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Thinking
Torah By Rav
Alex Israel – aletal@netvision.net.il 5765 Parshat
Kedoshim 5765: In the Real World The
reader of Parshat Kedoshim finds himself confronted by an entire
kaleidoscope of Jewish law. It would seem that no topic remains
untouched; the variety and scope is astounding. No area of human
existence is left unexamined. Every sphere of life has its directive and
regulation which give it unique shape and form and transform a mundane
existence into a particularly Jewish mode of living. As we read each new
verse, we move from topic to topic - from idolatry to social welfare,
from the prohibition of acts of vengeance to the banning of clothing
woven from wool and linen; tattoos, respect for the elderly, the strict
outlawing of communication with the dead - are but a few of the varied
areas covered in our weekly portion. The Torah lurches effortlessly from
subject to subject as if this series
of directives were a flowing narrative. The
reader will ask the question, what binds this eclectic collection of
laws together? What gives this narrative shape and form? The Midrash has
an answer. The Midrash is drawn to the unusual introduction to Kedoshim.
The text stresses that the laws of Kedoshim were spoken to a gathering
of the entire nation. (This phrase appears only one other occasion in
the Bible Ex. 12:1 with the law of the Paschal Lamb): “
The Lord spoke to Moses saying: speak to THE ENTIRE ISRAELITE COMMUNITY
and say to them: You shall be holy...” (19:1) Why
was the entire nation convened in a mass gathering for this particular
group of laws? TEN
COMMANDMENTS “Rabbi
Chiya taught: This section was taught as a public gathering because the
central principles of the Torah are based on it. Rabbi
Levi said : The Ten Commandments are contained in this section: “I
am the Lord your God” and here “I am the Lord your God” (19:2 and
v.26) “You
shall not have other gods” and
here, “Do not make for yourselves any image”(19:4) “God’s
name in vain” and here, “Do not swear falsely in My name” (19:7) “Remember
the Shabbat” and here, “Keep my Sabbaths” (19:3) “Honour
your father and mother” and here, “Each person should fear their
mother and father” (19:3) “Do
not murder” - “Do not stand idly over the blood of your
fellow”(19:16) “Do
not steal” - “Do not steal” (19:11) “Do
not commit adultery” - “Do not make prostitute your daughter”
(19:29) “Do
not bear false witness against your fellow” - “Do not tale-bear”
(19:11) “Do
not covet” - “You shall love your neighbour as yourself”
(19:18)” [1] The
parallel between our parsha and the Ten Commandments is striking but
what does it all mean? The mass assembly of the nation brings to mind
images of the revelation at Sinai when the entire nation “came forward
and stood at the foot of the mountain, the mountain ablaze with flames
to the very sky...and the Lord spoke to you out of the fire...”[2]. But
it is unlikely that the focus here is on the experiential dimension of
the Sinai revelation. Rather, it would seem that the Torah here is
interested in the content of the revelation. The Ten Commandments are
being repeated here in a new form, with fresh applications relating to
all the complexities of day to day life. Why repeat the Ten Commandments
in a new expanded form? Because the great principles which were given
amidst fire and cloud must translate themselves into regulations which
guide our every step in the prosaic rhythm of the everyday.
We do not require a Sinai to experience the Ten Commandments. The
Ten Commandments are for life. We experience them on a regular basis
through our dedicated adherence to Jewish law, an entire code for living
which touches every sphere of human activity.
If
there is one feature of Parshat Kedoshim which would be able to act as
its "hallmark", I would suggest that it is this all
encompassing, very typically Jewish approach to religion. Judaism
celebrates life. It infiltrates and regulates the way that the ordinary
person lives. It has laws that impact every action and thought, every
lifestyle decision and business action. But
the big question is how this relates to Kedusha. How are all these
"worldly laws related to a life of sanctity? GHOSTS
AND SPIRITS. It
is puzzling that a single law, not particularly striking at the outset,
makes a threefold appearance in Parshat Kedoshim. It is a law that warns
us against spiritual clairvoyance. “Do
not turn to ghosts and do not inquire of familiar spirits to be defiled
by them; I am the Lord your God. You shall rise before the aged and show
deference to the old...” (19:30-31) “If
any man turns to ghosts and familiar spirits and strays after them, I
will set My face against that person and cut him off from his people”
(20:6) “A
man or woman who has a ghost or a
familiar spirit shall be put to death ... The Lord said to Moses: Speak
to the priests, the sons of Aaron...” (20:27-21:1) Why
is this law singled out for repetition? Is it a problem of such epic
proportions that we need to be warned about it not twice but three
times? First,
a definition of these practices would be useful. Rashi defines these
practices as methods of connecting with the dead. The “Ov” is a
practice whereby one raises the spirit of the dead in order to know what
the future holds. The spirit will talk from inside the body of the
performer of this rite. The second practice (Yidoni) has a similar
objective but here a bird’s bone is inserted into the mouth and the
spirit of the dead will speak from the mouth. Why
does the Torah oppose these practices so vehemently? The immediate
reason is clear. They are part and parcel of the pagan idolatrous
culture of Canaan. This culture is antithetical to the monotheistic
atmosphere that represents Israel and the Torah. These practices are
therefore outlawed. But
an additional comment is worthwhile. Hirsch notes that the command to
respect the elderly is linked to the ban on this practice of necromancy. “The
erroneous conception of these oracles seek ... to lose all their powers
of thought and feeling so that, deprived of all their own senses, they
fall under the power of the oracle giving spirit. ... He does not wish
to place the decision for what he is about to do... under the dictate of
the word of God whose laws for human behaviour are addressed to the
clear wakeful mind nor under the dictates of his own thinking brain...
with all his mental and moral free will. He places the decision for
himself and his acts under the dictates of some dark mysterious power... Rising
before the aged is again the complete positive opposite to this ...
Our text demands rising to ones feet for “Sevah” - an
honourable old age spent in faithfulness to duty, and for “Ziknah”,
maturity of wisdom which has been obtained by the study of Torah... To
experience and wisdom - to the clear circumspect human understanding
which matures with experience, and the spirit of God which speaks out of
the Torah - are we to pay tribute and when we meet their
representatives, in “old men” and “wise men”, we are to show our
homage by rising and giving honour to them. ....But this is the opposite
of the ‘ghost and the spirit’.” Here
Rabbi Hirsch sees the elderly as the answer to the desire to seek advice
from the spirits. The elderly will give superior advice. Likewise the
Midrash on 21:1 (noting the mention of clairvoyance adjacent to the laws
of priests) sees the priests as the appropriate address for ones’
religious and spiritual quest, the preferred alternative to necromancy. Man
has always been intrigued by the future. Man wants to know that the
future will bring success and comfort and he consults with the dead in a
moment of crisis because he imagines that the unfettered soul has a
clearer view of his destiny than he has. In the Bible , King Saul
consults with one of these oracles. He is about to go to war and he
feels that he cannot fight without some knowledge of the war’s outcome
(see I Samuel Ch.30). But in the realistic practical view of Judaism
there is no place for this. Man’s destiny is determined by him, and
him alone. His actions - in the real world -make him what he is. Do we
attempt to determine our future by seeking the spirits, or do we work on
changing our lives from within, by slow, painful self-transformation? DEATH
AND DEFILEMENT “Many
religions view the phenomenon of death as a positive spectacle, inasmuch
as it highlights and sensitises religious consciousness and
‘sensibility.’ They therefore sanctify death and the grave because
it is here that we find ourselves on the threshold of transcendence, at
the portal of the world to come. Death is a window filled with light,
open to an exalted, supernal realm. Judaism, however, proclaims that
coming into contact with the dead precipitates defilement. Judaism
abhors death, organic decay and dissolution. It bids one to choose life
and sanctify it. Authentic Judaism as reflected in Halakhic thought sees
in death a terrifying contradiction to the whole of religious life.
Death negates the entire magnificent experience of halakhic man. ‘“I
am freed from the dead” (Ps 88:6) - when a person dies he is freed of
the commandments’ (Shabbat 30a) ....
The task of the religious individual is bound up with the performance of
commandments, and this performance is confined to this world, to
physical, concrete reality, to clamorous, tumultuous life, pulsating
with exuberance and strength. Therefore holiness need keep itself far
away from death.” (Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveichik. Halachik Man.
pg.31-33) Necromancy
is designated as that which defiles. Why? Because it is an attempt to
provide an answer to life by seeking out the dead. But we shall see that
Parshat Kedoshim bears the hallmark of ‘kedusha’-holiness, and it is
its “this-worldly” orientation which enables Parshat kedoshim to
provide a recipe for holiness. HOLINESS
REDEFINED At
first glance, the heading of our parsha would seem somewhat misplaced.
For a parsha so involved in the routine acts of life, we find the
unlikely heading of “holiness”. “”You shall be holy” is the
very opening line of our parsha and also its concluding verse.
“
The Lord spoke to Moses saying: speak to the entire Israelite community
and say to them: You shall be holy, for I, the Lord your God, am
holy.” (19:1-2) And
at its conclusion: “You
shall be holy to Me for I the Lord am holy, and I have set you apart
from the other peoples to be Mine.”(20:26) Usually,
holiness is seen is the result of withdrawal from the treadmill of
everyday life and society, the exclusive reserve of a pious elitist
group. The hermit can be holy hidden from the world and its polluting
influences, the reclusive monk, the frail old scholar bent over his
books. But Judaism gives a very different presentation of the road that
leads to the holy life. The Halakha - Jewish Law - celebrates life in
all its colourful diversity. Judaism invented the concept of
“a society of priests and a holy nation”(Exodus 19:5) by
viewing the world - every area of life - as having the potential to be
sanctified. The Halakha sets as its goal to infuse every action with the
sacred. Agriculture, commerce, family life, sexuality, clothing, can all
become connected with the Godly. Holiness is not an escape from the
world; it is in the very fibre of life. In the words of Rav Kook, we do
not view the world and society as a Godless wasteland, vacant of
spiritual content. Rather, we define our world as “not yet holy.”
[3] THE
BOOK OF VAYIKRA The
theme that we have outlined is essential to the thrust of central lesson
of the Sefer Vayikra. Up
to this point, the Sefer Vayikra has concerned itself with ritual
procedure and definition. Maybe a quick summary would be useful
CHAPTER
TOPIC A.
1-7 Laws
of sacrifices (korbanot) B.
8-10 Ceremonial
inauguration of the Sanctuary C.
11 Kosher(pure)
and Non-Kosher(impure) animals D.
12-15
Laws of ritual purity and the body : Bodily emissions, leprosy. E.
16
The service of Yom Kippur in the Sanctuary F.
17
The prohibition of sacrifices outside the temple G.
18 Prohibited
sexual relationships H.
19-20
Parshat Kedoshim I.
20-27 Laws
of festivals, slaves, sabbatical years etc. The
first half of Sefer Vayikra (A-E) deals with holiness as it regards the
sanctuary itself; what sacrifices are offered in the temple etc. Even
the laws of purity and impurity are integrally connected to the theme of
the Temple in that the impure are barred from entering its doors. The
Yom Kippur service too (E) instructs the Kohanim in their service within
the Temple but tells little of what might go on outside the Mishkan. But
we shall see that from Chapter 18 onwards, Sefer Vayikra changes its
focus. It begins to orientate itself to ordinary life with all its
weaknesses: Sexual impropriety, corruption, greed, paganism. It begins
to formulate a code for achieving holiness, not only inside the sacred
walls of the sanctuary, but in the towns and fields, the offices and
living rooms, in the boardrooms and the bedrooms of the Jewish people.
In the second half of Sefer Vayikra, when a law is addressed to the
Kohanim (priests,) it concerns their life outside the sanctuary and not
within it. The laws of the Sabbatical year sanctify our fields, the laws
of festivals sanctify our time. Sefer
Vayikra teaches us a vital lesson. In the kabbalistic phrase: “There
is no place where God’s presence cannot be found”. Or in the words
of the chassidic Rebbe of Kotzk: “Where
is God? - Wherever you let him enter.” MOSES
AND THE ANGELS We
will conclude with one fascinating Midrash. The Midrash describes Moses
ascending to the upper world to receive the Torah on behalf of the
Jewish people. He arrives and presents himself before the angels. They
turn to God in indignation. “What
business has one born of woman amongst us? That secret treasure.... Thou
desirest to give it to flesh and blood?” The
angels are outraged. Hs God waited with his Torah so long to give it to
a mere mortal, with all his weaknesses, passions and contradictions? God
tells Moses to argue his case. Moses answers by quoting the Ten
Commandments. He quotes “I am the Lord ... who brought you from the
Land of Egypt” and turns to the angels: “Did
you go down to Egypt? were you enslaved?”. He quotes “Remember the
Sabbath day” and asks the angels, “Do you perform work that you need
to rest? “Do not murder. Do not commit adultery. Do not steal.” He
asks the angels: “Does jealousy exist amongst you? Do you have a
desire, an inclination towards any
of these things?” [4] And
the angels conceded. The
Torah is given to humans “born of woman ... flesh and blood” with
all our inner contradiction and weakness. But the Torah was not designed
for angels. It is written for real people. It is given to us, and if it
is given to us, then it is possible for us to perform its laws and to
realise its vision. Our role is to use it as our guide to make the world
a little better, to make the world a little more holy. YOM
HASHOAH Maybe
at this point it is worthwhile to add a comment about Yom Hashoa. This I
will do with a quote from one of my mentors, Rabbi Immanuel Jakobovits
z”l. In reference to commemoration of the Shoah, he remarked. “Of
course the Holocaust and its victims, together with their historic
legacy, must be remembered for ever with supreme reverence … But at
the same time we must beware against breeding a Holocaust mentality of
morose despondency among our people especially our youth.
Would it not be a catastrophic perversion of the Jewish spirit if
brooding over the Holocaust were to become a substantial element in the
Jewish purpose, and if the anxiety to prevent another Holocaust were to
be relied upon as an essential incentive to Jewish activity? …The
slogan “Never again!”, now so popular, is a poor substitute for
purposeful Jewish living as a potent driving force to promote Jewish
vitality. We exist not in order to prevent our own destruction but to
advance our special assignment, embodying the ageless values which are
our raison d’etre.” (Leeyla
Magazine no.25 April 1988) Marking
Yom Hashoah, and remembering those who were murdered, condemning the
murderers is vital. However, our primary energy, our orientation must be
not to focus on the past, the killing and the death, but rather to
rebuild, to generate new life, and to live the richness of our Judaism
with persistence and dedication. The rebuilding of our nation, our Torah
and its institutions, our community, our land; that is the greatest
memorial that there can be to the dead of the Shoah. Shabbat
Shalom ___________________________ [1]
Vayikra Rabba 24:5 [2]
Deuteronomy 4:11 [3]
Orot Hakodesh I pg. 143-145. This phrase (not yet holy) is the invention
of Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm. See his “Faith and Doubt” pg. 73-74. [4]
Talmud Shabbat 88b
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