Parashat Vayelekh
Coming
Together: Affirming And Spreading Our Core Values
The final
commandments in the Torah, to gather as a community to hear the Torah and to
write down a spiritual legacy, encourage us to re-engage with our core values.
By Rabbi Gerald Serotta
The following article is reprinted with permission from SocialAction.com.
Like the ancient Israelites taking
a deep breath on the last day of the life of Moses, before the upcoming
transitions in leadership, we read Parashat Vayelekh every year during a time
around the High Holy Days when we seek new meaning and direction in our own
lives.
This portion, whose name comes
from the Hebrew root for movement, is frequently read together with another
portion, Nitzavim, which means standing firmly in place. This juxtaposition
implies that, ironically, we move and grow most successfully when we are like
trees, firmly planted in a soil rich with experience and tradition, but
nurtured alongside living and moving streams.
Parashat Vayelekh contains the
last two of the traditional counting of 613 commandments, both of which can
connect with the spiritual work we need to do in this transitional period, both
for the individual and the community.
In the Torah narrative, Moses
completes the writing of the Torah and hands it over to the kohanim, the
priests, and the elders. He instructs them to read it to the people at regular
intervals, not to keep it to themselves as a private esoteric document. He also
prepares and writes down his final "song," a moralistic epic poem to
be read and remembered regularly. It will serve as a witness to the fallibility
of the people about to enter into possession of a holy land.
From these texts, the Rabbis
extract the following mitzvot, or commandments: (1) the entire people
and those who identify with them must be gathered every seven years to hear
some specific teachings publicly; and (2) every individual must write down this
spiritual legacy.
This second commandment was
originally understood to mean that everyone is required to make his or her own
copy of the Torah. As Jewish law developed, this was modified to include
support for the writing of any sacred literature, whether taken from the
"written" Torah or its oral (rabbinic) interpretation.
A less literal expression of this
commandment is the creation of an ethical will, a statement of one's own
interpretation of the spiritual lessons we derive from our tradition and wish
to pass on to future generations. This tradition of writing an ethical will has
a venerable pedigree in Jewish history, extending from ancient times to today,
through which Jews act upon the felt obligation to summarize and pass on the
lessons of our lives.
The penultimate command of the
Torah is referred to as hakhel, meaning "gather" or
"assemble" the people. This sabbatical retreat has some very unusual
features. The gathering occurs on the harvest festival, Sukkot, following the
year in which there has been no harvest--the sabbatical or shmitah year,
in which the land has been given its rest.
All of the people are expected to
assemble: men and women, children and elders--and not only the Jewish people,
but also the local non-Jewish residents are invited to participate. In fact,
Sukkot, on which the gathering takes place, was in Temple times the most
universal of the national holidays, when sacrifices were offered on behalf of
all the nations of the world.
The traditional prophetic reading,
or haftarah, which the Rabbis connected to Parashat Vayelekh is taken
from Isaiah (55:6-56:8). It contains a précis of universal morality and a
strong emphasis on the interconnection of matters of spirit and justice. The
prophet declares: "Seek the Eternal while God can be found; observe what
is right and do what is just. Let not the foreigner who has attached himself to
the Eternal say, 'The Eternal will keep me apart from God's people'…for My
House shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples."
Why is this particular gathering
designated to be so inclusive, and what are the texts the gathered are supposed
to learn? The three segments read are all from Deuteronomy: (1) the
recapitulation of Exodus history through the giving of Ten Commandments, and
the passages contained in the Sh'ma and V'ahavta prayers
(1:1-6:9) (2) the section which describes the relationship of moral human behavior
to the ecology of the land (11:13-21); and (3) a potpourri of laws including
the intrepid pursuit of justice (tzedek, tzedek tirdof), concluding with
the blessings and curses which are the consequences of moral action or inaction
(14:22-28:69).
Interestingly, these particular
sections parallel the path prescribed in the Talmud for a person who wishes to
join the Jewish people: (a) recognize the traumas of the Jewish past; (b) learn
some of the laws of justice seeking, particularly the laws pertaining to the
responsibility we have toward the poor and vulnerable; and (c) recognize the
consequences of moral failure for the earth and its inhabitants.
But even more striking is the fact
that together, these very last commandments in the Torah demand that the entire
Jewish people periodically re-engage ourselves with our tradition's core
values, and then share our legacy with neighbors--according to Isaiah, with all
the nations.
Rabbi Gerry Serotta has served since 1982 as Campus Rabbi
at the George Washington University, and also serves as Associate Rabbi, Temple
Shalom of Chevy Chase, MD.