|
INTRODUCTION TO PARASHAT HASHAVUA
PARASHAT KEDOSHIM
HOLINESS
By Rav Zvi Shimon
This week's parasha begins with the commandment to be holy: 'Kedoshim
Tihiyu...' - "You shall be holy for I, the Lord your God, am holy"(19:1). The
concept of holiness is perhaps the most central idea in the Torah. However, in
spite of its importance, its precise meaning is unclear. It appears in our
parasha as a general commandment without any explanation of its exact
requirements. What is meant by the Torah when it commands us to be holy?
According to Jewish tradition, there are 613 commandments in the Torah. Although tradition informs us
regarding the number of commandments, their identity is a matter of dispute
among the Rabbis. The Rambam (Rabbi Moshe ben Maimon, Egypt, 1138-1204) prefaces
'Sefer Hamitzvot' - his list of the 613 commandments, with a delineation of the
principles guiding his determination of the 613 commandments. In his fourth
principle, he relates to our verse: "You shall be holy for I, the Lord your God,
am holy."
"General
commandments should not be counted [amongst the 613 commandments of the Torah].
There are in the Torah
injunctions and warnings which do not refer to anything
specific but relate to all the commandments exhorting us to do all which God has
commanded us to do and heed all the negative commandments...It is wrong to
include these as independent commandments since they do not oblige any specific action nor
prohibit anything new. Such is the case with verses like "Be on guard concerning
all that I have told you"(Exodus 23:13), "My rules you shall observe," "My laws
you shall keep" (Leviticus 18:4), "You shall keep my charge" (ibid., 30) etc.
Some have already faltered and mistakenly included "You shall be holy"
(Leviticus 19:2) as a positive commandment... even though
they are general exhortations to keep all the commandments."
According to the Rambam, the obligation to be holy is not one of the 613
commandments. Holiness is a product of keeping the commandments, a
characteristic or a state achieved by the exacting performance of all the
commandments. It is their ultimate purpose. It requires no additional specific
action beyond the performance of the commandments. Since holiness is a product
of the observance of the commandments, the Rambam does not consider it to be an
independent commandment. The Rambam garners support for his position from the
Sifrei ('Tannaitic halakhic midrash on the books of Numbers and Deuteronomy):
"And be
holy to your God" (Numbers 15:40) - "This refers to the sanctity of ALL the
commandments... Rabbi [Judah the prince] says ... When scripture says, "You
shall be holy" (Leviticus 19:2) it is referring to the sanctity of all the
commandments."
Rabbi Judah interprets our verse to be referring to all the commandments.
The Rambam therefore critiques the Rasag (Rabbi Sa'adia Gaon, Persia, 892-942)
for counting our verse as an independent commandment (see the Ramban's defense
of the Rasag in his glosses on the Rambam's 'Sefer Hamitzvot,' ibid.). However,
although Rashi (Rabbi Shlomo ben Yitzchak, France, 1040-1105) did not compile a
list of the 613 commandments, it is clear from his commentary that he also
understood our verse to be relating to specific commandments:
"You
shall be holy" -"Separate yourselves from incest and from transgression, for
wherever you find a fence around incest (commandments relating to incest) you
find holiness."
'Kedusha' - holiness, is not an outcome of keeping all the commandments.
Rather, it results from adherence to the laws relating to sexual conduct. Chaste
behavior which guards itself from any harlotry or other forms of forbidden
sexual relations is the path to holiness. Rashi did not consider our verse to be
connected to the continuation of our parasha but rather viewed it as the
culmination of the preceding chapter. Chapter 18 lists the prohibited forms of
sexual relations. Therefore, verses one and two of chapter 19 reveal that the
impetus for the commandments determining the parameters of sexual relations is
holiness.
Rabbi Hoffman (Rabbi David Zvi Hoffman, Germany, 1843-1921) also rejects
the Rambam's approach that the commandment to be holy is a general one relating
to all the commandments. However, in contrast to Rashi who viewed our verse as a
conclusion to the previous chapter, Rabbi Hoffman views it as an opening to
chapter 19. Chapter 19 includes many commandments for which it is very difficult
to find an underlying theme. However, many of the commandments in the chapter
relate to how one should conduct himself and feel towards his fellow man. The
following are some examples:
"You
shall not steal; you shall not deal deceitfully or falsely with one another"
(19:11).
"You
shall not insult the deaf, or place a stumbling block before the blind" (19:14).
"You
shall not take vengeance or bear a grudge against your countrymen. Love your
fellow as yourself" (19:18).
"You
shall rise before the aged and show deference to the old"(19:32).
"The
stranger who resides with you shall be to you as one of your citizens; you shall
love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt" (19:34).
"You
shall not falsify measures of length, weight or capacity. You shall have an
honest balance, honest weights..." (19:35,36).
Rabbi Hoffman infers from the strong moral component of chapter 19 that
'Kedusha,' holiness, is moral perfection, a yearning for the good and a
detestation of evil. The commandment to be holy is thus a commandment to strive
for moral perfection.
Rabbi Hoffman points out an interesting textual phenomenon. The word
'kadosh,' holy, when used in the Torah in reference to God, is spelled with the
letter 'vav' but without it when appearing in reference to man. He explains that
the reason for this change in spelling is that although man must strive for
moral perfection, he cannot reach this highest level of holiness for it is
reserved for God. The difference in spelling of the word 'kadosh' informs us
that we can strive to emulate God's holiness but can never truly match it (see
Hoffman on Leviticus 11: 45).
The Ramban (Rabbi Moshe ben Nachman, Spain, 1194-1274) offers a
fascinating and totally different interpretation of the commandment to be holy:
"In my
opinion, this abstinence does not refer only to restraint from acts of
immorality, as the Rabbi [Rashi] wrote, but it is rather the self-control
mentioned throughout the Talmud, which confers upon those who practice it the
name of P'rushim (Pharisees), [literally: "those who are separated" from
self-indulgence, as will be explained, or those who practice self-restraint]. The meaning thereof is as follows:
The Torah has admonished us against immorality and forbidden foods, but
permitted sexual intercourse between man and his wife, and the
eating of [certain] meat and wine.
If so, a man of desire could consider this to be a permission to be
passionately addicted to sexual intercourse with his wife, and be among
winebibbers, among gluttonous eaters of
flesh, and speak freely all profanities, since this prohibition has not been
[expressly] mentioned in the Torah, and thus he will become a sordid person
within the permissible realm of the Torah!
Therefore, after having listed the matters which He prohibited
altogether, Scripture followed them up by a general command that we practice
moderation even in matters which are permitted, [such as the following]: One
should minimize sexual intercourse,.... He should also sanctify himself [to
self-restraint] by using wine in small amounts, just as Scripture calls a
Nazirite "holy" [for abstaining from wine and strong drink],.... Likewise he
should guard his
mouth and tongue from being defiled by excessive food and by lewd
talk,... and he should purify himself in this respect until he reaches the
degree known as [complete] "self-restraint," as the Rabbis said concerning Rabbi
Chiya, that never in his life did he engage in unnecessary talk. It is with reference to these and
similar matters that this general commandment [Ye shall be holy] is concerned,
after He had enumerated all
individual needs which are strictly forbidden.... And such is the way for
the Torah, that after it lists certain specific prohibitions, it includes them
all in a general precept. Thus after
warning with detailed laws
regarding all business dealings between people, such as not to steal or
rob or to wrong one another, and other similar prohibitions, He said in general,
'And thou shalt do that which is right and good,' thus including under a
positive commandment the duty of doing that which is right and of agreeing to a
compromise [when not to do so would be inequitable], as well as all requirements
to act "beyond" the line of justice [i.e., to be generous in not
insisting upon one's rights as defined by the
strict
letter of the law, but to agree to act "beyond" that line of the strict
law] for the sake of pleasing one's fellowman... (Ramban 19:2)
The commandment to be holy does not relate to sexual conduct, nor to
moral precepts nor to the commandments in general. It extends beyond the realm
of the commandments. It obliges man to behave with abstinence even in relation
to that which is permissible. Man should not indulge himself in things which the
Torah permits. According to this interpretation, holiness is not guaranteed
through performance of the commandments. One must also live according to the
general spirit implicit in the Torah and in the commandments. If one keeps to
the letter of the law but ignores its spirit he is a 'naval birshut ha-Torah,' a
sordid person within the permissible realm of the Torah.
II
The Torah not only commands us to be holy, it also tells why: "You shall
be holy FOR I ,THE LORD YOUR GOD, AM HOLY." The simple understanding of this
clause is that we should be holy in order to emulate God who is holy. The Sforno
(Rabbi Ovadia Sforno, Italy, 1470-1550) comments
that this is the proclaimed purpose for the creation of man: "Let us make man IN
OUR IMAGE, AFTER OUR LIKENESS" (Genesis 1:26). Man was created with the inherent
capacity to emulate the traits of God. His whole purpose is to fulfill this
potential. One of the central traits which we must aim to acquire in following
the ways of God is the trait of holiness for God has informed us that He is
holy.
Our sages in the Sifra ('Tannaitic halakhic midrash' on Leviticus) offer
an interesting homiletical interpretation of our verse:
"You
shall be holy for I, the Lord your God, am holy"(19:1) "[The verse] teaches that
if you sanctify yourselves I will consider it as if you sanctified Me (God) and
if you don't sanctify yourselves then I will consider it as if you did not
sanctify Me"
Our verse draws a comparison between man's obligation to be holy and
God's holiness. According to the simple reading of the verse the Torah is giving
a reason for the commandment to be holy; we must be holy in order to emulate
God. However, our sages interpret the verse differently. We not only emulate
God. The holy conduct of man sanctifies God's name. Man's holiness adds, as it
were, holiness to God. Conversely, if man's conduct is decadent then no matter
how much energy he invests in exalting his creator, His name is not sanctified.
Thus, the primary responsibility of religious man is to sanctify God's name. The
sanctification of God's name is achieved through sanctifying ourselves. This is
the ultimate purpose and destiny of the Jewish people, to be a "Kingdom of
priests and A HOLY NATION" (Exodus 19:6).
|