Parshat Ki Tavo
by Rabbi Avi Billet
The bulk of Parshat Ki Tavo is occupied by
the Tokhacha, the great Rebuke that is promised to the Israelite nation in
exchange for their infidelity to God. Prior to the curses and promises of
destruction there are 14 verses of blessing which, were we to keep our end of
the deal, paint the Israelite existence in the Land as the most fantastic we
could ever dream to experience.
In the middle of the blissful depiction of Divine Grace,
we read, "The Lord will establish you as His holy people as He swore to you,
if you observe the commandments of the Lord, your God, and walk in His
ways." (Devarim 28:9)
The simple reading of
this verse seems to be descriptive and straightforward. God will do
"Y" for you on account of your having done "X." Nowhere
does there seem to be a commandment in this verse. While not exactly a
throwaway line, the phrase "walk in His ways" on a base level does
not seem to be an instruction as much as it is an example of how to observe the
commandments. In the original text, the phrase is two words, "V'halakhta
B'drakhav."
Another example of this
is the phrase "Zeh eili v'anvehu" (Shmot 15:2) – this is my God and I
will glorify Him. In Mesekhet Sofrim 3:17, this verse is utilized to explain
how a Jew should go the extra mile to fulfill mitzvot with nicer products
rather than with inferior products. Some examples include: decorating the
sukkah, finding the best lulav set, using the best materials (ink, quill,
parchment, etc) when writing a Torah, mezuzah or putting together tefillin.
The original phrase was
uttered by the people in the context of the Song of the Sea, and while perhaps
not a throwaway line, it is certainly not viewed as a mitzvah! While the people
may have accepted upon themselves a commitment to glorifying God, this does not
turn their "chumrah" choices (stringencies) into an absolute
requirement.
Similarly, the notion
of "V'halakhta B'drakhav" could arguably be viewed in the same way.
How does one best fulfill commandments? Or more accurately, how does one behave
in the most complete and perfect fashion? Through walking in His ways. The same
source in Mesekhet Sofrim (and Yerushalmi Peah 1:1) quotes Abba Shaul as
saying, "Just as He is merciful, you should be merciful."
And yet Maimonides
takes the verse and extracts what is, in his count, the 8th
commandment in the Torah: To Imitate God. Maimonides claims the mitzvah appears
elsewhere as well – see Devarim 8:6, 10:12, 11:22, 13:5, 19:9, 26:17, 30:16 –
and yet he uses our verse as his prime example of the mitzvah, utilizing the
teaching of "Just as He is merciful…" which also appears in the
Sifrei on Eikev to describe exactly how one walks in God's ways.
In describing this
mitzvah, Ramban quotes the passage in Sotah 14a (Maimonides mentions it in
passing) which further describes the imitation of God's ways as "clothing
the naked, visiting the sick, comforting the mourner and burying the dead"
each of which God did for Adam, Avraham, Yitzchak and Moshe respectively.
Considering the 7 other
places where this idea occurs in the book of Devarim, it is hard to argue that
"Walking in God's ways" should not be a mitzvah. Each verse in its
context clearly says it is a mitzvah. But it is still curious that Maimonides
chooses the phrase in 28:9 as the poster phrase for this mitzvah. The verse is
not quoted in the entire Talmud. And were it to appear alone in the Torah,
without the seven supporting verses, perhaps we would be able to argue that
"walking in God's ways" is no more of a mitzvah than "this is my
God and I will glorify Him." Meaning, it is a nice and helpful piece of
instruction, but by no means one of the six hundred and thirteen commandments!
I think a difference
between this verse and all the others is that 28:9 is the first mention of
imitating God that appears after Moshe's big speech. Devarim 5-26 has been one
long monologue of Moshe telling the people a mixture of narrative and
commandment, perhaps lending itself to people thinking Moshe was adding things
of his own accord. Perhaps people felt that "Moshe's 'throwaway lines'
were added touches, but were not meant as commandments" because they did
not see God's strings pulling Moshe's teachings.
Now that the big speech
is over and Moshe is once again telling the people that he is quoting God, 28:9
is the first time he mentions to walk in God's ways. Maimonides is merely
jumping on this appearance of the idea in order to make it clear to those with
doubts that this is not a throwaway line – it is a commandment like any other,
and it comes from God.
The preparations for
Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur require us to square away wrongs we have committed
against our fellow man and wrongs we have committed against God. The mitzvah of
imitating God is meant to help us accomplish both. If we are always being like
God, we can not possibly wrong God. And if we follow the examples that the
Talmud brings of how we are to treat man through imitating God, we will become
the most caring individuals.
May we merit to utilize
this mitzvah of imitating God to become the most wholesome people in our
relationships with God and our fellow Man.
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