Humility
Part 5
Intelligence, Wisdom, Torah and Humility
The connection
between humility and Torah is very well developed
in the teachings of Chazal and later rabbinic
literature. The nature of this connection,
though, demands some elaboration.
Being highly
intelligent and bright does not, unfortunately,
preclude being arrogant. Sometimes it even
seems that a high intelligence level feeds
an arrogant person’s bloated self-image. Nevertheless,
the Baraita Kinyan Torah (Avot 6:7) lists
humility among the 48 necessary elements for
aquiring Torah. If intelligence can coexist
with arrogance, why cannot Torah? Shouldn’t
even an arrogant person be able to apply his
innate, G-d-given intelligence to the texts
of the Torah and achieve scholastic results?
First of
all, we must distinguish between innate
intelligence and its application,
what one does with it. Someone might be born
intelligent, yet arrogance might hamper the
natural development and cultivation of his
intelligence. For example, someone who does
not listen to criticism and is not open to
questioning might be stuck with his own incorrect
conclusions. On the other hand, another person
might be afraid to sound silly or unintelligent
and not ask the question that might bring
him to a greater and richer understanding.
Someone else overly concerned with self-image
might prefer a complicated or intelligent
sounding idea or approach over that which
is simple but true. Furthermore, self-centeredness
can drive people to the pursuit of activities
not conducive to developing understanding
and wisdom. The self-centered drive for pleasure
or excessive leisure drags one away from serious
study and intense reflection. Someone intelligent
might never acquire wisdom.
These are
only, however, examples of the natural connection
between humility and intellectual pursuits
in general. A number of sources seem to point
to a special connection between Torah and
humility. It also seems to extend beyond the
realm of the practical-pragmatic naturalistic
connection we described above. There seems
to be an essential inner connection between
Torah and humility.
Moshe Rabbeinu
was both the most humble man that ever
lived -- “The man Moses was exceedingly humble,
more than any other man on the face of the
earth.” (Bemidbar 12:3) -- and the greatest
prophet that ever lived -- “No other
prophet rose any more in Israel like Moshe,
who knew G-d face to face. “(Devarim 34:10).
The height of Torah is prophecy, and Torah,
like prophecy, is a Divine gift. It is significant
that that gift was given to Israel through
its humblest leader.
Understanding
the Torah-humility connection is aided by
clarifying the definitions of both Torah and
humility. Torah is essentially Divine revelation,
and learning Torah is a way of encountering
G-dliness. Humility can be defined as a correct
apprehension of one’s place in the world.
Because the world was created by and is constantly
and totally dependent on an infinite and all-powerful
G-d, humility demands a high level of G-d
consciousness. Therefore the Torah and the
humble person are the perfect match. The
one most G-d conscious -- the humble man who
senses his own total dependency on G-d --
will be the one most open to G-d’s revelation,
to prophecy and Torah. Moshe Rabbeinu
was that person.
The Maharal
(Netivot Olam, Netiv Hatorah, Chapter 2) writes
that humility is a character trait that fits
the Torah. He explains a striking comment
by the Sages. On the verse, “It (the Torah)
is not in Heaven,” (Devarim 30:12) they comment
(Eiruvin 55a), “You will not find the Torah
among arrogant people (‘gasei haruach’).”
Arrogant people are limited, because they
see themselves as being at a certain level
of greatness. The humble person is without
limits, boundless, because he does not see
himself as anything at all. He is therefore
fitting to be the one to be the recipient
of the boundless Torah. Just as the Torah
is able to spread out, so can the humble person.
Just as the Torah is open to and connected
to all people, so the humble person is open
to and connected to all people. The two are
therefore fitting.
The theory
fits the historical reality. Our greatest
sages were always exceedingly humble. One
anecdote follows:
When Rav
Moshe Feinstein zt”l was a young boy of eleven
he had already learned all the tractates in
Nashim and Nezikin (about 1300 pages of Talmud).
Once his uncle, a great talmid chakham, was
visiting his father and the two were talking
in Rav Moshe’s father’s study. The eleven
year old Rav Moshe walked in the room and
the his uncle stood up for him, saying, “For
a boy who knows two sedarim (orders) one must
stand up.” Rav Moshe’s father immediately
told Rav Moshe to leave the room and shut
the door. Rav Moshe later said he could hear
his father speaking to his uncle with much
emotion -- “What are you doing? Are you trying
to kill my boy? You’ll turn him into a baal
gaavah (arrogant person)!”
Rav Moshe
himself writes (Derash Moshe, Ki Tissa), “It
seems that the Torah wants a person to do
mitzvot and learn Torah with a consciousness
that this is the way a person should be. It
should not cause arrogance, and one should
not think that he is doing something specially
great -- and therefore hide himself out of
humility. Rather, it should be done because
it is a necessity. One should neither pursue
honor nor should one hide so that he should
not receive honor. This is what Rabban Yochanan
ben Zakai meant when he said, ‘If you learned
a lot of Torah do not give yourself credit,
because for this you were created.’” (story
and quote from the introduction to the 8th
volume of Igrot Moshe, p. 9, in the biography
written by Rav Moshe’s grandchildren, translation
ours)