Parshat Bechukotai
I will set My
Presence among you, and My soul will not reject you. I will walk among you and will show
Myself your God, and you will be a people to Me.
26:11-12
This means that My conduct with you will be well known, as when a monarch
walks in the midst of his army, supplying them with all their needs. This then is the way of the simple sense
of the words of the Covenant, and it is true, for so indeed will He do with
them…Similarly, (this” alludes to the Divine attribute which our Rabbis have
called Shechinah (the Divine Presence) dwells with
Israel…Know, (however), that Israel never attained these blessings in their
perfection, neither many of them nor as individuals, since their merits were
never sufficient for them.
Ramban
Now God turns to the fourth
blessing
Moshe Alshich
While our parsha is known for its
promises and threats, I think that the process they give rise to is more
significant. Bechukotai describes the transition from a childlike belief
in a world of black and white punishment and reward, through exile, alienation
and remorse, to redemption and a renewal of the Covenant. Children who have received a solid
foundation of love and trust begin with a black and white sense of the
universe. Basic needs are met. Children are rewarded for being
good. They are punished for being
bad. Then one day there is a
conflict of interest. What feels
good to the child does not feel good to the parent. And the exile begins. This journey through alienation is the
central theme of the portion…Spiritual adolescence is a time of torment. That process of breaking the bars of our
yoke can be perceived either as an affliction or a gift. Often the simplicity of slavery seems
better than freedom. Exiled from an
ordered universe, we must learn to live with the anguish of the unknown. Like the Jews of the early dispersion,
we long for the security of our land and seasons…then, from the meditations of
our anguish, transformation is wrought.
We look critically at our behavior…We take responsibility for our
actions…If God is to dwell in our midst, it is up to us
to make Holiness. At first these
responsibilities feel like burdens…but as we recover our sense of
responsibility, we also recover our sense of awe…So, we return from exile with
our hands outstretched, not just as partners, but as one part of a
whole…
Ann Brener
Leviticus may be suggesting that
irrespective of the presence of the priesthood and the availability of the
sacrificial system, each person as an individual is ultimately responsible for
him-or herself, and the community as a whole is also ultimately responsible for
itself. Thus the concluding
chapters correctly concern the population as a whole, rather than only the
Kohanim.
Richard
Hirsch