Overview: Mitzvot
One often hears someone Jewish saying, “It's a mitzvah!”
usually referring to a charitable, beneficial act performed by another person. However, while its Yiddish parallel “mitzveh” does have this connotation, the
Hebrew word mitzvah does not mean “a
good deed” in that sense. Mitzvah
literally means “commandment.” In fact,
Jewish tradition understands exactly 613 mitzvot (plural of mitzvah) to be
derived from the Hebrew Bible. It is not simply a “good deed”, for example, to
refrain from murdering or stealing. And
similarly, the mitzvot which deal with feeding the poor, acting kindly to the
stranger, or observing the Sabbath are much more significant in the Jewish
tradition than mere divine suggestions on how to be good. Mitzvot are commandments, traditionally understood
to come from God and to be intended for the Jewish people to observe.
Those of us who live in the western world are often
uncomfortable with the idea of being “commanded” to do something, because it
seems to deprive us of the right to choose how we behave. In fact, the Torah itself says that when God
gave the commandments, God declared, “Behold, I have set before you the
blessing [of observing the commandments] and the curse [the potential
punishment for failing to observe the mitzvot]--therefore, choose
life!" It seems that even God recognized
that the Jews had a choice in the matter-- and was clearly hinting at the right
choice.
But why should the biblical Israelites have bothered to
accept and observe the mitzvot? After
God rescued the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt, God expected that the
Israelites would in turn observe the mitzvot in eternal, loving gratitude for
this redemption. Yet, gratitude only
goes so far, especially when it comes to observing such commandments as keeping
kosher (dietary) laws or Shabbat (resting and not working on the Sabbath
day). For the past three thousand or so
years, every generation of Jews, rabbis, and scholars, has analyzed and argued
about exactly why the Jewish people should continue to observe the mitzvot.
And it is not just 613 mitzvot that we are talking
about! Even after the historical era of
the Hebrew Bible, generations of rabbis continued to update, adapt, and
generate new, more modern commandments--all understood to be derived from the
original 613 in the Torah. Today, Jews
no longer practice animal sacrifices or give agricultural gifts to a hereditary
class of priests--yet there are modern mitzvot (often the subject of
ideological controversy) that deal with questions relating to organ donation,
the kashrut (fitness for eating) of
organic fruits and vegetables, and interfaith relations. Mitzvot deal with every aspect of how one should
go about leading a Jewish life.
The Torah itself does not offer many enlightened reasons,
but generally explains that the Jewish people should observe the mitzvot simply
because God commanded us to do so, or because of the potential negative
consequences that would result from non-compliance. Other thinkers have endeavored to prove that the mitzvot are all
completely rational, logical actions which any moral and ethical people would
welcome. Still others claim that the commandments actually improve us as human
beings, refining us as upright and just people, or that doing God’s
commandments actually has a cosmic effect upon the spiritual fabric of all
creation. And some thinkers even reject
the importance of asking this question entirely, arguing that the only
legitimate reason for the performance of mitzvot is in order to obey God’s
commandments and fulfill our part in the covenant between God and the Jewish
people.
Some people observe the mitzvot because it helps them to
identify and feel a part of the larger Jewish community, others because they
believe themselves to be commanded to do so, and still others simply because it
is pleasurable, a joy, to celebrate the Jewish holidays and home rituals. But
whatever reason motivates someone to observe the commandments is, in Jewish
tradition, less important than the actual doing of the mitzvot themselves--one
might say that the “deed” is more important than the “creed.” That is, how we behave in this world,
towards our fellow human beings and the world we live in, is ultimately of more
importance than what we may believe. In
the final analysis, the mitzvot are a uniquely Jewish approach to living a holy
life in this world.