Rabbi Yishmael Ben Rabbi Yosse Said: "He Who Studies Torah In Order To Teach Is Given The Opportunity To Study And Teach; And He Who Studies In Order To Practice Is Given The Opportunity To Study And Teach, To Observe And To Practice."
Rabbi Tzadok Said: "Do Not Separate Yourself From The Community, And Do Not Act As A Counselor [When Sitting As A Judge]. Do Not Make It [The Torah] A Crown For Self-Aggrandizement, Nor An Axe With Which To Cut."
So Too Hillel Used To Say: "He Who Exploits The Crown [Of Torah For His Own Ends] Shall Perish."[18] Indeed, You Have Learned From This That Whoever Derives Personal Gain From The Words Of Torah Removes His Life From The World.
The intent is that the Torah should not serve as the means by which one earns one's livelihood.
[19] Over the centuries, however, we see that the Jewish community has always paid salaries to its rabbis and teachers.
In Hilchos Talmud Torah,[20] the Alter Rebbe resolves this issue as follows: A person should never begin studying Torah so that he will be able to earn a salary as a teacher or rabbi. If, however, he begins studying with the proper intention, and then the expenses of his household require him to seek a livelihood, he is permitted to earn a salary based on his Torah knowledge.
We should not look to earn wealth[21] from the study of Torah. Nevertheless, Torah study should not prevent a person from supporting himself and his family.
(Likkutei Sichos, Vol. XX, p. 49-50)
Nevertheless, the Alter Rebbe writes
[22] that even a person who seeks to study Torah for his own aggrandizement should do so, because "A person should always involve himself with the Torah, [even] for a selfish motive. For out of [involvement for] a selfish motive will come involvement for the sake of the Torah itself."
[23]
On a simple level, this means that the study of Torah molds each student's thinking processes to the point that he will eventually devote himself to Torah with a selfless intent. There is, however, the possibility for an extended interpretation. - rendered as "For out of" - can also mean "In the depths of." Regardless of a person's conscious motives, the inner incentive for him to study the Torah and fulfill its mitzvos is always commitment for the sake of the Torah itself.
(Ibid.)
Notes:
- (Back to text) V. supra, 1:13.
- (Back to text) See the commentary of R. Ovadiah of Bartenura and others.
- (Back to text) 4:15.
- (Back to text) Given to us as a wage, in contrast to wealth that comes from G-d.
- (Back to text) Loc. cit.:14.
- (Back to text) Pesachim 50b, Jerusalem Talmud, Chagigah 1:7.