Parashat Korah
The Ultimate Self-Help Guide
Amidst seemingly mundane laws, valuable lessons emerge.
By Rabbi Marc Wolf
Reprinted with permission of the Jewish Theological Seminary.
A colleague and friend who shares my fascination with golf
as well as my plague of performing poorly, recently gifted me with a book
entitled, Golf is Not a Game of Perfect.
It is another one of the ever-expanding genre of self-help
books in sheep's clothing in which the subject, in this case, golf, is viewed
as a microcosm of life. Accordingly, the sport is given a philosophical reach
that outdistances any drive from the tee. It is filled with pithy moral
teachings such as "Golfers must learn to love the challenge when they hit
a ball into the rough ... the alternatives--anger, fear, whining, and cheating--do
no good." Through tangible advice on the game, it subtly links such
challenges as hitting a 40-foot putt to reaching for personal and professional
goals. Books like this one and others of this ilk by sports personalities like
George Forman and Michael Jordan tend to see an ecumenical relevance in
seemingly mundane activities.
Our culture is filled with such moral tomes. And while I am
sure I can learn a lot from George Forman's lesson of picking yourself up off
the canvas when you're down, the aisles of Barnes and Noble are not necessarily
the first place we should go in search of ethical teachings. There is much our
own tradition teaches us about living life morally, beyond our expected ritual
obligations.
The gift of Judaism is that within the nuanced discussions
of ritual obligations, moral lessons emerge. They are, in fact, inextricably
connected and should be viewed as a whole--each dependent on and enhancing the
other. In the latter half of our parashah this week, after the famous
earthly consumption of Korah and his followers, the focus shifts to the laws,
rights, and obligations of the priestly class. Their ritual obligation is to
perform the sacrifices and engage in holy activities of the Temple--work that
is replete with measurement and detail, and seemingly devoid of moral lesson.
However, we read in Number 18:7, "I make your service a
service of a gift ... " This gift can be given either by the priests to
God or by God to the priests. The giver and receiver are ambiguous. Reading
ritual obligations as a gift to God seems itself a bit contradictory, and many
medieval commentators attempted to rectify this seeming contradiction. For
example, Rashi and Ramban, in an unusual instance of concurrence, define the
gift that God has given to the Jewish people as the priesthood. This view is
also expressed by the commentators Ibn Ezra and Sforno.
This is not the case, however, when we reach the commentary
of the Zaddik Levi Yitzhak of Berdichev (circa:1740-1810). In his
commentary, Kedushat Levi (p. 311 Mesamchei Lev ed.), he states,
"When we serve God, it is not a gift, because it is our obligation.
However, when we work to return the Divine sparks to God, this is the gift we
give to God. Applying a concept that originated with gnostics in the early part
of this century and continued with some early kabbalists, Levi Yitzhak believed
that there was a service we could perform in addition to ritual
responsibilities, which would return the fragments of God in exile in our world
to the Godly realm. Continuing, he says this higher service is our
responsibility to act ethically in business. His definition of the verse as a
gift we give to God extends ritual law to include a moral dimension. Thus, avodah,
service of God, can be simple ritual observance without any moral dimension,
or, when the ethical dimension is included, our service becomes a gift to God.
This concept is supported by Rabbi Sampson Raphael Hirsch
(Germany, 1808-1888) in his Nineteen Letters. In letter 14, (p.88:
Feldheim trans.), Hirsch defines avodah as "striving to regain the eternal
values of life if we should have lost sight of them through the deceptions,
errors, conflicts and temptations of living." He adds, "Our sages
call true devotion avodat ha-lev--the service of the heart; that is, the
fulfillment of God's will toward our own inner person by purifying and
ennobling our character."
Rabbi Hirsch's service is truly more than ritual observance
and contains elements that are consonant with tikkun olam, repair of the
world, also incorporated in Levi Yitzhak's definition.
Maimonides, in The Guide for the Perplexed, (3:32)
talks about the deeper meaning of sacrifices and asserts that if the ritual
detail is of paramount importance to the avodah, then there would be more
leniency about where they can be held instead of restricting them to the
Temple. Thus, there must be a more profound meaning imparted to the sacrifices.
Moreover, he adds, the prophets--the champions of ethics and
morality--frequently spoke out against observing ritual law that does not
include a corresponding moral code.
All this is to say that rather than consult the self-help
aisles of the local book store, our religion can serve as a moral and ethical
compass. Our commentators bring law and ritual to life and instill it with a
meaning relevant to our daily lives. Looking within our tradition for inherent
moral structure will provide guidance with context and depth that is relevant
to us as Jews--it just may be a little more challenging to find our moral
guidance here than in a book by Michael Jordan.
Our challenge, then, is to approach our tradition and
discover the morals behind what may appear to be outdated and irrelevant ritual
detail. To quote a popular statement from Pirkei Avot, "turn it
over and over, everything is contained within it."
Our tradition is living and evolving, the challenge of
relevance is yours, and the next time you're playing golf, remember sometimes a
sand trap is just a sand trap.
Rabbi Marc Wolf is Director of Community Development at
the Jewish Theological Seminary. More commentaries from the Jewish Theological
Seminary can be found on JTS's
Parashat HaShavua page