PERSPECTIVES → SECOND THOUGHTS Issue 836 · November 18, 2020

David and Jonathan

They lived in parallel universes, each with its own function: Rav Feinstein deepened the knowledge of Torah, while Rabbi Sacks broadened the knowledge of Torah

David and Jonathan

 

Eich naflu gibborim, lamented King David in Shmuel II 1:19 upon learning of the death of his good friend Jonathan, and King Saul: “How the mighty have fallen!” This verse came to mind when I learned that we Jews had lost our own David and Jonathan within a 24-hour period: Rav Dovid Feinstein and Rabbi Jonathan Sacks.

These two would be the first to decry any comparison between them and the Biblical David and Jonathan, but the confluence of their names and their almost simultaneous departure from This World cannot go unnoticed.

Each of these two giants of modern Jewish life spoke to his own unique constituency. If one needed a Torah spokesman to address a secular Jewish or non-Jewish audience, one would call on former British Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, who would invariably deliver a brilliant and eloquent insight into the relevance of Torah for our day. And if one needed an answer to a complex halachic issue, a sense of direction as how to behave halachically in a non-halachic world, one would call on Rav Feinstein. Rav Feinstein was schooled by his world-renowned father, Rav Moshe Feinstein, and was himself a profound student of the intricacies and subtleties of the entire Talmud and its application to contemporary living. Rabbi Sacks was a university educated and erudite commentator of modern life, and could as easily cite Shakespeare as he could, l’havdil, Rambam. Rav Feinstein spoke to the committed and learned Jew, bringing him ever closer to the thinking of the Sages as to how to negotiate life in today’s world. Rabbi Sacks spoke both to the committed and non-committed, Jewish and non-Jewish, who lived in and were influenced by the secular world around them, and was able to help such individuals appreciate the message of classical Judaism. They lived in parallel universes, each with its own function: Rav Feinstein deepened the knowledge of Torah, while Rabbi Sacks broadened the knowledge of Torah.

In their personal lives, each of them embodied the finest in Jewish tradition. Rav Feinstein was the very model of wisdom and self- effacing humility, constantly ready to lend a helping hand to those in need of material or spiritual assistance. Rabbi Sacks, always available to those who needed his counsel, was the very model of an intellectual leader: morally courageous yet understanding, visionary yet practical, idealistic yet familiar with the nuts and bolts of daily life.

Continue reading with Mishpacha.

Create a free account to keep reading.

Everything you need to stay close to Mishpacha.
← Previous installment Words Not Heard Next installment → Who Really Lost the Election?