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Parashat Chukat

The Perfection of Imperfection
by Rabbi Adina Lewittes on Saturday June 23, 2007
7 Tamuz 5767
Numbers 19:1 - 22:1,Shabbat
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The opening section of this week’s Torah reading details the rite of purification after having come into contact with a corpse. The ritual is referred to as the Parah Adumah, the Red Heifer, as it involved the burning of an entire heifer on which every single hair was red. Even two black or white hairs disqualified the animal! The ashes were then mixed with water and sprinkled on those people and vessels needing purification from coming into contact with the dead. Once so purified, people could reenter the Temple and participate in sacrificial services.

This portion is also read in the weeks before Passover to alert those who had become ritually impure to tend to their purification in order to be able to come to Jerusalem and offer the paschal sacrifice.

The details of this ritual defy rational explanation. In fact, it is used by commentators as an example of laws that are to be observed simply because God commanded them, and not because of their inherent logic or reason.

The Midrash (Numbers Rabbah 19:3) imagines Solomon, peerless in wisdom, being confounded by this one. More colorfully, the Tosafot (BT, Avodah Zarah, 35a) describe the mitzvah of the Red Heifer as a lover’s kiss—something to be experienced, not explained.

Not completely satisfied with a “just do it” approach, some teachers, ancient and new, have tried to shed light on the meaning of this unusual tradition.

The Midrash, for example, extends the scope of the ritual to purify moral impurity as well, especially idolatry. It suggests that this red heifer comes to atone for the sin of the golden calf. Calves coming from cows, it puts it this way: “Let the mother come and repair the damage the offspring has caused” (Numbers Rabbah 19:8).

Another attempt sees in the text an important psychological insight: the complete burning of an entirely red heifer represents the burning or destruction of any notion of perfection. It teaches us that perfection is an impossibility. While we are mandated to fulfill our obligations to God, to community and to humanity, to slaughter the perfect cow is to symbolically slaughter the notion that any of us can be perfect in these enormous undertakings. This message of the burning of the Parah Adumah is that just as God doesn’t seek perfection from us, it is not perfection that any of us should seek from others, or from ourselves.

Moreover, perfection is a fairly subjective term. What constitutes perfection for me is not necessarily identical to what another might define as perfection.

There is no universally held standard as to what it might look like to be the “perfect” Jew, the perfect “friend”, the “perfect” spouse, the “perfect” family, the “perfect” [insert any other social/spiritual/professional role].

What life has taught so many of us (and what so many more need to learn), is that diversity and difference are not aberrations of an ideal vision of the world to be tolerated by others; they are precisely the essence of the world itself.

It is a lesson taught by nature. It is a lesson taught by science. It is a lesson taught by the Torah itself, as the Talmud explains the story of creation wherein all humanity descends from a single ancestor, Adam, who was created with the breath of God and in the image of God: A man stamps out many coins with one die, and they are all alike. But the King of Kings, the Holy One Blessed be He, stamped each man with the seal of Adam and not one of them is like his fellow (BT Sanhedrin 4:5).

This is one of the central texts of our tradition that serves to underscore our embrace of difference as a core Jewish value. No single lifestyle, faith community or social ideology bears any greater or more authentic stamp of God than any other.

As the “perfect” cow is slaughtered and destroys any false sense of our own perfection, also destroyed is the notion of any single definition of perfection towards which any of us might strive.

And so, as perfection goes up in smoke, so does arrogance, close-mindedness, and chauvinism. What remains with the lingering aromas (cedar wood, hyssop and “crimson stuff” were thrown into the fire!) and smoldering embers is a healthy whiff of humility.

Religious ritual has often been used to delineate who was “in” and who was “out”. One could see the rite of the Red Heifer as no different: it determined who could come into the Temple and who had to stay outside.

But reading it as we have above, the rite becomes one which dismantles barriers, and welcomes people, all people, into the temple of God: our beautiful and diverse world. The pure red heifer becomes a gorgeous speckled one. Or, in the words of Edward Markham:

He drew a circle that shut me out:
Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout.
But Love and I had the wit to win:
We drew a circle that took him in.

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Rabbi Adina Lewittes is the founding rabbi of Sha’ar, an innovative Jewish community in Tenafly, NJ. Rabbi Lewittes was born and raised in the Modern Orthodox community of Montreal, Quebec. She began her university education at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and completed her BA in Religious Studies at York University in Toronto. She studied in the Rabbinical School of the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York and was ordained in 1993, becoming the 1st Canadian woman to be ordained a Conservative rabbi. Currently, Rabbi Lewittes leads a study group in Hastings-on-Hudson, NY and teaches several courses through Sha’ar. In addition, she is an instructor in the Florence Melton Adult Mini School. Rabbi Lewittes also participates in Scholar-in-Residence programs at synagogues throughout the United States and Canada, most recently in Sudbury, MA and Montreal, QC. Rabbi Lewittes leads an annual Women’s Seder at the JCC on the Palisades in Tenafly, NJ, and has led innovative Jewish educational and experiential journeys. A unique mission to Israel was undertaken in 2005 and one to South America is being planned for 2007. Her greatest accomplishments and works-in-progress are her four children, Natan, Aaron, Isaac and Nomi.

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by Shel Haas on April 16, 2009 22:17
Another of the redactions regarding the section of the Torah scroll divided by the Rabbis into Numbers and its chapters. Does one really believe the words contained are God's words? It is interesting that the only "written " words found in the Holy Ark by king Solomon were on the 2 tables given to Moses on Mount Sinai. These were placed in the Temple he built in Jerusalem. The Torah was written by men at various times and this chapter was another in the rituals devised by man using God's name. I challenge the Rabbi to prove otherwise!
by Rick on June 22, 2007 10:52
Very interesting and engaging reinterpretation. But I still get stuck on what these kinds of events meant in their own day. While we can reframe them for ourselves today, what does it say about God and our ancestors that they saw God commanding them to do things (not just burning red heifers but so many other problematic things, including killing others) that defy any modern notions of Jewish ethics and values? I struggle with this all the time.
by David on June 22, 2007 07:56
Thank you! This was inspiring.

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