Parashat Ki Tetze
Let’s Get
Physical!
The commandment to
remove a corpse from the stake on which it is impaled teaches us the importance
of respecting the holiness of the body.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article is reprinted with permission from University of Judaism.
The definition of what is
"religious" shifts throughout the ages. In antiquity, being religious
meant offering sacrifices (of children, women, prisoners taken in war) and
making regular gifts to the gods. In biblical Israel, it meant being aware of
God's presence, by bringing animal sacrifices to the Temple in Jerusalem at the
designated times.
By the Second Temple
period, a new emphasis, one of ritual purity, ethical rigor, and obedience to a
growing oral tradition became the defining feature of pharisaic religiosity,
which the Rabbis of the Talmud extended into an emphasis on the performance of mitzvot
(commandments) and study as religious acts.
In the medieval period,
study and ritual purity remained important, but they were refocused through the
lenses of kabbalah, Jewish mysticism. Finally, in the early modern age, social
justice (for some) and celebration through song and dance (for others) often
competed with the earlier identifying features of religiosity.
Jews today have inherited
this range of different ways of being religious--from offerings to social
justice, from prayer and study to dance, from purity to the performance of
mitzvot.
There are many paths of
piety rooted in thousands of years of Jewish tradition. On the other hand,
America today seems to offer two primary modes of religion: either literalist
obedience to a sacred book or in new age exultation of feeling.
In many cases, what
American spirituality avoids is the bodily reality of human existence. Too much
of American spirituality assumes that "spirit," a concept originating
in Greek thought and Pauline Christianity, is the opposite of "body."
Spirit--we are told--is good, pure and eternal. Body is bad, corrupt and
ephemeral.
Given that understanding
of spirit, it is no wonder that the wide range of American spiritual movements
tend to help free the person from the trap of their own bodies and drives.
Cults from eastern religions and from the latest fad all unite in an effort to
help us transcend our bodies. How surprising, then, to look back over the list
of Jewish spiritual responses and see how solidly rooted in bodies they all
are.
Judaism is a corporeal
religion. We know that a spirituality that doesn't redeem the body with it is
merely an escape, and one doomed to failure in the end. That emphasis on the
body emerges in today's Torah portion in the unlikeliest place.
"If a man is guilty
of a capital offense and is put to death, and you impale him on a stake [after
his having already been executed], you must not let his corpse remain on the
stake overnight, but you must bury him the same day. For an impaled body is an
affront to God; you shall not defile the land that the Lord your God is giving
you to possess."
Why is an impaled body an
offense against God? Wouldn't the humiliated corpse serve a valuable
preventative function, since all who saw it would resolve not to commit a
similar offense? If so, it should be a good thing to leave the body hanging.
Besides, the person isn't the same as the body anyway! The body is relatively
unimportant, like a used set of clothing that no longer fits. So who cares
about how the body is treated!
Apparently, the Torah
doesn't accept that trivialization of the body. Rashi adds to the Torah that,
"It is a slight to the King [God] because humanity is made in the likeness
of God's image and Israel are God's children." This may be likened to two
twin brothers who resembled each other; one became a king while the other was
seized as a criminal and hanged. Whoever saw him exclaimed, 'The king is
hanged.'" This shocking comment implies that our resemblance to God is
more than just spiritual, that even our bodies reflect the Divine Image, and
therefore deserve reverence and respect.
In Midrash Va-Yikra
Rabbah, the great sage, Hillel, compares keeping our bodies clean to
maintaining a statue of a king. He comments that, "Bathing the body is an
obligation, since we are created in the image of the Ruler of the world."
For that same reason,
Jewish tradition prohibits cremation as undignified to the body of the
deceased, and Talmudic tradition affirms a physical resurrection of the dead.
One need not share every Talmudic belief about the afterlife to recognize great
wisdom in preserving a sense of awe and gratitude for the human body.
In an age awash in
self-destructive drugs, too busy to exercise or to eat carefully, respect for
our bodies is dangerously low on our agenda. Teenagers and women smoke in
growing numbers, and alcohol use, too, is on the rise. Biblical and Rabbinic
tradition maintain that our bodies reflect God's image and therefore command
respectful maintenance. In addition, our bodies are not our property, but
God's. We use them, as the tenants and stewards of God's possessions. But
ultimately, our bodies must be returned, well-tended, to their original Owner.
Is there a connection
between the trivialization of the body in American spirituality and the callous
disregard for bodies in American life? Let's get physical!
Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler
School of Rabbinic Studies at the University of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is
the author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill).
For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary, please send an
email request to bartson@uj.edu.