Parashat Metzora
Is It Blasphemous To Heal People?
Even if we view
leprosy as a punishment, we must work to heal the afflicted, allowing our sense
of compassion to override justice or logic.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
Our ancestors, like others in the ancient Near East,
suffered from frequent eruptions of a variety of skin diseases, called 'tzara'at.' Many of these 'leprosies'
were quite severe, and they carried a severe social stigma in every culture in
the ancient world. Countless stories in the Bible and the Talmud attest to the
dread consequences of this illness and the devastation it could bring into the
lives of individuals, families and communities.
According to the biblical view of how the world works,
'tzara'at'--like all illness--was a divine punishment. If everything comes from
the One God, then illness, too, must have its origin in Divine will. The
logical assumption was that people got their illnesses because they deserved
them. The only aspect open to question was to ask which illness resulted from
which deed.
According to the midrash
[commentary] Va-Yikra Rabbah, God inflicted this dread illness as a response to
libel, bloodshed, vain oaths, sexual crimes, robbery and refusing to pay 'tzedakah' (charity). It would follow
that if God punishes through illness, then anyone who tries to heal the sick
would be the equivalent of one who helps a murderer escape from prison.
Logically, a physician who heals a leper (or anyone whose
illness is understood to come from God) is violating God's plan, rebelling
against the way God rules the universe. The refusal to heal is a logical,
religious position, one to which some modern religions adhere at great cost to
their adherents, and at even greater cost to the children of those fanatics.
Logical, yes. But also cruel.
Such a viewpoint requires blaming an individual for being
sick--as if we could "earn" cancer or heart disease, as if the wrong
thoughts are enough to merit pain and death. Such a viewpoint treats a victim
like a criminal, ultimately withholding sympathy, company or care.
Judaism has always valued the mind. "Talmudic" is
a synonym for "logical" and has been throughout the ages. Yet, logic
was not permitted to restrain compassion. Our overriding obligation, according
to rabbinic tradition, is for humanity to become God's partners in
creation--actively applying our learning and our skill to intervening and
improving upon the world as we find it.
Where a Jew finds illness, she is commanded to heal. Where a
Jew finds hunger, he is commanded to feed. Where a Jew finds suffering, we are
commanded to identify with the sufferer and to alleviate their pain.
According to Midrash Temurah, the psalmist compares people
to grass because "just as the tree, if not weeded, fertilized and plowed,
will not grow and bring forth its fruits, so with the human body." The
fertilizer is the medicine and the means of healing, and the tiller of the
earth is the physician."
The Talmud understands the biblical injunction "not to
stand (idly) by the blood of your brother" as mandating medical care.
Rambam sees that obligation in the verse, "Let your brother live with
you" and in "Love your neighbor as yourself" (Leviticus 19:18).
Perhaps Judaism's rejection of the 'logical' position
reflects a different notion of how God and people are to relate. Rather than
viewing God as an unchanging monarch and humanity as the passive recipient of
whatever happens, the Jewish view of God and people is much more that of mutual
lovers--both of whom desire the other to take an active role in developing
their relationship and in making their house a home.
Judaism understands that we human beings have an active role
in making our house--this earth--a home. By caring for its occupants, we
demonstrate not blasphemy, but love--both for God and for God's creatures.
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.