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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Student Summaries of Sichot of the Roshei Yeshiva Yeshivat
Har Etzion
PARASHA KI TEITZEI
SICHA OF HARAV AHARON LICHTENSTEIN, SHLIT"A
God Desired to Bring Merit to Israel
Adapted by Dov Karoll
Behold, I have taught you statutes and judgments, as the Lord
my God commanded me, that you should do so in the land where you go to take
possession of it. (Devarim 4:5)
These are the statutes and judgments, which you shall take care
to do, in the land which the Lord God of your fathers gives you to possess all
the days that you live upon the earth. (Devarim 12:1)
The second section of Sefer Devarim contains many mitzvot, and
this concentration gives rise to the question of whether we are to seek
underlying rationales for mitzvot. Chazal and the Rishonim offer different approaches to this issue.
One approach is that there is no rationale for mitzvot. A more moderate view is that each mitzva has a
rationale, but it is not known to people, or that it is not meant to be knowable
by people. A third approach is that the
rationale behind the mitzvot can be understood, with various explanations regarding what
exactly can be known.
The Rambam (Moreh Nevukhim 3:26) explains that, while Chazal dispute this question, we
follow the approach that claims that we are mandated to delve into the
rationales of mitzvot. However, there is a Mishna (appearing in two places,
Berakhot 33b and Megilla 25a) that seems to contradict this position. Regarding
the mitzva of sending away the mother bird when taking the eggs, the Mishna
rules:
If one says, "Your mercy extends to a bird's nest" … he is
silenced.
The clear implication of this teaching is that there are at
least some limits to what can be known about the rationales behind the mitzvot.
This, however, is not to say that nothing can be known.
Regarding a general sense of purpose to the mitzvot, the Mishna says (Makkot 23b,
appearing also at the end of each chapter of Pirkei Avot):
Rabbi Chananya ben Akashya says: God desired to bring merit to
Israel; therefore, He gave them the Torah to study and many mitzvot to
fulfill.
In what way does the multitude of mitzvot serve as a greater
merit? One can understand this on a several levels.
First, the existence of more mitzvot provides opportunity for
accruing more merits, for accumulating more credit on one's Heavenly
register.
Secondly, the Maharal speaks of the great metaphysical impact
that mitzvot have, and how this is increased and intensified by the abundance of
mitzvot.
Third, the Ramban, in his commentary on the mitzva of sending
the mother bird away in this week's parasha (Devarim 22:6-7), cites the Rambam's
explanation in Moreh Nevokhim about the rationale behind this mitzva, which
deals with the compassion parents have toward their children. The Ramban then
goes on to explain that the Rambam is correct when he claims that there is a
rationale for every mitzva. However, this benefit does not have to be understood
in theological terms, from God's perspective, but rather can also be understood
in terms of its benefit to man.
And regarding the mitzvot which the Rambam finds difficult to
explain in terms of God's perspective, their purpose lies in the improvement of
man.
This is a very religiously humanistic approach; the purpose and
rationale of mitzvot is to be understood in terms of their impact on the human
religious personality. God gave us many mitzvot to give us greater opportunity
to improve ourselves and to come closer to Him.
This is manifest in many ways, for example, regarding the
mitzva of tzedaka. The verse states, "For the poor shall never cease out of the
land " (Devarim 15:11), but the purpose of giving tzedaka is not only to
eliminate poverty. Man needs to give tzedaka, even if he cannot solve the
problem entirely. And regarding the mitzva of sending away the mother bird, the
Ramban seems to emphasize the idea, based on the Midrash in Bereishit Rabba
(44), that the mitzva is meant to subjugate man to the Divine command and
thereby purify him. Once again, this emphasizes the idea of what man gains from
the mitzva, and not the way God relates to the birds.
Near the beginning of the speech of the mitzvot, Moshe tells
the people that the mitzvot are given for their good (Devarim 10:12-13):
And now, Israel, what does the Lord your God require of you,
but to fear the Lord your God, to walk in all his ways, and to love him, and to
serve the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul, To keep the
commandments of the Lord, and his statutes, which I command you this day for
your good?
What good is this speaking of? Not of some physical good, not
even of reward, but of improvement of man through mitzvot, and of the
opportunity to come closer to God. Throughout this section of Sefer Devarim, the
phrase "shema Yisrael, listen Israel" is repeated several times. This phrase,
especially in its most famous application, also brings this idea into clear
focus. One needs to listen carefully, to decipher what it is that God wants of
us, to accept the yoke of Heaven, and, through this, to grow in our service of
God. By listening carefully to the word of God, we can come to this
recognition.
By applying ourselves to follow the word of God and to
internalize its messages, the abundance of mitzvot can indeed serve as a merit,
as an opportunity to come closer to God and to become better servants of God.
Let us bear this in mind as we approach the days of repentance and the beginning
of a new year.
God desired to bring merit to Israel; therefore He gave them
the Torah to study and many mitzvot to fulfill!
[This sicha was delivered on leil Shabbat, Parashat Ki Teitzei,
5762 (2002).] |