Gleanings
Contemporary Thinkers on Mitzvot and their
Performance
On history, spirituality, obligation, and
standing at Sinai.
The thinkers
below, from a variety of Jewish perspectives, reflect on how contemporary
Jews-- imbued as we may be with a sense of the importance of freedom and
individual expression--should understand the practices and obligations which
have traditionally been understood in Judaism as "commandments. "
Mitzvot Emerge from Jewish History
Mitzvot are
related to historic experiences in which the Jewish people sought to apprehend
God’s nature and His will. They are to be observed not because they are divine
fiats, but because something happened between God and Israel, and the same
something continues to happen in every age and land.
Mitzvot thus emerge from the womb of Jewish history, from a series
of sacred encounters between God and Israel. When a Jew performs one of the
many life-acts known as mitzvot to
remind himself of one of those moments of encounter, what was only episodic
becomes epochal, and what was only a moment in Jewish history becomes eternal
in Jewish life.
-- Rabbi David
Polish founded and led the Beth Emet Free Synagogue in Evanston, Illinois.
Reprinted with permission from “History as the Source of the Mitzvah,” in Gates of Mitzvah, ed. Simeon J. Maslin, published by the Central
Conference of American Rabbis.
Mitzvot Help Us Recapture the Sinai Experience
The question is not how many of the
hundreds of mitzvot you choose to
follow. The question is whether you are interested in doing what Jews have
always done, recapturing the feeling of standing at Sinai, bringing holiness
into your life by sanctifying even its ordinary moments, especially its
ordinary moments. Over the centuries, ordinary people, people who were not
saints, people who were not scholars, managed to do that, for God’s sake and
the sake of their own souls. To paraphrase a familiar slogan, a soul is a
terrible thing to waste.
--
Rabbi Harold Kushner is Rabbi Laureate of Temple Israel in Natick,
Massachusetts, and a best-selling author. The following is reprinted with
permission from To Life!: A Celebration of Jewish Being
and Thinking, published by Little, Brown & Co.
Revelation Imposes Obligation
To the committed Jew, the experience
of revelation, at Sinai or at present, is not simply a momentarily rapturous
encounter. It is enthralling in both
senses of the word. It imposes binding obligation. The Torah, although it
includes sizable narrative segments, is, in its quintessence, normative.
Indeed, the rabbis felt constrained to explain why it had not begun with the
first command addressed to Israel (Exodus 12) rather than with the story of
creation. At its core, the Torah is a body of law. Halakhah, its heart and soul.
To respond to the Torah, at whatever
level, is not just to undergo mystical or even prophetic trauma, but to heed a
command. Or rather, to heed God as the giver of commands. To the pure ethicist,
obligation may perhaps be rooted in an autonomous moral law. Religiously
speaking, one is bound to the person-to-person encounter. Not just the law but
the King, not only the mitzvah
[commandment] but the m’tsaveh [One
who commands]. “Why [in reciting the Sh’ma]
does the portion of Sh’ma [Deut. 6:4-9] precede that of v’haya im shamoa [Deut. 11:13-21]? In order that he [who recites]
should first accept the rule of the Kingdom of heaven and then the rule of mitzvot.” This is the crux of the
precedence in Exodus 24:7 of na’aseh,
“we will do,” to v’nishma, “we shall
hear,” which the rabbis saw as being so basic to Israel’s acceptance of the
Torah.
--Rabbi Aharon Lichtenstein, Ph.D., formerly Professor of
Talmud at Yeshiva University, is rosh
yeshiva at Yeshivat Har Etzion in Alon
Shvut. Reprinted from The Condition of Jewish Belief: A Symposium, composed by the Editors of Commentary
Magazine, by permission; all rights reserved.
Writing the Torah — and Accepting It — Was a
Religious Experience
I believe that the Torah is a
document of revelation; but I am not a fundamentalist. I believe that the words
we read in the Torah were written by men; yet I am not a nontheistic humanist.
The men who wrote the Torah wrote it under the impact of a religious experience—an
experience of God’s concern for Israel, of God’s incursion into history. And
not only the men who wrote it. The experience was shared by the men who
accepted it—or there would have been no such acceptance.
Moreover, it is not merely a
question of a written text. Torah, for the Jew, is the oral as well as the
written Torah; and it is the function of the oral Torah to keep the moment of
revelation alive, to apply the underlying principles of Torah to circumstances
and conditions which could not have been described in the original written
text. With Franz Rosenzweig, I would distinguish between “legislation” and
“commandment” in the Torah. The “legislation” can be a mere matter of academic
study for me. But it need not be. Approached in the right frame of mind, Torah
“legislation” can yield commandments
addressed to me.
I am aware of the danger of
religious anarchy inherent in such an approach, though I am not sure that it is
really a “danger.” I can respect the Jew whose pattern of religious observance
differs from mine, if only his observance derives from a like desire to hear
God’s commandments. Yet there are also laws in the Torah which should be
observed by all Jews—whether or not they feel personally “addressed” by them.
For it is one of the functions of the Torah to be the “constitution” of the
holy community. The preservation of that holy community is itself a positive
value of supreme concern to the Torah and, as I believe, to God.
--Dr. Jakob J. Petuchowski, 1925-1991, was Professor of Rabbinics and
Jewish Theology at the Cincinnati campus of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish
Institute of Religion. Reprinted from The Condition of Jewish Belief: A
Symposium, composed by the Editors of Commentary Magazine, by permission; all rights reserved.
We Obligate Ourselves
I believe that the ultimate locus of authority for what we
believe and how we practice as Jews is in ourselves. That is the irreversible
gift of modernity. I also believe that we can and must voluntarily surrender
some of that authority, primarily to our communities—for without a community we
would be totally bereft (without a minyan,
I cannot genuinely worship as a Jew)—and ultimately to God as we experience God
in commanding relationship with us. But we reserve the right to determine how,
and in what areas, and to what extent we surrender that authority. In the last
analysis, we obligate ourselves.
-- Rabbi Neil
Gillman, Ph.D., is the Aaron Rabinowitz and Simon H. Rifkind Professor of
Jewish Philosophy at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New York
Reprinted with permission from, “I Believe,” Sh’ma 14/456 (September 3, 1993).