state of clarity and
independence, and is insulated from committing a sin. But that
state doesn't necessarily last very long after he has completed
the Mitzvah, and he can revert to a state of confusion, as well
as dependencies, both physical and social. Torah study, on the
other hand, gives one clarity of vision and purpose which
continues even after the Torah has been learned, and insulates
one from the drives of the yeitzer hara on an ongoing basis.)
In summary, Torah and Mitzvot are the guiding lights which
lead man to the fulfillment of his complete purpose of existence,
which is to develop a closer and closer attachment to G-d. (It
should be noted, adds the Maharal, that the fulfillment of one's
purpose is the motivating force that drives every living
creature, and is the subconcious factor governing every creatures
activities.)
Proverbs continues: "...and reproofs of discipline are the
path of life." "The path (or "ways") of life" are not Torah
commandments (which were referred to in the first half of the
pasuk) but are moral disciplines that man's intelligence dictates
should govern his life. We will explain why discipline is
considered the path to life.
The Midrash comments on the verse (Gen. 3:24) "Lishmor
derech eitz hachaim" ...to guard the path to the Tree of Life:
Derech Eretz (ethical behavior, alluded to with the word
"derech") preceeded the Torah (alluded to by the phrase "eitz
hachaim) by 26 generations. (The Torah was given on Sinai during
the 26th generation after creation. There were 10 generations
from Adam (1) to Noach (10), another 10 generations until Avraham
(20), followed by Yitzchak (21), Yakov (22), Levi (23), Kehat
(24), Amram (25), and Moshe Rabbeinu (26) in whose generation the
Torah was given. Derech Eretz, however, existed in the world
from the time of creation, 26 generations earlier.)
We need to understand why Torah is represented by a tree,
and derech eretz (proper worldly conduct) by a path. This will
be explained next week.
The class is taught by Rabbi Shaya Karlinsky,
Dean of Darche Noam Institutions, Yeshivat
Darche Noam/Shapell's and Midreshet Rachel for Women.
Introduction To Derech Chaim, Part 1
I will begin with the Maharal's introduction to Derech Chaim,
where he explains why he called his work "Derech Chaim" the path to life,
or eternity. In this section, he elaborates on a number of different issues.