The Jewish Spark
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"He [Rabbi Akiva] used to say, beloved is man for he was created in the
image of G-d. It is a greater love that it was made known to him that he
was created in the image of G-d, as it is said, 'For in the image of G-d
did He make man' (Genesis 9:6). Beloved are the Children of Israel for
they are called children of the L-rd. It is a greater love that it was
made known to them that they are called children of the L-rd, as it is
said, 'You are children to the L-rd your G-d' (Deuteronomy 14:1). Beloved
is Israel that they were given a precious utensil (the Torah). It is an
greater love that it was made known to them that they were given a
precious utensil, as it is said, 'For I have given you a good possession;
do not forsake My Torah' (Proverbs 4:2)."
Before we begin examining the statements of our mishna, we make a simple
observation regarding its structure. "Beloved are we that we have X. We are
even more beloved that we have been told we have X." It is often not
sufficient to be granted a gift or a talent. That gift may very well go
unnoticed and unappreciated if nobody informs us that we have it. It is a
known phenomenon that people often do not recognize their own talents.
Perhaps we become so accustomed to them that we fail to fully appreciate
just how truly blessed we are. Or perhaps we subconsciously deny them for
we realize that with great talent comes great responsibility. Or perhaps we
have only vague ideas about our abilities (which says a lot about how well
people know themselves nowadays), and only when they are clearly defined
and put into words do we really begin to understand just who we are.
Regardless of the reasons, however, there are certain things in life which
G-d wanted to make absolutely certain we would not overlook. There are
certain human and Jewish qualities which G-d insisted that we recognize:
that every human being is fashioned in the image of G-d, that we, the
Children of Israel, are G-d's children, and that we are the bearers of His
precious Torah. These are the true "gifts" G-d has granted us, giving our
lives purpose and direction. We may want to deny our humanity or pass
through life unaware of the potential we have as G-dlike beings. But G-d
never lets us forget just who we are. Certain things in life are just too
precious to be denied.
I'm a little hesitant to write the following, but I feel R. Akiva had a
particular need to tell his fellow Jews just how blessed they are. Jews are
a relatively insecure people (that was an understatement ;-). Do we feel
"gifted" with our special role to mankind? Do we proudly carry our
heritage? Or do we look over our shoulders -- fearing that our Gentile
neighbors will not approve of our peculiarities? Perhaps we lack the
requisite self-confidence because of our long (and continuing) history of
anti-Semitism. We're too afraid of being different -- and of standing for
our own principles. Many go so far as to tone down their religious
practices in order to gain "acceptance" among the Gentiles. Eminent
historian Paul Johnson writes in _A History of the Jews_ that the
motivating factor behind the 19th Century Reform Movement was not idealism
or a sincere yearning for new paths to spirituality, but "social tidy-
mindedness" and "the desire to be more genteel" (p. 333). There were many
at that time who wanted to recreate Judaism in the current German
Protestant image. They wanted temples they could show off to the
neighbors, rituals which showed them to be respectable,
upstanding "Germans of the Mosaic faith." (Oh, and it really did them a
lot of good!)
Unfortunately, such behavior does not earn the approval of our Gentile
neighbors. The results are in fact usually quite the opposite. Our
neighbors are not flattered by our attempts at imitation and currying
favor. They view it as an intrusion, that their culture is being invaded
and watered-down by outsiders. Their reaction will be to remind us that we
are but sojourners among them (as G-d promised us) and a not-fully-welcome
foreign organism. We would command a lot more respect if we would show
that we stand for something -- and demonstrate that our principles are
more important to us than conformance or even acceptance in the eyes of
the Gentiles.
(This incidentally was one of the factors which brought Joe Lieberman into
the U.S. Senate. He refrained from campaigning for a tight race during the
High Holidays (which fell out shortly before the election). The respect he
commanded by adhering to his principles far outweighed any fleeting gains
he would have achieved running himself ragged along the campaign trail.)
We now turn to R. Akiva's first statement -- "Beloved is man for he was
created in the image of G-d." This statement was clearly not directed at
Israel alone, as are our Mishna's second two, but to all mankind. All
humankind is fashioned in G-d's image. We are all endowed with a G-dly
spirit, an innate drive to do good and accomplish. We possess human
consciences -- which stir us to compassion and goodly acts, and which nag
at us if we act wickedly. We are all granted free will -- the independence
of spirit to choose good over evil, soul over body. And we are all
beckoned by G-d to rise to its challenge.
(Incidentally, it goes without saying that being fashioned in the "image"
of G-d does not mean that we "look like" G-d. G-d is incorporeal; He has no
physical form. This is the third of Maimonides' 13 Fundamental Principles
of Faith, and the Torah likewise states: "...for you did not see any image
on the day G-d spoke to you at Horeb..." (Deuteronomy 4:15). Rather, we
"resemble" G-d in that we have a soul -- and the free will to choose to
follow its dictates rather than those of our bodies.)
There's an interesting distinction here. Every human being has a soul,
granted. But let's say he ignores it, he does not follow the promptings of
his conscience. What happens then? King Solomon wrote: "G-d has made man
upright, but they have sought many complications" (Koheles 7:29).
Eventually, his conscience -- his soul -- will be stifled and will cease to
function as a vital force. The longer a person follows his own selfish and
animalistic desires, the more his conscience will ebb away. He will become
deadened to the challenges G-d has set before him, and he will lose all
sense of guilt and shame over his behavior. At that point, his soul will
die. The Talmud states: "The wicked even during their lifetimes are called
dead" (Berachos 18b). Beating hearts and functioning nervous systems do not
living beings make. Certainly high IQ's have equally little to do with it.
If a person has no sense of purpose, if he is completely unresponsive to
the prompting of his conscience, he has no soul -- and he is dead as far as
G-d's master plan for the world is concerned.
The Jews are different.
In R. Akiva's second statement, he states that we, the Children of Israel,
are the children of G-d. This of course implies an especially close
relationship -- we'll discuss this more fully G-d willing next week. But
there is something much deeper. A parent (under normal circumstances) never
completely forsakes his child, and never entirely forgets that his child is
his. When G-d told us we are His children, it contained an implicit promise
that He would see to it that we never lose the divine spark of G-dliness
within us. G-d does not allow us to totally forget who we are. He made our
consciences and our connection to Him just so much stronger, and He
promises that any Jew, no matter how remote and distant he seems from
spirituality, is still deep down a Jew. (Jews have always had a very
healthy guilt complex, preserved and passed on by our Jewish mothers over
the centuries...:-)
In Yiddish we refer to this spark of Jewishness as the pinteleh Yid - the
miniature Jewish heart which beats in every one of us. Except under the
most extreme circumstances, a Jewish soul never entirely dies. G-d, in
granting us the ultimate privilege of being His children, does not -- can
not -- allow us to shirk that honor. We cannot just forget it all and
decide to live like everyone else. Our sense of guilt and calling would
never totally abandon us, and we would never feel entirely fulfilled and
at peace with ourselves any other way.
For this reason, no matter how distant a Jew appears from G-d and Judaism,
there is always something to build upon. Even if he denies it, fights it,
joins cults, country clubs, converts out, marries out, or cries atheism,
deep down he knows he is a Jew, and a child of G-d. And he knows he can and
eventually must return to his Father's home. And G-d, in His infinite love
and patience, knows this too.
(Based in part on the commentary of the Tiferes Yisrael to this mishna.)
Text Copyright © 2004 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.