A Thought on the Parasha
Feel free to download and print
the Parasha sheet and share it with your friends and family: Click here: Parashat
Pinchas
Parashat Pinchas has much to say about zealotry and peace, and the
messages certainly remain worthy of examination today. Consider the following
situation: A religious zealot witnesses a person flagrantly violating religious
standards of behavior and, acting in the name of God, picks up the nearest
available weapon and violently slays the sinner. If this happened today -
and it does - we would be outraged and call for the act to be
condemned. The Torah, however, praises it:
Pinchas....has turned My anger away from the people of Israel,
when he was zealous for My sake among them, that I consumed not the people of
Israel in My jealousy. Therefore, say, Behold I give him My covenant of
peace....a covenant for eternal priesthood, because he was jealous for his God
and made atonement for the Children of Israel (Bamidbar, 25:13).
Is religious zealotry, then, an ideal to be emulated? While the
Gemara recognizes that such actions were praised after the fact in the Torah,
it states that halakha, as a normative system, would never give prior
warrant to such violence. Rather, from a halakhic point of view, Pinchas
was actually a "pursuer" who could have been killed to prevent him
from taking Zimri's life (Sanhedrin 82a). License can never be given to
violence, even if it is motivated by religious zealotry.
One can detect a similar concern in the blessing that God gives to
Pinchas: "Behold, I give him My covenant of peace." While this act of
zealotry may have been praiseworthy after the fact and in this unique set of
circumstances, the blessing for eternity, the guiding principle for life, must
be one of peace, not violence. One must hold strong to zeal for truth and for
God, but to realize it in the real world - the world of human beings and imperfection
- one must work in ways of peace.
God's seal is truth (Shabbat 55a), and truth is absolute and
unbending. But even God's name is erased for the sake of peace (Shabbat
116b). For the Torah of truth to be a Torah for life, one needs to be guided
by the principle of peace. When Torah and truth run up against error and sin,
the response need not be violence; the response can be understanding and
compromise.
Thus, we find that Pinchas goes on to become the embodiment of
peace. In Sefer Yehoshua, when the tribes of Reuven, Gad, and half the tribe of
Menashe return to the Transjordan and build a large altar, the Israelites make
preparations to wage war against them, believing that they have abandoned
God. Pinchas, however, leads a delegation that brokers a peace and averts
war (Yehoshua, 22). He has moved beyond his zealous, uncompromising youth
to become an elder statesman who pursues diplomacy, compromise, and peace.
Significantly, the Talmud records the opinion of Rav Ashi that Pinchas did not
even become a kohen until he brokered this peace (Zevachim
101b). His "covenant of priesthood" could only be realized when
he realized his "covenant of peace."
It is instructive in this regard to contrast Pinchas and
Eliyahu. The Midrash states that "Pinchas is Eliyahu," and
indeed, both of them were "zealous for God." In response to the
rampant idolatry in the land of Israel, Eliyahu decrees that there will be no
rain, and after three years of famine, in a great public demonstration, he
slays the prophets of the pagan god Ba'al by the edge of the sword. He
runs to hide in a cave, and there, God appears to him:
And he came there to a cave, and lodged there; and, behold, the
word of the Lord came to him, and he said to him, What are you doing here, Eliyahu?
And he said, I have been very zealous for the Lord God of hosts; for the people
of Israel have forsaken your covenant, thrown down your altars, and killed your
prophets with the sword; and I am the only one left; and they seek my life, to
take it away. And God said, Go out, and stand upon the mount before the Lord.
And, behold, the Lord passed by, and a great and strong wind tore the
mountains, and broke in pieces the rocks before the Lord; but the Lord was not
in the wind; and after the wind an earthquake; but the Lord was not in the
earthquake; and after the earthquake a fire; but the Lord was not in the fire;
and after the fire a still small voice (Melakhim I, 19: 9-13).
Eliyahu has indeed been "zealous for the Lord," and as a
result, many have died by sword and by famine. God, however, has a lesson
to teach him: God is not about violence but about the small, still voice, the
voice that will speak to a person's heart, the voice that will bring about
peace. Eliyahu, however, cannot comprehend this message:
And, behold, there came a voice to him, and said, What are you
doing here, Eliyahu? And he said, I have been very zealous for the Lord God of
hosts; because the people of Israel have forsaken your covenant, thrown down
your altars, and killed your prophets with the sword; and I am the only one
left; and they seek my life, to take it away.
And the Lord said to him, Go, return on your way....and
Elisha....shall you anoint to be prophet in your place (Melakhim I, 19: 14-16).
Eliyahu is so committed to
his absolute sense of truth that he cannot understand that the time for
zealotry has passed, and that for the people to reconcile with God, a small
voice, the voice of peace, is needed. If he cannot understand this, then
he can no longer lead the people, and Elisha the prophet must take his place.
Pinchas is Eliyahu, but he
develops and matures. Eliyahu, on the other hand, is only the younger
Pinchas. Eliyahu is taken heavenward in a whirlwind; he is not a person of
this world. His zealotry for truth and for God could not be reconciled
with the frailties of human beings. He is never to become the older Pinchas, at
least not in this world. But Eliyahu will become the ultimate emissary of
peace in the future world:
Behold, I will send you Eliyahu the prophet before the coming of
the great and terrible day of the Lord; And he shall turn the heart of the
fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their fathers, lest I
come and strike the land with a curse (Malakhi, 3:22-23).
He will be the one to bring about peace to save the world from the
harsh judgment that God, in God's attribute of truth, would demand.
In the end, the Sages
debate how much Eliyahu's final mission of peace will differ from his earlier
mission of truth and zealotry. We find the following discussion in the
Mishnah regarding those whose personal status prevented them from marrying
within the Jewish people:
R. Yehoshua said: I have received a tradition from Rabban Yochanan
b. Zakkai, who heard it from his teacher, and his teacher [heard it] from his
teacher, as a halakha [given] to Moshe from Sinai, that Eliyahu will not
come to pronounce unclean or to pronounce clean, to put away or to bring near,
but to push away those brought near by force and to bring near those pushed
away by force...
R.Yehudah says: To bring near, but not to push away...
The Sages say neither to push away nor to bring near, but to make
peace in the world, for it is said, "Behold I send to you Eliyahu the
prophet, etc., and he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children and
the heart of the children to their fathers" (Mishna Eduyot 8:7).
According to R. Yehoshua,
even in the future, Eliyahu will not compromise truth one iota. Peace will only
be made possible as a byproduct of truth. Eliyahu's mission will be to rectify
falsehood, to ensure that a person's status is true to reality. R.
Yehudah, however, believes that, in the end, truth will serve the interests of
peace, and it will be called on only to bring close those who have been
distanced. The Sages, however, reject both of these positions and believe
that, for Eliyahu, these two principles will never be reconciled. Eliyahu will
only be able to devote himself to peace by allowing the work of truth to be
done by others.
Eliyahu was not of this
world, but Pinchas was. He was given God's covenant of peace and was able to
realize true religious leadership in his own lifetime, leadership that brought
unflinching devotion to God and truth to serving the people, leadership that
actualized this truth in ways of peace.
Shabbat
Shalom!
Comments
Post a Comment