TAZRIA
By Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
Torah
Haftara: II Kings 4:42-5:19
In last week's parshah,
SHEMINI, the Torah set forth TORAS HA-BEHEMAH VE-HA'OF, the laws relating to
various kinds of purity and impurity in animals and birds. They came first in
the order of creation. This week's parshah, TAZRIA,
begins a series of parshahs that relate to TORAS
HA-ADAM, the laws relating to purity and impurity in man, the very crown of
creation. Our parshah takes its name from the
greatest of all natural, everyday wonders: a woman's ability to conceive a
living child.
THE
MIRACLE OF BIRTH
The Midrash
states: "We have learned: "What is the form of the embryo when first
created? It is similar to a locust: its two eyes are like the two eyes of a
fly; its nostrils are like two drops on a fly. Its two ears are like two drops
on a fly, and its two arms like two scarlet threads. Its mouth is like a barley
seed, its body the size of a lentil. And all its other limbs are contracted
inside it like unformed substance (GOLEM). And of this it says, "Your eyes
did see my unformed substance (GOLMI)" Psalms, 139:16; Midrash
Rabbah Tazria, 14:8).
Says the Talmud (Niddah 30b): Rabbi Samlai taught:
To what can the embryo in his mother's womb be compared? To a folded up
writing-tablet placed with his hands on his two temples, his two elbows on his
two knees, and his two heels on his two buttocks. His head rests between his
knees and his mouth is closed and his belly open. He eats what his mother eats
and drinks what his mother drinks. He does not excrete waste lest he kill his
mother. And when he goes out into the air of the world, what was closed becomes
open, and what had been open is closed. For if not so, he
could not live for even an hour. And while in the womb, a light is
kindled over his head. With it he gazes and sees from one end of the world to
the other, as it says: "When his lamp shone above me" (Job 29:3).
The miraculous entry of
the mature embryo into this world in the form of a living baby, embarking on a
whole destiny of its own, is accompanied with much physical pain and blood for
the mother. By G-d's decree, the baby, if a boy, must
be circumcised with pain and blood on the eighth day, initiating him into the
Covenant of Abraham. Peeling off the unclean material ORLAH foreskin (bound up
with nature, which was created in seven days), gives him access to the eight
level, BINAH, Understanding. This is the level that is beyond nature, as
discussed in last week's parshah, SHEMINI.
A girl has access to that
level in virtue of being female and especially through motherhood, with its
pains and joys. Together with the boy's circumcision, motherhood is the first
focus of our present parshah, TAZRIA. Immediately
after the birth, the mother must adjust to a new level in life with her baby,
boy or girl, in hand. She needs time to recuperate from the birth itself. The
biblical laws at the beginning of TAZRIA relate to the ritual purification in
The Midrash
also states that those women who carefully observe the laws of NIDDAH,
purifying themselves as prescribed by the law, will be worthy of giving birth
to children who will enter the Covenant of Abraham.
* * *
THE
COVENANT OF THE LIPS
The Covenant of Abraham
must be inscribed not only on the flesh of the male organ, but in the hearts
and on the lips of all of us, male and female. Parallel to the creative organs,
which bring the physical person into the world, the lips have the most
tremendous power to create realities in the spiritual, psychological and social
realms.
If a person refuses to
make a covenant with his lips, he may be visited with TZORA'AS, the
"illness" in which his arrogance and malicious deceit in wrongful
speech cause "leprous" marks on his "skin". The
"skin" is the person's exterior, what can actually be seen, with all
its flaws, as opposed to what he may want to present with arrogant deceit to
the outside world.
The rabbinic sages
unquestionably saw the complex typology of "leprous" marks as actual
physical manifestations, discussing detailed grades of skin discoloration and
minute differences in size, etc. At the same time, they emphasized that these
came about not naturally, by random chance, but as a supernatural spiritual
message from G-d contained in the physical symptom.
The entire portion of the
Torah dealing with the various kinds of "leprous" marks on different
parts of the body and the the "quarantine"
period of impurity is full of allusions to physical illnesses, psychological,
social and even national and international illnesses. The rabbis saw allusions
in the names of the "leprous" marks to numerous sins, and to the
nations that oppressed
In the entire process of
"diagnosis" of leprous marks, no physician is involved. Indeed, it is
not allowed to have a doctor cut out or treat the
leprous mark. The diagnosis is in the hands of the COHEN, representing CHESSED,
G-d's kindness, in shining the light of spiritual
insight and truth into the sinner. The only remedy is for the sinner to isolate
himself, separating himself from ordinary routine in order to enter a state of
contrition and mourning over his sins. He must sit alone, recognizing his
uncleanness, warning others, examining his deeds and truly cleansing his heart.
Only in this way can he be healed. It is necessary for the Cohen-Priest, the
Man of KINDNESS, to look with his loving eyes at the wound and shine his light
into the sinner's soul.
The route to healing and
redemption is by looking with the eyes of the priest -- with kindness --
overcoming the morbid illness by revealing the vital goodness concealed underneath.
Shabbat
Shalom.
Avraham Yehoshua
Greenbaum
