Parashat Nitzavim
All-Inclusive
Covenant
Moses tells the
Children of Israel that the covenant includes all of them, including the pious
and faithful as well as the rebellious and confused.
By David Nelson
The following article is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
In the beginning of Parashat Nitzavim, Moses prepares the
Israelites to enter the covenant with God. He declares that the whole
community--elders, women, children, strangers--will be part of the covenant,
"from your woodchoppers to your water-drawers"
(Deuteronomy 29:10).
This is a typical biblical phrase. "From x to y,"
where x and y represent opposite extremes of a continuum, means "including
everyone." Thus "from young to old" or "from the greatest
to the smallest" mean "including everyone." Our problem is that
woodchoppers and water-drawers are not opposite extremes. Both are menial
laborers and neither was highly esteemed. What does the phrase mean?
Perhaps these jobs are meant symbolically rather than
literally. Let's free associate. Woodchoppers are literally "choppers of
your trees." The image of trees has echoes of the Tree of Life, the Torah.
To "chop" such a Tree is to question, or reject Jewish tradition. On
the other hand, the image of "water-drawers" is reminiscent of the
verse "u-sh'avtem mayim b'sasson...," the promise of Isaiah
(12:3), "You shall draw water joyfully from salvation's wells." The
image is of one who drinks deeply from the wellsprings of Torah.
Understood this way, Moses is declaring the covenant to be
inclusive of all, the pious and the rebellious, the faithful and the confused.
The text warns us never to be so complacent about our commitment or devotion,
or so sure of our faith, that we see the covenant of Israel as closed to those
who are not convinced of its value or sure of its feasibility. Rather we must
learn from the later verses of the parashah and approach such Jews with the
assurance that the Torah, in its broadest sense, “. . . is very close to you,
in your mouth and in your heart" (Deuteronomy 30:14).