Body And Soul
Religion
Thought and
internal spirituality still require physical action in order to deepen one’s
religious experience.
By Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger
The following article is reprinted with permission from Kolel: The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish
Learning.
Overview
The dramatic contest of wills between God and Pharaoh is
coming to a climax: The plagues upon Egypt become steadily more punitive,
culminating with the death of the first born. Before the final plague, Moshe
and Aaron are given instructions by God to make a sacrifice, and to place the
blood on the doorposts of the Israelite houses. Further instructions are given
to eat unleavened bread and bitter herbs; this becomes the source of our Passover
traditions. The firstborn of the Egyptians are struck dead; this is the final
blow to Pharaoh, who sends the entire Israelite people in the middle of the
night. Commandments concerning Passover and the sanctification of the firstborn
are given as a remembrance of the Exodus.
In Focus
"Pharaoh called to Moshe and said: 'Go, worship God!
Only your flocks and your herds will remain; your little ones will go with
you'" (Exodus 10:24).
Pshat
Pharaoh is stubborn and will not admit total defeat, even
after nine afflictions upon his land and people. After the "plague"
of darkness, he grudgingly allows the Israelites to leave Egypt; however, he
wants them to leave their cattle behind, perhaps as the price of their freedom.
Moshe won't hear of it, and tells Pharaoh that they need the cattle to make
sacrifices to God out in the wilderness. Pharaoh's heart is hardened once
again, and he does not agree to Moshe's demands.
Drash
The exchange between Moshe and Pharaoh at the end of chapter
10 is, on the simplest level, a battle of wills between political opponents,
each trying to get the best deal for his side. Not unlike other famous
negotiations in the Middle East, the two parties don't trust each other, and
each tries to give up as little as he can to the other.
The Hasidic master Rabbi Yaakov Yitzhak from Pshi'scha, also
known as the Yehudi HaKadosh (The Holy Jew), proposes a reading of the
story far removed from the realm of political revolutions. The Yehudi imagines
Pharaoh challenging Moshe over his understanding of spirituality in worship:
Pharaoh said:
"It is possible to worship God [only] in thought and in feeling. So if, in
truth, you really desire to worship God--what do you need your flocks and herds
for? 'Go, worship God'--with an upright heart and pure intentions, and you
won't need to make any physical offerings, so 'only your flocks and herds will
remain.'"
Moshe answered him:
"Intentions alone, without any actions connected to them, aren't
important, aren't anything! The main thing is real action, and thus intentions
depend on actions and are deepened through them. Therefore, 'our cattle will
also go with us,' (v. 26) because 'we will take from them to worship Adonai our
God.'”
From actions one is
aroused to worship God with great feeling and to embrace the Divine. (Source:
Itturei Torah, translation mine.)
Clearly, the Yehudi doesn't think that Pharaoh was all that
concerned with the Israelite's spirituality--this is a parable about
contemporary concerns. I understand the Yehudi to be addressing those people
who want a purely internal spirituality, going deep inside themselves, spurning
the physical world. The Yehudi, speaking through the character of Moshe, seems
to be suggesting that the proper way to deepen one's inner life is to align it
with your physicality, your embodied being.
An example that comes to mind is ritual action, something
often derided by those who seek a purely internal, detached kind of
spirituality. (Think of the negative connotations of the word
"ritualistic.") A simple ritual is making a blessing before eating,
which can help bring us to feelings of awe and gratitude.
One might think that the best thing is to go directly to the
proper feelings, and bypass the ritual, but I think it doesn't really work that
way. The action of the blessing can bring us to a depth of emotion and
spiritual understanding unreachable by thought alone; sometimes we don't even
understand, on a spiritual level, what the ritual is all about until after
we've done it many times.
I think I've quoted before one of my favorite teachings from
another tradition: "It's easier to act your way into right thinking than
think your way into right acting." Of course, a certain amount of
intellectual preparation is crucial for Jewish practice, but I think the Yehudi
reminds us that religious growth can't happen only "from the neck up."
It happens when we bring physical and spiritual together, when we bring our
whole being into the quest, when our actions in the social and religious realms
become entirely aligned with our higher goals.
Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger is currently the rabbi of
Temple Israel of Swampscott and Marblehead, Mass. A former student at Kolel, he served as Kolel’s Director of
Outreach from late 1999-2001. He was
ordained in the first graduating class of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic
Studies of the University of Judaism, and holds a Master’s of Environmental
Studies from York University in Toronto.