A Three Part Guide to Jewish Life - Part Two - Love
Last week I wrote about belief. You can find that article at
tinyurl.com/threepartjudaism. This
week I want to connect that analysis to elements of Jewish observance such as Shabbat
and Kashrut. The connection is a connection of love.
We are, of course, commanded to love both God (that obligation
comes from the Shema) and our fellow (a command Rabbi Akiva considered the
single principle underpinning the entire Torah). At first these obligations
seem disparate. God is the power beyond all particularity and form, whereas humans
are weak and distinct. But they are connected by the single most radical idea
in Judaism - the notion that humanity is created btzelem elohim - in the
image of God. The Etz Hayim Chumash points out that all kinds of Ancient Near
East traditions considered the King divine, but the Torah goes far further insisting
all humanity contains divinity. Each of us; men, women, the powerful and the
powerless... contain this spark. It's a notion powerful enough to justify human
rights, democracy, or frankly any liberation movement you care to name.
Certainly taking these twin obligations as one it becomes impossible
to claim to love God while treating any human poorly. The reverse is equally
true. If you place the love of all humanity at the heart of your every action you
embody what it truly means to love God. Certainly the best advice for anyone unsure
about belief is don't worry so much, concentrate on loving your fellow. The
magic of the staggeringly profound nature of our existence may seep in slowly,
but don’t worry about theology, just get on with loving.
So what does it mean to be loving? Provocatively the Torah doesn’t
understand love as an emotion. Rather love means action. In Talmud Sotah (14b) the
Rabbis struggle with how to fulfill the Biblical obligation to 'walk in way of
God,' - how to behave in a godly manner. They come up with a list of Divine
accomplishments that are most remarkable for their being least remarkable. Just
as God visits Abraham as he recovers from circumcision, so we are called upon
to visit the sick, and so on. Nowhere are we called to be anything other than Menschen
- humans whose humanity is embodied in acts of kindness.
Lovers are not slapdash, rough or approximate. And so too in
our relationship with God. If we love God it matters whether there are 49 poles
in the sanctuary, or fifty. It matters whether one eats a cheeseburger or
remembers to call one's mother Shabbat eve. And so we arrive at the heart of
the entire system of Jewish do-s and don't-s. It's an attempt to articulate how
to be a lover.
Should we say a blessing before we eat food? Of course we
should. This is how we develop the spiritual discipline that allows us to
understand our place on this planet. Then the pursuit of detail follows; what should
we say before we eat this or that, what should we say after? These questions,
and thousands like them, drive rabbinic Judaism - how do we balance competing
claims of different refractions of different divine images? How we should treat
poshtei yad - beggars on the street? What if they might spend the money
on booze, their dog or their gang master? Thankfully we have a system of
working these issues through - it's called Halachah. Sometimes, admittedly, the
pursuit of detail can blind. Sometimes we can lose the bigger picture - but the
bigger picture is acting in a loving way.
Even areas of Halachic that seem distant from this idea of
love connect. Shatnetz - thou shall not mix wool and linen - is superficially
unlovely. But it is part of a series of obligations to hold different elements
of creation differently. Don't eat meat and milk together, don't yoke an ox and
a mule together etc. These are attempts to have us understand everything is not
the same. That clothing, food and the like are not merely our playthings, they define
our relationship with the world. If we treat clothing purely as something for
us to use and are blind to the difference between clothing that comes from plants
and clothing that comes from animals, how are we supposed to care about the
treatment of animals, or the wages paid to cotton pickers in Ukraine, or the
working conditions of garment manufacturers in some awful factory that
collapses under the weight of human greed - ours as much as the manufacturers? Mitzvot
are calls to become observant. As we observe it we become more observant, and
the more we see, the more we understand, the more capable we become of acting
in a loving way.
We don't need to re-invent the entire interplay of morality
and ethics and compassion with our every purchase and every bite. Instead we can
observe Shabbat, keep Kosher, even wear non-Shatnatz clothing and use these
pathways of love to become ever more loving.
That’s the Jewish legal system; a system of walking in the
path of the Divine, recognising the image of God in all humanity and trying to do
the right thing to do in the ever more complex web of relationships, pulls and
tugs that make up our existence.
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