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The Israel
Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Introduction to Parashat
Hashavua Yeshivat Har Etzion
PARASHAT CHUKKAT
MAIMONIDES' MISHPATIM
By Rabbi Yaakov Beasley
A.
INTRODUCTION
In his
introduction to Sefer Bamidbar, the Netziv identifies the
theme of the book as the transition from the generation that leaves Egypt to the
generation that enters the Land of Israel 40 years later. Until our parasha, we read of both the attempt to
organize the people into a nation, with God in its center (both literally and
figuratively), ready to march towards its ultimate destination, the Land of
Israel; and the concurrent setbacks and failures of the people, until the
ultimate decree of 40 years of wandering is pronounced. Korach's futile rebellion against
Moshe's leadership and the final consolidation of the position of the Levites in
the camp in last week's parasha
simply reflect the dying embers of a generation consigned to purposeless
drifting. Our parasha transports us 40 years forward,
to the fresh beginning of a generation ready to begin the final ascent to the
Holy Land.
Standing erect as a barrier between the narrative
of the generation which leaves Egypt and that of the generation which will enter
Israel, we find the laws of para adumma (red cow). This animal is wholly burnt, and its
ashes are used to purify those who come in contact with a corpse from their
tuma (impurity) and enter the Mishkan (Tabernacle) or Beit Ha-mikdash (Temple). The parasha's second verse opens
"Zot chukkat ha-torah," which the Sages explain as "This [commandment] is
the law of the Torah;" para adumma is the one mitzva — more than any
other — that symbolizes the incomprehensibility and enigmatic nature of the
commandments:
"This is the chukka (law) of the Torah" –
the Satan and the nations ridicule the Jewish people, saying, "What is the
meaning of this mitzva? What sense
does it make?"
Therefore,
the Torah defines it as a chukka:
"It is an absolute decree from Me, and you have no right to challenge
it."
(Rashi, 19:2)
According
to this view, the feminine noun "chukka" (plural, chukkot) is
specific; like its masculine counterpart, chok (plural, chukkim),
this word refers to a "law," a mitzva which defies (easy) explanation. It contrasts with the term
"mishpat" (plural, mishpatim), which refers to a rational,
reasonable "statute." As such, both
the Keli Yakar and the Or Ha-chayyim explain "This is the chukka of the
Torah, which God has commanded" -
"I command you (Moshe) to tell the Jewish people that this mitzva has no
rationale; seek no rational explanation for it." In this essay, we will examine both
those commentators who refrain from explaining this commandment and those who
attempt to comprehend its purpose, despite its enigmatic nature. In doing so, we shall concentrate on the
Rambam's distinction between chukkim and mishpatim and how a
person should integrate the intellectual search for understanding with the
performance of mitzvot.
B.
RABBINIC ATTEMPTS AT APPROACHING
UNDERSTANDING
The
hesitancy on interpreting this commandment permeates many of the medieval
commentators. In the Sefer Ha-chinnukh, written for
the explicit purpose of providing insights and rationales into the performance
of the mitzvot, the author
acknowledges his inability to provide even a hint for understanding this
enigmatic commandment:
Although
I have taken the liberty to write some simple hints about the meaning of the mitzvot up to this point, rationalizing
my activity as necessary for the education of my son and his young friends… when
it comes to this mitzva, I find my hands weak, and I fear to even open my
mouth. For I have seen how the
Sages warn of its profound importance and enigma, and they say that Shelomo
understands in his great wisdom the meaning of all the mitzvot — except
for this one, about which he said, "I thought myself wise, but it is far from
me" (Kohelet 7:23).
The allusion
in Sefer Ha-chinnukh to
Shelomo's inability to comprehend the purpose of the para adumma is found in the Midrashic
literature on our parasha:
"I
investigated all this with erudition, I thought myself wise, but it is far from
me" (ibid.) — the Torah states that "God granted Shelomo wisdom and
understanding, exceedingly great, with a breadth of insight like the sand on the
seashore … wiser than any human…" (I Melakhim 5:9-11) Despite this, Shelomo says, "Other
issues I have been able to fathom, but when it comes to para adumma, I
analyzed, questioned, investigated – and all that I can say is 'I thought myself
wise, but it is far from me.'"
(Bamidbar Rabba 19:3)
The Talmud
(Yoma 14a) explains the paradox that
baffles Shelomo: "When sprinkled on the impure, it purifies; but when sprinkled
on the pure, it brings impurity… it is to this that Shelomo refers…"
Some
commentators prefer to justify Shelomo's (and by extension, our) inability to
achieve full comprehension. The
Akedat Yitzchak, for example, suggests that there are four potential approaches
to Torah study: (a) oversimplification, (b) intellectual investigation, (c)
investigation that corresponds to committed observance, and (d) investigation
that borders on heresy. Students
quite often believe themselves prudent when they search for logical explanations
for the commandments. However, the
Akedat Yitzchak argues that all the mitzvot ultimately originate in Heaven, into
which man's intellect cannot penetrate.
Therefore, man is in danger if he tries to interpret the Torah solely
through logic, though he can never fathom the commandment's ultimate
purpose. Unwittingly, he may
undermine the entire Torah for himself, thereby moving from being prudent in his
investigations to the realm of heresy.
Therefore, God gives us certain commandments which, all thinking people
would agree, lack rational explanation.
From these, we understand that we must treat the entire Torah as a Divine
decree and perform it without question.
This is the third category, which the Akedat Yitzchak holds as the
ideal.
C.
MAIMONIDES AND THE MISHPATIM
Despite
this hesitancy, commentators have offered many varied interpretations for this
commandment (Rashi
included). Opposing the Akedat
Yitzchak's view, the Rambam (Maimonides) insists that whenever possible, it is
not only proper, but also necessary to attempt to interpret the
chukkim:
Although
all the chukkim in the Torah are pure decrees, as we have explained… it
is proper to contemplate them and assign them explanations as much as
possible. The early sages said that
King Shelomo understood the explanations of most of the chukkim in the
Torah.
(Hilkhot Temura
4:13)
From the
midrash above, the Rambam derives that one should not desist from
intellectual pursuit because of Shelomo's single failure; instead, one should
draw encouragement from the remaining successes that Shelomo enjoyed. However, the Rambam's requirement that
we investigate the meaning of all the commandments equally appears to blur the
famous distinction we know between chukkim, laws without a known reason,
and mishpatim, laws that people consider comprehendible:
The
Torah (Vayikra 19:37) states:
"You shall keep all My chukkot and all My mishpatim and
perform them." The Sages (Sifra,
Kedoshim 3) point out that we find that the verse equates "keeping" and
"performing" for both the chukkim and the mishpatim. "Performing" is obvious: it means doing
the chukkim. "Keeping" means
caring about [the chukkim] and not perceiving them as less important than
the mishpatim.
Mishpatim
are the commandments with a clear explanation and value evident in the world
(i.e., prohibiting theft, honoring parents). Chukkim are the commandments with
explanations that are less clear, about which the Sages state, "It is a decree
that I have made for you; you must not challenge it," such as the prohibition
against eating meat and milk together… and the commandment of para
adumma.
(Hilkhot Me'ila 8:8)
At first
glance, several problems arise from the Rambam's definition of how to categorize
the commandments. If personal
understanding is the sole variable that differentiates between chukkim
and mishpatim, then we face two
immediate difficulties: not only is understanding not something that can be
measured in a binary yes/ no manner, but as a linear value (we all recognize
cases where we have some, if not full, understanding of an issue); moreover,
understanding itself is a highly subjective term. What is clear to one person is
incomprehensible to another: certain commandments may appeal to some, while
others will gravitate towards different mitzvot. Finally, as noted above, the Rambam's
definition of a chok above appears to preclude any substantive
distinction between the two groups, as we are equally required to investigate
and comprehend the rationales for both of them to the best of our ability.
We can
suggest a different understanding of the distinction between the two types of
commandments based on a subtle reading of the Rambam's words: regarding chukkim, the Rambam writes, "it is
proper to contemplate them and assign them explanations as much as
possible." Regarding mishpatim, however, the Rambam says
something else:
It
is proper for a person to contemplate the mishpatim of the holy Torah, to attempt
to understand the full depths of the issue according to the power of his
mind. If there is something in
which he can discover no explanation or which he thinks to be of no purpose, he
must not belittle it… or think about it as he would abut something secular.
Mishpatim
reflect their purposes precisely because we are able to sense them directly:
they are "the commandments with a clear explanation and value evident in the
world." Chukkim, on the
other hand, because they are not directly (and consistently) sensible "in the
world," need us to assign their explanations. The more explanations that a person can
discover and assign to a given chok, the more sensible it becomes to that
individual. While the Rambam
enjoins a person to discover meanings in all commandments, both mishpatim and chukkim, only by the mishpatim does he express concern if a
person fails to discover anything of value in them. As long as he performs the commandments,
a person can live happily without appreciating the rationales behind separating
milk and meat, forbidding certain mixtures in clothing (sha'atnez) and
para adumma. A person who
needs to justify the prohibitions of murder and stealing or the obligations to
honor parents deservedly arouses worry.
Despite
this, the Rambam never loses sight of the deeper, essentially inscrutable nature
of the Chok:
How
terribly did King David suffer from people who denigrated the chukkim! The more that they struggled with him,
wielding the kind of spurious arguments that are only made by those with the
limited intelligence of the human mind, the more he would strengthen his bond
with the Torah, as it states (Tehillim 119:69), "The malicious have
smeared me with a lie; yet I will keep your precepts whole-heartedly."
(Hilkhot Me'ila 8:8)
At the end of 19:22, Rashi writes: "This is its explanation according to
its simple meaning and its laws. I have [also] copied an aggadic midrash
from the Yesod of Rabbi Moshe Ha-darshan, and this is it…" An allegorical explanation of the
elements of para adumma follows.
Indeed, in Moreh Ha-nvukhim (3:47), the Rambam advances a reason
for para adumma itself.
Noting that the Torah itself offers the description that "it is a
sin-offering" (19:9), he suggests that the para adumma atones for ritual
impurity and makes a person eligible to enter the Beit Ha-mikdash. It does so in the same manner as the Yom
Kippur scapegoat, by transferring man's impurities onto itself (just as the
scapegoat assumes the sins of the Jewish people). Therefore, those who touch it become
impure, as it embodies impurity and sin. (It should be noted that the Rambam
admits that he cannot explain the finer details of the commandment, i.e., using
hyssop during the ceremony.)
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