Parashat Shoftim
Balance Of
Power
The Torah takes
care to limit the power of both the kingship and the priesthood, the formal
institutions of leadership and governance in ancient Israel.
By Steve Greenberg
The following article is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
Parsashat Shoftim is about power. It tells how a holy people
is also a people of realpolitik living out its life on the land. In ancient
Israel, there were two formal institutions of governance, the executive branch
and the priestly order, each with certain built-in limits of power.
A king is needed to focus and direct the state, particularly
during wartime. The king's powers are limited by the scroll of the teaching. He
is commanded to make a copy of the Torah scroll for himself and keep it with
him always. The teaching serves as a general constitutional framework, but
there are three explicit rules that apply specifically to the king. He must not
have many wives, many horses, or much gold and silver. The political, military
and economic power of the king is thus limited functionally and symbolically.
The Temple serves as the locus for another leadership force.
The priests and Levites manage the Temple, conduct its sacrifices, instruct the
people in the details of worship and ritual purity, provide musical
accompaniment, and organize the festivals. They are the preservers of sacred
memory.
Their power too is limited. They are not to receive a
portion when the land is divided between the tribes. They are to eat of contributions,
tithes and special offerings of the people. Those charged with the task of
preserving sacred memory cannot be burdened with the toil of making a living
from the land. But they are also deprived of the access to power that the land
entails. They, unlike their people, are not of the land and are consequently
freer perhaps to dream, less shackled to horizontal limits. As it says,
"They shall have no portion among their brother tribes; the Lord is their
portion" (Deuteronomy 18:2).