Getting a Second Chance
Chapter 4, Mishna 11
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"Rabbi Yonasan said, whoever fulfills the Torah out of poverty, will
ultimately fulfill it in wealth. And whoever neglects the Torah out of
wealth, will ultimately neglect it out of poverty."
This week's mishna contains a great deal of poetic justice. I believe upon
closer analysis we will understand the true justice of our Sages' words as
well.
A person who is not well off financially has a somewhat legitimate excuse
why he or she is unable to study Torah. Engaged in a constant struggle to
make ends meet, he is far too preoccupied -- both in time and in peace of
mind -- to devote much of his time and effort towards spiritual pursuits.
Likewise, he just cannot afford to send his children to private school to
receive a Jewish education. Those of us who have experienced (or are
experiencing) the enormous burden of financial stress know how trying a
challenge it can be. Worrying about the next mortgage or tuition payment,
watching the interest on our credit cards soar ever higher, or seeing our
neighbors enjoy vacations and luxuries we know we cannot afford are all
sources of ongoing anxiety which take their toll on our peace of mind, our
blood pressure, our marriages, and our self-esteem. It is true we are
taught that all men, whether rich or poor, healthy or infirm, young or old
must study at least some minimal amount of Torah every day (Maimonides Hil'
Talmud Torah 1:8). Nevertheless, one who is unable to rise to such a
challenge, will be judged by G-d -- and should be judged by others -- with
sympathy and understanding.
The person, however, who sees beyond the stress and preoccupation and
devotes himself (or his children's schooling) to Torah in spite of
financial worries, will be deserving of special regard. He had every
reason to back off and take the easier path. Yet he put all aside and made
Torah his life priority. And if he does so, G-d will treat him in kind. If
Torah is to him primary, regardless of financial considerations, G-d may
see to it that what to him is secondary -- his monetary needs -- fall
aside entirely. He will then be able to dedicate himself even more fully
to Torah and service of G-d. We learned earlier: "Whoever accepts upon
himself the yoke of Torah study, the yoke of government and the yoke of
earning a living will be removed from him" (3:6)
(www.torah.org/learning/pirkei-avos/chapter3-6.html). Life will always
have worries and unexpected expenses. Fortunate is he whose worry is Torah
study.
One of the sad facts of life is that there are always legitimate excuses
not to pursue spirituality "just now." Life and the world around us never
cease to bombard us with worries and distractions (and that was before the
baseball season began). There will always be expenses to pay off before we
can think about charity, concerns which preoccupy our minds from Torah
study, and harried confusion enveloping our lives, not permitting us to
pause, to think about our lives and our purpose in this world. We learned
earlier, "Do not say when I have free time I will learn, lest you not have
free time" (2:5) (www.torah.org/learning/pirkei-avos/chapter2-5c.html). If
we wait for worry-free days before formulating religious beliefs -- or
financial security before planning a child -- those times might just never
come. Life's obligations -- as well as its blessings -- never come without
great price and inconvenience, ones we just have to accept if we want to
grow spiritually.
It has been said that many of a person's greatest achievements would never
have been undertaken if he knew from the start what he was really getting
into. To some degree, dedicating ourselves to G-d is just an act of love.
To pursue it we must sometimes just blind ourselves to the many details and
frustrations along the way.
The converse principle of our mishna is that one who wastes time from Torah
study on account of his wealth will ultimately be forced to waste study
time on account of poverty. Here we have a second manifestation of G-d's
perfect justice. If we take G-d's blessing of wealth and do not see it as
a tool for spiritual growth -- whether through our own Torah study, the
study of our children, or philanthropy -- G-d may no longer entrust us
with such a precious gift. If we treat our riches and successful careers
as reasons to be too busy to study Torah, G-d will be more than happy to
provide us with *real* reasons not to study -- unfortunately ones from
which we will have little recourse. There's a Jewish saying that you
should never pray too hard for your deepest desires -- because G-d might
actually grant them. If our actions state that we enjoy money because we
like being preoccupied with the stuff (earning it, saving it, investing
it, spending it, etc.), G-d may just hear our actions and give us more
than enough aggravation to occupy us for a frustrating lifetime.
For better or worse, the Torah seems to rightly have a rather ambivalent
attitude towards money, at least for its own sake. Money is always depicted
in the Torah as the ultimate corrupting force: "And Jeshurun (i.e., Israel)
waxed fat and kicked" (Deuteronomy 32:15). "Silver I increased for her and
gold; they used it for Ba'al. Therefore, I will take back my grain..."
(Hosea 2:10-11). And it is a challenge G-d does not always deem us worthy
of. The Talmud writes that G-d searched through all the good qualities
(Heb., "middos") to give Israel and found nothing better than poverty
(Chagiga 9b). And true to the Talmud, the story of the Jewish Exile has for
the most part been a tale of hardship, struggle and deprivation.
It is interesting to note the extent to which this trend has reversed in
recent years. In many parts of the world our generation is enjoying wealth
and living standards neither attainable nor imaginable to previous
generations. I have heard R. Yissochar Frand explain this phenomenon as
follows: It seems the Jewish People are being given a second chance, some
great opportunity to rededicate themselves to spiritual pursuits in a way
never before possible. For some reason known only to G-d Himself, our
generation has been entrusted with wealth and prosperity, in some ways a
faint echo of grandness of King Solomon's times. It is as if G-d has a
special message for our generation, as if He is saying: "Here, money is
yours, opportunity is yours, no doors are closed to you. You can be CEO,
CTO, founder of multi-million high tech startups, and Secretary of State.
Now I ask you again, how will you use it? Will you be swept away in the
euphoria of new opportunities and develop ever more expensive tastes? Will
wealth, status, and career become all-consuming passions, distancing you
even further from Me? Will money become its own ends? Or will you see
financial security as a blessing and an opportunity, providing the chance
to relax from the travails of everyday living and to instead pursue lives
of the spirit?"
We have been handed peace, prosperity, and the rare, historical chance to
begin to surmount barriers of ignorance and apathy which have so plagued
the Jewish People for the past two centuries. The blessing has come with a
challenge, a heralding trumpet call to greatness. May we all take wealth
and physical well-being, and see in them opportunity for spiritual growth
and reawakening.
Text Copyright © 2005 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.