Thursday, September 15, 2016

Such an insignificant mitzvah


Ki Tetze
Deut. 21:10 - 25:19

Précis:  The parasha might be subtitled “entering society” because it describes the creation of a just and moral social network. It begins with the phrase “when you go forth” (ki tetze) to battle. This parasha, according to Maimonides, contains 72 mitzvot (commandments). Although they seem unrelated, they all deal with the morals and values that God wanted to be deeply implanted in the Israelites' society. They cover a wide variety of topics, from family life, human kindness, respect for property and animals, the safety of others, sexual relationships, escaped slaves, financial loans and charging interest, keeping promises, and remembering to blot out the name of one of Israel's greatest enemies. This assortment of commands included requirements that there be sex-distinct clothing; that mother birds not be separated from their eggs; that roof-tops have parapets; that seeds not be mixed in a field, and that “tzitzit” (fringes) be worn on garments.

Deut. 22:6 "If [walking] along the road, you chance upon a bird's nest . . . and the mother is sitting over the fledglings or on the eggs, do not take the mother together with her young. Let the mother go and take only the young, in order that you may fare well and have a long life").
            Rabbi Irving Greenberg has written (MyJewishLearning.com 8/28/12) “the reward of long life for the seemingly simple commandment of shooing away a mother bird before taking her young teaches us that no act is trivial.”
This week’s reading, containing as it does more commandments than any other parasha, provides an opportunity of weighing the importance of each mitzvah on some kind of “mitzvah scale.” We know that saving a life (b’kuach nefesh) trumps other mitzvot (even allowing one to desecrate the Shabbat). According to the Sages, this particular mitzvah is called the “lightest” or most insubstantial of all of the mitzvot. Merely approaching a mother bird on her nest will usually result in the bird flitting away. Why should such an easy to accomplish mitzvah offer a specific reward of “long life?” In fact, this reward is identical to what is promised for fulfilling the commandment to honor one’s parents!
The Sages respond: every action has importance and is significant. This is a lesson which certainly applies to Jewish communal professionals, to parents, spouses, and to children as well. Sometimes, it’s the “small” things we do (a warm greeting on Shabbat, a comfortably handled response to special needs for seats on the holidays, attending a shivah minyan, helping an elderly neighbor bring grocery bags in) which may have great value.
This verse reminds us of another important aspect of Jewish history and tradition. According to Talmud, Rabbi Elisha ben Abuyah was a rabbi of significant authority in midrashic times. The story is related that he observed a young boy climbing a tree, and dutifully fulfilling the mitzvah of this verse before collecting the eggs in the nest. He watched the boy then fall to his death. This created a crisis of belief, since the promise of the Torah had obviously not been fulfilled. Because of his shaken faith, he was named “Acher” (“the other”) in Talmudic literature. But despite his heretical status, his opinions were not stricken from Rabbinic writings. From this we learn that our tradition honors wisdom from all sources.
As to the verse itself, Maimonides has written in his laws of repentance that we should consider the world to be perfectly balanced between good and evil, between life and death; our next act, even if minor or trivial, can tilt  the entire world towards one side or the other. We need to act mindfully and chose life.

No comments:

Post a Comment