A Message from the Rosh HaYeshiva
Feel free to download and print
the Parasha sheet and share it with your friends and family: Click here: Parashat Netzavim-Vayelech
Parashat Netzavim opens with a
gathering together of all the people of Israel to enter into a covenant with
God. The Torah, in fact, goes out of its way to make it clear that every single
person is present and accounted for:
You stand this day all of you before the Lord your God; your
captains of your tribes, your elders, and your officers, with all the men of
Israel, your little ones, your wives, and your stranger that is in your camp,
from the hewer of your wood unto the drawer of your water. That you should
enter into the covenant with the Lord your God, and into his oath, which the
Lord your God makes with you this day (Devarim, 29:10-12).
It is rare for the Torah to
underscore with such detail the full presence of all members of the community.
In fact, one of the only other times the Torah does this is found just a few
chapters later. There we read that Moshe writes the Torah and gives it to the Kohanim. He then instructs
them in the mitzvah
of hakhel, that
every seven years, at the end of Shmita,
they are to gather all the people together and read the Torah to all that are
present:
When all Israel is come to appear before the Lord thy
God in the place which He shall choose, you shall read this law before all
Israel in their ears. Gather the people together, men and women, and children,
and your stranger that is within your gates, that they may hear, and that they
may learn, and fear the Lord your God, and observe to do all the
words of this Torah (Devarim, 31:11-12).
The similarity of these two passages
compels us to look at them side by side. When we do so, we note that both of
them - the reading of the Torah and the entering into the covenant - parallel
momentous events that occurred at Mount Sinai.
Let's first take the reading of
the Torah to the entirety of the people. This can be understood as a
reenactment of the divine declaration of the Ten Commandments, which was also
proclaimed to all the people. This comparison, however, is somewhat imprecise,
as here the entire Torah is read and not just the Ten Commandments. What's
more, the Ten Commandments were declared, not read from a scroll as is done
during hakhel.
The event that hakhel
replicates is not the giving of the Ten Commandments, but what took place
after. Moshe, having received all the detailed laws in Parashat Mishpatim,
comes down to the people and writes down all these laws in a book. This book is
called the sefer ha'brit,
the book of the covenant. Here's what happens next:
And he took the book of the covenant, and read in the ears of the
people: and they said, "All that the Lord has said will we do,
and we will obey" (Shemot, 24:7).
Notice the direct parallels. In
both cases Moshe writes the words of God in a book. He then either reads this
book to the people or gives this book to the Kohanim
that they should read it to the people. And in both cases the words are read,
or are to be read, to the entire people "in their ears." What we
have, then, is not a replication of God's giving of the Torah, but rather a
replication of the transmission of God's word.
Now, the dominant concern in the
book of Devarim is how to ensure that the next generation, which did not
experience the miracles of the desert let alone the theophany at Mount Sinai,
will continue to remain faithful to God and God's commandments. Sadly, there is
no way that future generations can experience or replicate the giving of the
Torah at Mount Sinai. But what the mitzvah
of hakhel is
signaling to us is that this is not necessary. Even for those who were present
at Mount Sinai, almost all of what they received was not directly from God. The
vast majority of the mitzvot
were received through the process of transmission, God's word as communicated
by Moshe. And this is something that can
be replicated. For just as the human Moshe could put those words in a book and
read them to the people, so can we continue that process, passing down the
written Torah, recopying those words, and communicating them from one
generation to the next.
This, then, brings us back to the
beginning of our parasha
and the entering into the covenant, which was also done with the entirety of
the people. This event also finds its parallel with a similar event at the time
of the giving of the Torah. The Torah makes this point explicitly at the end of
Parashat Ki Tavo: "These are the words of the covenant, which
the Lord commanded Moses to make with the children of Israel in the
land of Moab, beside the covenant which He made with them in Horeb"
(Devarim, 29:1).
Rashi states that the covenant at
Horeb (Mount Sinai) to which the verse refers is the one at the end of Vayikra
(chapter 25), where the Torah lists all the tragedies that will befall the people
if they violate God's commandments. The problem with this interpretation is
that those verses speak about the consequences of violating the covenant but do
not constitute the covenant itself. More precisely, then - and this is probably
what Rashi meant - we may say that the verses in Vayikra are
"sealing" the covenant, or that they are the "penalty
clause" of the covenant that was made at the foot of Mount Sinai. The
covenant in the Plains of Moab likewise has a penalty clause - all of the
curses in Parashat Ki Tavo. But the covenant itself, the one that the entirety
of the people is entering into at the beginning of our parasha, is a reenactment
of the original covenant at Mount Sinai.
And what was that covenant? It
was nothing more than Moshe's reading of the "book of the covenant"
into the "ears of the people" and their willing acceptance of it upon
themselves with their famous declaration, "We will hear and we will
obey."
What emerges, then, is both a
formalized reentering of the covenant for the generation that was about to
enter into the land and a once-every-seven-years reenactment of the
transmission of the Torah, the substance of the covenant. What was significant
is that these two events were done by the people and with all the people.
First, by the people. What made
the covenant possible was the willing participation of the people. Their
ability to be autonomous agents and meaningful partners in the covenant was
only made possible when God's commanding voice at Mount Sinai receded and Moshe
stepped forward to represent God to the people. When that happened, the people,
who until this point had retreated and cowered from the direct word of God,
were able to move close, to engage, and to enter into the covenant. God's word
had to be taken from heaven and brought to earth. For God's Torah to be a Torah
for humans, it had to be a Torah transmitted by humans.
And hence, with all the people.
For in order for this transmission to continue, it cannot be the responsibility
of a few individuals. It must be the responsibility of the entire people. The
covenant is not just a commitment to observe the laws of the Torah. It is a
covenant to preserve the Torah itself, its words, its memory, its power, its
commanding force. If everyone is bound by the Torah, then everyone must become
active parts of the mesorah,
ensuring that the Torah is taught, that it is heard, and that it is passed down
from one generation to the next.
We have often failed to fully
live up to this responsibility. Secular Jews might delegate this responsibility
to the religious. Lay people might delegate it to rabbis or Torah scholars.
Parents might delegate it to their children's teachers. When this happens, we
have robbed the Torah and the mesorah
of all the voices that are an integral part of the covenant. And we
make the Torah smaller. It becomes a Torah that increasingly speaks to a
smaller and smaller segment of society.
To quote another verse from this
week's parasha,
the Torah is not in heaven (30:12). It comes from heaven but is now found here
on earth, transmitted through humans, accessible to humans, and able to speak
to humans. We can be equal partners in the covenant because the Torah can and
must be embraced and transmitted by us as individuals and as a community. It is
only in this way that the Torah will be able to continue to be passed down and
continue to talk to all of us in all our wonderful diversity.
Shabbat
Shalom!
Comments
Post a Comment