Nitzavim Vayelech 5766 – Gilayon #464
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Parshat Nitzavim-Vayelech
AND A LATER GENERATION, YOUR DESCENDANTS, WHO WILL RISE AFTER YOU, ALONG WITH THE
FOREIGNER WHO COMES FROM A DISTANT LAND, WILL SAY, UPON SEEING THE PLAGUES OF
THAT LAND AND THE DISEASES WITH WHICH THE LORD STRUCK IT: SULFUR
AND SALT HAVE BURNED UP ITS ENTIRE LAND! IT CANNOT BE SOWN, NOR CAN IT GROW
[ANYTHING], NOT [EVEN] ANY GRASS WILL SPROUT UPON IT. IT IS LIKE THEOVERTURNING OF SODOM, GEMORRAH, ADMAH AND ZEBOIIM, WHICH THE LORD OVERTURNED IN
HIS FURY AND IN HIS RAGE. AND ALL THE NATIONS WILL SAY, "WHY DID THE LORD
DO SO TO THIS LAND? WHAT [IS THE REASON] FOR THIS GREAT RAGE
OF FURY?"
(Devarim 29:21-23)
R. Yehudah
son of R. Ila'i said: The Land of Israel burned for
seven years with sulfur and fire, for it is said: Sulfur and salt have
burned up its entire land! In those seven years, God has already collected
[the debt of punishment] from Jeroboam ben Nevat and his companions, so that even Jeroboam ben Nevat and his companions willlive in the Messianic Age. What saved them from the punishment of Gehinom? Burial in the Land of Israel, for it is said: and
His land shall atone for His people.
(Yalkut Shimoni Tehillim 847)
…the main point is in
accordance with RaShBA's interpretation of the verse,
that if the blessed Lord gave [them] the land in order that they uphold His
covenant then, if they transgress it the gift is void. Since the covenant is
void, so is the gift of the land. That is [what they meant when] they said that
when He took them out of Egypt, he established a covenant with them but they
could claim they had been forced ("He held the mountain over them like a
basin") and so the gift is void. That is why He poured His wrath and anger
upon the land alone – unlike the case of Sodom and Gomorrah where the
land's inhabitants were destroyed. Rather, He sent them to another land
so that they would wander and sojourn in strange lands to this very day; that
He had taken them out of Egypt and did not destroy them. Therefore, when they
repent in all the nations, etc. (Devarim 30:1) as when they accepted [the Torah] in the
days of Ahasuerus, then He will return and collect
them from all the peoples (30:3) when it [their acceptance of he Torah] will be with all your heart
(30:2) – without any duress.
(R.
Meir Simha MiDvinsk, Meshekh Hokhma 29:23-24)
You are all standing this day
Gili Zivan
All
of you are standing this day before the Lord, your God the leaders of your
tribes, your elders and your officers, every man of Israel. Your
young children, your women, and your stranger who is within your camp both your
woodcutters and your water drawers. That you may enter the covenant of the Lord, your
God, and His oath, which the Lord, your God, is making with you this day. In
order to establish you this day as His people, and that He will be your God, as
He spoke to you, and as He swore to your forefathers to Abraham, to Isaac, and
to Jaco. But not only with you am I making this
covenant and this oath. But with those standing here with us today before the
Lord, our God, and [also] with those who are not here with us, this day. (Devarim
29,9-14)
Parashat Nitzavim opens with two insights concerning the essence of
human society, or, if you please, they concern two possible ways of looking at
a nation's essence.
The
first point of view is horizontal. It emphasizes the reciprocal
solidarity between the tribal elder and the woodcutter, between the Supreme
Court justice and the fruit-seller at work in his market stall. Therefore, in
order for a nation to enter God's covenant it must create this feeling of
togetherness. The nation's "all of you" must genuinely include
everyone.
The
second viewpoint is vertical. A human society that seeks continuity and
vitality includes in itself not merely those who are present; it also includes
the heritage of those who are absent, of those who are no longer with us
today in the physical sense, but whose insights, whose loves and hatreds, whose
struggles, both successful and failed, all shaped us to make us who we are. In
the same way our values, deeds, and words will – if we like it or not – affect
the coming generations with whom the covenant has already been made in potentia.
This
Shabbat, the eve of Rosh HaShana
5768, I will endeavor to broaden the scope of thought regarding the role of
both these viewpoints for the maintenance of a living and vibrant society, a
society that is capable of committing itself to the covenant and to being His
people.
The
horizontal viewpoint is found in the life of the community, in our ability to be concerned for the
suffering of the "other" in our community. It is expressed in dozens
of halakhot devoted to arranging decent
relations between people. The horizontal viewpoint is expressed in the "we"
feeling, a feeling which, unfortunately, is constantly being drained out of the
increasingly segmented Israeli experience. It calls for the responsibility of
every societal group not only for its own "sector" but also for the
other parts of the Jewish People, including the "strangers" who live
among us (foreign workers, minorities, and all those alluded to by the verse, and
your stranger who is within your camp).
If
we observe the transitional moments in our lives we will find that they always
occur in a public context and that individuals can maintain a Jewish way of
life only as members of the community.
Prof.
David Hartman expressed this well:
As
someone included in the covenant… the Jewish individual is clearly placed
within the community's framework. The covenant was made with the people in its
entirety and not with Jews as individuals. The broad scope in which the
individual finds spiritual self-fulfillment cannot exist in isolation from
political, collective consciousness. (David Hartman, MiSinai
leTzion, pg. 16)
It
is not only commandments such as charity, tithes, gifts to the poor and
exchange of food parcels on Purim, rituals of joy and mourning, and weekday,
Sabbath, and festival prayers that cannot be performed without a community. Rather,
the very meaning of "being a Jew" means, among other things,
consciousness of one's being part of a people. As Hartman puts it, "The
Jew can stand at the foot of Mount Sinai only after he becomes "we" (Hartman, Be'Ayin Tova, pg.
128). And "we"
means the community both in the past as well as in the present.
In
an interview with the editors of the book She'eilot
al Elohim ["Questions Concerning God"
Yizhar Hess and Elazar Shtrum, editors], Hartman describes the foundations of his
religious faith:
I
was brought up in a religious home, in a yeshiva framework and within a
community of people whose very lives gave witness to God's existence. Their
very lives were testimony… I am of the opinion
that you do not begin with ze Eli ve'anveihu [this is my God, and I will make Him a
habitation] but rather with Elohei avi ve'aramemeihu [the God
of my father, and I will ascribe to Him exaltation]. That is to say that
the very existence of the spiritual-communal framework with which you identify
gives testimony to the worship of God. And so, I did not find God in a
particular place on a particular day in a particular corner, or in some
personal mystical experience, but rather within the framework of communal life…
I
have no scientific proof of this [the existence God] or a personal experience
that affirms God's existence. Spiritual life is built on prayers, Shabbat, and
Torah study. This whole framework gives testimony and is significant to me.
This life marks for me the existence of God. (op. cit. pg. 13,
boldface added)
The "community which built its life upon the awareness that there is
something beyond man" (ibid.) expresses this awareness through its way of
life, which is embodied in concrete commandments. The way of life of the Jewish
community serves as witness to its faith in the existence of God (which cannot
be proven scientifically).
Therefore, Hartman claims that "if you want to rehabilitate
religious experience based upon commandments… you must first rehabilitate
communal feeling… .Jewish education fails today
because it is cold and insulated. There is no echoing voice "there"
to make one feel: "I belong to something greater than myself and my
private family" (Hartman in Ayin Tova, pp. 128-9).
Yeshayahu Leibowitz also testified to the role of the
community of believers in fashioning Jewish belief:
I
have a portion in Torah and faith only to the degree that I belong to
collective Israel. I myself lack the drive and the strength to create a new
religion and faith of my own. This religious collective was not created by
elements of faith or by values, since consciousness and volition are
essentially personal, private, subjective, and individual. There is no such
thing as volitional or conceptual collectivities, but a common way of life is
possible. (Yeshayahu Leibowitz, Yahadut, Am Yisrael ve'Medinat Yisrael pg. 20)
Each person's faith choice is personal, but the way of life is created by
the community, by the collectivity known as the People Israel from its
beginning and up to its present modes of expression.
"Collective Israel" a lá Leibowitz is supra-historical and it leads us to the
vertical perspective, which crosses boundaries of time and place.
The horizontal perspective expresses our way of looking at reality, our
values and methods of interpretation in the present which are nourished – both
consciously and unconsciously – by the melodies implanted in us by our fathers
and mothers. That is to say, the
individual is not only part of the living community; he is also part of an
entire culture of traditions and customs into which he was born and in which
his own creations take shape. At the conclusion of his book HaMasa
HaYehudi-Yisraeli, Prof. Avi
Sagi analyzes the Jew's identification with the
Jewish collectivity spanning the generations. In order to clarify his argument
he cites the case of Brother Daniel (Daniel Oswald Rufeisen)
and Judge Zilberg's ruling, which "penetrated
the meaning of Jewish identity" (pg. 242). Brother Daniel was born a Jew and in the Second World War he risked his
life to save his brothers. Later, he converted and became a Christian Monk. After
the war he immigrated to Israel as a Christian monk and asked to be recognized
as a Jew. Judge Zilberg was aware of the fact that halakhically speaking Brother Daniel was a Jew. However, halakhic identity is not sufficient. Judge Zilberg emphasized that in order to be counted as a Jew
Brother Daniel had to be part of the Jewish discourse spanning generations.
…one thing is shared in common by all of the
People [Israel] dwelling in Zion (except for a tiny minority): we do not
disengage ourselves from the historical past and we do not deny our heritage. The
lines of connection differ, the conclusions differ, but we do not stop up the
wells… such and such are the national burden of the Jew in Israel – whether
he is religious, non-religious, or anti-religious, if he likes it or not he is
connected by his umbilical cord to Jewish history: from it he draws his
language and its expressions…
Sagi explains that, "Judge Zilberg's main
claim is that a Jew's Jewish identity depends upon his entry to Judaism's diachronic discourse. Failing to make that entry a person can subjectively identify with the
Jewish collectivity, but he will not be identified as a Jew; that is to say – that
will not make him into a member of the collectivity" (Sagi
pg. 244 boldface added).
It winds up that we are in need of the diachronic discourse (the
inter-generational discourse expressed by the vertical line) as well as of the
synchronic discourse (the discourse of the present community). In order to enter
the Lord's covenant we must cast our eyes empathetically towards
out bothers and sisters while also looking towards the present and future with
the knowledge that our existence and present mindset are rooted in our Jewish
heritage.
I gaze upon Israeli society on the eve of Rosh HaShana 5768 and I do not know which discourse we are
more in need of. If synchronic
discourse is the discourse of concern for the "other," then we have a
long way to go to become a "we." "We" – according to the
opening verses of our parasha – include both those
above and those below the poverty line, both our brothers, members of the
Jewish People as well as the "non-Jews" who live in our midst. It
appears that if we do not hasten to change our modes of thought and action Israeli
society will not endure.
If we glance for a moment towards the diachronic discourse as a necessary
element in Jewish identity, we see here too that many parts of Israeli society
have disengaged from discourse with the sources of our culture, and we must act
in every way possible to revive that discourse, be it through pluralistic batei midrashot,
through the expansion of cultural and media events dealing with past Jewish
materials and their meaning for us, and in every creative way that will join
more Jews to such a living discourse.
Dr. Gili Zivan directs the Yaakov Hertzog Center for Jewish Studies in Kibbutz Ein Tzurim
Righteousness and Justice Are the Base of Your Throne, Steadfast
Love and Faithfulness Stand before You
(Psalms 89:15, Slihot service)
The story is told of King Mumbaz who spent all
of his treasures in years of famine. His brothers told him: Your fathers hid
treasures and increased those of their fathers, whereas you wasted all your
treasures and those of your fathers.
He replied: My fathers hid treasures below, I hid them above, as is
written Truth springs up from the earth; my fathers hid treasures in a
place under human control, but I hid treasures in places not under man's
control, as is written Righteous
and justice are the base of Your throne; my fathers hid treasures which bear no fruit, but I hid treasures which
bear fruit, as is written, Hail the just man for he shall fare well, he
shall eat the fruit of his works; my fathers hid treasures of money, but I
hid treasures of souls, as is written, The fruit of the righteous
is a tree of life; a wise man captivates people; my fathers hid
treasures for others, but I hid them for myself, as is written, And it will
be to your merit before the Lord your God; my fathers hid treasures in this
world, but I hid them in the world to come, as is written, Your
righteousness shall go before you.
(Tosefta
Pe'a, 4:18)
It is known that Justice is
the base of the throne of glory, as
is written: Righteousness and
justice are the base of Your throne, and whoever establishes justice, establishes
the throne. And whoever casts aside petitions for judgment or blemishes it,
blemishes the throne, and therefore Scripture reminds us that one who is not
good will not merit the good mentioned in Psalm 31, How
abundant is the good that You have in store for those who fear You. With this, Solomon teaches us that whoever
shows favoritism in judgment is punished both in this world and in the next.
Justice is the reason for peace, and therefore we find that Yitro,
in his advice he gave Moses regarding judgment, mentions peace, as is written: If you do thus in this matter when God
commands you further, you will be able to stand, and also this people will come
to its place in peace. The world exists because of peace. Therefore,
judgment was assigned to the Sages, for the Sages increase peace in
the world.
(Rabbeinu Behayey, Shemot 20:22)
The Shemitah
Year is Meant to Bring Peace and Equality
This is also the rationale for this [commandment of] hakhel
[assembly] for in addition to [the commandment to] take these four species onthe first day of the festival, God commanded us to make another similar gesture
every seven years, for the Shemitah year also
gives rise to solidarity and peace. This occurs because one does not sew seed
and grow [crops] and the poor can eat [whatever grows by itself],
for one is prohibited from acting as the landowner and taking hold of the
seventh year's grain. All of this doubtlessly causes peace, since all conflicts
derive from the trait of "mine is mine," i.e., "it is all
mine." All of this is less evident in the seventh year, because while
action [i.e. agricultural production] involves inequality, all are equal in inaction,
and that is really what peace is about. And so in the Sukkot
Festival every one leaves his permanent dwelling for a temporary dwelling and
sits under the sukka of His peace. On the
first day of hol ha'moed
the king is commanded to create a feeling of peace. That is the point of hakhel, for all of this is preparation for
repentance and he [the king] reads stirring words of rebuke to them from Devarim.
(Keli
Yakar Devarim 31:12)
Readers Respond
In David Yiselzohn's article, "Stages
of Faith" (Shabbat Shalom parashat Ekev), there is an apparent slide from the concept of yira ["fear"] and yirat
Hashem ["fear of God"] to the concept
of emuna ["belief" or "faith"].
The author quotes a verse from the parasha referring
to fear of the Lord and immediately interprets it as referring to emuna – without giving his readers any explanation
of the basis for this move.
True, both concepts are important for Judaism, but the differences
between them are clear. Emuna relates to the epistemic
realm, to the acceptance of particular utterances or opinions. Yira refers to a certain relation towards God, to
what might be called a certain attitude of the soul.
The RaMBaM makes this distinction salient in
his writings. Ha'amanat ha'elohut
["belief in God"] appears as the first positive commandment listed inhis Sefer HaMitzvot,
while ha'amanat yirato
[something like: "taking fear of God seriously"] appears separatelyas the fourth commandment. Similarly, the first chapter of Hilkhot
Yesodei HaTorah is
devoted to delineating emuna in the Creator,
in His existence and unity, while the beginning of the second chapter treats
the proper love and fear of God.
Actually, I think that this emphasis on emuna
in its cognitive sense is an invention of the RaMBaM
and others of his period. Both Scripture and the Sages do not trouble
themselves much with emuna as a concept. The
famous verse referring to Abraham, And he
believed [he’emin] in the Lord, and this was
accounted to him as righteousness (Bereishit 15:6) is talking about Abraham's
faithfulness [ne’emanut] rather than to his
faith [emuna]. The Mishnah
and Gemara hardly set down any rulings regarding
matter of emuna, save those found in the
famous mishnah from Perek
Helek: "These have no portion in the World
to Come: one who says there will be no resurrection of the dead, or that the
Torah is not from Heaven, etc."
In conclusion, a quick comment: It is my impression that of late many
people – even those from the innermost circles of Modern Orthodoxy – avoid
mentioning the concept of yira, preferring
instead to speak almost exclusively about ahava
["love"]. This phenomenon may have healthy roots; it may constitute areaction to the overemphasis of fear and punishment in certain sectors of
religious education. However, exclusive emphasis on love without fear is
unbalanced and even dangerous, but this is not the place to expand on that
issue.
Rabbi Yehonatan Chipman,
Jerusalem
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