Parashat Ki Tetze
Every Act Is
Significant
The reward of long
life for the seemingly simple commandment of shooing away a mother bird before
taking her young teaches us that no act is trivial.
By Irving Greenberg
The following article is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
This parasha has the largest concentration of mitzvot
(commandments) of any portion; 74 out of the traditional 613 commandments are
found in it. Of all these commandments, one stands out. "If [walking]
along the road, you chance upon a bird's nest . . . and the mother is sitting
over the fledglings or on the eggs, do not take the mother together with her
young. Let the mother go and take only the young, in order that you may fare
well and have a long life" (Deuteronomy 22:6).
The Talmud labels this mitzvah the "lightest" (the
most insubstantial) of all the commandments, probably because it takes little
effort to perform. Sending away the mother might well involve merely making a
loud noise. Indeed, just walking close (or advancing menacingly) might induce
the mother to fly away.
Commentators in every generation have wondered why there is
so extravagant a reward (a good, long life) for so "trivial" an act!
Indeed, one Talmudic commentator points out that the same reward is specified
in the Torah for honoring parents. Yet fulfilling that commandment takes a
lifetime and often involves money, emotion and effort without limit. He
concludes that the equality of reward is the point. The "lightest" of
commandments rewarded as much as the "weightiest" to teach us to
treasure and observe all commandments equally--for the reward of any mitzvah is
incalculable.
Through this commandment, the Torah teaches that every act
is of immense significance. Therefore, no act is inherently trivial. When you
eat, you can choose food and prepare it to express reverence for life or
commitment to being a Jew (kashrut). When you speak, you can say a word
of encouragement, truth or love or you can say a word of malicious gossip,
falsehood or degradation.
Maimonides writes in his laws of repentance that every
person should consider himself or herself as perfectly balanced between good
and bad and the world as perfectly balanced between good and evil. The next
action you do--however trivial--can tilt you and the whole world toward the
side of good and life or to the side of evil and death. Choose life!