Noahide Commandments
by:
Rabbi Yoel Schwartz
Translated by:
Yitzhak A. Oked Sechter
Introduction:
This book deals mainly with the
effort of defining the commandments that the non-Jewish nations
should fulfill or make an effort to do so. In addition to the
seven basic commandments, there are several other active
commandments that have not been clarified and explained in depth
in the scriptures and subsequent Torah literature. Just the
same, according to what is written in the Torah and the Midrash,
we are able to learn something from the actions of those that
existed before the Torah was given to Israel. According to the
Midrash, the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob upheld more
commandments than what the children of Noah were called upon to
do. Even commandments that the sages turned into laws many
generations later were kept by the Patriarchs.
According to these same sources,
Jacob already upheld all of the 613 commandments of Judaism.
This is why Jacob's children are no longer called children of
Noah but children of Israel. Just the same, we can learn from
some of their actions and from their expectations from those
that lived during their generation regarding the ways that
apply to any person who wants to come closer to G-d should act
and attain spiritual fulfillment.
The matters that we are trying
to explain in this book are not in any way an effort to try and
establish a new religion. But to look at the Scriptures and
other Torah literature and reach conclusions concerning what a
person should do or try to do. Our prayers are that this modest
beginning will bring others to write a more complete book and
that it should cover a greater scope. In order to help all those
among the nations who are looking for ways to come closer to
G-d.
Judaism forbids establishing a
new religion, as explained by the Rambam (II Kings 10, 5:6-9):
"The principle of the matter: You cannot allow them to establish
a new religion or to carry out commandments from this
knowledge..."
Anyway, what we are doing here
in connection with the Children of Noah is not the establishment
of a new religion. Since a foreigner (Gentile) is not ordered in
writing to fulfill them, but only, if by his own free will,
wishes to carry out such commandments as the Rambam wrote:
"We are not allowed to stop a child of Noah that seeks to be
compensated by fulfilling the laws of the Torah." So it
seems that the establishment of a new religion occurs only when
a person comes and says that he has been ordered by G-d to
fulfill such and such a law and not when he is trying to reach a
degree of spiritual perfectness by fulfilling the commandments
that the children of Israel have been ordered to carry out.
FOREWORD ON THE IMPORTANCE OF
DOING THING
(FULFILLING AND CARRYING OUT).
"We will fulfill and we will
hear" (Shabbat 88:a). Here we will try to explain the
importance of spiritual fulfillment and its effect on the
personality of the person. We will also see why it is not enough
to feel this spiritual fulfillment in the heart, but that it
must be accompanied by actions. All this has been explained in
the Torah and was understood as something quite simple by many
intellectuals of the world like Captain Soren Kirkgor (In his
book "A Jew, Who Is He, What Is He?" page 22) who said,
"A belief that does not bring in its wake a fulfillment and a
change, is a false one. The greatest believer, who carries out
his belief with great enthusiasm, but shows no sign of a
complete change in his life, proves, that his belief is simply
part of his own imagination only. The influence and recognition
of a belief in a human being depends on the way he carries out
his day-to-day life and manages to control and suppress his
desires, stops doing evil and the actions he takes to carry this
out."
The Greek philosophers, who did
not believe in a practical religion, but believed that human
perfection comes from recognizing and studying the truth,
believed just the same, that a person must carry and fulfill
deeds that will teach him spiritual perfection: Yehudah HaLevi
in his book "Hakuzari (Article A, Part A): "Question the
truth on the things that you want to know, in order that your
brains will act and not be acted upon. Talk to the point and in
truthful ways. This will help you seek and recognize the truth.
Then you will demand less, be more humble and accumulate good
measures."
The Philosophers did not
recognize G-d or the need to act accordingly to His
commandments. This is why they believed that human beings can
act in any way suitable that will bring them to fulfillment of
their goals. Just the same, these intellectuals understood that
it was not enough fro a person to acquire education and
knowledge but that he also needed to carry out and act in order
that his internal thinking could turn into a reality. Which is
exactly what the Torah tells us to do, and we will bring several
examples here.
A) The Precepts (Mitzvot)
connected to prayers: These precepts connected to prayers are
done through the heart as it is stated in Ta'anit 2,
"and to labor for him with all your heart - what is the labor of
the heart - it is prayer." Anyway it is not enough to pray
from the heart. if a person has some thoughts that stem from his
heart but does not utter them out through his lips, then he has
not fulfilled the commandment as it is stated in Berachot 20,
"Thoughts are not the same as an utterance."
B) Repentance: The
precepts connected to repentance are also connected to the
heart: Nevertheless, "A person repenting must confess through
his lips and say the things he has decided to do through his
heart." (Rambam, Repentance, Chapter 20).
C) Ownership: When
ownership is transferred, the most important part in this
transaction is that the heart of the original owner agrees with
the action. But all of this is not legal until some sort of
action of transference is performed, such as that a deed or
legal paper is signed or changes hands or the transfer of
ownership done according to the Jewish religion (Halacha)
(This includes an action which is accepted as a valid
transference of ownership by the society where the transaction
is taking place.)
D) Marriage: It is not
enough for both sides to agree to marry and to live like a
family, but a legal action must also be carried out for this
agreement to be formal.
From all these examples we have
learned that it is not enough for the heart to tell you to do
something. There is a need for some sort of act to carry out the
will of the heart. For this reason the spiritual fulfillment of
a person is not reached unless it is carried out by action. The
belief and the desire to be close to G-d and the actions
connected with it must be according to the precepts (Mitzvot)
that G-d set forth in the Torah.
There is, sometimes, an opposite
process when outside actions (not connected or controlled by the
person) influence the internal thinking of a person as
it is explained in Sefer Hahinuch
40:16, explaining why the Torah has so many practical precepts:
"You should know that a person is governed by his actions.
His heart good or bad. Even a wicked man whose thoughts are
concentrated on doing evil all day, if he should start studying
Torah and Mitzvot, even if he is not doing it for G-d's sake, he
will start acting in a more positive manner. This is because the
heart goes after the deeds. The same holds true, concerning a
righteous man, who lives according to the Torah and Mitzvot, but
makes a living from dubious transactions, or if for example he
is forced by the King or ruler to deal in such dubious matters,
he will eventually be transformed from a righteous man to an
evil one."
In the book Mesilat Yesharim,
chapter 7 it is written, "that hastiness is brought about by
the internal enthusiasm of a person. But even if a person lacks
this internal enthusiasm, he should carry out and do things in
an accelerated pace, this will bring about an internal
enthusiasm. Since external actions brings about internal ones."
The Rambam, Maimonides, in his
commentary to the Mishna, Avot, wrote, "If a person wants to
give a certain sum to charity. it is worth while to divide this
charity into several portions and give it away at different
intervals and not at one time. By doing so, it has a greater
effect on a person, than if he would give the sum to charity all
at one time. This despite the act that to do so he must invest
more time and effort."
The actions of a person should
be done in order to fulfill and carry out the commandments of
the Creator, since these are the things that elevate a person.
As the Maharal from Prague wrote in Tiferet Yisrael, chapter 4,
"The commandments of the Torah can be likened to a rope by
which a person is drawn out of a hole or a well. The person is
drawn from the lowest levels to the higher levels of the world.
The more he does the more he removes materialism from himself,
which then enables him to sit next to the Lord of Hosts."
The meaning of the word Mitzvot
in Hebrew comes from the root Unite and Bind. Which means that
each mitzvah unites and binds the person to the Creator of the
world. (See the book of Tania). The Tanna, Rabbi Eliyahu says in
Chapter 9, "I testify before heaven and earth, Israel and the
nations, man and woman between a servant and handmaiden, the
Holy Spirit rests upon a person according to his actions."
The fulfillment of the
commandments in the Torah, builds the character of a person and
raises him to a level of perfection, as it is written in
Deuteronomy 4:14, "And the Lord commanded me at that time to
teach you statutes and ordinances, that ye might do them..."
(The English version of the Bible is not translated 100 percent
perfect, since in the Hebrew the word "Leasotchem" is not
exactly "ye might do them", it also means "will do to
you.")
This word "Leasotchem"
teaches us here that the statutes and ordinances, the "mitzvot",
builds the person and does not only mean that a person must
carry them out. This is why it is written in this special way. A
person must be trained on the way he should build his life,
starting from early childhood. Anyone reading books dealing with
child-care can find many examples there. But even as a grownup,
a person must take a grip on himself, if he wants to "discover
himself" and find a real meaning to his life. The
Noachide laws are logical. Many intelligent people will even
agree that there is a need for them, but this is not enough. We
must remember that we must carry our these ordinances and
statutes because we have been ordered to do so by the Creator.
They were given to Adam and Noah. Then again given on Mount
Sinai. Part of the Torah was given on Mount Sinai to the
Israelites as a Holy nation of Priests. The remaining part is
intended for entire human race.
The Rambam wrote in
Malachim, Chapter 8:11,
"Every person that
agrees to carry out the seven "Mitzvot" of the children
of Noah, and does this
in a careful manner, is a righteous gentile, and has
part in the world to come, meaning that he carries
this out because G-d has
ordered him to do so in the Torah, through Moses. But if
these seven "mitzvot" are carried out just
because he feels a
necessity to do so, then he is not a Gentile resident in
Israel, "Ger
Toshav", nor a righteous gentile or one
of its wise persons."
The Mitzvot have been handed
down to us in the form of an order, but just the same we are
called to accept them gladly. A person must accept the Mitzvot
with love. Despite the hardships in fulfilling them, he must
carry them out. This also has an educational value.
When a person decides to do a
good deed without being ordered to do so, he feels he is
important and just. But when a person decides to carry out the
Mitzvot because he has been ordered to by G-d, then he feels the
importance of the G-d that orders. it is only then that he
manages to discover and find all his hidden powers in order to
carry out these "mitzvot". These hidden powers cannot be
tapped to their utmost if a person carries out the "mitzvot"
simply because he has the sudden urge or mood to do so. This
decision is strengthened even more when the person announces it
before three learned and wise Jews. This acts transforms the
person into a "Ger Toshav". Even today, when, since all
of the Israelites have not yet returned to their land the laws
concerning a "Ger Toshav" are not applicable – in
reference to the special privileges which would otherwise apply
to a non-Jew who has made such a declaration - such a
declaration made before three wise Jews nevertheless still
enhances the status of the non-Jew.
This declaration should include:
belief in the principles of the existence of the one true G-d,
who is everlasting, the Creator of all things, guides all of his
creations, is the One that gave the Torah in Sinai for humanity,
and oversees all the actions of the human beings to reward and
punish them for their deeds. Then the person should state that
he is willing to fulfill the seven mitzvot that were given to
Noah. (I have not mentioned that there are those that believe
that this announcement should be completed by the submersion of
the body in a pool of at least 660 liters of water. Like the
sea, spring, or a man made pool built in the earth because this
is not really essential)
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