Parashat Mattot
Maintaining
Monotheism
Our discomfort
with the Torah’s command to wipe out other nations stems from the contrast
between that directive and the Torah’s usual emphasis on respect for human
life.
By Joseph Telushkin
The following article is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
Mattot is a disturbing Torah portion. In depicting the early
Hebrews' war with the Midianites, it contains a command to the Hebrews to wipe
out most of the Midianites.
To place the commandment in context, one must remember that
3,000 years ago, this is how wars were fought. "Ancient documents from
Mesopotamia to Egypt," a recent book notes, "abound in joyous
references to annihilating neighbors."
The main reason these injunctions so disturb us is because
the Bible itself has sensitized us to deeply respecting each human life. As the
late Princeton philosopher Walter Kaufmann wrote, "The reproach of
callousness and insufficient social conscience can hardly be raised. Our social
conscience comes largely from the religion of Moses."
In large measure, it is only because of other verses in the
Bible commanding us to love our neighbors and to love the stranger that the
verses commanding total war trouble us. "[But] to find the spirit of the
religion of the Old Testament in [these biblical passages]," Kaufmann
added, "is like finding the distinctive genius of America in the men who
slaughtered the Indians."
The Bible's troubling ethics of warfare can perhaps be best
explained in terms of monotheism's struggle to survive. After all, it was long
a minority movement with a different theology and ethical system than the rest
of the world. It developed and expanded because it had one small corner in the
world where it grew undisturbed. Had the Hebrews continued to reside amid the
pagan, child-sacrificing Canaanites, monotheism itself almost certainly would
have died.