Our Gemara on Amud Beis discusses the derivation and dispute between Rabbi Shimon and the Sages about the walls of the Succah. In one iteration of the discussion, there was an idea that the three verses that mention the word Succah account for three walls of the Succah. Then there is an oral tradition from Sinai about an additional wall - but the dispute between Rabbi Shimon and the Sages was about whether the tradition is to subtract a wall to the number three, hence two walls and a hand breadth, or add a wall to the three, hence three walls and a final hand breadth to make 4. In the conclusion, the Gemara rules that a tradition from Sinai would only come to subtract, not add on.

What is the logic behind the concept that a Halakha Le-Moshe MiSinai would only subtract a wall to the Succah but not add on? The answer to this is connected to an idea we have discussed previously, there is a strong trend within the Oral Torah to be more lenient than the written Torah. The Yismach Moshe (Emor 21) quotes the Arizal as stating that the Written Torah represents Middas Hadin (Divine exacting justice), and the Oral Torah represents Middas HaRachmanus (Divine mercy). Therefore, an oral tradition is more likely to reduce the number of walls required.

To prove this point, I have compiled an extensive list of examples showing how the oral tradition acts as a softening and mitigating factor to the written Torah:

Occasionally the oral law adds on restrictions but that’s only when interpreting parameters for the overall rule such as defining what is an esrog, wine for Kiddush, requirements to effect marriage, divorce and the like. However, the overall trend is toward mitigating the strictness of the literal word. Why is all this important? It is because as consumers of Torah thought it behooves us to understand its psychological and philosophical underpinnings. 

The duality of the Written and Oral Torah is not a random feature. Rather, it represents two streams of emphasis. The written law is a portrayal of an ideal absolute universal, while the oral law embodies the actual and practical. By way of metaphor, there is an idea called a triangle. A pure triangle, that is one that is mathematically perfect, exists only in concept. As a concept, it is pure truth. However, in reality it cannot exist. The most beautiful and perfect pyramid constructed, while close to mathematically perfect, will never actually be mathematically perfect. The mathematical truth has value in that it is a pure universal. The practical truth has value in that it can actually exist in this world. This is a good way of thinking of the difference between the written Torah and the oral Torah.

 

Translations Courtesy of Sefaria, except when, sometimes, I disagree with the translation cool

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