Parashat Ahare Mot
All of Our Sins
The commandment to
the priests to purify themselves of sin before God reminds us to hold our
leaders accountable to act ethically.
By Rabbi Daniel Bronstein
The following article
is reprinted with permission from SocialAction.com.
Violent Divine retribution. The
slaughter of animals. The sprinkling of blood. Sexual perversions. Arcane
rituals. Shame and atonement.
These are not topics culled from
"yellow journals" or television "news magazines," but
rather from the Torah portion, Aharei Mot,
or "after the death..." Passages such as these have often been
difficult for moderns to digest, let alone difficult to comprehend.
After all, why should we care to
read about how the ancient priesthood of Judaism conducted ritual sacrifices,
the slaughter of animals, or how to dash blood about? And why would anyone care
to read, in precise detail, about seemingly arcane rites of purification, the
priestly wardrobe? And does anyone really need to be told not to engage in
bestiality?
It is easy to respond
patronizingly to such texts and to explain them away as remnants of our
primitive past. But "difficult" texts like Parshat Aharei Mot contain
meaning for the contemporary world--and even for social action itself.
The death referred to in the title
of this portion refers to the deaths of the High Priest Aaron's sons, who were
punished by God after offering up "strange" sacrifices. This portion
begins with descriptions of priestly sacrificial rites, outlines priestly
conduct for Yom Kippur, and details forbidden sexual acts. We no longer offer
up animal sacrifices to God, but the ethical insights of this text are eternal:
it is not just about ritual purity, but moral purity as well.
Most especially, Aharei Mot is
concerned with the purity of leaders. The text directs Aaron, the progenitor of
the Jewish priesthood, that "from all your sins shall you be clean before
God."
We might imagine that Aaron,
alongside Moses the leader of the Jewish people in their exodus from slavery
and their journey toward revelation, would not need to be told to behave in a
pure fashion. And yet not only did Aaron's sons cross the boundaries of
Judaism, but Aaron himself was also a key participant in the idolatrous act of
worshiping the golden calf. Leaders--even religious leaders--can clearly behave
inappropriately and, unfortunately, unethically.
Even religious leaders who seem
beyond reproach, the very leaders who seem to transcend the moral weaknesses of
most human beings, are themselves sometimes subject to the same ethical challenges
of humanity as a whole. But for many of us, including this writer, the moral
failings of leaders are far more difficult to absorb than the sins of the
proverbial "average Joe."
As the sages lament, power can
stain those who possess it, and "would that on leaving the world"
leaders be "as free of sin as upon entering it." From financial to
sexual improprieties, we are endlessly bombarded with new revelations of our
leaders' failings. This is also true of our own Jewish communal leadership, and
not simply that of society as a whole.
This Torah portion is in part a
warning that no matter how charismatic, no matter how skilled, and no matter
how successful in serving a cause--a leader's ethics matter. No matter how much
money is raised or how many people are served by a leader, his or her ethics
have an impact upon the entire community and upon our community's moral agenda.
And efforts on behalf of tikkun olam
(repairing the world) cannot somehow cancel out an individual's ethical--or
unethical--conduct.
This lesson, unfortunately, needs
to be reiterated over and over again--not only in public life at large, but
also in our own community. If the priests of antiquity needed to cleanse
themselves of their sins, so too do our contemporary leaders--even, or
especially, those identified with social action, and with Jewish causes at
large--need to be ethically whole. Let us not morally compartmentalize our
personal and common moral agenda. May all of us, leaders and "regular
Joes" alike, strive to be clean before God.
Rabbi Daniel Bronstein
was ordained at the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion and is
presently a Ph.D. candidate in Jewish History at the Jewish Theological
Seminary of America. He also presently
serves as a Program Officer and Educator at the Jewish Life Network, and counts
Rabbi Yisroel Salanter and Groucho Marx as among his two greatest influences.