LEVITICUS 26:03-27:34
RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
"Grime and Punishment"
This week's parasha ends the Book  of Leviticus. If there has been a
recurring motif in this book it has been  "Kedoshim Tih'yu--You shall be
holy." We have discussed in d'vrai Torah the  many ways of achieving
holiness, spirituality and a set-aside feeling. In  this Parasha
Bechukotai, translated as "My decrees," we read how God  promised
blessings if we work toward holiness and promised curses if we do  not.
These curses, called "tochachah" (admonitions) are so horrendous that  in
many traditional synagogues they are whispered when the Torah portion  is
read. An abridged version of the blessings and curses are repeated  in
Deuteronomy Chapter 11. This makes up part of the Shema prayer  in
traditional sidurim (prayer books), but has been deleted from some liberal  prayer books.
The liberal movements do not adhere to the traditional  notion of reward
and punishment by God. They do accept the idea of God as the  true
judge. They acknowledge that His judgment is not always  understandable or
discernible. We know that bad things do happen to good  people. We also
know that good things happen to bad people. However, how to  we know who
is truly bad and who is sincerely good? Those judgments are  better left
to God. We as Jews are correctly taught not to judge our  fellows.
The emotional "grime" in which we find ourselves wallowing  is
punishment enough for those of us who have drifted away from  holiness.
Our Midrash says in Deuteronomy Rabbah 2:12 that "the gates of  repentance
are always open." Psychiatrist Carl Jung wrote in his  "Collected
Letters" (Vol. I, page 162) that "no one who is a Jew can become a  human
being without knowing that he is a Jew, since this is the basis  from
which he can reach out to a higher humanity." In other words, the joy  of
living justly is its own reward. 
As Jews who have a code of ethics to
follow, the guilt that we  feel inside when we ignore our mandate is
punishment enough. As King David  said in Psalm 16:07 "I bless God who is
my counselor, but in the night, my  inmost self instructs me." The authors
of the Torah and our great sages can  only teach us. It is we who must
study, choose and follow. Even for those who  wish to live their lives
without divine ethical guidance, at some point will  understand the verse
from Genesis 4:10, "Your brother's blood is calling out  from the ground." 
When that realization comes to one who has lived with  little
spirituality, it is tochachah enough. That person is ready for the  teshuvah of  Jewish Spiritual Renewal.
If God had not commanded us  to obey His mitzvoth would we have an
ethical imperative to behave properly?  We know the concept of the seven
Noahide Laws from Genesis that all men are  commanded to obey. They
parallel the Ten Commandments minus Shabbat and  honoring one's parents.
The "God laws" are combined. Are these ethics  independent of Halakah
(Jewish law)? And are ethics built into our system of  Jewish laws? Many
traditional views say "no." We do as God commands and if  ethical
behavior is a benefit, fantastic. The liberal Jewish view however  gives a
resounding "yes" to both questions. 
On the seal of my Alma  Mater, the University of Pennsylvania, it is
written, "Leges sin more vanae,"  laws without morals are vanity. Since
the Torah does allow us to drink wine  and eat certain meat, does this mean 
we are allowed to be drunkards and  gluttons? Maimonides clearly says that
there must be an ethic independent of  the Torah as we must abstain or do
in moderation those things that Torah did  not expressly forbid.
There is a command of: "and you shall do what is right and  good in the eyes of God." 
Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah talks numerous times in  the Talmud of the
value assigned to doing good outside of the context of  a specific
mitzvah. As spiritual Jews we do not do good for the sake of  a reward. We
do it because it is the right and moral thing to  do.
 When we do something not good we do teshuvah (repentance,  returning,renewal). This is not because we
are afraid of the curses we read  in this week's portion, but because we
each accept voluntarily the moral  imperative to correct our wrongs. We
do not live our lives obsessing over  reward and punishment. 
Our  self-definition from Talmud Bavli Tractate Yevamot  79A sums up our views. We are
"compassionate ones and bestowers of kindness."  We might be eating pork
if we were not commanded not to do so, but we  certainly would not be
committing murder if we were not commanded to not do  so. This is one
reason why the liberal rabbis deleted the verses of  curses and blessings
from their prayer books.
Liberal Jews have  proclaimed themselves to be not bound by ritual
halakah. However, we strongly  embrace the anthropo-mitzvoth. We, as we
discussed a few parashat ago, must  truly love our neighbors as ourselves.
We have an obligation to go beyond the  law when it comes to man-to-man
obligations and  behaviors.
Rabbi Yohanan said in  Talmud Bavli Tractate Bava  Metzia 30B
that Jerusalem in 70 CE was destroyed because people followed "din  Torah"
(the Law of the Torah). He explained that they followed the letter of  the
law, but not the spirit of the law. They did not practice "lifnim  mi
Shurat ha Din" (beyond the letter of the Law).
They were destroyed . It is not just correct for a Jew to do  ritual
minutia while ignoring the plight of those around him. That would  be
keeping to the letter of the law, but not to the spirit. When we  endeavor
to keep to the spirit of the law, we progress toward holiness. We  help
fulfill the theme of Leviticus of Kedoshim Tih'yu (you shall be  holy).
As we have seen above, Jews have an obligation to go beyond the  letter of
the law. Our essence as Jung describes it is to know what it means  to be
a Jew. We have an obligation to study and to reason and not just  to
follow blindly. In Talmud Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin 74A, Rabbi Rava renders  an opinion
concerning the man who was given a choice to "kill or be killed."  Rava
tells the man to allow himself to be killed because "who says your  blood
is redder than his?" The other rabbis agree with Rava even though  no
scripture is quoted. This is referred to a "s'vara," literally  reasoning.
Jewish reasoning, as Rabbi Y. Etshalom writes, "is the reasonable  result
of ethical and religious norms inculcated in Jewish culture and  society."
Jewish tradition has always respected and valued life for its own  sake.
It is not just enough to be right; we must be good. We must not  only
follow the mitzvoth outlining our behaviors toward our fellows, we  must
go beyond them.
The Ba'al Shem Tov, founder of the Chassidic  movement, wrote, "For the
want of the thing that you lack is in the  indwelling Glory. For man is
a part of God, and the want that is in the part  is in the whole, and the
whole suffers the want of the part. Therefore, let  your prayer be
directed to the want of the Whole." 
When we are connected to the Divine
Presence by holy acts, we  are dwelling with God. The word for this
presence, the Sheckinah, comes from  the Hebrew shin-kuf-nun (to dwell).
When we do our best to strive for holy  spirituality we bring forth the
Ruach Kodesh, the Holy  Spirit.
 The ultimate enlightenment of humanity is
when we all  act compassionately and lovingly toward one another according
to Rabbi Aryeh  Kaplan. This is when God will "pour out His Holy Spirit on
all flesh" (Joel  2:28). Please note that the idea of the Holy Spirit is
not Christian in  origin. It is a Jewish concept borrowed by St. Paul (Rabbi
Saul) in his  development of the theology of the Godhead.
So from where do our  blessings come? Where should we place our hope?
Jeremiah in chapter 17, verse  13 from this week's Haftarah gives us
the answer. "The Hope of Israel [Mickve  Israel] is God." He teaches us
not to depend of our fellow frail man's ways  but to trust in God's
teachings. In a later verse (17:14) we read what has  become a prayer in
our Amidah "Heal me, God, and I will be
healed; save  me, and I will be saved."
Some of the first Jews who came to what is now the State of  Georgia, USA, in 1733,
placed their faith in God. They believed that they  were
partners with God. They named their Congregation Mickve Israel,  the
Hope of Israel. It is the third oldest congregation in the USA in  Savannah, GA.
We ask God to help us, but we must also help ourselves. We  ask
God to heal us, but we must also heal ourselves. We ask God to grant  us
"rain in our season" (Lev. 26:04), but we must plant the seeds. We  are
the ones that are God's co-workers in Tikun Olam, the repair of  the
world.
By striving to do justice, do good deeds, act  kindly and lovingly, with
hope and trust in God, we hopefully will avoid the  tochachah's disasters
described in this parasha.
"Chazak! Chazak!  Venitchazeik! Be Strong! Be Strong! and May We All  Be
Strengthened!"
Shabbat Shalom,
RABBI ARTHUR  SEGAL
Get fantasy football with free live scoring. Sign up for FanHouse Fantasy Football today.
