Parashat Va’et’hanan
Love The Lord
Moses’ message to
relate to God through love, not only through fear, is especially relevant in
the modern age.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article is reprinted with permission from University of Judaism.
What is the proper
emotional attitude to take toward God? In our day, as in the past, religious
human beings divide into two general camps. Some argue that we must fear and
venerate God, while others stress the need to love God.
The two modes of
relationship, fear and love, have a long history within Judaism. Both yirat
shamayim (fear of heaven) and ahavat ha-Shem (love of God) find
ample attestation in traditional and modern writings. While most Jews retain
elements of both, individuals and communities tend to stress one tendency over
the other.
The natural consequence
of a stress on fearing God is to expect human-divine relating to work in one
direction. God commands and people obey. Halakhah (Jewish law) is
treated as immutable because people, including community leaders, are overwhelmed
by a sense of their own inadequacy and insignificance. The highest form of
human response becomes complete, unquestioning acquiescence.
While fear of God may be
important as a secondary value, preventing the diminution of God into a
rubber-stamp of our latest preferences or our most egregious shortcomings,
there is a long precedent that gives priority to relating to God in love.
Today's Torah portion
highlights the value of ahavat ha-Shem as a primary mode of Jewish piety.
Standing before the assembled tribes of Israel, Moses recalls the stirring
moment at Mount Sinai when God gave the Ten Commandments. He then continues
with the Shema, reminding us of God's unity and pledging our loyalty to
God's exclusive service. Immediately following, Moses continues his
instructions to the people by telling them, "You shall love the Lord your
God with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your might." For
Moses, the most important component of serving God is to love God.
In his commentary to the Torah,
Rashi (11th century France) affirms that judgment. He explains that Moses
meant, "Perform God's commandments out of love. One cannot compare a
person who acts out of love to one who acts from fear, who serves a master out
of fear. When the latter feels overburdened, he leaves and goes away."
Rashi, keen student of the human heart, knows that fear can motivate behavior
only so long as the power of compulsion remains. As soon as the source of fear
loses its strength, service stops.
So, too, those who serve
God primarily through fear do so only as long as it "works" for them.
Once they no longer see their service as exempting them from the hazards and
disappointments of life, their inducement for serving God also stops.
Perhaps it was for this
reason that Maimonides (12th century Spain and Egypt) insisted that serving God
out of fear is not "the standard set by the prophets and sages." At
best, he claims, it is a useful educational measure "until their knowledge
shall have increased when they will serve out of love."
What was true then is
even more true now. Modernity, with its insistence on the worth of the
individual, on the ability of humanity to progress, has moved us beyond the
utility of fear as a functional training device. If Jews who wish to be modern
also desire to draw close to God, they will do so out of love. What is crucial,
then, is to become open to perceiving that love. Through the beauty of nature
around us, we can experience God's love as Creator.
Through profundity of our
sacred Jewish heritage, we can integrate God's love as the honen da'at,
the One who bestows wisdom. Through the performance of mitzvot
(commandments), we can takken olam be-malkhut Shaddai, repair the world
under the sovereignty of God. And through the acts of compassion and caring
from those we love and our community, we can experience God as the Gomel
Hesed, the one who bestows lovingkindness.
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.