The Torah describes the remarkable events that preceded the revelation at Mount Sinai: "Moses led the people out of the camp towards God, and they stood at the bottom of the mountain." (Exodus 19:17)

The Torah is much more than a moral guidebook.

The midrash interprets the phrase "bottom of the mountain" quite literally: the people were standing not at the foot of the mountain, but underneath it.

"The Holy One held the mountain over them like a bucket and warned them: If you accept the Torah - good. And if not - here you will be buried!" (Shabbat 88a)

Would it not have been preferable for the Jewish people to accept the Torah from their own free will? Why does the midrash teach that they were forced to accept it?

Limits to Free Will

It is essential that we have the ability to choose between right and wrong. This is how we develop and refine our ethical faculties. However, there are limitations to our free will.

Not everything is subject to freedom of choice. Free will itself is an integral part of life and is beyond our control. We are not free whether to choose or not. We must make a choice. We decide what to choose, where to go, which path to take. But the necessity to choose, like life itself, is forced upon us.

If the Torah was simply a manual for making good ethical decisions, it would be appropriate for Israel to be free to accept or reject the Torah. The Torah would belong to the realm of free will, and the fundamental decision to accept and follow the Torah would need to be made freely, without coercion.

But the Torah is much more than a moral guidebook. The Torah expresses our inner essence. When we violate the Torah's teachings, we become estranged from our own true selves. For this reason, the Torah needed to be given to Israel in a compulsory act, just as the very basis of free will is placed upon us without our consent.

Supporting the World

The corollary to this truth is that the Torah is not the private possession of the people of Israel, nor is Israel a private entity unconnected with the other nations of the world. Within the inner core of creation, all is

The Torah is not the private possession of the people of Israel, nor is Israel a private entity unconnected with the other nations.

interconnected and interrelated. The Universe mandates the existence of the Torah and its acceptance by Israel.

Why did the midrash use the image of an immense mountain dangling overhead as a metaphor for the inevitability of Matan Torah?

Mount Sinai merited a unique position on that decisive day. The mountain represented all of creation; it became the universe's center of gravity. Mount Sinai absorbed the quality of universality and was permeated with the force of inevitable destiny. It represented the impossibility of life, or any aspect of existence, without Israel accepting the Torah.

The Jewish people made their stand under the mountain. Like Atlas, they supported an entire universe that was concentrated within the mountain held over their heads. "If you accept the Torah, good" - for then you will have been faithful to your true essence, the truth of your very existence. "And if not, here you will be buried" - for the entire universe will rise up against you, just as you have rebelled against your true selves.

[Adapted from Ein Eyah vol. IV, p. 191]