{"id":3080,"date":"2008-05-27T09:07:54","date_gmt":"2008-05-27T17:07:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=3080"},"modified":"2008-05-27T17:42:02","modified_gmt":"2008-05-28T01:42:02","slug":"on-being-controversial","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=3080","title":{"rendered":"On Being Controversial"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.utj.org\/Viewpoints\/?p=125\">Rabbi Alan Yuter writes<\/a>:<\/p>\n<p><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><em>Religious Jews speak about Jewish education, Torah commitment and the  commandments. The culture of religious Jews and the culture commanded by the  sacred library of Judaism are often very different. While Jewish education gives  lip service to the commandments of the Torah, in practice the message given  always justifies the elites who speak in the name of Torah.<\/em><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"> Rebbe<\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"> cards reflect this  phenomenon. The canonized book is superseded by the holy man. Calling attention  to this disconnect causes consternation and is termed,  &ldquo;controversial.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>While Tradition finds 613 commandments in the Torah,  there seems to be a 614th commandment, lurking in the shadow or penumbra of the  oral that has gone unrecorded in the sacred Torah library. That commandment is  &ldquo;Thou may not be controversial.&rdquo; When informing a Rabbi Joseph Tender, an  educator at Ner Israel High School in Baltimore County, that I am a student of  Rabbi Yosef Faur, this gentleman informed me that my mentor was &ldquo;controversial.&rdquo;  I responded, &ldquo;So was Rabbi Kotler,&rdquo; the founder of Lakewood Yeshiva and the  Ashkenazi teacher of Rabbi Faur. Rabbi Faur&rsquo;s approach is based on law and not  politics, and does not defer to social convention. Such independence calls  attention to the disconnect between Torah ideals and the reality of Jewish  religious life, and is assigned the stigma of being &ldquo;controversial.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>What  does it mean to be religiously controversial in the Orthodox world? The idiom  attaches to people and positions that on one hand are not indefensible based on  Torah documents, because if the position were in violation of an explicit norm,  the error could be identified, cited, and condemned directly. Positions which  conflict with those taken by people in power that are reasonably defensible must  be attacked by more subtle means.<\/p>\n<p>On one hand, we must disapprove of  wrongful thinking; on the other hand, we do not engage in &ldquo;<\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><em>leshon  hara<\/em><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\">&rdquo;,  negative speech. And by referring to a person or an idea as &ldquo;controversial,&rdquo; the  syntax is descriptive and the prescription is implicit. We pretend that are not  really being negative, but we ominously make our point that to persist in what  the culture determines to be deviant thought, behavior, or policy will lead to a  social ban. Since for parochial religious society, the sanction of exclusion is  so great, being labeled &ldquo;controversial&rdquo; is a mark no less damning than Hester  Prynne&rsquo;s scarlet letter, which proclaimed disapproval, disdain, and the desire  of a community&rsquo;s dredges to cast the first accusatory stone.<\/p>\n<p>Just because  an idea, person, or principle might valid according to the letter of Jewish law  does not mean that the principle, person or idea is &ldquo;appropriate&rdquo; in living  religious society. According to this ideology, the letter of the law is known to  all Israel. But the &ldquo;spirit&rdquo; of the law is known, by oral tradition and inspired  intuition, to the right reverend rabbis. No one can possibly know the intentions  of the Divine Father except through them. Rabbi Herschel Shachter,<\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><em> Rosh  Yeshiva<\/em><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"> at  Yeshiva University, proclaimed at a recent Rabbinical Council convention, that  synagogue rabbis are clergymen and real Jewish authority is possessed by the  great rabbis of the Yeshiva. Apparently, it is controversial to remind the  learned<\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><em> rosh  yeshiva<\/em><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\">  that it is his job to train rabbis to be his peers and not his pawns, that Torah  authority resides not in the academic office of the professor of Torah law, but  in the community rabbi, who is ordained to make legal decisions. And if this  aspect of Jewish tradition, that it is the community rabbi and not the academic  who possesses authority may undergo change, one wonders where, how, and why the  non-Orthodox movements are different as well as wrong when they claim that they  have the right to change Jewish law.<\/p>\n<p>Now, since the term &ldquo;controversial&rdquo;  carries disapproval, applying it in the negative context of disapproval  constitutes prohibited speech according to Jewish law. But in the emerging  religious society where convention trumps covenant because deviant ideas are too  dangerous to be tolerated, the term serves a very important social function that  cannot be dismissed: it serves as the sanction that reminds insiders to Jewish  religious society that not all of its definitions and boundaries are based upon  Torah texts. The great rabbis or Torah people have the right to define right  thought and action. Our kind of simple Jews, including community rabbis, may not  determine proper thought and action by canon and code but must apply convention  and custom as determined by the real rabbis of the rabbinical elite. Loyalty to  God is defined as loyalty to the rabbinical culture heroes who canonize  convention and codify custom and are so great that they may, when necessary,  even suspend law and precedent in order to preserve the thick culture of  religious society that obeys them, pays them, and honors them.<\/p>\n<p>In this  non-controversial and pious world, Rabbis Shlomo Riskin of Efrat, Noson Slifkin  the evolutionist Orthodox rabbi, the fabulously learned Daniel Sperber of Bar  Ilan University, and the activist consciences of the modern Orthodox world,  <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#0000ff\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.theawarenesscenter.org\/gafni_mordechai.html\">Saul  Berman<\/a><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"> and  <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#0000ff\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.theawarenesscenter.org\/gafni_mordechai.html\">Avi  Weiss<\/a><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\">, have  earned the stigma of being &ldquo;controversial.&rdquo; These rabbis have never consciously  violated Jewish law. They have, however, violated what some would consider being  accepted convention. Considering convention to be covenant improperly distorts  the covenant and is therefore regarded by God to be &ldquo;controversial.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>It  is controversial to claim and to complain that Israel ought to draft all its  Jewish citizens, including Orthodox women and Yeshiva students. It is also  required according to bSota 44b. Why are the rabbis who claim that  the<\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><em>  Daas<\/em><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\">  [opinion of] Torah of their communal conventions and intuitions are superior to  the revealed religion of the public text of the Oral Torah? Therefore, if one  obeys the letter of Torah law, one is a deviant Jew. And by not deferring to  those endowed with the intuition to read the mind of God, it is implied that one  is not minding the will of God.<\/p>\n<p>The problem with this culture sanction,  of dismissing people as &ldquo;controversial,&rdquo; is that it violates the real principles  of Torah Judaism. If the idiom &ldquo;controversial&rdquo; is indeed negative because of  connotation, it may not retain the innocence of association implied by dint of  denotation. Furthermore, the person who is object of the criticism is denied the  opportunity to defend him or herself, as required by Jewish law. Jewish law does  not demand obedience in the face of wrong, silence when protest must be heard,  or loyalty when Torah values are being subverted or misrepresented. Abraham was  controversial when he left the idols of Iraq in order to create a Godly  community; Moses was controversial when he challenged the accepted, expected,  conservative world of Egypt that deified its elite while defiling its  humanity.<\/p>\n<p>Before the Biblical Joshua could be allowed assume the mantle  of leadership, the Torah presents a narrative that shows Joshua how to  appreciate the fact that the real religion called Torah is the word of God, not  convention, custom or culture as conceived by social or political elites. After  the Assembly was convened and Eldad and Medad were acting as charismatics in the  camp, Joshua dutifully and loyally reported their uppity &ldquo;offense&rdquo; to Moses.  Rather than restrain talent, Moses would share power with anyone talented who is  morally worthy to exercise power. Having learned the lesson that right is based  on loyalty to the divine master, and not the human master, Joshua, with Caleb,  defy the great elders of Israel by insisting that Canaan is conquerable. Rather  than concede to the majority, who outnumbered him 10-2, Joshua took the socially  incorrect and theologically courageous position and defied convention. When  measured against the benchmarks of canonical Jewish values, might those who  exploit the &ldquo;controversial&rdquo; epithet be considered to be themselves  &ldquo;controversial?&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>When people are told that they are controversial, they  are being warned, &ldquo;we lose too much by being close to you,&rdquo; you are deprived of  approval, and we hope that the sanction social intimidation is sufficient to  resolve the insolence of your non-conformity. The idiom is always leveled at  those who challenge convention and with whom conversation and dialogue is  dangerous. After all, they may be right. Right wing rabbis like Mendel Shapiro,  <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#0000ff\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.theawarenesscenter.org\/Tendler_Aron.html\">Aron<\/a><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"> and <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#0000ff\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.theawarenesscenter.org\/Tendler_Mordecai.html\">Mordecai  Tendler<\/a><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\">,  <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#0000ff\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.theawarenesscenter.org\/Weinberg_Matis.html\">Matis  Weinberg<\/a><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\">,  or Ner Israel&rsquo;s <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#0000ff\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.theawarenesscenter.org\/Eisemann_Moshe.html\">Moses  Eisenmann<\/a><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\">  are theologically correct and, in spite of charges of sexual and homosexual  impropriety, never earn the &ldquo;controversial&rdquo; epithet. The modern Orthodox world  is not exempt from this controversy. We recall that <\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#0000ff\" family=\"SANSSERIF\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.theawarenesscenter.org\/Lanner_Baruchi.html\">Baruch  Lanner<\/a><\/font><font size=\"2\" face=\"Geneva\" color=\"#000000\" family=\"SANSSERIF\">, an  abuser of Jewish boys and girls, was first defended with the claim it is  improper to say bad things about a rabbinical authority figure. Given the sad  fate of Nadav and Abihu, God likely considered this rabbinical ethic to be  controversial.<\/p>\n<p>Who fears controversy and who embraces it? The tyrant  described in Maimonides, Laws of idolatry 1:1-2, for whom invented religion is  the opiate of the masses he deigns to control, controversy is heresy because it  asks people to ask the seditious question, &ldquo;why.&rdquo; Tyrants who fear  accountability condition their community to avoid controversy. These people rule  on the basis of intuition&mdash;what is good for them is good for the  community.<\/p>\n<p>A Torah community that believes in God will be controversial  when God&rsquo;s Torah demands and commands. Women&rsquo;s prayer groups are &ldquo;controversial&rdquo;  but sexual abuse must go unreported because rabbis will be shamed. A Torah  education worthy of the appellation creates an autonomous religious personality  for whom right is determined by principles and not principals. The authentic  Torah education will expose wrong even against community pressure. Canon,  covenant, and conscience are informed and inflamed in the authentically  religious soul. The religiously mediocre soul wants to fit in and be accepted by  doing what is expected by culture, community and convention. Only when we are  prepared to measure culture and convention with the benchmarks of canon and  conscience will the method of &ldquo;being controversial&rdquo; translate into &ldquo;being holy.&rdquo;  And the authentic Jewish leader empowers people to be holy by leading, by  exercising the moral courage to be controversial. Rabbis who are unwilling to be  controversial in principle have fear of people but not fear of God. In his  essay, &ldquo;Half-Consolation,&rdquo; on the blood libel, the secular Hebrew writer, Ahad  ha-Am showed that the majority who believes the blood libel are wrong, and the  Jews, who protest their innocence, are right. Since God is one and truth is one,  the authentic believer sanctifies God&rsquo;s name by being willing to be  controversial. Authentic Torah religion demands that we respect an impartial and  just God before the partisan pressure of authority persons.<\/font><\/p>\n<p>JOE EMAILS: &quot;But R. Faur IS  controversial. He had a little Syrian cult going of &quot;return to the Rambam&quot; with  this anti-ashkenasi teachings, and wreaked havoc in various communities, such as  Seattle. He also had some rather reactionary concepts about the role of women,  etc, as well as advocating for things like using bathtubs for mikvah. He was  banned by most Sephardic communities.&quot;\n<\/p>\n<p><!--adsense--><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Rabbi Alan Yuter writes: Religious Jews speak about Jewish education, Torah commitment and the commandments. The culture of religious Jews and the culture commanded by the sacred library of Judaism are often very different. While Jewish education gives lip service &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=3080\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[18,590],"tags":[8661,2059,4093,8659,2333,8657,29773,8658,30429,8662,31394,7423,8660,3809,4558,4118,750,8663,29981,29806],"class_list":["post-3080","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-orthodoxy","category-torah","tag-baltimore-county","tag-consternation","tag-elites","tag-holy-man","tag-jewish-education","tag-jewish-religious-life","tag-judaism","tag-kotler","tag-lakewood","tag-lip-service","tag-ner-israel","tag-orthodox-world","tag-penumbra","tag-rabbi-joseph","tag-rabbi-yosef","tag-rebbe","tag-rsquo","tag-stigma","tag-torah","tag-yeshiva"],"aioseo_notices":[],"aioseo_head":"\n\t\t<!-- All in One SEO 4.9.10 - aioseo.com -->\n\t<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Rabbi Alan Yuter writes: Religious Jews speak about Jewish education, Torah commitment and the commandments. 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