Parashat Tzav
Challenging Isolation
Too much isolation set Nadav and Avihu over the edge.
By Steven Exler
This commentary is provided by special arrangement with
American Jewish World Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
We tend to think of solitary confinement as an
awful thing. Yet, at times, many of us have chosen to detach ourselves in order
to give our full attention to an important task. Our other responsibilities and
connections temporarily fall away as we push single-mindedly toward
accomplishing our goal. For this type of endeavor, the intensity of focused
time is often useful, even necessary. However, dangers abound. We may forget
our connections and our broader commitments. We may slip away from society.
Priestly Isolation
The
Torah prescribes isolation at the end of Parashat Tzav. As the
long-awaited consecration of the Tabernacle draws near, God dictates the final
instructions for Aaron and his sons:
"You
shall not go outside the entrance of the Tent of Meeting for seven days, until
the day that your period of ordination is completed…You shall remain at the
entrance of the Tent of Meeting day and night for seven days, keeping God's
charge--that you may not die--for so I have been commanded. And Aaron and his
sons did all the things that God had commanded through Moses."
The
day job of the priests becomes an all-encompassing 24-hour affair, and Aaron
and his sons begin a week of singular attention to their roles in the
dedication of the Tabernacle. It is not surprising that this task demands
complete focus--the Tabernacle is thus far uncharted territory and the stakes
are high. The priests cannot afford any distractions.
"That You May Not Die"
Despite
the separation God commands, we are confronted by a striking irony. God clearly
specifies the benefit of the imposed isolation in the Tabernacle for seven
days--"that you may not die." Aaron and his sons faithfully adhere to
the prescribed isolation.
However,
just over a chapter later--at the pinnacle of the consecration--two of Aaron's
four sons, Nadav and Avihu, offer a "strange fire," one that they
were not commanded to offer. Their punishment for this transgression is death,
and they are consumed by Divine flame. The echo of the verses prescribing
isolation rings in our ears as we read of their death. Nahmanides relates to
this echo in his commentary on these verses:
"In
every other place it says, 'As God commanded through Moses,' but here, because
they added to the commandment it did not describe their actions using this
language, because they did not do 'as God had commanded Moses.' Rather, they
did 'all the things God commanded' and added on to them, as it was written,
'alien fire, which He had not enjoined upon them.'"
Losing Sight
Nahmanides
points out astutely that Aaron's sons did not merely follow God's word--they
added something of their own. Perhaps it is in their very addition to the
command for isolation that Nadav and Avihu get carried away and offer this
strange fire. God commands them to separate for seven days to prepare for the
consecration of the Tabernacle. In their detachment they lose sight of their
role to lead the community and instead offer up their own fire.
This
fire is brought on the eighth day. Was it this extra day of isolation that
pushes Nadav and Avihu over the edge? The Sages support this idea, suggesting
that Nadav and Avihu never married and did not have children. In the Sages'
world, marriage and child-rearing were moorings to anchor one to the community.
We now see the irony in sharp relief: the isolation that was meant to be their
very protection from death becomes, so painfully, their downfall.
The
story of Nadav and Avihu teaches us that isolation should be treated as a means
to accomplishing a goal, not an end unto itself, and that isolation is never
meant to be a permanent state.
Global Responsibility
In
a global era we must recognize how our concept of society and our detachment
from it has been radically redefined. We have access to tremendous information,
resources and people the world over. Yet we often choose not to make those
connections, thinking of ourselves as separate from those suffering and
struggling across the globe.
We
must remember to balance our sometimes necessary isolation in our own
tabernacle of family and Jewish community with the dangers of forgetting about
the lives of people in the Global South. For them, every day is a struggle for
economic sustenance. Survival often stands in the way of their ability to
articulate the hopes and dreams we take for granted.
Lest
we, too, come to offer a strange fire, a product of a too-extensive isolation,
let us commit to following the stories of our broader international community
as part of our weekly schedule. Let us choose a region to which we feel
connected and promise to act for its development. Nadav and Avihu's eighth day
of isolation was their demise. May our atonement for their death come through
never letting a whole week go by without acting on our global awareness.
Steven Exler
is a rabbinical student at Yeshivat Chovevei Torah and a Wexner Fellow.