From the Brink of Destruction
Chapter 3, Law 6
"The following are the ones who do not have a portion in the World to
Come, but rather are cut off, perish, and are judged for their great
wickedness and sinfulness eternally. (1) Agnostics; (2) Heretics; (3) Those
who deny the Torah; (4) Those who deny the Resurrection; (5) Those who deny
the arrival of the Redeemer (i.e. the Messiah) (6) Apostates; (7) Those who
cause the many to sin; (8) Those who separate from the ways of the
community; (9) One who sins unashamedly (lit. 'with a high hand') and
publicly such as Yehoyakim (Jehoiakim); (10) Those who give over [Jews to
Gentile authorities]; (11) Those who place fear on the community not for the
sake of heaven; (11) Murderers; (12) Those who regularly engage in evil
speech (lit., 'masters of evil speech'); (13) One who stretches out his
circumcision (making him appear uncircumcised)."
As we've seen in past laws, virtually all Jews -- as well as righteous
Gentiles -- are granted a share in the World to Come. G-d's entire purpose
in creation was in order to grant man reward. He thus goes to every extent
to find merit in His subjects. Although the sinful must certainly be
punished for their wicked deeds, after all punishments are endured and
atonement achieved, they too will be granted a humble yet tangible share in
the hereafter.
This week the Rambam teaches us that this principle only goes so far. There
are people simply not suited for closeness to G-d -- either because they
knowingly rejected or ignored G-d's plan for humanity or because they were
just irredeemably evil.
Over the next several weeks the Rambam will discuss most of the listed
categories in further detail. So for now we will hold off on attempting to
define "apostate" versus "heretic" etc. There is a great deal more to be
said -- although again, most of the categories boil down to "If you really
don't want G-d, you'll get your wish."
Beforehand, however, I feel we should address one general issue which is
actually very bothersome to me. Perhaps once upon a time, a heretic was
really a heretic. He knew who G-d is, what Israel stands for, and our
obligation to the Almighty -- but rejected it all anyway. Such a person
could truly earn the title "heretic". He knew what it was he was rejecting
-- and would be judged accordingly.
Today, however, the situation is drastically different. My maternal
grandfather, a great Chassidic rabbi (R. Zvi Elimelech Hertzberg, a rabbi
and community leader in mid-20th century Baltimore), used to bemoan the fact
that we don't have true "apikorsim" (heretics) nowadays. In his day (and
certainly today) most folks who *claim* they are atheists actually have
precious little idea what they're talking about. They know so little about
Judaism that, far from heretics, they would have to be dubbed plain old
ignoramuses ("ahm ha'aratzim"). (And in fact, if they actually *knew* what
they were rejecting, I somehow doubt they would so readily dismiss their
millennia-old heritage.)
(My uncle Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg (my grandfather's oldest, who passed away
about five years ago), relates that when he began to veer from the path of
Orthodoxy, (he would later graduate from the Jewish Theological Seminary to
become a well-known Conservative rabbi), my grandfather handed him a small
pile of heretical books, translated into Yiddish (he was surprisingly
well-rounded for a Chassidic rabbi), telling his son that if he really
wanted to become a heretic, at least be a learned one!)
With all of this in mind, there is something profoundly disturbing about
most of the coming laws. Let's take a moment to look at the profile of the
typical Jew today. He may well not even *know* he's Jewish (or half-Jewish).
If he does, his knowledge of and involvement in religion is likely pitifully
scant. At most he perhaps had a few quickly-forgotten lessons before his Bar
Mitzvah. Perhaps his parents dragged him to synagogue twice a year for High
Holiday services. If he observed anything -- such as not eating pork in the
home (somehow pork is more permissible outside the home), it was likely
viewed as a burden -- by child and parents alike.
Now such a person has probably never even *heard* that G-d gave Israel the
Torah at Sinai, let alone had the opportunity to study Judaism's
fundamentals in depth. If so, how can he be expected to truly know who G-d
is, to believe in the coming of the Messiah, to accept that every word of
the Torah is sacrosanct? I know even from my own readers that even many
sincerely interested Jews have literally never heard about some of the
Torah's most fundamental principles -- such as the existence of the World to
Come. (It's somehow gotten into people's heads that it's a Christian
innovation, I haven't the faintest idea how.) (Even more pathetically, such
people's entire impression of observant Jews, Israelis, etc. is likely
shaped by a biased media, hopelessly warping the little knowledge of Jews
and Judaism they have.)
My question is therefore how does G-d judge such people? Is He really going
to destroy them for not accepting the fundamentals of Judaism? But how can
they be faulted for that which they were never given the chance to study and
accept? On the other hand, could G-d actually reward people who might not
even have believed in Him? Even if it was not their fault, they can hardly
be called G-d's servants.
One relevant point I can add is that many contemporary authorities state
that people today who are nonbelievers or wholly unobservant are generally
not viewed by us as heretics. The assumption is that their lack of belief is
due to lack of knowledge rather than outright rejection. (Some want to
extend this even to people who were raised religious but who clearly did not
*truly* get it.) Undoubtedly G-d too understands that the rejection of the
Torah on the part of most of world Jewry stems from plain ignorance rather
than wanton repudiation. Yet again, even so, what does G-d do with such
people? Perhaps He doesn't hold their lack of belief against them but
presumably neither can He reward them.
To be honest, I don't have an answer to this dilemma. The only feeble
suggestion I can make is that G-d attempts -- using all means at His
disposal -- to give every Jew an opportunity to find out about his or her
heritage. G-d tries to reach every one of His children. Of course there are
quite a few of them and much apathy and many misconceptions between them and
the truth. Yet G-d never gives up on us -- in spite of the huge distance
which must be spanned.
Perhaps we can also invoke the Kabbalistic concept of reincarnation -- that
G-d will eventually give such souls a second chance: the opportunity to be
raised in a committed, religious home. (I even once heard a rabbi suggest
that this is G-d's reason for granting the Orthodox such enormous families
today. This is almost His only chance -- working behind the scenes in a way
only He can -- to reintroduce the masses of Israel to their G-d.)
The Talmud at most hints to the concept of reincarnation. (Several times it
makes such statements as "A, B and C were all the same person" (even though
they had different names, were born to different parents, and lived in
completely different times). Either A enjoyed unusual longevity and
underwent a few schizophrenic changes of identity, the Talmud only means to
equate A, B and C in their characters, or the intention is that the soul of
A came back to earth a few more times.) Regardless, the concept of
reincarnation is well-established in Kabbalistic sources. Perhaps as we
suggested, this is G-d's means of allowing as many souls as possible to
reconnect to Him.
Nevertheless, regardless of how G-d solves this problem, a few points are
particularly relevant to us. The first is to recognize the terrible sin
parents do to their children when they do not pass on their heritage. Anyone
who so much as knows he's Jewish today only knows so because his forebears
passed on their tradition for literally thousands of years. The parents
which stopped it, failing to teach their children what it means to be a Jew
-- or simply allowing their children to attend public school and slip
through the cracks, may have even thought they were doing them a *favor* --
relieving their children of the burden of their Jewishness. But in fact such
parents did their children a terrible, cataclysmic disservice. Their
children, as well as all their descendants, will basically have no easy way
to reconnect to G-d, of undoing the damage and scaling the distance imposed
upon them by such thoughtless parents.
Secondly, this law provides all of us with a sobering sense of the enormity
of the task before us -- those of us who *do* know. Those of us who teach
Torah -- or who simply know enough to share with others -- are confronted
with a colossal mission: to reach everyone, to give every single Jew the
opportunity to reconnect to his or her heritage. And based on the Rambam
today, this isn't just a matter of personal enrichment. It is saving lives.
The Mishna states that anyone who preserves a single Jewish soul [from
death], the Torah considers it as if he has preserved an entire world (since
it saves all his descendants from destruction as well) (Sanhedrin 4:5). And
if the Mishna states so regarding preserving a man's physical life, all the
more so with his spiritual. We have much work before us. All I can do is
pray that G-d provide us the strength and inspiration to rise up to the
challenge, to become the conduit to enable every one of His children to
reconnect with their Father in Heaven.
Text Copyright © 2011 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org