Sometimes Torah is cryptic and hard to understand. Parts of the Book of Leviticus are
inscrutable as we try to put ourselves in the place of an ancient culture and
see how a particular list of animal sacrifices would elevate us and draw us
closer to God (the Hebrew korban,
sacrifice, is derived from the root word k-r-b (karov) for physical proximity, closeness, to draw near). Fortunately, such is not the case with this
week’s double portions of Acharei Mot and Kedoshim. They are pretty straightforward.
We may be familiar with Acharei Mot because we read it on
Yom Kippur; it describes the ritual of the Kohain
Gadol (High Priest) on the first Yom Kippur. It contains the ritual of the original scape
goat, a symbolic receptacle for the sins of the Jewish people. Aaron, having just grieved the death of his
sons for offering an inappropriate offering, is directed to seek atonement
(sometimes interpreted as at-one-ment) for himself, for his own personal
shortcomings, then for those of his family, and only after that could he be
ready to seek atonement for the whole “House of Israel”. This is a pretty awesome responsibility of
leadership at a time of very emotional vulnerability for Aaron.
For those still in synagogue Yom Kippur afternoon in
congregations that read the traditional Torah reading for the Mincha service, you may also be familiar
with the list of prohibited sexual relationships in Chapter 18. There is a connection here between achieving
communal holiness and personal holiness, and connecting to the chapter that
follows, but we’re getting ahead of ourselves a bit, and the holiness is the
important part.
So I asked a panel of experts (my 5th grade
Monday class at B’nai Tzedek) recently (last week) who can makes things holy,
God or humans? We’ve talked before about what is holy; something separate,
distinct, set aside, special. The
predominant answer was, everyone; God and humans can make things holy. To prove them right (adults are not always to
be trusted) I gave them two proof texts, Breisheet (Genesis) 2:3 (“And God blessed the seventh
day and made it holy.”) and VaYikra
(Leviticus) 19:2 (You shall [must] be holy, for I, the Lord you God, am
holy.”).
The text has been leading us this way over the last few
weeks. In Shmini we learned to distinguish ourselves by what we do and do not
eat. If we are concerned about what goes
into us, and if like the popular maxim states, we are what we eat, then what we
fuel ourselves with matters. When we
pause before and after we eat to show gratitude, we also distinguish ourselves
from other consumers. In Tazria and Metzora we learn about times and situations that distinguish
members of our community for temporary exclusion – temporary because Torah
always provides a method to become tahor,
pure again, and rejoin the preferred state of being part of the community.
But Kedoshim
begins with an imperative – You shall [or must, or will] be holy. Children of Israel, you are special. You have to distinguish yourselves by your
behaviors, personal and communal, internal and external. How you behave, what you do, not so much what
you think, matters. What you do inside
your house, outside your house, for yourself (what you eat, who you associate
with) for others matters. Be righteous;
be generous, be fair when you judge.
Take care of your poor. Pay for
the work you have done by others, be kind and sensitive to the differently
abled among you (19:14 – don’t insult the deaf or put a stumbling block before
the blind). Verse 18 leads us to the
pinnacle, the thing we were meant to be modeling all along, that rule that is
golden, the great rabbi Hillel said is the main thing in the Torah, that Robert
Fulghum says we all should have learned in kindergarten: “V’Ahavta l’raiacha Kamokha”
(Love your fellow as yourself).
There are big and easy ways to be holy, and very often we
get to decide. We can make a day holy by
planning a celebration and setting that time aside. We can make an artifact holy by treating it
gently and using it for special occasions.
We make our relationships holy when we treat people well and with
consideration. We make ourselves holy by how we act. How to we respond when a friend is sick, or
we hear bad news. Do we click our
tongues or pick up the phone to ask what we can do? Bullying is in the news – do we disarm the
bully and try to support the victim or do we turn our heads? We can distinguish
ourselves by how we act - we can be holy.
It’s not uniquely Jewish to do these things. We don’t have exclusivity here, but we do
have an imperative – we are commanded to act this way. It is an expectation, it’s what goes in to
being a mensch, and it’s what we want for all of our people, adults and kids.
No comments:
Post a Comment