Parashat B’hukotai
Preserving The
Covenant
Incentives to keep
the covenant are directed at Israel because of Israel’s power, through its
behavior, to break the covenant.
By Dvora Weisberg
The following article is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
In this parasha, God details the rewards for observing the
commandments and the punishments for rejecting them. If Israel is faithful to
the covenant, God will grant the people rich harvests and peace in their land.
If Israel disregards the covenant, the people will experience famine and
disease, and will be overwhelmed by their enemies.
These passages are both understandable and disturbing. When
two parties make an agreement, they may outline the incentives for honoring the
contract and the penalties for breaching it. Israel and God have made a
covenant. Why shouldn't there be incentive clauses or penalties?
On the other hand, the covenant is not a business agreement;
it marks the entrance into a deeply committed relationship. Is there any need
for incentives, let alone threats? Furthermore, the covenant binds God as well
as Israel. If incentives and penalties are appropriate, why are there none
directed at God?
The covenant is clearly a reciprocal arrangement, with its
core being not particular commandments but relationship. "I will be ever
present in your midst; I will be your God" (Leviticus 26:12). The
preservation of this relationship is the true incentive for upholding the
covenant. The gravest consequence of disobedience would be the severing of the
bonds between God and Israel.
God appears to be in control of the covenant. God initiates
the covenant and spells out reward and punishment. But God needs Israel as much
as Israel needs God. If Israel derives its identity from its relationship with
God, so too is God known in relationship to Israel.
Furthermore, however Israel behaves, God promises, "I
will not repudiate them or spurn them...annulling My covenant with them: for I
am the Lord their God" (26:44). God cannot reject the covenant. The
incentive clauses are directed at Israel because only Israel has the power to
break the covenant.