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Shabbat Shalom: Parshat Emor
Leviticus: 21:1-24:23
By Shlomo Riskin
The Shavuot Jew
Efrat, Israel - “And you shall count for yourselves from the morrow of
the Sabbath (the first day of the festival of Matzot)…. Seven Sabbaths, a
complete (count) shall they be… fifty days shall you count; and you shall
bring a new gift offering for the Lord… two loaves of bread, uplifted, …
that you bake as leavening, first fruits for the Lord” (Lev. 23:15 – 17)
Is the Shavuot Jew superior to the Passover Jew? In last week’s commentary
I wrote about the count (sefira) of forty-nine days between Passover and
Shavuot, days of “Hol haMoed,” (Intermediate Days of a Festival) which
express the connection between the Holy Days; indeed, Passover is the very
beginning of our inception as a nation – even before we received the 613
commandments of our Bible and even before we entered the Promised Land of
Israel – and Shavuot is our end-goal, the day in which we received the
Torah and is additionally our Festival of first fruits which we bring to the
Holy Temple in Jerusalem.
From this perspective, the Passover Jew relates to G-d’s covenant with
Abraham (Genesis); he feels first and foremost a profound familial
connection with every Jew, a blood-bond which impels him/her to share in the
Jewish fate – even if it means sacrificing his/her life – and to
participate in the Jewish destiny. He/she connects with the familial stories
of the origins of the family-nation of Israel, enjoys the special familial
foods and major occasions of familial celebration or mourning (Passover
Matzah, for example), and feels him/herself to be an integral part of the
Jewish community.
The Shavuot Jew, on the other hand, relates to G-d’s covenant with the
nation of Israel at Mount Sinai, after the Divine revelation of the Torah
(Exodus 24:7-10). This Jew resides in Israel – after all, the Festival
celebrates the bringing of the first fruits to the Jerusalem Temple – and
apparently accepts all of the commandments as attested to by the national
proclamation preceding this second covenant, “we shall perform (the Divine
commands) and we shall internalize (or understand) them.” Whereas the
major motivation for the Passover Jew is his horizontal relationship with
the Jewish peoplehood, the major motivation for the Shavuot Jew is his
vertical relationship with G-d, his commitment to a higher law which it is
his duty to observe.
There is yet one more aspect to the Shavuot Jew which must be emphasized:
his vertical relationship to G-d ought to impel him to establish a profound
horizontal relationship not only with his/her sibling Jews but also with
every single human being on earth. After all, if indeed “G-d created the
human being in His image” (Gen.1:27), each of us human beings contains
within him/herself a portion of that Divine essence; if part of G-d is
within me and part of G-d is within you, then we both share part of that
same Divine essence which bonds each of us to the other in an extricable
bind. Hence our Bible commands: “Observe the Sabbath day (which is a
testimony of G-d’s creation of all earthly creatures) to keep it holy…
in order that your Gentile male servant and your Gentile female servant may
rest like you” (Deut 5:12,14); apparently this is because your Gentile
servant is essentially like you, endowed with that very same “image of
G-d” which endows you with your ultimate and inviolate value.
This is precisely how Rabbi Abraham Ibn Ezra (12th Century Biblical
commentary) understands what is probably the most famous verse in the Bible:
“You shall love your neighbor like yourself, I am the Lord” (Leviticus
19:18); says the Ibn Ezra, “One should love doing good to his friend as he
would wish to do for himself; and the reason that (this verse concludes with
the words” ‘I am the Lord’ is because I am the Lord who has created
you as one.” (Ibn Ezra ad loc).
Perhaps the most outstanding expression of this principle is the
introduction to the daily prayer which was written by Rav Haim Vital
(outstanding disciple of Rav Yitzhak Luria of 16th century Safed) and has
been adopted by almost every Prayer Book of the Oriental Jewish communities
(Edot haMizrach): “Before one begins one’s prayer, it is proper to say,
‘behold, I accept upon myself the commandment of ‘you shall love your
neighbor like yourself.” Apparently, the very purpose of attempting to
come close to the Almighty in prayer is so that we might come close to our
fellow human beings created in the image of the one G-d. And this may very
well be the deepest reason why we read the Book of Ruth on Shavuot: the true
Shavuot Jews feels the obligation to bring every human being, even a Moabite
woman, under the wings of the Divine Presence, at the very least to accept
the seven Noahide laws of morality (Maimonides, Laws of Kings, 8,10).
From all that we’ve written thus far, it seems clear that the Shavuot Jew
is far more complete – and praiseworthy – than is the Passover Jew.
However, there is one problematic flaw which tragically often manifests
itself in the Shavuot Jew: his closeness to G-d not only fails to enhance
his closeness to every Jew and every human being, but that very closeness to
the Divine sometimes removes him/her even further from his/her fellow Jew
and fellow human being. It is as Rav Yaakov Yosef (the 18th century author
of Toldot, a masterful defence of Hassidut and a scathing indictment of
Rabbinic (Mitnagdic) leadership) suggests: “’With G-d did Noah walk’
(Gen. 6:9); with G-d, and not with humanity, so that Noah neither
remonstrated with G-d on behalf of the world nor did he attempt to bring the
errant children closer to their father in heaven, as did Abraham.”
Rav A.Y. HaKohen Kook, the first Chief Rabbi of Israel, says it very
strongly: “The soul of the sinners of Israel before the coming of the
Messiah, those who are connected with love to all matters affecting the
welfare of the Jewish people, the Land of Israel and it’s nation, is more
perfected than the soul of the religious faithful of Israel who lack that
fundamental feeling for the communal well-being and the renewal of the
nation and the land” (Arpilei Tohar, Mosad HaRav Kook, Pps 11.12). In
other words, a Passover Jew who truly loves and sacrifices for his nation
can sometimes be on a higher plane than the Shavuot Jew who is careful not
to transgress over connecting him to G-d but lacks true love for every Jew
and every human being.
Shabbat Shalom
Postcript:
Rav Yisrael Salanter would tell the following story which demonstrates how
closeness to G-d can sometimes lead to distance from one’s fellow Jew and
fellow human being. Rav Yisrael was once stuck in Kovno unexpectedly just
before Kol Nidrei. When he entered the synagogue the Gabai immediately
invited him to sit on the eastern wall; he preferred to stand at the end of
the synagogue and purvey the scene. He noticed a Jew praying with great
devotion, mouthing audibly the following prayer: “My Lord, before I was
born, I was not worthy; now that I have been born, it is as if I had never
been born. I stand before You as a vessel filled with shame and
humiliation” As he mouthed these words tears were coursing down his
cheeks. “Rav Yisrael motioned to the Gabai that he wished to be seated in
the empty seat next to that particular person. He found the great rabbi was
much inspired by his seatmate, and this inspiration continued the following
day. During the reading of the Torah, the seatmate seemed to fidget
uncomfortably. The gabbai asked him to accept the honor of binding the torah
(Gelilah), and he had a veritable ‘fit’!
“Gelilah? ! Gelilah is for the dogs give it to someone else, I am leaving
this place”. The great rabbi turned to his seatmate in confusion “But
did you not just weep over the fact that you are not worthy, that you are
like a vessel filled with humiliation?”
“Yes, in comparison to the Almighty I am not worthy; but in comparison to
these jokers and ignoramuses, I deserve far greater honor than they!”….
Shabbat
Shalom
Shlomo Riskin
Chancellor Ohr Torah Stone
Chief Rabbi - Efrat Israel
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