CHAPTER XXXIX
WE have given the definition of prophecy, stated its true characteristics,
and shown that the prophecy of Moses our Teacher was distinguished from that of
other prophets; we will now explain that this distinction alone qualified him for
the office of proclaiming the Law, a mission without a parallel in the history from
Adam to Moses, or among the prophets who came after him; it is a principle in our
faith that there will never be revealed another Law. Consequently we hold that there
has never been, nor will there ever be, any other divine Law but that of Moses our
Teacher. According to what is written in Scripture and handed down by tradition,
the fact may be explained in the following way: There were prophets before Moses,
as the patriarchs Shem, Eber, Noah, Methushelah, and Enoch, but of these none said
to any portion of mankind that God sent him to them and commanded him to convey
to them a certain message or to prohibit or to command a certain thing. Such a thing
is not related in Scripture, or in authentic tradition. Divine prophecy reached
them as we have explained. Men like Abraham, who received a large measure of prophetic
inspiration, called their fellow-men together and led them by training and instruction
to the truth which they had perceived. Thus Abraham taught, and showed by philosophical
arguments that there is one God, that He has created everything that exists beside
Him, and that neither the constellations nor anything in the air ought to be worshipped;
he trained his fellow-men in this belief, and won their attention by pleasant words
as well as by acts of kindness. Abraham did not tell the people that God had sent
him to them with the command concerning certain things which should or should not
be done. Even when it was commanded that he, his sons, and his servants should be
circumcised, he fulfilled that commandment, but he did not address his fellow-men
prophetically on this subject. That Abraham induced his fellow-men to do what is
right, telling them only his own will [and not that of God], may be learnt from
the following passage of Scripture: “For I know him, because he commands his sons
and his house after him, to practise righteousness and judgment” (Gen. xix. 19).
Also Isaac, Jacob, Levi, Kohath, and Amrarn influenced their fellow-men in the same
way. Our Sages, when speaking of prophets before Moses, used expressions like the
following: The bet-din (court of justice) of Eber, the bet-din of Methushelah, and
in the college of Methushelah; although all these were prophets, yet they taught
their fellow-men in the manner of preachers, teachers, and pedagogues, but did not
use such phrases as the following: “And God said to me, Speak to certain people
so and so.” This was the state of prophecy before Moses. But as regards Moses, you
know what [God] said to him, what he said [to the people], and the words addressed
to him by the whole nation: “This day we have seen that God doth talk with man,
and that he liveth” (Deut. v. 21). The history of all our prophets that lived after
Moses is well known to you; they performed, as it were, the function of warning
the people and exhorting them to keep the Law of Moses, threatening evil to those
who would neglect it, and announcing blessings to those who would submit to its
guidance. This we believe will always be the case. Comp. “It is not in the heavens
that one might say,” etc. (ibid. xxx. 12); “For us and for our children for ever”
(ibid. xxix. 28). It is but natural that it should be so. For if one individual
of a class has reached the highest perfection possible in that class, every other
individual must necessarily be less perfect, and deviate from the perfect measure
either by surplus or deficiency. Take, e.g., the normal constitution of a being,
it is the most proper composition possible in that class; any constitution that
deviates from that norm contains something too much or too little. The same is the
case with the Law. It is clear that the Law is normal in this sense; for it contains
“just statutes and judgments” (Deut. iv. 8); but
“just” is here identical with “equibalanced.”
The statutes of the Law do not impose burdens or excesses as are implied in the
service of a hermit or pilgrim, and the like; but, on the other hand, they are not
so deficient as to lead to gluttony or lewdness, or to prevent, as the religious
laws of the heathen nations do, the development of man’s moral and intellectual
faculties. We intend to discuss in this treatise the reasons of the commandments,
and we shall then show, as far as necessary, the justice and wisdom of the Law,
on account of which it is said: “The Law of God is perfect, refreshing the heart”
(Ps. xix. 8). There are persons who believe that the Law commands much exertion
and great pain, but due consideration will show them their error. Later on I will
show how easy it is for the perfect to obey the Law. Comp. “What does the Lord thy
God ask of thee?” etc. (Deut. x. 12); “Have I been a wilderness to Israel?”
(Jer. ii. 31). But this applies only to the noble ones; whilst wicked, violent, and pugnacious
persons find it most injurious and hard that there should be any divine authority
tending to subdue their passion. To low-minded, wanton, and passionate persons it
appears most cruel that there should be an obstacle in their way to satisfy their
carnal appetite, or that a punishment should be inflicted for their doings. Similarly
every godless person imagines that it is too hard to abstain from the evil he has
chosen in accordance with his inclination. We must not consider the Law easy or
hard according as it appears to any wicked, low-minded, and immoral person, but as
it appears to the judgment of the most perfect, who, according to the Law, are fit
to be the example for all mankind. This Law alone is called divine; other laws,
such as the political legislations among the Greeks, or the follies of the Sabeans,
are the works of human leaders, but not of prophets, as I have explained several
times.