Parashat Ahare Mot
From Far And
Near
We can reach God
by engaging with the world around us and connecting to others and the earth.
By Rabbi Menachem Even-Israel
The following article is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
"And the Lord spoke to Moses after the death of the two
sons of Aaron, When they came near the Lord, and died. And the Lord said to Moses, 'Speak to Aaron
your brother, that he come not at all times into the holy place inside the veil
before the covering, which is upon the ark; that he die not; for I will appear
in the cloud upon the covering.'"
Your Torah Navigator
1. Why did the sons of Aaron die?
2. Why were they punished for coming close to the Lord? Isn't that a good thing
to do?
3. Why does God warn Aaron about approaching the holy of holies?
4. What is the cloud of God?
Talmud--Tractate Sukkah 28a
They said of Jonathan b. Uzziel that when he used to sit and
occupy himself with the study of the Torah, every bird that flew above him was
immediately burnt.
Midrash Rabbah--The Song of Songs I:53
Once as Ben 'Azzai sat and expounded, the fire played round
him. They went and told R. Akiba, saying, 'Sir, as Ben 'Azzai sits and
expounds, the fire is flashing round him.' He went to him and said to him: 'I
hear that as you were expounding the fire flashed round you.' He replied: 'That
is so.' He said to him: 'Were you perhaps treating of the secrets of the Divine
Chariot?' 'No,' he replied. 'I was only linking up the words of the Torah with
one another and then with the words of the prophets, and the prophets with the
writings, and the words rejoiced as when they were delivered from Sinai, and
they were sweet as at their original utterance.
Your Midrash and Talmud Navigators
1. What is the meaning of the fires in these two texts?
2. Are these fires good or bad?
3. What are the differences between the fires?
4. Are these fires a result of
enlightenment?
A Word From Near And Far!
There are many ways to reach God
and to reach "inner peace" for one's self. One may think that by
devoting all his life to God and disconnecting completely from the world, he
will achieve enlightenment. One may think that sitting at home complacently
when the world around us is collapsing is a solution. One must know this isn't
the way of God.
We are all created in God's
image, thus we have the power and the obligation to make the world around us an
active place to live and work in. We have the obligation to use the most
mundane things to make this place an inhabitable world. A place where we feel a
connection between us and the world and between us and God!
I is important to realize that the same concepts of caring and connecting with
the people around us and the land around us apply to the Land of Israel and the
people of Israel, even though it seems so much easier to close our eyes and be
oblivious to the needs and struggles of our brothers and sisters. We must wake
up and say, "Enough is enough!" For 2000 years, we have been
persecuted for no reason. We cannot afford to stand by idly and allow persecution
in our own land. It is our obligation to our heritage to our people to stand up
from far and near, to get together and say: "Enough!"
Prepared by Rabbi Menachem Even-Israel, Regional Educator Baltimore Region, Hillel's
She'arim--Gateways Initiative.
Provided by Hillel's
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning, which creates innovative
educational resources based on Jewish texts and trains Hillel students,
professionals, and lay leaders to infuse Jewish content throughout their
activities. © 2002 Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.