Parashat Ahare Mot
Raising Up the Physical
How to develop a healthy relationship with the material world.
By Baruch Herschkopff
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with Canfei Nesharim. To learn
more, visit www.canfeinesharim.org.
One of the most refined and holy of all the
offerings brought in Jewish worship during the time of the Temple, and the time
of the Tent of Meeting before it, was the ketoret, the special blend of
incense.
The burning of the incense comes to its utmost expression in this
weekly Torah portion of Ahare Mot, where it becomes the offering of the
High Priest on Yom Kippur as he enters into the Holy of Holies (Leviticus
16:12-13). This portion can illuminate for us the Torah's insistence that we
raise up the beauty of the physical world into spiritual service.
Moreover, the
incense offering of the High Priest is contrasted with the failed offering of
Aaron's sons Nadav and Avihu, which resulted in their death. From this contrast,
we can also begin to understand the Torah's perspective on proper and improper
use of the environment. Furthermore, the Haftorah associated with this portion
offers us strong indication of how we might apply this Torah perspective in our
contemporary situation.
A Global Blend
The Torah indicates through the service of the Temple that humans have
the ability to refine and lift up the physical world for spiritual service,
rather than focusing on the physical environment as on object of commodity and
selfish pleasure-taking. The ketoret in particular is a blend of spices
from the far reaches of the globe, ground and burnt together for the unique
quality of their combination.
God describes the special components of the ketoret to Moses
soon after the exodus from Egypt: "And the Lord said to Moses: Take for
yourself aromatics, [namely] balsam sap, onycha and galbanum, aromatics and
pure frankincense; they shall be of equal weight (Exodus 30:34)."
The Talmud (Kritot 6b) explains that according to tradition there were
11 spices in the ketoret. Some were native to the Middle East: Balsam,
also known colloquially as the balm of Gilead, was produced in Israel, most
famously in Ein Gedi. The aromatic gum resin of Galbanum is procured from
plants native to Persia, or modern-day Iran. The various resins of Frankincense
are all native to the lands of Arabia. Myrrh, also an aromatic resin ingredient
of the ketoret, is native to Yemen, Somalia, and the eastern parts of
Ethiopia.
However, several of the spices must have originated in the farthest
attainable locations. Cloves are native to Indonesia. Cassia, similar to
cinnamon, is an evergreen tree native to southern China and Vietnam. Spikenard
could be a member of the Valerian family that grows in the Himalayas of China,
or it could be lavender, which is also native to Israel. Saffron, from the
stamens of the saffron crocus, is native to southwest Asia, but has been
cultivated for over 3,000 years. Also native to Europe, and much of Asia,
especially the Himalayas, is Costus. Lastly, cinnamon is native to south India
and Sri Lanka.
The ingathering of
all these components into one blended spice offering on the holiest day of the
year carries an obvious message. While the High Priest, dressed all in white,
performed a sacred service of atonement, he brought with him the essence of
plants grown in the dirt of many different places on earth. He did not
"leave the world behind" as he entered the Holy of Holies; rather, he
took with him the most elevated and refined representation of the entire world.
Contrast: Nadav & Avihu
This entire portion of the service of Yom Kippur and the incense is
introduced with a reference back to Nadav and Avihu, the sons of Aaron, the
High Priest. The service is described as being taught to Moses "following
the death of Aaron's son's…who died (Leviticus 16:1)."
Nadav and Avihu brought an incense offering at the inauguration of the
holy sanctuary. However, their offering was "foreign" and they died
in a supernatural event. The Torah's use of this introduction seems to contrast
the description of the service of the High Priest. Indeed, the Torah makes note
that the service of the High Priest is designed specifically, "…that he
should not die," in contrast to the way of Aaron's sons (Leviticus 16:2).
What exactly is the
difference between these two offerings, that one would be considered
appropriate and the other not? From a cursory reading of the text, they seem so
similar. Many classic Torah commentaries offer explanations.
However, in our
societal context, there is an extra lesson we can glean. From the understanding
we have gained of how the ketoret represents resources from all over the
world, we can allegorically infer a teaching about proper and improper use of
the beauty and bounty of the earth's produce.
The service of the
High Priest is in response to a Divine command and represents a use of the
physical world that is sustainable, extending beyond selfish desire. In
comparison, the offering of Aaron's sons seems selfishly motivated, personally
oriented, and not in response to the Ultimate Will.
Their untimely death
in the Torah can be understood as a homiletical warning of the inevitable
result of the lifestyle based on individually-motivated, selfish desire. How
can we measure whether our use of the environment is selfishly motivated or is
a lifting up of the physical world as part of a greater plan and intention?
Messages from the Haftorah
This exact theme is
accentuated in the Haftorah for Ahare Mot, a selection from the prophet
Amos. The prophecy recorded suggests a misalignment with proper use of the
world in several ways. Firstly, there is a description of excess personal
consumption.
The prophet (Amos
6:4) speaks to, "those who lie on couches of ivory and stretch out on
their beds, and eat lambs of the flock and calves out of the stall…" He
warns them, "The Lord God of Hosts says: I abhor the pride of Jacob, and I
hate his palaces, and I will deliver the city and the fullness thereof (Amos
6:8)."
Simply being
over-invested in and distracted by material reality takes us out of the selfless
and Divinely-oriented consciousness upon which proper use of the environment is
predicated.
A second theme of
the Haftorah is use of the physical world where people hoard resources for
themselves. Amos speaks to, "…those who rejoice over a thing of naught,
who say, 'with our strength we have taken horns for ourselves' (Amos
6:13)."
He criticizes the
use of personal power to accumulate private gain, for "ourselves,"
but not for others, calling us to recognize, instead, the shared need and the
common good.
Yet a third theme is
the explicit harm which comes to other people when consumption of the physical
world is oriented around personal gratification. The prophet warns that
destruction will come, "for they are selling a righteous man for money,
and a poor man for a pair of shoes (Amos 2:6)."
When personal
accumulation of physical property and the resources of the physical world are
held as the highest priority, then even the most basic social justice is
threatened.
While these external
indicators are in themselves things to be avoided, they all stem from a common
root of misunderstanding the role of the physical environment in the life of
human beings.
As long as we see
the physical world as merely a means to satisfy our own desires, the pitfalls
of unsustainable living will continue to threaten us. Our drive to hoard and
consume, along with our fears of never having enough, will constantly strain
our relationship with the environment.
The more we are able
to shift ourselves into a place of service to God, even in our consumption and
use of the physical world, the more we will be able to attain a more selfless
perspective, attune to the higher will of the world, and thereby be joyfully
sustained and supported in our way of living. As the scripture states, our use
of the physical should be sustainable "so that we should not die"
both physically and spiritually.
Suggested
Action Items:
1. Be mindful in your shopping. Try to buy only
what you need, rather than simply impulsively buying according to your desire.
You could start with just one shopping trip, or one buying decision per trip,
and see how it goes.
2.
Investigate two or three
products that you buy regularly. How are they made? What kinds of resources are
used? Are they used in a sustainable way?
Are the raw materials obtained in a process of fair trade? Are the
people who produce the products treated in a humane way? Are there different
product choices you could make to help limit your environmental impact? Ask
your friends to do the same with a few other products and compare notes.
3. Appreciate the
beauty of what comes forth from the natural world. Try not to throw out items
which could be repaired or used in a different way. Are there more ways this
item, and the physicality with which it was made, could be raised up in service
of the Ultimate Will? When it is finally time to throw something away, consider
consciously acknowledging the service it has provided up until now. Then
dispose of it properly.
Baruch
Herschkopff is a student at Yeshivat Derech HaMelech in Jerusalem.