Parashat Nitzavim
On This Day God Calls To You
Parashat Nitzavim
teaches us the importance of viewing ourselves as partners in a dialogue with
God.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
Some look to religion to transmit
a sense of the majesty of the past. Traditions, because they come to us from a
purer time, embody fragile vessels carrying remnants of a lost insight.
Such a view of Judaism correctly
perceives the treasures of our ancestors' seeking and recording their
relationship with God. But it errs in transforming the record of that search
into a type of fossil, a brittle relic that can only be passed from hand to
hand, without any direct contribution from the viewer.
Such an idolization of the past
removes God from the theater of our own lives, and threatens to trivialize the
worth of our own continuing journeys, to ignore the harvest of our own insight
and response. The Torah itself rejects this excessive veneration of the past.
In clear terms, Moses tells the
Jewish People, "You stand this day, all of you, before the Lord your God .
. . to enter into the covenant of the Lord your God, which the Lord your God is
concluding with you this day . . . that He may establish you this day as His
people and be your God."
Three times, Moses stresses the
phrase, "this day," emphasizing the contemporaneity of God's outreach
to the Jewish People. Rashi notices this repetition, and comments that the
chorus of "this day" indicates that, "just as this day
enlightens, so will God enlighten [the Jewish People] in the future."
God's relationship to humanity is
a permanent expression of love, an ongoing fact no less than gravity or
sunrise. It undergirds the laws of nature, unifies human enterprise and the
rhythms of nature. To center one's faith in the past is to imprison God within
a book or a set of books. Such a faith makes idolatrous even the most sacred of
inheritances. To center one's faith in the living Source of life, the God of
creation and of Revelation, however, is to liberate one's spirit to the
continuous abundance of God's 'chesed'
(love, grace).
Jewish tradition is sacred because
it reflects our ancestors' intimacy with God and because it cultivates in
ourselves a responsiveness and an eagerness for that same intimacy; which means
that, important as it may be, Jewish tradition is a means to a higher
end--which is a love relationship with God.
For Jews, such a relationship may
only be attainable through the practice of ritual acts and good deeds, through
ongoing learning and through prayer. But the Torah's emphasis of "this
day" addressing "all of you" reminds us that, essential though
they may be, the goal is not mitzvot
(commandments). The goal is God.
Mitzvot are our special pathway leading to the splendor
of the Holy One. As with our ancestors, the Sovereign of the Universe beckons
to each one of us. Come, My beloved, come away. Today, this day, God calls to
you, and to your neighbor, and to me. Today, even now, the Holy One of Israel
awaits your response.
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.