Rabbi Fohrman Bechukosai
Rabbi Fohrman Bechukosai
Rabbi Fohrman Bechukosai
This week's Parsha presents the Jewish people with what seems like a very raw choice. A choice
essentially between life and death: follow God's commands and live, or abandon them and die.
And let's start our exploration with this: when the parsha opens and says, Im bechukotai telechu, if
you will follow my commands, what exactly does the Torah mean? Is that sort of a generic
exhortation – 'and if you follow all of God's commands' – or is it a specific exhortation to follow
specific commands? The answer seems to be that we are dealing with very, very specific commands
because when we go towards the very end of our parsha and we talk about all the terrible things that
will happen if these commands aren't kept, we read this language... at the very end of these all, when
Israel is exiled and other lands: az tirtzeh ha'aretz et-shabtoteiha, the text says, “then the land will
rest its Sabbaths.” Kol yemei hoshamah, “all the days of the desolation,” when you are on your
enemy’s territory,” az tishbat haaretz, that's when the land will finally rest.
We are talking here about the laws of shemittah and yovel, the sabbatical years, the rests, so to
speak, that Israel must give its land. That seems to be the focus of these laws that must be kept here.
If you walk in My ways, keep these Shabbatot, these sabbatical years, things will go well for you —
and if not, it will be a disaster.
Another question is: Why are these laws of keeping the shemittah year, the sabbatical year, why do
those elevate themselves so highly in the various lists of 613 laws, that this seemingly is what it all
depends on?
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The answer to that, I believe, is the text of the Torah itself. If you look at the text of the Torah, you
will see what forces the Rabbis to say this — because the text of Bechukotai is replete with allusion
after allusion to life in the Garden of Eden. It's as if we're replaying the Garden of Eden one more
time.
To show you what I mean, let's go back to the original creation story when man is first created and
placed in the garden.
1. Pru urvu umilu et haaretz, “be fruitful and multiply,” fill the land.
2. Vechivshuha, “conquer the land.”
It is actually kind of strange to talk about conquering to Adam and Eve, who are they going to
conquer? There is no other armies. But you would suppose maybe it means the animal world, like
the next thing that the verse says: urdu bidegat hayam, “and you will have dominion over the fish,
over the fowl and over the animals.” And after we talk about dominion over the animal world, we talk
about dominion over the plant world: hineh natati lachem et-kol-esev zorea zera, “I am giving you
all the grasses and weeds of the fields.” And then after we talk about the plant world, we talk about
the world of trees: v'et-kol-haetz asher-bo pri-etz, “and the trees and all the fruits of the trees,”
lachem yihyeh l'achlah, “you will be able to eat all of these.” And of course, after this, the 6th day is
over and we get to the 7th day, we get to the Sabbath.
And now, with that in mind, follow me into Bechukotai, into our parsha. Does anything in our parsha
remind you of this?
And the answer is: everything in Bechukotai reminds you of this. In the prologue part of the
Bechukotai, the blessing part, vehifeiti etchem vehirbeiti etchem, “and I will multiply you,” God
says. Ah, that was the first part of the blessing. Well, what was the next part of the blessing?
Remember vechivshuha? “And you will conquer the land,” God had said to Adam and Eve. Well, now,
uredaftem et-oyveichem. “You will run after your enemies,” venaflu lifneichem lecharev. “They will
fall before you by the sword; 50 of you will chase a hundred, a hundred will chase 10,000.” Sure
sounds a lot alike “and you will conquer it.”
What was the next part of the blessing? Dominion over the animal world. Well, if you go into
Bechukotai, you get to dominion over the animal world, too. Vehishbati chayah raah min-haaretz,
God says, “I am going to take care of all the terrible beasts so that they don't harm you.” And right
before this, vehisig lachem dayish et-batzir, “you are going to have grains and abundance.” And
right before that? V'etz hasadeh yiten pirio, “the trees of the field will provide for you.” It's all
happening backwards.
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Every single element of the blessing is showing up here, leading right into Sabbath. Right after all
the blessings, after the 6th day, you have the Sabbath, and right before all of these, im bechukotai
telechu, “if you follow My laws,” — which laws? The laws of the sabbatical year, the Sabbath laws, the
Sabbath for land. All the Sages did was to point you in this direction with a little wink and a nod.
They saw that God was suggesting that we could recreate Eden, the original Garden of Eden that we
were expelled from. That didn't work out but this is a second chance.
Well, in order to understand that, let me go back to the garden with you, and I want to explore a very
strange aspect of the original Garden of Eden. As you may know, the original garden had two special
trees: the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. If you ate from the Tree of Life, it
would give you, apparently, eternal life. But if you ate from the Tree of Knowledge, it would make you
mortal; you would become a being that would die.
And now, let me ask you, how did these trees accomplish these spectacular feats? How could one
tree give you death and another tree give you life? Was it just sort of fairy dust that the Almighty
sprinkled on these trees? Or was there a mechanism by which these trees granted life or death? And
if so, what was that mechanism?
I would like to suggest a theory about that to you. Let's think about this carefully. What's the only
thing that can really grant you eternal life? Everything that we see in the world eventually dies. So
what would have to happen in order for you to live forever?
Well, think about it: there's only one source of eternality in the world. There is only thing that lives
forever — and that is God himself. So the only way for human beings to live forever would be to
somehow cling to God so tightly that they would partake in the immortality of the Almighty Himself.
But how do you cling to God? You can't touch God, you can't feel him, so how would you embrace
God and hold on to Him so tightly that you would be immortal just like Him?
That gets to a very deep question: what it means to cling to God. In Hebrew the term is devekut.
What does devekut really mean? How do we achieve it?
Why would God put that tree in the garden? If He doesn't want us to eat from it, why bother putting
it there in the first place? Because if a parent gives a toy, gives a wonderful gift to a child, the parent
wants one more thing besides seeing the child enjoy the toy. The parent wants the child to
understand that the toy came from the parent, it was a gift. The child can never lose sight of that,
can never give into the illusion that the toy was always there. That that's just the way the world was.
There was just this toy and to lose sight of the giver. The child needs to delight in the toy but must
remember where it comes from.
We need to delight in the trees but to understand where they come from, too. And therefore God says
the way that you are going to show Me that you understand that, the way that you are going to avoid
the illusion that they were just there, is to maintain one restriction: to stay away from the one tree,
that's My tree.
And what is the path to death? If you say, I don't like abiding by that restriction, I want to feel that it's
mine. If there's one tree that’s off-limits, if I constantly remind myself, this is gift on loan from God.
Maybe God will take it away one day. Let me exert control over everything and I will feel more
secure. Ironically, that's the path to insecurity because when you let go of the source of all life, when
you no longer embrace Him, when you succumb to the illusion of your own full and complete
control, then you're just like everything else that dies — and you will die too.
That's the way it was in the original garden and that's the way it is in the land of Israel, too. It's a
land flowing with milk and honey, there are all of these trees, have them all, enjoy it but understand
it is a gift. How will you understand it's a gift? Because there's one restriction that you abide by to
understand that the land is a gift that belongs to God — and it is the sabbatical year. What the tree of
knowledge is to space, the sabbatical year is to time. It is the new Tree of Knowledge.
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The Meaning of God's Curses in the
Bible
In the original garden all of the trees were permitted save for one; in the land of Israel, all of the
trees are permitted save for one period of time, the sabbatical year. Abide by that restriction and
enjoy the fruits of the land and you cling to God and you live. Abandon that restriction and you
abandon the source of life — and when you abandon the source of life, the crumbling of your
national fabric, the onset of death, is inevitable. It's not a punishment really, it's just a natural
consequence of the way things are.
The Creator is not a javelin-throwing old man on a heavenly throne. The Creator is the source of all
life, who wants nothing more than to walk with us and thereby to bestow that life upon us as a
people.
Closeness with God is a privilege but it is a responsibility, too. Life in the garden comes with a
supreme challenge: the ability to deal with closeness with God, to forge a relationship out of it and
not to turn one's back on the Almighty by living in a narcissistic illusion of self-sufficiency.
Vehithalachti betochechem, “stroll with Me in the garden.” God says.
I want to enjoy your presence in the garden, I want you to enjoy the luscious fruits I give you — and
when you do, I want you to understand that they come from Me. To do so is to embrace life itself. To
fail to do so is to let go of the source of life. That's just the way it is — and therefore, choose life.
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