Parshat Behar Bechukotai
by Rabbi Avi Billet
The Torah gives three
examples of "Your brother becoming impoverished." (V'khi yamukh
achikha). The first has to do with selling family property, and how it returns
to the original owners at the Jubilee year.
The second and third
examples deal with a case where he can not sustain himself and is relying on
community assistance (25:35-38), or even needs to be sold into slavery to
support himself (25:39-42), respectively.
At the end of each of
the latter segments, a similar statement is made:
"I am God your Lord who
brought you out of Egypt to give you the land of Canaan , [and] to be a God for you,"
(25:38) and "This is because I
brought [the Israelites] out of Egypt , and they are My slaves. They shall not
be sold [in the market] as
slaves." (25:42)
The idea of being slaves to God instead of slaves to men,
or of God's intent to "be a God for you" would likely make for a
great psychoanalytical study, were we not speaking of God.
But the truth is, it doesn't end there. The next section
begins with a reference to the "brother becoming impoverished"
(though with a different language) (25:47), and it concludes with instructions
for when the Jubilee comes, and all slaves are freed, as God says, "[All
this] is because the Israelites are [actually] My slaves. They are My slaves
because I brought them out of Egypt . I am God your Lord." (25:55)
This last summary
sentence actually brings together the notions set forth by the earlier verses –
Israelites are slaves to their God, Who is their God because He took them out
of Egypt . The
focus on Egypt is so significant, not only because it reminds us of the other
times in the year when we mention Egypt (ever evening Kiddush, during the
Shema, and otherwise on a regular basis), but also because it is how we remind
ourselves of which precise moment turned a group of slaves who happened to
share a common ancestor, into a nation sharing a destiny forever.
Most significantly, the
Exodus from Egypt is mentioned in the first sentence of the Decalogue as well [Shmot
20:2 – "I am God your Lord, who brought you out of Egypt, from the house
of slavery"] – an
obvious connection on account of the next two verses in the Torah here, which
happen to be the last two verses of Parshat Behar, whose parallel to the
Decalogue is unavoidable: "[Therefore,]
do not make yourselves false gods. Do not raise up a stone idol
or a sacred pillar for yourselves. Do not place a kneeling stone in your land so that you can prostrate yourselves on it. I am God your Lord. Keep
My Sabbaths and
revere My sanctuary, I am God." (26:1-2)
We can argue that it is hard to come to grips with the seeming
obsession over our being God's servants or slaves.
But when we look at the
setup of all the different examples of the "brother becoming impoverished,"
and how not to lose focus of who we really are and how we should really
respond, it gives us a brand new look at what the Aseret HaDibrot (Decalogue)
is meant to represent for us.
Many are familiar with
the notion that the first five of the statements in the Decalogue refer to
one's relationship with one's Creator, while the last five statements refer to
relationships between men and fellow Man.
But in the Aseret
HaDibrot, all the commandments between fellow Man are written in the negative.
Don't murder, don't commit adultery, don't steal, don't swear falsely, don't
covet. There are no instructions for how to positively relate to
fellow Man.
So perhaps here, in
Parshat Behar, we have the underlying unified message: Caring for another
person means picking the other person up when he is down. It also means respecting
the humanity of the "other," never blurring the lines between slaves
of God and slaves of men, and being sure to help a brother in his hour of need.
Remembering Egypt and
of our being "slaves to God" both serve as grounding principles for
how we live out our Jewish lives with the proper foci.
We must know who we are
and what values we espouse. We must continue to model what it means to look out
for one another, to help others who are needy, and to look for positive ways
to be of assistance – not just negative things to avoid, in staying out of
people's way, but proactive care for our fellow Man.
And above all, remember
Egypt . Remember
what binds us to one another. Remember what binds us to our God, to our Torah
and to our Land. Remember that being a slave to God is very different from
being slaves to men. Particularly nowadays, in a free society, when people
choose whether to be slaves to God, we appreciate our commitment and dedication
to a "mitzvah-focused" life which grounds us and keeps us connected
to our God who took us out of Egypt .
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