Parashat B’har
This Land Is God’s Land
The prohibition
against worshipping idols includes falsely attributing to ourselves power over
land.
By Rabbi Marsha J. Pik-Nathan
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The
Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
Parashat Behar discusses the sabbatical year and the jubilee
year. The Israelites are told that they may sow their fields and prune their
vineyards for six years, but during the seventh year the land must be given a
complete Sabbath year of rest. During this year, the people can eat what the
land happens to produce, but can do nothing extra to have it yield its fruits.
During the sabbatical year, all debts are to be forgiven. Likewise, every
fiftieth year is the jubilee year, in which no work can be done in the fields.
During the jubilee year, all Israelites who had been
enslaved during the previous 49 years are granted their freedom. Also during
the jubilee year, any properties purchased during the previous 49 years are to
be returned to the descendents of those who were given the land at the time the
Israelites originally entered it.
Leviticus 25:23
"And the Land shall not be sold for ever, for the land
is Mine, for you are strangers and sojourners with Me."
Leviticus 25:42
"For they are My servants, whom I brought out of the
land of Egypt--they may not give themselves over into slavery."
Your Torah Navigator
1. Why does the text say that the land is "Mine"
(God's) if humans buy and sell land (and, indeed, the Torah gives us so many
rules for such buying and selling of property)?
2. What does it mean to be both "strangers" and
"sojourners" with God?
3. What is the meaning of being God's "servants?"
What connection does that have with having been taken from Egypt?
4. Specifically, who is the Torah telling us may not be
slaves? How do we understand the fact that this injunction is not placed on
other peoples, and how do we reconcile this with our modern understanding of
human liberty?
A Word
Our parshah ends with the pronouncement "You shall not
make idols for yourselves, or set up for yourselves carved images or pillars,
or place figured stones in your land to worship upon, for I the Lord am your
God. You shall keep My Sabbaths and venerate My sanctuary, Mine, the
Lord's."(Leviticus 26:1-2)
In essence, this entire parshah focuses us on countering the erroneous reality
that we set up for ourselves. We can worship ourselves as idols: we attribute
to ourselves power and status in accordance with our wealth and with how many
people are "under" us. The end of the parshah gives us pause by
posing the true reality--that it is God's laws we must ultimately follow, not
our own. In the end, it is God's power that is abiding, not ours.
It is to prohibit worshipping our own glory that the rules
of the sabbatical and jubilee years exist. Ultimately, we do not really own the
land, and we certainly do not own each other. To believe otherwise is to deal
in idolatry. We act godly when we till and tend the land and care for those
around us, realizing we own none of it.
Rabbi Marsha J. Pik-Nathan is the
director of Tri-College Hillel (Bryn Mawr, Haverford and Swarthmore Colleges).
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.