To Believe Is to Behave (Part 5)
To Believe Is to Behave (Part 5)
(Lailah Gifty Akita)
“These are the precepts whose fruits a person enjoys in this world, but whose principal remains intact in the World to Come. They are: honoring one’s parents; acts of kindness; early arrival at the study hall in the morning and the evening; hosting guests; visiting the sick; providing the wherewithal for a bride to marry; escorting the dead; praying with concentration; making peace between two people; and Torah study is the equivalent of them all.” (Tractate Shabbat 127a)
The fourth mitzvah is hosting guests. There is an astonishing statement that appears twice in the Talmud (Tractates Shabbat 127a and Shavuot 35b), that having guests is even greater than being in the company of the Divine Presence. Our Sages learn this monumental lesson from the actions of our forefather Avraham. The Torah relates (in Genesis 18) how Avraham took temporary leave of the Divine Presence in order to serve three wayfarers who were passing by. The Midrash Tanchuma explains that hurrying away from the Divine Presence was not a disrespectful thing for Avraham to do, because by serving
Rabbi Shmuel Bornstein (1855-1926), the second Rebbi of Sochatchov, whose multi-volume masterpiece on the Torah and Chassidic thought called Shem Mishmuel is still avidly studied today, writes that Avraham had never received such a sublime revelation before as he did now when he stood before the Divine Presence. And it was clear to him just how precious it was. In fact, it is impossible to imagine an otherworldly delight that might be greater than the one he was experiencing at that moment. And yet, in order to perform the mitzvah of hosting guests, Avraham immediately chose to disregard his own personal, infinite pleasure, in order to tend to the needs of three strangers. Why would he do such a thing? Because Avraham understood that the absolute purpose of the trait of kindness is to ignore one’s own needs and to think of others.
Fascinatingly enough, our Sages mention a seemingly insignificant detail in Tractate Bava Metzia 86b. They teach that during the meal that he prepared for them, Avraham served his guests tongue cooked in mustard. Rabbi Avraham Pam (1913-2001), the beloved head of the Torah Vedaath Yeshivah in New York and one of the most influential Torah leaders in America in the previous century, asks an intriguing question. Avraham was a spiritual person whose entire being was dedicated to serving
Actually, so important is the mitzvah that our Sages teach (Tractate Sanhedrin 103b) that the reward earned for hosting guests and feeding the hungry is truly exceptional because
Rabbi Yehoshua Leib Diskin, one of the outstanding Torah luminaries of the nineteenth century and who served as the Rabbi in some of the most prestigious communities in Eastern Europe and, at the end of his life, in Jerusalem, was known to excel in the mitzvah of hosting guests. Once, while he was seemingly completely engrossed in learning Torah, he suddenly put down the volume of Talmud that he was studying, and went over to one of his elderly guests in order to help him take the soft parts of the challah out of the crust. Being familiar with his legendary concentration for Torah thoughts, his students asked him how he could have realized that there was someone at the table who needed assistance when he was so totally absorbed in his studies. In the quintessentially Jewish way, Rabbi Diskin answered with a question of his own. “When
To be continued…