Parashat Mishpatim
Critiquing Our Leadership
While it’s easy to
complain about poor leadership, Parashat Mishpatim challenges us to critique
from a committed, engaged perspective.
By Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Kolel: The
Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish Learning.
Overview
The word mishpatim
means "laws" or "ordinances," and comes from a root which
means judge or judgment. This parsha contains civil laws, liability laws,
criminal laws, ritual laws, financial laws, and family laws--the Torah doesn't
seem to make the same distinctions that we do between civil and criminal,
religious and secular legislation.
Towards the end of the parsha, the holidays are reviewed,
and God repeats the promise to bring the people to the land of Canaan. Moshe
makes a sacrifice in front of the entire Israelite leadership, and they have a
wondrous vision of God. Moshe goes back up the mountain, and stays there in a
cloud to receive the law.
In Focus
"You shall not revile God, nor curse a leader among your
people. " (Exodus 22:2--but counted as Exodus 22:28 in some Christian
translations.)
Pshat
Chapter 22 contains a mix of different kinds of laws,
pertaining to everything from liability for damaging animals to sexual
prohibitions to dietary laws. In context, perhaps this law, about cursing
judges and leaders, is related to the other laws in that everybody accepts some
restrictions on their freedom in order that society may function. Without some
common understanding of the customs of ownership, family life, sexuality, and
so on, it might be hard to live together as a community. Similarly, if people
do not accept some form of leadership, society would break down into anarchy,
which is anathema to the culture of the Bible.
Drash
To many commentators, this is one integrated commandment,
because they understand leadership as fulfilling the word of God. Thus, someone
who curses the leader or the judge is implicitly rejecting the authority of
God, Whose laws the leader is (at least theoretically) enacting.
However, the commandment not to curse a leader is by no
means a commandment to accept flawed leaders without question--the Bible is
full of positive examples of people criticizing their leaders. A gentle example
comes from the previous parsha, when Yitro, Moshe's father-in-law, gives him
some constructive criticism about taking on too much, and then advises him to
delegate many of his responsibilities. (Exodus 18)
A more forceful example of criticizing a communal leader is
the prophet Natan's famous rebuke of King David, after David committed adultery
with Bathsheba and then had her husband killed on the battlefield so he could
marry her. (2 Samuel 11-12) Natan approaches the king directly, and even gets
David to confess how wrong his deeds were--there was no question of letting
David get away with corruption just because he was the king.
In fact, the historical and prophetic books of the Bible are
just full of instances of leaders acting badly and then being denounced for
it--so why does the Torah tell us not to curse a "leader among the
people?"
Perhaps there is a subtle but crucial difference between
criticism and cursing. While some criticism is just useless griping, the kind
of critique that the prophets offered was always in the hope that people could
change and improve their behavior. Natan confronted David not to bring down his
kingship, but so that he would confess and repent.
Contrast this with the passive anger towards the political
system felt by so many people today. Voter turnouts are among the lowest ever
in recent Canadian, American, and Israeli elections--people love to curse the
leaders, but that's not the same as getting involved for positive change.
Maimonides notes that "cursing" is a form of anger, which he regards
as a destructive emotion, at least when it's not connected to constructive
action.
Another interesting observation is made by the 14th century
Italian rabbi Menachem Recanati, who points out that cursing the leadership,
even if it has no physical effect, may convince people that leadership is a
thankless task and discourage people from taking positions of public service.*
Exactly the same point has been made in countless Canadian and American
newspaper editorials during the various public scandals of the past few years,
especially when journalists and opposition parties engage in what some call the
"politics of personal destruction."
I believe that the Torah encourages--even demands--holding
leadership accountable to the highest moral and legal standards. Nobody, not
even King David, is above the law. Too often, however, we are content to curse
the system without any involvement in it, which serves no one, and changes
nothing. This whole section of the Torah conveys a very different message: a
good society depends on the participation and moral responsibility of each
individual. It's easy to curse the leadership, but it's better to work together
for a better community.
*These two
commentaries are quoted in The Mitzvot
by Abraham Chill.
Rabbi Neal Joseph
Loevinger is currently the rabbi of Temple Israel of Swampscott and Marblehead,
MA. A former student at Kolel, he
served as Kolel’s Director of Outreach from late 1999-2001. He was ordained in the first graduating
class of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies of the University of Judaism,
and holds a Master’s of Environmental Studies from York University in Toronto.