Parashat Masei
The Importance
Of Intention
The Torah's
establishment of Cities of Refuge introduces the idea that intention determines
the meaning of an action.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article is reprinted with permission from University of Judaism.
In this week's Torah
portion, the Torah addresses the issue of unintentional manslaughter. What is
the appropriate penalty for someone who kills someone else unintentionally?
Should there be any penalty at all?
Our parashah discusses
the establishment of six Cities of Refuge (Ir Miklat). These six cities
were set aside as a permanent asylum. Anyone who unintentionally killed another
person was permitted to flee to these cities. Once within their walls, the
manslayer was protected by law against any revenge or additional punishment.
In this way, the Torah
balanced the need to insist that killing another person is objectively
reprehensible, while also asserting a distinction between murder (which is
deliberate) and manslaughter (which is not). Contemporary American law makes a
similar distinction, mandating a different degree of severity to correspond to
the different levels of responsibility due to intention and circumstance.
Three thousand years
earlier, the Torah instituted those same legal distinctions based on different
intentions. One way to understand the profundity of the Torah's insight is to
contrast the Biblical law with other ancient standards. Ancient Greece, Sumer,
Phoenecia, and other cultures all articulated a notion of asylum. In those
civilizations, a murderer could flee to a local shrine and gain protection at
the altar of the local deity. Whether or not the death had been intended was
irrelevant to the power of the shrine to protect the murderer. After all, the
pagan idol was no less holy, no less powerful, just because the murderer
intended to kill his victim.
Not so the Torah's law.
The Torah asserts emphatically that the six Cities of Refuge would only protect
the unintentional manslayer. The willful murderer was to be evicted, tried, and
punished. No matter how powerful the divinity whose altar provided shelter, the
Torah mandates that religion cannot interpose itself between a murderer and
justice. Religion is a way of life, not a shield to violence.
Also diverging from other
ancient law codes, the Torah does not determine the severity of punishment
based on the status of the victim. Murdering a free man, woman, child, slave,
or foreigner all resulted in the same penalty. Since all human beings reflect
God's image, all people deserve equal protection and possess equal worth.
The notion of a City of
Refuge is not unique to the Torah. Nor is the notion of making legal
distinctions for the same action. Nonetheless, in the law of the Cities of
Refuge the Torah presents something breathtakingly new and exciting. What was
revolutionary was the assertion that inner intention determines the meaning of
an action. All intentional murders are abhorrent, but they are different from
an accidental homicide. One who kills unintentionally is still guilty, but of a
lesser offense. In fact, the Talmud (in Tractate Makkot) expanded upon this
insight to provide for the release without penalty of those involved in
complete accidents. Intention matters.
Unique among ancient law
codes, the Torah consistently maintains its emphasis on kavvanah
(intention). Indeed, our Jewish traditions continue that distinction to this
day. Human beings represent something precious--the only permissible
representation of God in the world. And what is most godly about us in our
knowledge of good and evil. That awareness, and our ability to act on our own
moral impulse, represents both an opportunity and a challenge. The challenge is
to grow to reflect that Divine Image to the fullest extent we can. The
opportunity is to create, through moral integrity and mitzvot
(commandments), an environment in which God's presence is readily apparent.
As this week's reading
says, "I, the Lord, dwell in the midst of the children of Israel." To
which Rashi (11th century France) adds, "you shall not cause Me to abide
in uncleanness." Our actions must reflect our intentions, as we strive to
make our intentions correspond, ever more closely, to God's.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler
School of Rabbinic Studies at the University of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is
the author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill).
For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary, please send an
email request to bartson@uj.edu.