Parashat Shemini
Role Models for Leadership
The deaths of
Aaron’s sons Nadav and Avihu remind us of the need for leaders who connect with
the people.
By Michelle Wasserman
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The
Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
"Sons of High Priest Commit Minor Infraction.
Internally Burn to Death: External Bodies Left Untouched." It reads like a
headline for the National Enquirer.
Even for the Torah the deaths of Aaron's sons Nadav and Avihu in this week's
parasha, Shemini, are sensational.
Their crime: they decide to make an incense offering to God
at an inappropriate time, presenting "alien fire" to God. Their
punishment: God sends flames up their noses and burns them to death. God
explains his actions by saying ambiguously, "I will be sanctified through
those who are nearest Me, thus I will be honored before the entire
people." Aaron remains silent. Their cousins remove their tunics and their
bodies, untouched by the flames; Aaron and his sons are forbidden to mourn.
On a literal level these deaths are hard to explain. These
are not common men attempting to destroy the hierarchy of the priesthood; these
are Aaron's sons. They are actually fulfilling one of their duties, the daily
offering of incense. Their deaths are violent and painful, and God seems to say
that through this violence he has been honored. If this is the case,
sanctification from God is a dangerous thing.
In Judaism, God is both merciful and wrathful, but always just. Accordingly
sages throughout the ages have tried to rationalize these seemingly empty
deaths. The sin was bringing "alien fire" before God. Midrash [commentary] claims that this
offering came as the last in a series of selfish acts. The pride involved in
the act made the offering alien. There is another suggestion that perhaps the
brothers were intoxicated, making the offering an abomination to God, and
leading into the next section of the portion that forbids the drinking of
alcohol before entering the Tabernacle.
Of all the inconsistencies in the portion, the greatest is the preservation of
the brothers' bodies. After their strange demise, the parasha relates how the
cousins of Nadav and Avihu "carried them by their tunics to the outside of
the camp." The fire did not burn their clothing or, as Midrash claims,
their bodies.
Oftentimes what does not make sense on a literal level does make sense on a
metaphorical level. This part of the Torah portion leads to a more metaphorical
interpretation. Fire is a universal symbol for passion. Fire appears in two contexts
in this story: first as the fire the brothers send up to God and second as the
fire that consumes them on the inside.
The passion that burns inside of these two men is a divine
one, centered on God. Divine passion both fills them and kills them. They
first, however, offer their own fire up to God. This fire is "alien,"
or alienating. The two brothers separate themselves from the rest of the people
and concentrate their passions on God. The brothers cultivate private passion
for God, one that eventually consumes them.
Looking to the context of the whole Torah portion, in Shemini God establishes
precedent for the Israelites. The Tabernacle is set up, the rules for priests
explained and the laws of Kashrut delineated. Priests and sacrifices served an
important communal purpose for the Israelites. Through sacrifice the Israelites
atoned for both individual and societal sins, assuring the smooth function of
the society.
There is no room in such a
system for priests consumed with a private passion for God. The priestly role
cannot be separated from the people. God's ambiguous comment explains this, and
makes Nadav and Avihu negative examples of priestly behavior. God says "I
will be sanctified through those who are nearest me, thus I will be honored
before the entire people."
Those nearest to God, the
priests, must sanctify God only in the communal context. They cannot alienate
themselves and offer God a passion that separates them from the community.
Priests must function as spiritual intermediaries, and through this action God
will have honor They must teach the Israelites to connect to their God and to
their heritage, and in doing so they unite the entire community and glorify
God.
Nadav and Avihu failed by removing themselves from the important community
capacity as teachers and role models. The Jewish people still need leaders to
connect the past with the present and to serve as positive examples of
behavior.
Prepared by Michelle Wasserman, a member
of Hillel's 1999/2000 Board of Directors and a student at the University of
California, San Diego.
Provided by Hillel’s
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning, which creates innovative
educational resources based on Jewish texts and trains Hillel students,
professionals, and lay leaders to infuse Jewish content throughout their
activities. © 2002 Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.