A Taste of Torah in honor of Shabbat
from Rabbi Avi Weiss
Parshat
Bo
FEBRUARY 2 - 3, 2001 / 10 SHEVAT 5761
THE
INTERDEPENDENCE OF ACTIONS AND FEELINGS
In this week's portion, the Torah begins
to present commandments given to the Jewish people. One wonders why so
many commandments are proscribed in such detail.
The Sefer Ha-Hinukh (13th century) offers a comment that reveals a basic
message about the purpose of commandments. He writes, "Know that
human beings are influenced by their actions and their intellectual and
emotional life is conditioned by the things they do, good or bad."
In other words, what we do very much influences what we feel.
Hundreds of years later, Rabbi Eliyahu Dessler offers an understanding of
love that reflects the Sefer Ha-Hinukh's sentiments. While all people
walk a type of balance between giving of themselves to others, and taking
from others, by and large, Rabbi Dessler argues, each person can be
categorized as either a "giver" or a "taker."
Rabbi Dessler insists that the cornerstone of love is the capacity to give
to the loved one. And he adds, it's not necessarily the case that one
first loves and from the loving comes the giving. The reverse is
equally true, and even more powerful. One gives, and from the
giving comes loving. The more one gives, the more one loves. In
fact, the real test of love is not only what I feel towards you, but what I
am prepared to do for you.
What is true in personal relationships involving love of others is also true
about ritual commandments, religious observance, which connects us and
expresses our love to God. Perform the ritual and, from the act, this
feeling may come. Hence, Jews at Sinai first proclaimed, "we will
do." Only then did they say, "we will listen."
A story illustrates this idea. My
mother of blessed memory and father, may he be well, made aliyah in the late
70's. Whenever my parents flew to New York, it was my responsibility
to meet them at the airport. One time, my father called me to inform
me that at the last moment their arrival was moved up by 24 hours.
Professing my deep love for my parents, I insisted that I couldn't change my
schedule on such short notice. "You became a hot shot
Rabbi," my father responded, "and don't have time for your
parents?" "I love you deeply," I protested, "but it's
difficult to alter plans at the last moment." I'll never forget
my father's response. "Don't love me so much, just pick me up at
the airport!"
Not coincidentally, the root of ahavah,
love, is the two letter Aramaic word hav, to give. It reflects the
point made by the Sefer Ha-Hainukh that "actions shape character."
It is nothing more than what my Abba said: "don't love me so
much, just pick me up at the airport."
Shabbat Shalom!
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Rabbi Avi Weiss, Hebrew Institute of Riverdale
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