Parashat Tetzaveh
We Are All Holy Before God
How to make weighty decisions about the community we are working to create.
By Rabbi Kerry Olitzky
This commentary is provided by special arrangement with
the Jewish Outreach Institute, an organization dedicated to creating a more
open and welcoming Judaism. To learn more, visit www.joi.org.
Admittedly, I am not a big fan of men's jewelry. Yet, I have always been
fascinated by the priest's breastplate--the choshen mishpat. Perhaps its
weight, which can be inferred from the directions for its creation in this
week's Torah portion, reflect the weightiness of decision-making that the
priest is forced to undertake as a result of his position in the community.
And the jewels indicate
that the entire community (the twelve tribes and their descendents) is impacted
by such decisions. And while I am not a big fan of most Torah adornments
either, I think about the connection between the Torah and the role of the
priest whenever the Torah is removed from the ark--assuming the Torah being
used has a breastplate adorning it.
By moving from the
Temple cult into the synagogue (where the Torah is read to both simulate
revelation and stimulate discussion), we have moved the weight of such
decisions for the future of the Jewish community into a different context, but
its weightiness has not changed.
Thus, the role of
the Torah and its words--as indicative of the Divine foundation for our
decisions--are extremely important as we consider the future of the Jewish
community.
This is the way the
text directs the people to fashion the breastplate for the priest: You
shall make a breastpiece of decision, worked into a design; make it in the
style of the ephod: make it of gold, of blue, purple, and crimson yarns, and of
fine twisted linen. It shall be square and doubled, a span in length and a span
in width. Set in it mounted stones, in four rows of stones...
The first row shall be a row of carnelian, chrysolite, and
emerald; the second row: a turquoise, a sapphire, and an amethyst; the third
row: a jacinth, an agate, and a crystal; and the fourth row: a beryl, a lapis
lazuli, and a jasper. They shall be framed with gold in their mountings. The
stones shall correspond [in number] to the names of the sons of Israel: twelve,
corresponding to their names. They shall be engraved like seals, each with its
name, for the twelve tribes (Exodus
28: 15-21).
But the text is not satisfied with a description of the
breastplate or the ephod. It continues by describing an important additional
item:
"You shall make a frontlet of pure gold and engrave on
it the seal inscription: "Holy to Adonai (Exodus 28:36)."
If the Israelite community--the Jewish people--are to be a
"nation of priests," as it says previously in Exodus 19:6, then we
are required to mimic the activities and garments of the priests.
I recognize that the priests had a special responsibility
and a special relationship with God, identified as "holy," but
everyone can enjoy such a relationship, priest or not. Perhaps the sign that
they were to wear--concretized in part in the tefillin that is now placed on
our foreheads temporarily but probably worn all day at a previous time--is a
reminder that all of us, whoever we are in the community, old-timer or
newcomer, are indeed holy to God.
The priest in all of us must remember this as we make the
weighty decisions about the future and the community we are trying to create.
Rabbi Kerry
Olitzky is the author of many inspiring books that bring the wisdom of Jewish
tradition into everyday life. He most recently co-authored 20 Things for Grandparents of Interfaith
Grandchildren to Do (And Not Do) to Nurture Jewish Identity in Their
Grandchildren and Jewish Holidays: A Brief Introduction for Christians.