Parasha Kedoshim: Leviticus 19:01-20:27
Rabbi Arthur Segal
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Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA
"Getting Back to the Garden"
This Torah portion is entitled "Kedoshim." In it we read many of the wondrous man-to-man laws that help define our ethical relationships to one another and thereby form the basis for our civilization's codes of legal and subscribed behaviors. The word kedoshim is translated into English as holy. The root word, however, comes from the Hebrew word that means "set aside." While it is a virtual impossibility for any flesh and blood human to be truly holy, it is certainly possible for each of us to set aside a part of ourselves for holiness.
What is notable in this portion of Leviticus is that there are few priestly rituals listed. As we have seen so far, the sacrificial rituals and the priestly rules have made up the bulk of this third book of the Chumash. We therefore get a broad hint on how to achieve spirituality during our sojourn on earth. We seem to be told that the way to achieve closeness to God is by doing good to our fellow men and treating them with honesty and respect.
In pasuk (verse) 19:18 we read: "you shall love your fellow as yourself - I am God." How can we be commanded to love? What exactly is "our fellow?" Is this mitzvah so important that God had to remind us that He indeed is God? Why did Rabbi Akiva say this is "the great principle of the Torah?" Why did the medieval Jewish mystic
In the 950-year-old text Duties of the Heart, Rabbi Bachya ibn Paquda devotes his 925-page book to the concept of obeying the commandment "to love." Before we can love our fellow, we must accept the other commandment of the love of God. He asks us to understand that whatever we have is a gift, or better stated, a loan from God. We should never lose sight of our love for Him. We must further understand that all humans are God's children and beloved equally by Him. We can reach a conclusion that by loving others, we are helping to repay God for his gifts to us. Since His gifts are really just loans, we are only just in an infinitesimal way beginning to thank God by helping another with our time, resources, energies, and emotions. Can one ever fully thank our Maker for the gift of life itself?
The Hebrew word ray-eh-cha has been translated as your fellow, your friend, or your neighbor. This beautiful mitzvah has been colored by the words preceding it in the first part of the verse. They are, "you shall not bear a grudge against the children of your people." (b'nai amekah). When the verse continues and uses the word rayehcha, are we to believe that this love is just to be directed for our "fellow Jew," or to our "fellow human neighbor" in our earthly home?
One can certainly not speak for God in today's age. Traditionally we believe that our prophets were inspired divinely. They have made it quite clear to us in their writings that God meant by rayehcha, all of our fellow humans, not just our fellow Jews. As Orthodox rabbi and psychiatrist Dr. Abraham Twerski posits, Judaism teaches that spiritual drives are an expression of the neshemah (soul). The Torah states that when God created man, He "breathed the breath of life into him" (Gen. 2:07). The Zohar, the text of the Kabbalah, points out that when one exhales, he or she exhales something from within himself or herself. Thus, God - by breathing a breath of life into man - put something of Himself into each one of us. The human spirit is therefore part of God Himself.
Since God is absolute unity, all souls are one, and all humans are one spirit. Since we are separate individuals we have separate physical bodies, but our souls are attached. In other words, mankind is one in spirit, but many in corporeality. By loving all of our fellow humans, the Zohar teaches, we are striving for the essence of Judaism. We are emphasizing our spiritual soul that would keep us together rather than feeding our physical bodies with pleasures, which keep us apart.
When King Solomon built the
When our rabbis finally wrote the Talmud, 1,000 years in the making, in 500 C.E., the concept of loving equally the Jew and non-Jew was reinterpreted. To some sages, loving your fellow became loving a fellow Jew. Ahavath rayehcha became ahavath
The Torah is very clear in that on a religious level a convert to Judaism is as Jewish as a born Jew. It was assumed in Torah times that when a non-Jewish woman married a Jewish man, she automatically became Jewish, as were her future children. Conversion ceremonies, independent of marriage, first appeared in the post-biblical period. We also see that in Torah law a non-Jew was equal to a Jew and should be loved and treated equally. Judaism via our Torah does not distinguish, on a human level, between those who are Jewish and the non-Jews who live among us. On a religious level the Torah does not distinguish between one who is born Jewish or one who converts either by ceremony or by marriage.
However, by the time our Talmud was put into written form this universality of the prophets was amended in some ways. In 500 C.E. Judaism was in much danger. We were dominated by the
William James once said, "A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudices." Our Talmud - some small parts of which are embarrassing to us now in the third millennium C.E. - has some statements in it that if read out of context can be hurtful not only to others but to ourselves. Both Jews and non-Jews have read the Talmud out of its historical time frame with disastrous results. We need to remember, before continuing, that the Gemorah part of the Talmud records all opinions of the rabbis, not just the ones that became law.
Talmud Bavli Tractate Moed Kattan 17A suggests that if a Jew is tempted to do evil, he should to go to a non-Jewish city where he is not known. Tractate Bava Metzia 114B speaks of Jews being only truly human (designated men) and Tractate Beracoth 58A speaks of having sex with a non-Jewish woman as having sex with a she-ass. Tractate Bava Kamma 37B says that if a Jew's ox gores a Canaanite's ox there is no liability, but if the Canaanite's ox gores a Jew's ox, there is full liability.
The Talmudic rabbis quote Ezekiel 34:31 as their proof that gentiles are not men (adam) as Jews are, because God says that His sheep (Jews) are "men." But when did Ezekiel write? He wrote during the Babylonian captivity, and he was using poetry as a rallying cry to let
We must remember that the Talmud was written during some very tough times for our people. It is a 1,000-year text. There was understandable hatred in many rabbis' hearts for the pagan Romans. Their concern was not against the early Christians. Gentile meant Roman. But as the Talmud, centuries later, found its way into the hands of the church fathers, these statements about gentiles were forced to be amended. Maimonides, in his book on the Talmud, called the Mishna Torah, says it is a religious duty in the Talmud to "eradicate traitors, minnim, and apikorsim" such as the Saducces (who denied the oral law and were against the Pharisees, the forerunners of Rabbinic Judaism), apostates, and followers of Jesus. The Rambam continues "as for gentiles, the basic Talmudic principle is that their lives must not be saved, although it is also forbidden to murder them outright." The Talmud Bavli in Tractate Avodah Zarah 26B expresses this maxim as "gentiles are neither to be lifted out of a well, nor hauled down into it." The beginning of the second millennium when the Rambam wrote was a bellicose time. Writing these pugnacious words in the relative safety of Moorish Spain or Muslim Egypt was the only safe way Maimonides, a Jew, could express his outrage at the wholesale slaughter and discrimination the Church was rendering to his people.
Tractate Bava Metzia says that if a Jew finds a lost object of a gentile it does not have to be returned. Be mindful that all of these quotes are taken out of context. For example, it is a general Talmudic principle that any object that is found that the owner has given up hope of recovery may be kept. Since Jews and non-Jews lived separately, the likelihood of a non-Jew having hope of finding a lost, unidentifiable object in a Jewish town was nil. Hence, the object was attainable by the finder. The Talmud says we should go out of our way to find this gentile and return the object. But as we have seen so many times before, when any group interprets the Torah through their eyes (especially when they say they know the right and only way of interpretation), hurtful behaviors can result. We need to understand always that the Talmud is the work of men who were doing what they thought was best for our people during the tumultuous times it was written. We as modern liberal Jews do not accept the Talmud or the books of the rabbis of the Middle Ages as divine. In Jewish Spiritual Renewal we work on ourselves with God's aid to become the best loving people we can be and use our texts for the parts within them to help us in this direction.
When every word of the Talmud is assumed to be the word of God, certain rabbis can then give license for bigotry. Thank heaven these rabbis are very small in number. Ordained, hateful behavior gets directed not only toward non-Jews, but also to Jews labeled as apikorsim or minnim. These are code words for assimilated or liberal Jews who deny that the Talmud, and works that stem from it (like the Rambam's text), are divine. In Aramaic, "shitta sidhre" means the six orders (sections) of the Mishna (oral law). The term is abbreviated sh's and pronounced shas. Is it any wonder why the Shas party of
As written in traditional Pesach Haggadot, when we open the door at the end of the seder to welcome Elijah, one says in a loud voice, "Pour out Thy wrath upon the Gentiles that know Thee not, and upon the kingdoms that call not upon Thy name, for they have consumed Jacob and laid waste his habitation. Pour out Thy rage upon them and let Thy fury overtake them. Pursue them in anger and destroy them from under the heavens of the Eternal." One can easily see how our Christian neighbors might misunderstand this prayer.
Our Haggadah, codified in Talmudic times, is referring to the Roman pagans who conquered us and sent us into the Diaspora. No wonder the Christian Church in the Middle Ages demanded that we keep our doors open during our seders! The liberal movements deleted this section of the Passover ceremony. What is overlooked is the following fascinating Midrash saying that many first-born Egyptians ran to the
When Baruch Goldstein, on Purim 1994, gunned down 40 Palestinian civilians, including children, he was quoted as saying that his rebbe told him the Talmud said that "all Arabs are dogs." Professor Ehud Sprinzak described Goldstein's and his rebbe's philosophy in a1994 New York Daily News interview. "They believe it is God's will that they commit violence against 'goyem' (non-Jews)." Rabbi Yitzhak Ginsburg declared in a 1989 New York Times interview, "We have to recognize that Jewish blood and the blood of a goy are not the same thing." Rabbi Yaacov Perrin stated in a 1994
"As water reflects a face back to a face, so one's heart is reflected back to him by another." (Prov. 27:19). As related in Talmud Bavli Tractate Shabbat 31A, when Rabbi Hillel was asked to sum up Judaism, he said that the love of one's neighbor was most important. He said the rest of the Torah was commentary that needed to be studied. The Talmud makes it very clear that the Adam and Eve story was to teach us that we all come from the same first man and woman so that no one can say that their ancestors were better than another's. But how do we love another? We begin not by receiving from him, but by giving to him. When you give to another, a part of you becomes incorporated in that other person. He becomes an extension of you!
Rayehcha did mean all fellows even at the time we were being formed as a nation in the wilderness of Sinai. We were a mixed multitude of peoples, not just the children of Jacob. Leviticus 19:33-34 reminds us that we were strangers (ger) in
The thirteenth-century Spanish rabbi, Nachmanides the Ramban, speaks sarcastically of "a boor in the realm of Torah." This boor is a learned and observant Jew who has not violated a single mitzvah but still brings disgrace by misinterpretation. It is clear to so many that love of your rayehcha is a universal decree. There is a Judaic concept, not often taught, of Yirei ha Shem. This idea states that there are other ways to reach God outside of Judaism. Judaism is not the only path to spirituality. The Midrash Rabbah comments on Deuteronomy 34:10, one of the last verses of the Chumash, which says, "And there never again arose a prophet in
God is Infinite. Can any religion really say that they know the true way to God? The twentieth-century physicist, Heisenberg, who was in charge of wartime
A wonderful Midrash asks, "What is the tzelem Elohim, the image of God, in which all humans are made?" It answers that when an ordinary king like the Roman emperor puts his image on a coin, all the coins get minted the same and are therefore identical. But when God, the ultimate Ruler, puts His image on a coin (humans), we each come out differently. God equally loves any religion or way of life that helps one seek holiness and a love for their fellow. For Jews, we have our way, and within our way, we have many ways. All are beloved of God. No one way is better than the next. We do not believe we have the "true" religion. What we do believe is that we need to derive mussar, ethical teachings, from our Torah, so that we can treat all of our fellows with love. As Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan said, "The past should have a vote, not a veto."
Even those who unfortunately misinterpret this d'var to mean love your fellow Jew miss this narrow interpretation as well. The Talmud tells of a horrible tragedy that befell our people during this period of time we now celebrate during the counting of the omer. This is the seven-week period between Pesach and Shavuot, when we were given the Torah on
Every person is in the image of God, b'tzelem Elohem. This is true of anyone of any creed. All of us need to understand this as we are now securely into the third millennium of the Gregorian calendar. Everyone needs, as Rabbi Judith Hauptman has written, "our active monitoring of his or her welfare and protection from discrimination and exploitation." We must be a light for the other nations.
Shabbat Shalom:
Rabbi Arthur Segal
Via Shamash Org on-line class service
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA
Member: Temple Oseh Shalom
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(001) The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal
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In The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality.
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(002) A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud
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A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us.
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(003) Tzadakkah Bundle
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The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal and A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud. Purchase both books as a set, and I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to the tzadakkah of your choice. -- Rabbi Segal
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