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Rabbi Harold Schulweis Archives
SECULAR SCIENCE AND JEWISH FAITH
Yom Kippur 2002
by Harold M. Schulweis
A special welcome to you who have returned home to us, to your
families and your synagogue from the world of academic culture,
college and university.
Zayde persuaded my parents to send me to Yeshiva. When I told
him that I was indeed accepted as a student at Yeshiva College, he
was taken aback. Yeshiva, he understood. But Yeshiva college was
for him an oxymoron like jumbo shrimp, a glatt treif platter. Why did
I need college anyway? I told him I would be studying philosophy
and history and science. That information only confirmed his
uneasiness. He came from a tradition that was wary of "chomath
yavan", Gentile culture, pejoratively goyishe wisdom.
Zayde worried that his eldest grandson would be seduced by the
alien culture. In some circles this remains a concern.
College is considered a "Jewish disaster area" because college was
not simply the opportunity of meeting people of other faiths, but a
cultural clash between two competitive civilizations: Athens and
Jerusalem.
Here you enter college with memories of Genesis, a world created in
6 days, with species each according to its own kind. Then you are
assigned to read Charles Darwin's 1865 Origin of the Species and
his 1871 Descent of Man. Two different worlds. In the Synagogue
world you hear that on Rosh Hashanah we celebrate the creation of
the universe and mark your Jewish calendar as 5763. But in college
you learned different datings. Going back in geological time based
on paleontological events, the evidence of rocks and fossils, with the
first single cells of life, is conservatively 3.6 billion years old. The
Rock of ages is not The Ages of Rocks. Darwin's universe is not as
described in the Bible created by the divine fiat "and God said". For
the scientist, the universe is evolved from a randomly conjoined
combination of carbon, oxygen and potassium molecules.
Following Darwin, you and I were not created by designed
supernatural divine election but by random natural selection. As
Darwin argued you and I were descended from a "hairy tailed
quadruped, probably arboreal in nature." Darwin, in a celebrated
phrase informs his readers that "Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny".
What does he mean? He means that each and every one of us as
individuals recapitulates the process of world evolution in our own
person. You and I are microcosms of the evolution of life. So we
read, in Darwin's works, that the fetus of a dog after a week looks
virtually the same as the fetus of a human being. Several hours
after conception, you and I had gills and a tail just like tadpoles and
fish, the gills representing an ancient fish, the tail an ancestral
reptile. The Origin of the Species is not Bereshit. These were
different ways of understanding, of describing and thinking of the
world.
How can you and I harmonize the early chapters of Genesis with
The Origin of the Species? Whose book do we choose? Do we turn
our faces toward Athens and our backs to Jerusalem or vice versa?
How do we keep Jewish faith and secular science on one plate? Do
we "Eat Kosher but think treif"--keep kosher at home, but treif on
the college campus? "How you goin to keep them down on the farm
after they've seen M.I.T.?"
While historically and up to this day, the Darwinian theory of
evolution rocked the foundation of Christian belief, why did it not
affect Jewish religious thinking? Just as medicine presented no
problem to Judaism as it did to Christendom, Darwin was no threat
to Judaism. Why not? Why generally does science and faith in
Judaism create no conflict which it does with Judaism's daughter
religions?
What is unique about Jewish faith that accounts for the compatibility
of science and religion? How did the mother and daughter part
ways?
The Church had to choose between the truth of Darwin or the truth
of God's testament -- either/or.
For the synagogue this is a false choice. Why? Because there
cannot be a conflict between scientific truth or biblical truth. Truth is
one and God is one and the name of God is Truth. So we read in
the Talmud (Sabbath 55a) "chotmo shel hakodosh baruch hu emet"
-- "the seal of God is truth".
The term "emet", the rabbis in the Talmud point out is formed by the
aleph, mem, teth -- first, middle and last letter of the Hebrew
alphabet. Judaism is in love with God whose signature is truth. In
Judaism truth has no race, no ethnicity, no religion, no geography.
In Judaism there is no secular truth as opposed to religious truth.
There is no Jewish astronomy or pagan astronomy, or Jewish
biology or Gentile biology.
What about non-Jewish alien sources of knowledge? A fascinating
discussion in Talmud Peshachim (94b) includes a rabbinic debate
on some matter referring to the calendar and the movement of the
moon and stars. Some of the rabbis cite "chomay Israel" -- Jewish
sages. But some Rabbis cite "chomay umoth ha-olam" -- Gentile
sages. But the conclusion in the Talmud is "Nirim divreyhem
midrabanam" -- we follow the pagan sages because in matters of
astronomy they are superior to us. Truth is truth whatever its
origin. What do we recite when we take out the Torah on Shabbat:
we sing the words of "bay ana rachetz" from the Zohar.
"Kshot" is the Aramaic word for "truth". God is truth. His Torah is
truth. His prophets are people of truth and He performs deeds of
goodness and truth.
Jewish history has nothing parallel to the fate of Giordno Bruno who
because of his teaching of the Copernican heliocentric theory was
buried alive by the church.
The synagogue, unlike the church, has no history analogous to the
persecution, torture and arrest of Galileo because of his teaching on
astronomy.
The synagogue never produced a librorium prohibitorum -- an index
of books that under severe penalty cannot be read or studied.
I think it was Alexander Pope who composed Sir Isaac Newton's
eulogy. "Nature and nature's law lay hid at night. God said ⤗Let
Newton be, and all was light." Does it make a difference to Judaism
that the discovery of gravitation is attributed to a mere human being
or that Newton was not a Jew or that his scientific logic is not in the
Bible? From a Jewish perspective, Newton's scientific illumination of
the ways of the heavenly bodies pays homage to the God of heaven
and earth. As someone put it: "Theology tells you how to go to
heaven; science tells you how the heavens go."
How is it that the Jewish philosophers and Jewish theologians from
Philo to Maimonides, from Saadya to Soloveitchik did not see
science and faith as adversaries? How did they read the Bible and
what is their legacy to all of us? How should we today read the
Bible? Misreading the Bible leads to the deprecation of Judaism.
Jewish minds did not read the Bible as if it were a book of biology or
a book of archeology or book of astronomy or a book of history or a
book of logic. Torah is not science. It's not geology and it's not
history.
Our Jewish sages never claimed that the Bible is presented as
empirical truth.
Does a believing Jew assert that the world is 5,763 years old? Listen
to Rashi, the 11th century great interpreter of the Bible who lived
quite before the 19th century Darwinians. Asked about the date and
the age of the world Rashi answers "The Torah doesn't tell you the
order of the ages." And he cites the remarkable rabbinic
commentary that God had created many many worlds before this
one. Torah is not archeology or astronomy. If you look for science
in the Bible or for religion in science you will end up confused and
dispirited.
Equally important, the genius of religious Judaism as evident in the
Talmud, the midrash, and Jewish philosophy is that our sages were
not bound by fundamentalist literalism, an approach that reads
every word and every verse as prose description. That you should
bring with you into the college of comparative religion, philosophy
and theology. I have found that literalism makes disbelievers of
some people. Maimonides in the Perek Helek puts it sharply
"Literalism robs our religion of its beauties, darkens its brilliance,
and makes the laws of God convey meanings quite contrary to their
intended meanings."
Literalism reduces religion to absurdity. To be literal is ludicrous. If
you want to ridicule the Torah, just read it literally. Read literally it
becomes material for stand-up comedians. For example, to begin
with vayomer Elohim --"And God said ⤗Let there be light'". And to
whom was God speaking since there was no one there in the
unformed, void and chaos of the universe? Is God speaking to
Himself? What does it man that God speaks? Does God have a
voice, a larynx, vocal cords and in what range does He speak: alto,
tenor, basso profundo, does He sound like James Earl Jones or
Woody Allen?
But the sages of the Talmud and the Midrash realized that the Bible
text "And God said" and indeed repeats the term "And God said" ten
times in the creation of the universe means to teach something else
than a literal account of God's method of communication. In all the
other cosmogonies in all of the stories of creation, Greek,
Mesopotamian, Babylonian, the world is created by bloody warfare
between titan gods, by collusions and conspiracies among the gods
Gaia and Uranus, Marduk and Tiamat. But when the God of Israel
created the world with words alone, with speech alone. "And God
said," means to instruct us that there is no Satan, no primordial
battle between rival gods, no dualism between good and bad God.
In the biblical view, the world did not come into being by wars and
violence between contending deities. The world was created by one
God with the word, and we should learn to sustain with the word, not
the sword. In our morning prayers one of the first prayers we recite
is "Baruch sheamar vhayah ha-olam" -- blessed is the one who
spoke and there was a world.
What rescued Judaism from a rigid, narrow fundamentalist literalism
is expressed brilliantly by the 19th century Talmudist, Rabbi Naphtali
Zvi Yehuda Berlin, the Rosh Yeshiva of Volozyn based on the
commentary on Deuteronomy 32:44 "And Moses came and spoke
all the words of this song in the ears of the people". The Rabbi
declared that shirah, this song refers to the whole Torah and the
whole Torah is poetry and possesses the nature and essential
character of poetry, not prose. To understand Torah you have to
understand symbols and parables and metaphors and allegories.
Torah is art, a spiritual interpretation of life, not a mechanical record
of facts. Do you write a love sonnet, the way you write a legal
contract of sale?
Yes, yes. But which is true? Science or faith? Genesis or Darwin?
Here I read two books about the same event: A blind man is
operated on by an internationally known ophthalmologist. And in his
book the ophthalmologist describes the operation, the diagnosis, the
detailed protocol, the physiology of the eye, the instruments
employed in dealing with the optical nerves connected to the brain.
The language of his book is scientific, exact, precise, detailed, literal.
The other book was written by the blind man who was given new
sight by the ophthalmologist. He describes the event in terms of
excitement, exultation, exaltation and gratitude. The book is filled
with ecstasy, poetry and awe. He describes the first time that he set
his eyes upon his newborn child and his fine witness of the rising of
the sun. Which of these two books is true? Which of these two
books is truer? Are these two books contradictory? Both books
refer to the same event. But consider how different their intention.
Both books are true but are judged differently according to their
purpose.
Science is not Torah. Torah is not science.
Science is concerned with facts. Torah is concerned with value.
Science is concerned with "what is". The Torah is concerned with
"what ought to be". History is concerned with "what was". Torah is
concerned with "what should be".
Science is morally neutral. It tells you "how". It doesn't tell you
"what for". I do not go to the ophthalmologist to discover my vision
of life because that is not his competence. He can make me see the
letters on an eye chart, not the goals of my life. Science offers us
knowledge. Torah offers wisdom. Knowledge can build crematoria
or sanctuaries. But science is morally neutral. It can instruct people
how to build bombs or how to build hospitals. Science tells you
"what is". Torah is concerned with "what for". Darwin is concerned
with the Origin of the species, Judaism is concerned with the
purpose of the species. Darwin is concerned with the Descent of
man, Torah is concerned with the destiny of man.
The Torah is not science and science is not Torah. When Torah is
treated like science, you invite mythology. When science is treated
like Torah, you invite idolatry. Torah, Jewish faith has to watch that
scientific ingenuity doesn't produce a golem that turns on society.
Back to Darwin. Look what some social scientists made out of
Darwin's description of nature as a jungle in which the fittest
survive. I have in mind some of the greatest leaders and
interpreters of Darwin such as Herbert Spencer in England and
William Graham Sumner in America. Spencer argued that we
should learn from Darwin's description of the "survival of the fittest",
how to structure our society. Political policy should emulate nature's
course. We should follow Darwin's scientific account of evolution
and apply it to our political and moral governance. Society should
follow nature. Listen to Herbert Spencer's argument. "What
happens to a sow when it has a runt in the litter? She eats it. What
happens to a mutilated baby chick, the mother hen pecks it to
death. What happens when wolves go on a hunt and one of them is
wounded or maimed, the wolf pack abandons him." But now
Spencer continues "And what do we do in our society? We ignore
Darwin. We do not follow the wisdom of nature. We do not allow
the fittest to survive. Instead, contrary to the natural laws of nature
we build hospitals for the sick, asylums for imbeciles, create a
welfare society that drains our treasury. We institute poor laws, we
support the incompetent, the impotent with welfare, we drain
ourselves with taxes." So contrary to nature and Darwin's science,
we support "the survival of the unfittest".
Notice what has happened. Spencer turned science into Torah. He
religionized Darwin. He argued that society should imitate nature
and not interfere with nature. Don't let society intervene with
welfare. Don't support the frail, the incompetent because you will
create a society in which you tax the energy and the resources of
the successful and the powerful.
It is precisely in such a case that Judaism dissents. Here Jewish
faith clashes, not with Science but with Scientism, not with empirical
facts but the illicit of conversion of facts into value, not with the
natural description of the survival of the fittest but with the claim that
only those who are physically fit deserve to survive.
This is where the uniqueness and distinctiveness of Judaism should
serve you and our civilization. Judaism is the conscience of
Science. Because science is morally neutral it can be made to
justify greed, selfishness and indifference. You should master
science, but it should not master you. Science may be accepted,
but it must not be deified. Science is neutral. It can tell us how to
produce medicines, vaccines, but its information can and has been
used to produce crematoria, death camps, anthrax, cyanide to
suffocate infants, smart but vicious bombs to devastate cities.
Science is morally malleable.
So the rabbis had no difficulty with the evolution of the world. One
of the great rabbinic enthusiasts of Darwin's evolution was the first
Chief Rabbi of Palestine, Abraham Isaac Kook. The world, the
rabbis reiterate, is incomplete, unfinished evolving.
From the viewpoint of Judaism, evolution does not call for
opposition. Evolution requires human help. The most significant
emphasis in the biblical story of Genesis is that there is in this
natural world a human being with an evolving Image of Godliness.
Transformed by the environment the human being in turn can and
should transform his environment. The truth of evolution and the
truth of Judaism are complementary. We respect the evolutionary
character of nature and human nature as Darwin describes, but as
committed Jews, we prescribe. As serious Jews, we are bidden to
transform nature, nature raw in claw and fang. We are to defang
and detoxify nature. Contrary to social Darwinism, we are to imitate
God, not nature. We are to soften the coarseness, elevate the
fallen, straighten the spine of the weak, remove the toxicity of the
waters and the contamination of the air. We are to engage in
research that will free those crippled with the paralysis of illness.
We are to imitate God's attributes, not the wildness of the jungle.
It is noteworthy that in the current debates over permitting the use of
Federal funds for medical research with stem cells taken from
human embryos, contrary to the judgement of the Vatican and many
Church leaders, the rabbis across the board from Orthodoxy,
Reconstructionism, Reform and Conservative judge such therapy as
a great mitzvah. The scientific use of stem cells genetically identical
with the cells of the sick recipient holds out a joyful promise for
people living under the shadow of Alzheimers, liver failure, diabetes,
spinal cord injuries. You will hear no rabbi argue that such scientific
interpretation runs counter to God's will, that humans here are
playing God.
There is evolution but we human beings are a crucial part of
evolution. Torah is the conscience that helps direct the arc of
nature's trajectory. Judaism and science are not in opposition, but
allies in tikkun olam -- the repair of the world that cries out for
human intervention for godly purpose.
Within that hairy tailed arboreal quadruped lies dormant, a potential
evolving Image of God. That is the thrust of Judaism and the thrust
of these High Holydays. We can and must change. We can change
ourselves and our environment. For the great cry throughout the
services is the cry "tshuvah, tefilla, tzedakah". By turning and
self-judgement and acts of goodness we children of God can modify
the decrees of nature. Science must not turn into Scientism, an
absolute religion. Science needs a moral critique. Science needs
the conscience of Torah. Science needs to know its limitation.
Master the science. Study the facts. But you, as children of Torah,
should ask to what end are these facts gathered, to what end this
competence, to what end this technology? And, if I may be
personal, the religious question asked of you in your choice of
profession is "what for?", to what purpose your degree, your
certificate of masters? Who will profit from your knowledge? How
will it affect your society? These are not the questions of science.
These are the inquiries of Torah. The religious question of science
is "what for?"
At the end of the movie "Inherit the Wind" with Spencer Tracy as the
secular attorney Clarence Darrow and the fundamentalist, William
Jennings Bryant played by Frederic March the camera focuses on
two books, The Origin of the Species by Darwin 1856, and the
Bible. In the last scene Clarence Darrow lifts and places both books
together side-by-side. It is a Jewish response. Athens and
Jerusalem need each other. God is one and truth is one. Zayde
has no reason to be afraid of college. My young friends, carry with
you the ethics and purpose of Judaism into the citidals of academia.
College will be no Jewish disaster area but a secular sanctuary, an
homage to the God of truth.
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