Parashat Kedoshim
Being Holy
The commandment to
be holy permeates every other commandment, fills in gaps between commandments,
and infuses every human action.
By Charles Raffel
The following article
is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
Where does the command "You shall be holy," the
defining moment of this portion, fit in? Is it the conclusion, the underlying
teleology of chapter 18's prescriptions against forbidden sexual practices? Or
is it the introduction, the topic sentence, of the compact code of laws that
forms chapter 19?
According to Ramban,
Rabbi Moses ben Nachman (1194-1270), both of the above possibilities minimize
the centrality and significance of holiness in God's plan for human conduct. As
a result, both possibilities miss the point. For Ramban, holiness is the key to
the fulfillment of the entire Torah; rather than standing alone, it must inform
and illuminate the performance of each and every commandment.
Without the all-encompassing prescription to be "wholly
holy," Ramban envisions the disturbing possibility of the "scoundrel
with Torah license," a cosmically annoying individual who mechanically
fulfills all of the specific rules of the Torah and refrains from all the
specific prohibitions. While this individual fulfills the specifics of the
Torah, the Torah does not animate or fill out this scoundrel's personality.
Rather, the scoundrel operates crudely, selfishly, opportunistically in areas
and moments in which specific Torah law is silent.
In Ramban's view, the command to holiness, to aspire
constantly toward a divinely inspired sanctification, makes the possibility of
the scoundrel obsolete. The generalized divine command to be holy not only
informs each specific command, but fills in the gaps of silences between
commanded moments.
In the Torah, God speaks to us in a dual language--stereo,
if you will--specific commands in tandem with a general, informing and defining
charge or exhortation. Ideal human conduct is approached when we hear, at all
times, both a detailed, specific command and an accompanying whisper, "Be
holy." Holiness is achieved through our committed and sustained response
not only to the specific instructions, but to the generalized instruction as
well.
For Ramban, holiness, then, is the defining, shining moment
not only of this portion, but of every fully realized human action.