Parashat B’hukotai
Faith In
Difficult Times
Jeremiah’s deep
faith despite the impending exile predicted in Parashat B’hukotai can teach us
to turn to God in the most troubling of times.
By Rabbi Andrea Lerner
The following article is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
Our Torah portion this week, B'hukotai, is the last Parasha
of Leviticus. B'hukotai ends with the tochahah, a warning, promising
defeat, massacre, and the pain of exile if one disobeys God.
Jeremiah, a prophet who wrote during the closing days of the
Kingdom of Judah struggled to find meaning during the time of the destruction
of the Temple. We hear his words in our haftarah portion (reading from
the Prophets or Writings that follows the Torah reading) this week. In his bitterness
he cried: The guilt of Judah will be inscribed with a stylus of iron...
(Jeremiah 17:1).
Despite all that he saw, Jeremiah expressed deep faith that
God is the living water that sustains us all. He wrote, "He shall be like
a tree planted by waters, sending forth its roots by a stream: It does not
sense the coming of heat, its leaves are ever fresh; it has no care in a year
of drought, it does not cease to yield fruit" (Jeremiah 17:8).
Your Haftarah Navigator
1. According to Jeremiah, who is like a tree planted by
waters?
2. How does faith in God help us through difficult times?
3. In your experience, have you turned to God, to prayer, to
faith when life was difficult?
Jeremiah experienced tumultuous times. He was a sensitive soul who saw it all.
Destruction. Defeat. Hopelessness. And yet, Jeremiah was also able to find
within himself his hope, his faith that rose from the deep recesses of his
heart.
The following text, expanded, became one of the nineteen blessings in our Amidah
(silent benediction). Jeremiah saw much of life. Still, the Haftarah ends with
a hopeful note, "Heal me, O Lord, and let me be healed; save me, and let
me be saved; for You are my glory" (Jeremiah 17:14).
Your Haftarah Navigator
1. What is the relationship between prayer and healing? What
does God have to do with healing?
2. Have you ever prayed for
someone who is ill? Does it work? What is the purpose of a prayer for healing?
A Word
This is indeed a sobering text.
Jeremiah understood Jewish suffering as something that was deserved. A
rebellious people are finally punished by a God whose patience has finally run
out.
Thousands of years after Jeremiah, we human beings still experience these
evils: defeat, pain, suffering. We experience the devastation of illness, the
pain of a breakup of a family. Today, though, most of us do not see these
tragedies as punishment for our sins.
Conversely, many people wonder at these moments of pain and disappointment if
God is indeed there at all. The question of today is different. We ask ourselves,
"How does one continue to believe, to let God in, when such devastation
surrounds us at times?" Pain can harden one's heart. It can make a person
cynical, mistrustful of others.
These days are the in-between days--days of reflection and sadness between
Pesach and Shavuot. Why? Because during these days we commemorate the wandering
in the wilderness. The time between our freedom from Pharaoh and our receiving
the gift of Torah at Mt. Sinai.
During that time we were lawless. We had no Torah. We had too much freedom.
Instead of it being a wonderful party, it was awful. We complained bitterly.
The law, as the midrash learns, brought true freedom to the world, a freedom
that we could sustain.
For those of us in the northern hemisphere, this season also means that the
summer warmth is coming. Some of us feel relief, now that the academic year is
ending, granting us a liberation from the constraints of imposed order. Now, as
summer approaches, we experience the freedom without laws. We feel rootless.
Maintaining faith in difficult times is a struggle for each of us. And yet,
Jeremiah's beautiful, poetic words strike a chord for us, who want so
desperately to feel God's presence beside us as we struggle. Jeremiah offers
these words of consolation and hope, describing that a person who has faith in
God can survive even the toughest times.
Lag B'Omer, a holiday day that is a reprieve in our 50 days of mourning between
Pesach and Shavuot, also occurs during this time. In the spirit of Lag B'Omer,
let us feel the reprieve of the water around us, soothing our roots, caring for
our leaves. And may we soon yield fruit again. As Jeremiah says, "Heal me,
O Lord, and let me be healed. Save me, and let me be saved. For you are my
glory."
Parashat B'hukotai ends the book of Leviticus. When the Torah reading is
completed, it is customary for the congregation to chant, "Chazak,
chazak, v'nithazek." Be Strong. Be Strong. And let us be strengthened
by one another.
So may it be.
Prepared by Rabbi Andrea Lerner, Midwest Director of Hillel's Joseph
Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning and Campus Rabbi, Hillel at the University of Wisconsin.
Provided by Hillel’s
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning, which creates innovative
educational resources based on Jewish texts and trains Hillel students,
professionals, and lay leaders to infuse Jewish content throughout their
activities. © 2002 Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.