Judaism and Justice
The Jewish passion to repair the world.
By Rabbi Sidney Schwarz
By special arrangement with Jewish Lights Publishing, we
are privileged to be providing an excerpt of a book by Rabbi Sidney Schwarz
entitled, Judaism
and Justice: The Jewish Passion to Repair the World (Jewish Lights,
2006). You may purchase the book by clicking on the link or book cover.

The Jewish people's narrative has several possible starting
points. While Abraham is the first Jew for bringing the idea of monotheism into
the world, it is the Exodus story that represents the beginning of Jewish
national consciousness. A group of slaves that might not have had much in the
way of ethnic homogeneity shared a common predicament (slavery) and a common
oppressor (the Egyptians). What shapes the national consciousness of the people
that the Bible calls "the children of Israel" (b'nai yisrael) is the pairing of that enslavement experience with
the Israelites' escape to freedom. Their consciousness was forged not only by
an experience of common suffering, but, more importantly, by a shared
experience of redemption…
From Political to Moral Consciousness
With the Exodus story, all the elements of political
consciousness were now in place: a common history (Egyptian slavery), a
founding myth (being redeemed from the Egyptians by a God more powerful than
any other), and a leader (Moses). The Exodus dimension of Jewish existence
would continue to be central to the Jewish people throughout their long
history. For a time, it would play itself out in the form of political
sovereignty, as it did with the ancient kingdoms of Israel and Judea. In the
twentieth century, the Exodus dimension would manifest again with the creation
of the modern state of Israel.
But the Exodus consciousness described here transcended
conventional political arrangements. The Jewish people manifested this
consciousness during their wandering in the desert, in their early settlement
in the land of Israel arranged by tribal affiliation, and during the two
millennia that Jews existed in the Diaspora. Exodus consciousness caused Jews
to identify with each other regardless of the fact that they might be living
thousands of miles apart, under different political regimes, speaking different
languages, and developing variations on Judaism that often synthesized elements
of traditional Jewish practice with the specific gentile culture in which they
lived.
This consciousness also meant that Jews took care of one
another, not only when they lived in close proximity, but even when they became
aware of Jews in distress in other locales. During the time that Jews lacked
political sovereignty, they became a community of shared historical memory and
shared destiny. They believed that the fate of the Jewish people, regardless of
temporal domicile, was linked. This is what explains the success of the Zionist
movement, the historically unprecedented resurrection of national identity and
political sovereignty after 2,000 years of dispersion. The Exodus consciousness
of the Jewish people was the glue that held the Jewish people together. It was
the secret to Jewish survival.
For the children of Israel, however, there was a dimension
of national identity that transcended political consciousness--an encounter
with sacred purpose that would create a direct connection between the slaves
who experienced the Exodus from Egypt and the vision that drove the patriarch,
Abraham….
Abraham and "The Call"
…The Torah tells us that Abraham truly became the father of
the Jewish people when he heeded God's call to adopt a sacred purpose,
spreading righteousness and justice in the world (Gen. 18:19). The Jewish
people would not be merely a people apart, a separate ethnic and political
unit. Instead, they would be a people bound to a higher calling. According to
God's covenant with Abraham, every Jew is called upon not simply to believe in
the values of righteousness and justice, but to act on them: motivated by moral
responsibility, to advocate--as Abraham did--on behalf of the vulnerable of all
nations.
Abraham lived in Canaan as "a stranger and a sojourner"
(Gen. 23:4), but his sense of separateness and apartness did not prevent him
from heeding a universalistic moral call--behaving with altruistic compassion
toward the people of Sodom and Gomorrah.
This sense of a higher calling--an altruistic urge to bring
righteousness and justice into the world--is the Jewish legacy from Abraham. It
is what I call the "Sinai impulse."…
Reconciling Exodus and Sinai
...[There is a] millennial tension in Judaism between Exodus
and Sinai impulses. Every faith community is committed to the survival and
perpetuation of its own. Judaism is not immune to these tendencies. Judaism has
often fallen prey to the tendency, affecting all groups, to see itself in
parochial terms, to believe that the interests of the group supersede all else.
This is especially true in times of crisis. In modern times, this defensiveness
extends to times when Israel is at risk, either from war, terrorism, or
worldwide campaigns to discredit Zionism and the right of Jews to collective
existence in its ancestral homeland.
Still, the Jewish tradition's universal teachings about
responsibility toward all human beings and to the entire world continue to
bring us back to the needed equilibrium between self-interest--the Exodus
impulse--and the interests of humanity--the Sinai impulse. Even when, or
perhaps especially when, the Jewish world tends toward the parochial, there are
voices in our midst that call us back to our prophetic legacy to be agents for
the repair of the entire world.
Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik, a prominent Orthodox opinion
leader, spoke to the tension between Exodus and Sinai in the consciousness of
the Jewish people in another way:
"In order to explain the difference between the people
of fate and the nation of destiny, it is worth taking note of the antithesis
between camp (mahaneh) and
congregation (edah). The camp is
created as a result of the desire for self-defense and is nurtured by a sense
of fear; the congregation is created as a result of the longing for the
realization of an exalted ethical idea and is nurtured by the sentiment of
love." [Joseph
Soloveitchik, Fate and Destiny: From the
Holocaust to the State of Israel (Hoboken, NJ: Ktav, 1992), 57–60.]
The Jewish community cannot realize its fullest potential to
become a people of the covenant, committed to the ethical principles of
righteousness and justice, if it remains in its tribal camp, paralyzed by fear
and consumed by its perceived need to defend itself from every threat, real and
imagined. It is true that without the proper communal mechanisms and political
advocacy to properly defend the Jewish people at risk, no Jew would have the
luxury to pursue the more lofty, Sinai agenda. At the same time, unless the
Jewish community begins to give higher priority to an agenda of righteousness
and justice--the agenda that started with the first Jew, Abraham--it will have
confused the means and the ends.
That prophetic legacy is why the Jewish people were put on
this earth.
Sidney Schwarz is the president of PANIM: The Institute
for Jewish Leadership and Values and is also the author of Finding a
Spiritual Home: How a New Generation of Jews can Transform the American
Synagogue (Jewish Lights, 2000).
