Parashat Tazria
Judging
Ourselves And Others
The priest’s role
in declaring and treating leprosy, a physical manifestation of spiritual
impurity, teaches us not to judge our own or others’ spiritual lives.
By Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger
The following article is reprinted with permission from Kolel: The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish
Learning.
Overview
Parashat Tazria and the following parasha, Metzora, deal
with issues of ritual purity and impurity, starting with ritual impurity after
childbirth. Ritual impurity, or tumah, has nothing to do with being
"unclean" physically, but was a spiritual state that prevented one
from entering into holy areas. Similarly, the skin affliction that is discussed
at length is not the biological disease leprosy but rather something that the
Torah understands as the physical manifestation of a spiritual or ritual
problem. This condition is called tzara'at; a person with it is called a
metzora. A negah is a more general word meaning some kind of
outbreak on one's body or clothing.
It's important to remember that all these rules, which seem
so arcane and barbaric to us, were part of our ancestor's religious system.
They were not merely the medical knowledge of the day. The Torah seems very
concerned about bringing people back into the camp who would otherwise be
ostracized or expelled.
In Focus
"The kohen (priest) shall look at the affliction
on the skin of his flesh....and declare him ritually impure" (Leviticus
13:3).
Pshat
Let me say again: The system of purity and impurity was
about religion, not about disease, per se. The priests were to examine certain
kinds of skin blemishes and make a declaration that someone was either ritually
pure or impure, in which case that person had various kinds of rituals to
perform, depending on the severity of the impurity.
Drash
What strikes me about this verse is that only the priests
were to declare someone ritually impure--this was not a matter for just anybody
to decide. (Cf. Deuteronomy 21:5, for example.)
It's easy to understand why: If neighbors were allowed to declare
each other impure, there could be all kinds of panic and nasty recriminations,
and people might use this weapon for personal gain or revenge. It's hard to be
objective about someone's problems if your life is bound up in theirs--even
today, the mental and physical health professions insist on certain boundaries
around the personal relations of patients and caregivers.
Reminding ourselves that tzara'at was the physical
manifestation of a spiritual condition, I'd like to suggest that there is a
powerful lesson to be learned from the fact that the Torah authorizes only the
priests to make a judgment of impurity. All too often, we think we know what's
going on with another person: they eat too much, they drink too much, they're
too lazy, they're workaholics, they're too permissive/too strict with their
children, they should do this, they should do that.... The list goes on and on.
Quite often, however, we simply can't, and mustn't, judge
the spiritual, physical, or moral condition of another person--we usually don't
have all the facts. We may not be experts, and personal relationships may make
objectivity impossible. We might declare another person "outside the
camp," because of their behavior or appearance, but we might be seeing
only the outside appearance of things, without the subtleties. To me, the
Torah's message in this verse is: don't think you can diagnose your neighbor's
problems so easily.
Of course, it's also true that a person cannot declare
himself or herself a metzora, either. Denial can work in two ways: We can
refuse to see a problem in ourselves, until we are presented with unavoidable,
straightforward evidence, and we can also think things are worse than they are,
until someone else tells us there is real hope.
I'm not suggesting that we don't have real insight into our
own problems, and the problems of those around us--I'm only suggesting that
sometimes it pays to leave the exact diagnosis of a mental, spiritual or
physical condition to those who can be both objective and helpful. A busybody
thinks they know what's wrong with everybody around them; a compassionate and
loving person sees that people get the help they need, without presuming that
they themselves have all the answers.
Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger is currently the rabbi of
Temple Israel of Swampscott and Marblehead, Mass. 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.