Parashat Ki Tissa
The Idol Of
Complacency
The prohibition
against making an idol warns us not to fix our image of God, but rather to
allow our conception of God to evolve.
By Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger
The following article is reprinted with permission from Kolel: The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish
Learning.
Overview
Parshat Ki Tisa begins with instructions for taking a census
and a half-shekel contribution from the Israelite adults, and continues with
more instructions for making the worship implements for the Mishkan
(Tabernacle). After that, God reminds Moshe to tell the people about the
holiness and importance of Shabbat.
The most famous part of our Parsha is the story of the
Golden Calf: The people, upset at Moshe's delay up on the mountain, make a
statue of a bull or cow and venerate it as their liberator, apparently with
Aaron's cooperation. Both God and Moshe become angry with the people, and
although Moshe rebukes them harshly, he also prays on their behalf.
Finally, Moshe goes up the mountain again and beseeches God
to reaffirm the Covenant; Moshe also wants a unique experience of God's
Presence. With great drama, God shows Moshe God's "back" but not
God's "face," and does reaffirm the Covenant and its ritual and
ethical stipulations.
In Focus
"Do not make for yourself any molten gods" (Exodus
34:17).
Pshat
After the sin of the Golden Calf, Moshe goes back up the
mountain to plead with God, Who reveals attributes of mercy and forgiveness
along with strict justice. However, Israel must obey the terms of the covenant,
which include keeping the holy days and a stringent prohibition on anything
resembling the worship of other deities. After the Israelites build the idol of
gold, God reminds them in no uncertain terms that they must not make physical
representations of Divinity.
Drash
In its context, our verse makes perfect sense: God is irate
about the Golden Calf, and warns the Israelites not to try it again. However,
building statues of the sea-deity isn't on most people's agendas these days.
Thus the famous Hassidic rabbi Menahem Mendel from Kotzk, also known as the
Kotzker, used this verse to point out that creating a limiting representation
of the Source of All doesn't necessarily mean building something physical:
"Do not make
for yourself any molten gods"--do not make for yourself a god that is
fixed in form [i.e., "molten" into one form], with unchanging
routines. (Source: Itturei Torah, translation mine.)
I suspect that the Kotzker is making a pointed comment about
the religious life of his day, but his insight continues to be relevant. Our
experience of spirituality and religion must grow and change over time--if we
have the same conception of God at 50 that we did at 15, then we've missed
something important. Thus the traditional commentaries insist that the
commandment of Torah study lasts until one's dying day--perhaps not only
because the way one understands Torah will change as we age, but the way we
view our lives and world can change if we never stop viewing it through the
prism of sacred texts.
The Torah itself hints at this flowing and dynamic model of
spirituality, just a few verses before, by enumerating 13 different
"attributes" of the Holy One (verses 6-7) when Moshe asks to see
God's "face." Moshe may have wanted the same thing that the
Israelites did when they made the Calf: a palpable, visible, imaginable,
conceivable Deity.
To me, the great genius of Judaism is its insistence that we
never stop striving for holiness and spiritual growth--there's no way to
"grasp" the God of Israel entirely, no ending point in out quest for
insight. God is not limited by denominational ideologies (though they are
valuable learning tools), political inclinations, or intellectual
paradigms--rather, authentic spirituality breaks through our easy answers and
forces us to admit that there is learning yet to do.
A famous pop psychology book from the early 80's captured
this insight into its title: "If You Meet the Buddha on the Road, Kill
Him!" I'm no expert on Buddhism, but I understand this to mean that as
soon as you think you've found the endpoint, "met the Buddha," you're
in trouble. If I were writing a similar book, I'd take my title from the
Kotzker's understanding of this verse: "If Your God is Routine and
Comfortable, You've Made a Molten Idol!" It probably wouldn't be a
bestseller, but it might impart an important truth about the hard work of
Jewish growth.
Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger is currently the rabbi of
Temple Israel of Swampscott and Marblehead, MA. A former student at Kolel, he served as Kolel’s Director of Outreach
from late 1999-2001. He was ordained in
the first graduating class of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies of the
University of Judaism, and holds a Master’s of Environmental Studies from York
University in Toronto.