Bearing Fruit Even In Old Age
The Torah mentions
the ages of Moses and Aaron to teach us that age is a source of pride and that
by honoring the elderly we bring richness to our own lives.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
Most of our lives are darkened by the shadow of aging.
We mock the old, laughing at their physical condition, joking about being in
wheel chairs, in old age homes, in hospital beds. We associate the old
with the incompetent, with a state of permanent boredom and irrelevance.
By bleaching our hair, lifting our faces, breasts and calves, sucking off our
fat, and dressing in the gaudiest apparel possible, we hope to "stay
young" forever.
Our fear of age trails us everywhere, urging middle-aged
women to undergo cosmetic surgery and middle-aged men to find a mistress.
It whispers to us of "our last chance"--whatever the vice in
question. There is a frenzied quality to our recreation, our
relationships, and to our acquisition of property, since we expect all of them
to ward off the inevitable--death.
There is one way to ward off death, but it doesn't lie in
the distractions and the stuporifics offered by today's fashion
magazines. We can ward off death, prevent its encroachment into the realm
of life, only by truly living each and every day, only by refusing to see the
elderly as the walking dead, or to view aging as equivalent to dying.
We can put off death by honoring the old among us.
Look, for a moment, at how our Jewish tradition speaks of age. In today's
Torah portion, Moses and his brother, Aaron, receive God's command to appear
before Pharaoh to demand the freedom of the Jews. In what looks like an
unnecessary digression, after discussing the conversation between the brothers
and God, the Torah records that "Moses was 80 years old and Aaron was 83,
when they made their demand on Pharaoh."
Why does the Torah stoop from the drama of statescraft and
diplomacy at the highest levels to reveal something so mundane, so irrelevant
as the age of these two leaders?
According to Rabbi Abraham ibn Ezra (12th Century Spain),
this reference to advanced age is unique. "We don't find prophets anywhere
else in Scripture for whom the text points out that they prophesied while
elderly, except here."
Only for Moses and Aaron does the Torah go out of its way to
tell us that they were old. Why? "Because it attributes
greatness [to Moses and Aaron] beyond all other prophets, for only to them did
God appear . . . for only to them was the Torah given, and thus through their
hands do the righteous inherit the Coming World, while all other prophets
either chastise or predict the future."
Rabbi ibn Ezra noticed a distinction in the functions of
these brothers and all subsequent Jewish prophets. Only Moses and Aaron
transmitted new teaching to the Jewish people, and their teachings became our
portal to eternal life and higher purpose. All the other prophets, as
great as they indubitably were, worked to remind us of the ethical and
spiritual core of the Mosaic revelation.
While Rabbi ibn Ezra's insight is itself remarkable, for our
purposes what stands out is his evaluation of age. He sees the statement
of Moses and Aaron's old age as highly complimentary. Not only do they
not hide their age, but it is a source of pride.
In the words of the Talmud, "at 80--the age of
strength." What is the strength of 80 years? Surely a teenager is
stronger physically, and a child can run farther and packs more energy!
The acumen of a 40-year old is more quick and deft, and a 60-year old is more
keen to the ways of the world.
The strength of 80 is the wisdom that comes from experience
and completion. Having run much of the course of life, having seen the
follies and passions of the human heart rise and subside, having seen their own
and their friends' dreams, limitations and achievements, an adult of 80 years
is finally able to look at the human condition with compassion and some
skepticism. At 80 years of age, we need no longer serve either passion or
ambition.
Finally, at 80, we can review our life, taking stock of how
those who cared for us as children paved our paths through life, for good or
for ill. The Talmud relates that Rabbi Hanina used to say that one was
regarded as healthy "as long as one is able to stand on one foot and put
on and take off one's shoes." It was said that Rabbi Hanina was able
to do so at the age of 80. He remarked that "the warm bath and oil
with which my parents anointed me in my youth have stood me in good stead in my
old age."
In our youth, each one of us was cared for by someone
older. As links in the chain of the
generations, we also care for others who depend on us to transmit what they
need to establish lives of purpose, accomplishment and belonging. Judaism is the warm water, and Torah the oil
with which to anoint our children and ourselves, the bath to keep away the
chill. Then, even in old age, we will
flourish like a cedar. Planted in the courtyards
of our God, we shall bear fruit, even in old age.
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.