RE'EH
by Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
Torah Reading: RE-EH, Deuteronomy 11:26-16:17.
Haftara: Isaiah 54:11-55:5.
AND YOU
SHALL CHOOSE LIFE
"See: I am setting
before you today a blessing and a curse." (Deut. 11:26). Moses asks us to
see and understand the most important fact about our existential condition:
that we are free. Each of us is placed within a unique matrix of circumstances
that set the overall parameters of our lives. Yet within those parameters, we
are constantly faced with options and divergent pathways, and our task is to
choose between them. Our freedom is a trial because while we may see (or
imagine we see) where we want a given pathway to take us in the short-term, as
time-bound humans we can never know the long-term consequences of our choices
at the moment we actually make those choices.
Only G-d has perfect
knowledge of all the short- and long-term consequences of the options that face
us. While He gives us the freedom to make our own choices, He offers us
guidance based upon His knowledge. Thus the Zohar
calls the commandments of the Torah "advice". Each commandment is
advice about which turn to take at each juncture in the road of life. Nothing
compels us to follow the commandments: if there were any compulsion, we would
not be free. G-d wants us to have the merit of choosing our destiny for
ourselves -- He wants us to see and understand for ourselves, and to make wise
choices. "SEE: I am setting before you a blessing and a curse" . "And you shall choose LIFE". (Deut.
30:19).
Moses was addressing the
Children of Israel in the plains of
Our parshah of RE'EH
opens with the beginning of Moses' instructions about this ceremony (Deut.
11:26-32). Further instructions and the text of the chant are given four parshas later in KI TAVO (Deut. 27:11-26. Thus we find that
the main body of the book of Deuteronomy is "sandwiched" between the
beginning of Moses' instructions for the ceremony of blessings and curses at
the start of RE'EH and his further instructions for the ceremony given in the
middle of KI TAVO. The main body of Deuteronomy is made up of the detailed
commandments in many different areas of life contained in the parshiyos we read on this Shabbat and for the next three
weeks.
The remainder of parshas RE'EH, the whole of parshas
SHOFTIM and KI TETZE and the first part of KI TAVO thus constitute the
"repetition of the law" that gives the book of Deuteronomy its name.
In Torah literature, this book is called MISHNEH TORAH, "the repetition of
the law", while the Greek words that make up the name Deuteronomy mean
exactly the same -- the repetition of, or second law. It is not that this law
is any different from the code of Exodus (as set forth in parshas
MISHPATIM) or that of Leviticus (set forth in parshas
KEDOSHIM). Rabbinic exegesis of Torah law in the Midrash and Talmud shows that
all the different passages supplement one another and constitute a single,
unified code. The law is "repeated" because it is only through
MISHNEH -- constant repetition and review -- that we bring the Torah deep into
our hearts and make it rule our lives.
The sandwiching of the
code of Deuteronomy, the MISHNEH TORAH, between the beginning and end of the
instructions for the ceremony of blessings and curses on entry into the Land
comes to emphasize that keeping the Torah is the essential condition for
The most striking feature
of the Code as set forth in Deuteronomy compared to the laws in Exodus,
Leviticus and Numbers is the constant return to the centrality of
Later in the Code of
Deuteronomy (SHOFTIM, Deut. 17:8ff, etc.) we will encounter Mount Moriah as the seat of the sages and elders of the
Sanhedrin, Israel's true Supreme Court, whose proper place is in the Hewn
Chamber on the Temple Mount. However, in our present parshah of RE'EH, the
focus is on
Complete blessing can
dwell only when the law is scrupulously observed. "ALL the word that I am
commanding you, you shall guard to do: YOU MUST NOT ADD TO IT AND NOT SUBSTRACT
FROM IT" (Duet. 13:1). Some of the severest sanctions in the Torah are
reserved for those who encourage others to deviate from the law, such as the
false prophet, those who lead whole towns astray, and notably the MEISIS
("inciter to idolatry" -- Deut. 13:2-19). The Torah insists that
sanctions may be imposed only through due legal procedure -- "And you
shall search out and investigate and question thoroughly" (Deut. 13:16).
Nothing could be further from the Torah law on the eradication of idolatry than
the practice of those who "burn their sons and daughters in fire to their
gods" -- those who send young male and female suicide-terrorists to
indiscriminately kill innocent men, women and children and babes in arms in the
name of religion. The severity of the law of the Torah is directed not at
innocents but at smooth-tongued, malicious, evil and dangerous inciters who
whip up entire nations to madness.
But "You are
children to HaShem your G-d": our best protection against the
smooth-tongued incitement to stray from the Torah to which we are exposed every
day is our own personal holiness and sanctity. Thus the laws in our parshah
against incitement are followed immediately by the laws of holiness and
abstention from the consumption of forbidden species of animals, which causes
spiritual degradation. We are to regulate our physical appetites. We are to
tithe our crops, and instead of simply eating the fruits immediately at home in
order satisfy our bodily needs, we are to take a tithe (Maaser
Sheni) to eat in Jerusalem "in order that you will learn to revere HaShem
your G-d all the days". Self-restraint applies not only to farmers but to
those involved in the money economy as well. Thus our parshah contains the laws
of restraining our appetite for wealth through giving charity and loans to the needy, and remitting debts in the Sabbatical year. Again and
again we are charged to remember the poor and needy, the Levite, the widow and
the orphan.
Through our compassion,
we will arouse the compassion of the Almighty as we prepare to enter the month
of ELUL, the time of Teshuvah. love
and compassion. The letters of the name of Elul are the initial letters of ANI
LEDODI VEDODI LI: "I am my Beloved's and my Beloved is mine".
Shabbat Shalom!!! Chodesh Tov Umevorach!!!
Avraham Yehoshua Greenbaum
