EXODUS 21:01 TO 24:18
RABBI ARTHUR L. SEGAL
"LAW AND ORDER"
There are many times when I remember to be proud  of being Jewish and of
our vast traditions. Reading this parasha brings me to  one of those
exceedingly proud moments. Only two or so months have passed  after our
first  Pesach, and we are taught by Moses rules of societal  behavior in the
middle of the Sinai wilderness
As modern Jews we  harken back to the original late 1800 Pittsburgh platform of the  first liberal movement
making the ritual laws of ''man to God''  optional, but keeping and doing the
mitzvoth of the ''man to man'' laws.  While debate is certainly open to whether one should or should not obligate him  or herself in all of God's mitzvoth, there is no doubt that our  anthromorphic mitzvoth were far ahead of their time.  In an electric letter  received from
Rabbi Fred Davidow of Atlanta, he states, "As a general rule,  Reform
Judaism would consider all the mitzvoth involving ethics and morals to  be
binding." This parasha is chock full of these ''man to man'' laws. Most  of
them today, in one form or another, form the basis of  Western
democracies. We as modern Jews therefore might do well to study  this
portion carefully.
All of these laws today are studied and  discussed in our Talmud. I urge
you to read through a tractate or two.  Perhaps you will obtain the desire to  study Talmud. You will see  that
Judaism was always a living religion and a way of life subject  to
interpretation and adaptability over time and place. Many of these  pasuks
(verses) are discussed in volumes in our great rabbinic  literature.
Questions pondered in the Gemora section of the Talmud are  intense.
In Ex 21:23-24, does "life for a life, eye for an eye" mean  that
literally or do we mean monetary compensation? In Ex 22:24, when  the
Torah says we should not charge interest for our loans, and not to  pay
interest on loans, is it "kosher" to invite your loan officer to  your
home for dinner? If there are so many laws that have the death  penalty
as punishment, why does the Talmud say that a court that issues a  death
penalty more than once in seventy years is a "bloody"  court?
Before one can even begin to understand these laws or to undertake  an
acceptance of these man to man ethical laws, we need to ask "why."  Why
"should" we do good to our fellow man? Why can't we steal if we  can
overpower another? Why aren't our individual lives more important  than
another's? The answer lies subtly in the parasha of last  week,
specifically in the order of the Ten Utterances.
Before we can  do good to our fellow man, we must accept God as the
creator and true judge  of all. If good and evil are separated from God,
they become no more than  personal opinion. We have seen too often in
history that God without ethics  and ethics without God has led to evil.
So the first three commandments  command us to know and love God. 
In the 1,000-year-old text "Duties of the Heart," which reads as new  today as
any self-help book, Rabbi Bachya Ibn Paquda,  of Spain, develops his logical syllogism on
the belief in God as  the creator of all. Hence we are all His children,
and by doing good with our  trained hearts, we are doing God's will.
Without God, no act is holy. With  God, all of our acts can be made holy
and can help us get closer to God and  develop our own spirituality.
The fourth commandment is about Shabbat. It  is a gift  from God. Granted,
historically, we know that the  Babylonians set aside special days of the
month on their lunar calendar (the  7th, 14th, 19th, 21st, and 28th
days). They could not cook foods, ride in a  chariot, discuss work or
politics, reveal oracles, or heal the sick. These  were not Shabbats, not
days of rest, but unlucky days to do the above  mentioned tasks. If we do
not love and accept God, we will not accept this  gift of our Jewish
Shabbat. And if we do not love ourselves to take time out  for rest and
our OWN soul's nourishment, how can we love another and do good  for
another?
The fifth commandment is to honor our parents.  
Can a person with self-hate, who doesn't believe in God,
truly honor his mother and father? And can a 
person, who has no love  for his parents, truly love strangers and see
them as brothers and sisters of  the same Holy Parent? Is this why these first
five commandments are presented  before the last five, which deal with
relations  between man and  man?
Rabbi Samson Hirsh, a Frankfurt nineteenth-century scholar (and no  friend
of the German Reform movement), wrote that Torah (tav, vav, reish,  hey)
comes from the root word "to conceive" (hey, reish, hay). He says that  the goal
of Torah is to plant God's words in our minds and hearts so that we  can
cultivate them and manifest them in our good deeds. He says we  must
accept God outwardly and bring Him inside of us so that we can  produce
good deeds outside. He was in battle with the ethical humanists of  his
time, who cast off God given proscribed behaviors, and wanted to  develop
moralistic personalities from inside.
The role of Mishpat,  from our parasha Mishpatem, is the performance of
justice. The performance of  justice is not just a divine occupation. The
world without justice  (tzaddakah) is rebelling against what Locke called
Natural Law. When we  perform acts of justice, we become a partner with
God in doing Tikun Olam  (repairing the world). We therefore are all
elohim (dispensers of justice).  "Every judge who judges with complete
fairness even for a single hour, is as  though he had become a partner to
the Holy One, in Creation" (Talmud Bavli  Tractate Shabbat  10A). 
When we do good deeds to our fellow  man, and follow the ethics in the
Torah that we as liberal Jews embrace, we  help bring the Shechinah (God's holy Presence)  into
the world, a  Midrash teaches. Man has the capability of bringing the
divine presence of  God into each of our hearts by treating our fellow
humans justly and with  love. 
The writers of the Kabbalah (Isaac Luria et al.), described ten  sefirot
(countings, levels) of God's nature that if would be nice if we  achieved
for ourselves. The sefirah of judgment (din), also called  gevurah
(power), represents the fearsome powers of divine punishment and  wrath in
the world. This power, it is posited, is needed to maintain control  over
the universe. This power also contains the seeds of demonic evil,  also
known as the "other side" (sitra ahra). God's name when He dispenses  din
is Elohim. It appears on the left side of the kabbalistic "map."  The
sefirah of chesed (loving kindness or compassion or love), also  called
gedullah (greatness) ,represents the generous, benevolent side of  God,
best shown in man by Abraham. God is known as El or El elyon when  he
shows chesed, and this trait appears on the right side in  kabbalistic
terms. Luria says there are seventy-two bridges of chesed.
The  right side represents attributes of chakmah (wisdom), chesed (love),
and  nezah (eternity), while the left side represents binah
(understanding), din  (justice), and hod (glory). We can see how the left
side without balance from  the right can lead to evil, while the right
side without the left can lead to  weakness. 
Wisdom seeking, like a cave-dwelling monk without real life understanding,
 is not a Jewish concept. Knowledge without wisdom can lead to  disaster. Too much mercy without
justice leads to anarchy, while too much  justice without mercy leads to
totalitarianism. The middle column brings us  tiferet (beauty) with a
strong foundation (yesod) , leading to a divine crown  (keter), and a
oneness with the Godhead, the Ein Sof, the Unknowable  Infinite. This
middle represents the ideal balance of mercy and justice. This  harmony
the Kabbala teaches is important for the survival of the  universe.
The beauty of this week's parasha is in its combining of  everyday
societal problems with a relationship with God. Judaism takes  the
everyday and makes it holy. We take what some religions consider  profane
and make it divine. The Talmud teaches that it is a sin to be offered  a
new fruit you have never tasted before and refuse it. Our  religion
glorifies relations between husband and wife. And we make holy  our
relationships with one another, when we truly are a Keneset Yisroel,  the
people of Israel, the children of the One God. 
We need, as the saying goes, to think globally but to act locally.
Let's keep our eyes on our own
behaviors instead  of judging our fellow congregants, officers, rabbis, and cantors,  and
let's work to make our own temples, shuls, and synagogues places  where
the  Shechinah  would be happy to dwell.
Shabbat  Shalom,
RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
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