KI TAVO
by Rabbi Avraham
Greenbaum
Torah Reading: KI TAVO, Deuteronomy 26:1-29:8.
Haftara: Isaiah 60:1-22.
Our parshah, KI TAVO, puts the seal
on Moses' detailed exposition of the commandments in the Mishneh
Torah (=Deuteronomy) -- the "Second" or repeated Torah -- and
recounts the Covenant that G-d struck with Israel in the plains of Moab prior
to their entry into the Land. KI TAVO thus brings us into the closing sections
of the Five Books of Moses, the very climax of the Torah. This is fitting
reading as we approach the coming Day of Judgment -- Rosh Hashanah -- and the
Days of Awe.
The commandments
contained in our parshah are almost the last commandments written in the Torah
-- except for the two commandments contained in next week's reading, the double
parshah of NITZAVIM-VAYELECH. (Those relate to the teaching of the Torah -- its
public reading at the HAKHEL assembly in the
THE
FUTURE MODE -- THANKYOU
The commandments
contained in our present parshah, KI TAVO, relate to the longed-for, glorious
future: "And it shall be when you come to the Land.".
The opening Hebrew word of the parshah is a permutation of the holy Name of
HaShem. This seals His eternal promise that the time will indeed arrive when
YOU WILL COME TO THE LAND. The time will come when you will be able to present
your first fruits with gratitude in the
The opening section of KI
TAVO gives the commandment to present the first fruits in a basket by the altar
in the
The mitzvah of the first
fruits is immediately followed by the commandments relating to tithes, which
also involve a declaration. Periodically all accumulated gifts of agricultural
produce to the Levite and poor etc. that have not yet been distributed must be
cleared out of the house. This is done after the end of the first three years
of the Sabbatical cycle, on the eve of Pesach of the fourth year. Following the
distribution of the remaining gifts, the householder declares that he has
fulfilled each one of the various commandments relating to agricultural produce
in their proper order -- therefore, "Look down from the dwelling place of
Your holiness from the heavens and bless Your people." (Deut. 26:13-15).
This is known as VIDUI MAASROS, the "confession" over the tithes.
This declaration is the opposite of a confession of sin. It is an enumeration
of the merits gained by faithful adherence to the commandments of the Torah,
like a laborer listing what he has done for his master before inviting his
blessing.
With the mitzvah of the
first fruits and the commandments relating to the tithes, gifts and consumption
of the produce of the Land, the Torah has come the
full circle. At the beginning of Genesis, we learned of man's basic sin, which
was bound up with the eating of fruit: the forbidden fruit of the Tree of
Knowledge of Good and Evil. Man took without asking -- he stole, with all the
consequences. The serpent tricked Adam into taking the fruit, and thereby
brought death upon him and robbed him of his blessings. Jacob had to use
trickery against Esau and Laban to retrieve the blessings back from the
serpent. Jacob's children had to go down into
A person inspecting the
long-awaited luscious fruits gradually ripening on his tree of figs or
pomegranates would tie a thread to mark out the choicest first fruits. Instead
of marking them out for his own self-gratification, he would set them aside to
present as a gift to the priest at the side of the
The rectification of the
trickery of the serpent, which tempts man to make self-gratification his only
altar, is through the steady application of the Torah commandments that
regulate how and what we take from the world around us, including the very food
we put into our mouths. Before we enjoy the fruits of our labors, we must think
of the priest, the Levite and the poor, and separate all the obligatory gifts
and tithes. The fulfillment of all the relevant commandments elevates and puts
blessing into the fruits that remain for our own enjoyment.
In the declarations over
the presentation of the first fruits in the
Presentation of the first
fruits in the
There is a practical
lesson for us here as we stand now in the middle of the month of Elul, the
period of TESHUVAH, repentance, self-examination and inner work. Teshuvah is not only a matter of confessing sins. We have
all sinned, but we have all done a lot of good too. In looking at ourselves and
weighing our lives and behavior, we must give due consideration to all the good
things that we do. When we weigh their true worth and importance as acts of
loving obedience to the King, it will inspire us to go forward with greater
confidence, in the knowledge that if we strive to do His will, He will surely
bless us.
* * *
AND TO
GO IN HIS WAYS
The last commandment
contained in KI TAVO, based on the words "and to go in His ways"
(Deut. 26:17) is to model our personal traits on the traits and attributes of
G-d. "Just as He is merciful and gracious, so you should be merciful and
gracious..." The refinement of our traits is the inner work in the heart
that G-d asks of the Israelites, an essential part of the spiritual work of the
month of Elul. The repetition of the Thirteen Attributes of Mercy in the Selichos (penitential prayers) recited in this season comes
to arouse us to follow these attributes in our daily lives.
It is indeed the traits
of kindness and compassion that are the marks of the true Israelite and the
distinctive attributes of AM SEGULAH, the "treasured nation" (Deut.
26:18) whom G-d has chosen to observe His Torah and enjoy its blessings. The
very exaltedness of this calling gives
The first reference to
this ceremony was made at the beginning of parshas
RE'EH, which we read four weeks ago, before Moses entered into the details of
the law code of the Covenant in the trilogy of RE'EH, SHOFTIM and KI SEITZEI.
Now, in KI TAVO, after completion of the law code, the Torah depicts this
striking ceremony to impress upon us that
On entry into the land,
they were to set up great stones washed with lime and write the Torah on them
"with clear explanation" (Deut. 27:8) -- "in the seventy
languages" (Rashi ad loc.). The fact that the Torah had to be written in
all the languages of the world shows that the presence of Israel in the land is
not merely of particular interest to Israel alone but of universal significance
for the whole of mankind.
For this reason, the
present series of commentaries is entitled UNIVERSAL TORAH even though many
sections of the Torah deal with commandments that apply exclusively to
If so,
fulfillment of the Covenant will certainly bring all the amazing blessings
listed in our parshah. Our obligation in this generation is to return to the Covenant with
all our hearts so that we will rapidly witness the complete redemption, peace
for
Shabbat Shalom!
Avraham Yehoshua Greenbaum
