Parashat Yitro
Parents Make It To The Top Ten
The placement of
the commandment to honor our parents in the midst of the Ten Commandments
highlights the complex ways in which parents serve as our bridge between God
and the world.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
Each of us is descended from parents. Without exception, a
man and a woman were involved in your inception and birth, and generally in your
childhood, teen years and early adulthood as well. How are we to respond to
these people; how should we adjust to our own increasing powers of
understanding, physical strength and financial ability in the light of the
gratitude and respect we owe our parents for the care we received at an earlier
age?
That we owe our parents honor and reverence is a 'given' in
Jewish tradition. The mitzvah of kibbud
av va-em (honoring the father and mother) is the Fifth Commandment of the Aseret Ha-Dib'rot (the Ten
Commandments), standing halfway between the first four--dealing with the Jewish
relationship with God--and the last five--establishing standards of social
morality. That placement speaks of the insight that parents represent a bridge
between God and the world, between our own personal drama of Creation and our
entry into the world of human interaction and expectation.
The Talmud teaches that three partners are involved in the
birth of every person--God, mother and father. One of the roots, then, of our
obligation to honor our parents is their role as a pre-eminent source of life.
Parents represent God, not only for their role in our inception and birth, but
also on a psychological level.
Parents teach, through their raising of children, that the
world is reliable and basically good. Each time a mother comforts a screaming baby,
each time a father offers a bottle to a hungry infant, the child receives a
concrete lesson that they are not abandoned in a meaningless void, that needs
are met, that compassion and love are real and potent. In nurturing their
children, parents establish the emotional base for a subsequent relationship
between their child and the Sacred.
As we would expect in any instance where we are given a gift
without having earned it, showing gratitude is an integral part of a child's
relationship to parents. No one does something to deserve being born. Each of
us is gratuitously created and nurtured for countless hours, through illness,
temper and the normal self-absorption of childhood.
As adults ourselves, we honor parents as a demonstration of
gratitude for those years of unearned service. There is also a specifically
Jewish component to honoring parents. These people provide the tangible link to
our sacred past and our covenant with God. The childhood memories of lighting
Chanukah candles, the smell of warm loaves of challah on a newly-set Shabbat
table, the joy and love of a Passover Seder, all of these connections to our
Jewishness are through our parents and grandparents.
Even in those families where the child's Jewish commitment
is more consuming or elaborate than that of the parents, the core of the
child's identification as a Jew is still a product of who the parents are and
of the nature of their family and friends.
If parents are so central, then why doesn't the Torah or the
Talmud mandate the love of parents? The lack of such an imperative is the
result of a recognition that there is no relationship as complex, multi-layered
and deep as that between a parent and child. Experiences of total dependency,
of complete rebellion, of increasing similarity are all commonplace between the
generations. Spouses can divorce, and friends can separate, but a parent is
forever.
Given this overwhelming variety of feelings--due to the
overwhelming variety of relationships--that each individual has with each parent,
it would be impossible to reduce that bundle of feelings to any one emotion.
The entire range of human passions applies between parents and child. But only
a narrow range of behavior is healthy and appropriate.
For all these reasons, then, Jewish tradition places a great
emphasis on kibbud (honor) and yirah (reverence) towards parents. As
the people to whom we owe life itself, as the people who provided years of
care, and as transmitters and links to Judaism and the Jewish past, our parents
merit our honor and respect.
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.