A Thought on the Parasha
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The book of Bamidbar
begins with the organizing of the Israelite camp with the mishkan
at its center. In this parasha, the Torah now turns to what it means to be
outside the mishkan, to be in the camp, and to continue to orient
oneself to God's presence. This emerges, I believe, from the section relating
to sotah, the wife suspected of adultery. This section addresses how
discord between husband and wife, and the suspicion of infidelity, creates a
status of tumah, impurity. This situation, this tumah, is
paradoxically brought to the Temple to be resolved, so that purity can be
reestablished, and that husband and wife can return to the camp and once again
live their lives with the proper orientation towards God's presence.
The parasha of nazir continues this theme. It is a possible solution
of how to connect to God and a life of kedusha outside of the mishkan.
The solution of the nazir is to attempt to recreate the mishkan
in the camp, at least for him or herself personally. Like the Kohen Gadol, he
or she does not come into contact with the dead, even with his or her closest
relatives. He or she not only refrains from intoxicating drink, as do Kohanim,
but does not even eat grapes or mixture of grape products, and - unlike the
Kohanim - allows his or her hair to grow wild. These last two extensions ensure
that he or she will be cut off from outside society, so that s/he can live in a
protected mikdash-reality while outside the mikdash.
However, this form of kedusha is not the ideal. First, it is a kedusha
of denial, or rejection. It is not a kedusha that taps into
the most creative part of our tzelem E-lohim and seeks to give it
expression. But beyond that, what makes this kedusha so
problematic, is that it is a kedusha that is self-serving and self-
indulgent. It is all about one's own spiritual growth and reflects no sense of
responsibility to the larger society or to bringing that kedusha into
the real world. This is why I would argue the nazir brings a chatat,
a sin-offering. The Gemara and rishonim debate whether one should infer
from this that the nazir is a sinner, or whether the nazir is kadosh
(and the sin is that s/he terminated the nezirut). I would argue
that he or she is both. The nazir is kadosh, but it is a type of
a kedusha that is somewhat sinful, because it is completely
self-serving.
Thus, the nazir's pursuit of kedusha is not only more
restrictive than that of the Kohanim, but - more to the point- lacks the
dimension of service that the Kohanim embody. Even the Kohen Gadol, who does
not exit the Temple when a relative dies, is present in the Temple so that he
can serve the people by doing the avodah and by representing them to
God. Kohanim are shluchei didan, our representatives in the Beit
HaMikdash; the nazir represents only himself. It is for this reason
that when Amos condemns the people, he distinguishes between the nazir and
the navi: "and you have made the nazirs drink wine, and you
have commanded the prophets - 'do not prophesy!' (Amos 2:12) - the nazir
can only be corrupted, while the navi serves a greater function - to
admonish and direct the people, so that when one opposes the navi, it is
by silencing him and preventing him from doing his duty and his role.
The problematic nature of the nazir is most highlighted in the
prohibition of contact with the dead. Coming in contact with the dead, on the
one hand transmits the highest form of tumah. At the same time, a person
so ritually defiled, and even a corpse itself, is allowed in the camp of the
Levites, the closest camp to the mikdash. Dealing with the dead is both
a very physical, this-worldly experience, and is the most profound encounter
with death and one's mortality. Hence it is in strong contrast to a pursuit of kedusha
and its focus on the spiritual, non-physical realm and in opposition to the
immortality of God, the source of all life. On the other hand, dealing with the
dead is one of the most profound mitzvot. It is a chesed shel emet, a
true selfless kindness, and the helping of the ill, the dying, and those who
are dead is one of the most significant and weighty mitzvot that one can
perform. The two cases of dealing with the dead in the Torah are exactly in the
performance of such mitzvot - Moshe's carrying of the bones of Yosef, and the
people who were impure and could not bring the korban pesach, and who
became impure because, as Chazal tell us, they had been burying the bodies of
Nadav and Aviyhu.
Thus, the nazir's removing himself from the contact with the dead is
the removing of himself from the most basic act of engagement with this world,
with people, and with their most human needs and concerns. Chazal could not
accept this complete divorcing of oneself from the world, and hence stated that
even the Kohen Gadol and even the nazir must become impure for a met
mitzvah, a corpse whom no one is burying. When there is no one else, then
no one can forswear his obligation to respond to this profound human need.
It is for this reason that there exists a special category called nezirut
Shimshon. To explain how Shimshon could have been a nazir and
nevertheless regularly come in contact with the dead, Chazal stated that there
exists a type of nezirut known as nezirut Shimshon which allows
one to become tamei li'met, impure to the dead. On the face of it, this
is a very bizarre phenomenon, since the prohibitions of the nazir are
always bundled together and there is no clear explanation why coming in contact
with the dead should be allowed to be an exception. Given the above, however,
the explanation is obvious: Shimshon's nezirut was tied into his
leadership of Bnei Yisrael: "because a nazir to God the child will
be from the womb, and he will begin to bring salvation to Israel from the
Philistines." (Shoftim 13:5) A nezirut of Shimshon is a nezirut
of being a shofet, being a leader. It is not a self-serving religious
pursuit, but a religious leadership. And to lead the people, one needs to be mtamei
li'metim, one needs to get one's hands dirty in the physical world, in the
suffering, the losses, and sometimes the wars of the people. One cannot remain
completely pure in such circumstances, but this is undoubtedly the highest
calling.
This kedusha of the nezirut of Shimshon is thus like the kedusha
of the Kohen, a kedusha of kehuna, literally, of service. It is a
kedusha of being present in the mikdash, but also of serving the people
even when one is in the mikdash. It is a kedusha of bringing the kedusha
of the mikdash to the outside world and of the focusing much of one's
activities outside the mikdash (Kohanim only served 1 week out of 24 in
the mikdash) - "they will teach Your laws to Jacob and Your
teachings to Israel." And hence the parasha of the nazir is
immediately followed by the parasha of birkhat Kohanim, of the priestly
blessing. For it is the role of the Kohanim to connect to God, but ultimately
to bring God's blessing to the Jewish people.
Chodesh
Tov and Shabbat Shalom!
Reprinted from 2011
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