Monday, July 6, 2009

Striving with Life - The Red Heifer


This past Saturday I read the part of the story about the Simple Man and the Wise Man that I posted yesterday. When I was done, I switched to a commentary on the week's Torah portion. Fascinatingly, it touched on the same concept.

The Torah teaches that if one comes into contact with a dead body, either by touching it or being in the same room, he becomes tamei, ritually impure. The only way to remove the tumah (ritual impurity) is by waiting a minimum of seven days during which the ashes of a red heifer mixed with some other ingredients, are sprinkled on the person's body. There are other occurrences which can result in a person becoming tamei, but contact with the dead results in the most severe tumah. Usually tumah is removed by immersion in a mikvah, a ritual bath and one is pure the following day. Why does contact with the dead require such a strange sounding a lengthy process?

The most significant ramification of a person's being in a state of tumah is that he is precluded from entering the Temple and offering sacrifices or participating in some other manner. This shows us that one who is in such a state is not allowed to approach God in the same manner as others. The tumah symbolizes that there is something in his spiritual makeup that is creating a barrier between himself and God. We haven't got the space here to discuss this in reference to all the various types of tumah that exist, but why, specifically, in the case of contact with the dead, is there tumah? Why does it affect a person's ability to connect to God?

Rabbi Yitzchok Issac of Komarna, a Chassidic Rebbe who wrote an intensely Kabbalistic commentary on the Torah, gives us some insight into this. He explains that when one sees someone who has passed away, there is always a part of the person that begins to strive with God. To some degree the person begins to question God's providence in taking this person, and wondering about the justice of the way the world is run. The person does not want to accept the reality of what is and finds himself upset and striving with the facts as they are before him.

This attitude creates a barrier between the person and God which is represented by the tumah which comes upon him. He or she needs a week to work on their attitude towards God and to come to terms with the reality and to quit striving with what is.

The ashes which are sprinkled upon the person are meant to symbolize this as well. They remind the person that he is but dust and ashes. For that matter, only a microscopic bit of ash mixed in water must land on him. That reminds the person of what he is as compared to the entire Universe, the Creation of God. "Humble yourself as all you are is ash, and don't question reality or strive with it."

As we said yesterday, happiness can only come by making peace with what is. Striving with the facts only retards ones ability to achieve true spiritual growth.

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