Dedicated to a refuah sheima for Moshe Aaron ben Necha Itta and Sharon bas Shoshana.
This week’s parsha is Parshas Acharei Mos Kedushim. It is well known that this double parsha has an incredible number of mitvos in it. Many of these mitzvos make perfect sense to us, such as revering our parents and not swearing falsely. Others need a little more explanation. Like most things in the Torah, however, taking a deeper look at these mitzvos, reading the parsha from a different angle – so to speak, provides a new perspective on the world.
One law that does not appear to need explanation is “Anyone
among the Israelites, or among the strangers residing in Israel, who gives any
offspring to Molech, shall be put to death; the people of the land shall pelt
the person with stones…” (Vayikra 20:2). Molech was the deity figure of a cultish
religion in the region of Israel. The followers of Molech practiced child
sacrifice; they sent their children into the flames.
It is fair to say that it is inconceivable to us today that
someone would sacrifice a child, that people would join a cult that
specifically required one to burn a child to death. Children are the future.
Actually, Jewish tradition is intriguingly bi-lateral: On
the one hand, we believe that our elders and those who came before us are
closer to Torah and are to be given absolute respect. As it says, also in this
week’s parsha: “You shall rise before the aged and show deference to the old;
you shall fear your God: I am Hashem” (Leviticus 19:32).
On the other hand…Well, don’t get in the way of a Jewish
mother… so many of our halachos are focused on teaching our children and
preparing them for the future. Every child is a bracha, a gift from Hashem, so
how is it possible that anyone would be tempted to join a cult that glorifies
killing children?
The answer is zealotry. Misdirected zealotry turns people
into monsters. The Torah has made clear that Hashem wants people to celebrate
life, not death. And we see this distinction even in modern times. Think of the
famous Golda Meir quote: “We will only have peace with the Arabs when
they love their children more than they hate us.” Far too many young
people have died in the last year and a half conflict, and we – as a nation –
grieve every death, even as our enemies embrace it.
Zealotry leads one to embrace a death cult; perhaps such
drive stems from an insatiable desire to prove one’s fervor, to demonstrate one’s
righteousness. Perhaps it is a drive that comes from wanting to experience a
tangible sacrifice, something one can always hold on to and announce how loyal
one is, what one was willing to sacrifice. Yet, as we learned in the recent
parshios and as is vaguely referenced in the title Acharei Mos, Hashem does not
want uncalled for offerings.
What happens when one “wakes up” from zealotry, when one
calms and looks to move forward in life. If one acted like a zealot but
followed one’s own council, then the next step might be regret. If one acted
like a zealot and offered one’s child to the powerless false god of Molech, then
one might feel anguished over the possibility destroyed.
And now, if you think about it, it makes sense that the 4 pasukim
in Vayikra 20 that are stressing the prohibilion against Molech are followed
immediately by, “And if any person turns to ghosts and familiar spirits and
goes astray after them, I will set My face against that person, whom I will cut
off from among the people” (20:6). We often find connections between side-by-side
passukim, so how does turning to ghosts and familiars connect to Molech? Perhaps
this pasuk is alluding to causing death and regretting it. Perhaps these two
verses are set against each other because when the mania of zealotry comes down,
one may be so bereft as to seek out the dead.
Interestingly, Vayikra 20:6 is not the only place in the parsha
where ghosts are mentioned. Just before the Torah enjoins us to rise before the
aged, as quoted before, there is a verse that is oddly similar to Vayikra 20:6.
Vayikra 19:31 reads: “Do not turn to ghosts and do not inquire of familiar
spirits, to be defiled by them: I Hashem am
your God.”
The two passukim are remarkably similar. The earlier verse,
however, commands one not to consult ghosts or familiars, while the later verse
fiercely describes the consequences of doing so. The warning, verse 19:31,
precedes the injunction to honor the aged. Together, these two verse could be
understood with the message of “Stop looking to those who have passed, to the
generations no longer accessible, and see the treasure you have before you in
the men and women of age and wisdom.” The verse of consequence, when paired
with the warnings against Molech that precede it, is, perhaps, a cautioning
from Hashem that their actions are not reversible. Sacrifice is sacrifice.
When you put these two topic pairings together, you come up
with one definitive fact (other than ghosts are a no-no). Judaism is about life
and living. We value life; we value the potential of life in all children, and
we value the experience of life in those who have lived longest. The parsha of
Kedoshim is a parsha dedicated to being holy - and the way to be holy is to
truly live.