Parashat Kedoshim
Nobility on Endless Trial
We achieve
nobility and holiness through practicing self-restraint.
By Rabbi David Ehrenkranz
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The
Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
"Be good."
I often heard my mother's words trickle through as the bus doors slammed shut.
On my way to school I would sometimes wonder about the vagueness of the
directive, but I soon became distracted by pop rocks, last night's baseball
scores, and something equally as vague called Watergate. "Be good,"
"be polite," and "be nice," seemed to dominate my
childhood, and yet no one explained how I was supposed to accomplish the moral
triumvirate.
In this week's parsha, we find a directive by God that
appears just as hazy as my mother's advice:
The Lord spoke to Moses, saying:
Speak to the whole Israelite community and say to them:
"You shall be holy, for I, the Lord your God, am holy."
(Leviticus 19:1-2)
Most of the rabbinic commentaries are fascinated with this
all-encompassing order. "Be holy." Holiness has a variety of
meanings. Are we supposed to lock ourselves away in synagogues or yeshivot [schools] and continually learn
Torah? Should we give away all our possessions and embrace the ascetic way of
life? Should we meditate in the desert and await a cleansing or purging of our
soul and body?
No. Holiness is much more difficult than that. Rashi
(1040-1104), the sublime commentator, claims that in order to be holy we must:
Separate yourselves from sexual immorality. (Leviticus 19:2)
Rashi connects the previous parsha's (Acherai-Mot) warnings against sexual
immorality with the beginning of Parashat Kedoshim's directive to be holy.
Rashi finds a few verses in the Torah that demonstrate an explicit connection
between the word kadosh (holy) and sexual
transgressions.
Ramban
(Nachmanides, 1195-1270), however, takes issue with Rashi by pointing to
numerous places where holiness is not associated exclusively with sexual
immorality. Ramban maintains that the concept of holiness lies in our ability
to maintain self-restraint. A Jew who wants to attain holiness must temper his
passions and control his desire for excess. A married couple should not engage
in marital relations several times a day. We are allowed to eat a kosher steak,
but we should not eat seven of them in one sitting. We can drink kosher wine,
but not to the point of debauchery.
For the Ramban, holiness is the antithesis of vulgarity.
Dignity and a balanced lifestyle are synonymous with holiness. Nachmanides is
aware that one could follow all of the technicalities of Jewish Law and still
violate this directive of "kedoshim
tihiyu," (you should be holy). In his words, one could become a "Naval b'rishut HaTorah," a
primitive scoundrel with license from the Torah.
Excessive pride, gluttony and sexual improprieties are
destructive forces that eliminate our nobility. Once we can demonstrate
self-restraint, we can slowly attain dignity, and then even holiness. By
constant reflection we can refine ourselves and ultimately become closer to
God. During the process of developing nobility through self-restraint we
inevitably help our friends, community and the world at large.
My mother's directives as well as God's are to be learned through osmosis. We
learn by observing our role models and experience. Moreover, by internalizing
the Torah and its halachic (Jewish
legal) values we transform ourselves into dignified, noble people. Our parents,
teachers and friends who display compassion and self-restraint deepen our sense
of humanity and consequently our holiness. Conversely, the athletes, actors and
politicians who exhibit ruthless and brutal selfishness erode our sense of
nobility.
"Kedoshim Tihiyu" is on endless trial and we have the
wherewithal to issue a spiritual and ethical verdict on the decree, as our
rabbis tell us in Tractate Megillah
(25a), "Everything is in the hands of Heaven, except for the fear of
Heaven."
Prepared by Rabbi David Ehrenkranz,
Brandeis University Hillel.
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.