Loving God: Not Wisely, But Too Well

Shemini begins with the great drama of the week-long consecration ceremony of the Sanctuary. The nation is exalted, the leadership is inspired – but joy is turned into tragedy when Nadav and Avihu, the two sons of Aaron the High Priest, are consumed by a fire sent down by God [Leviticus 10:1–2]. Why? The text […]

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Shemini begins with the great drama of the week-long consecration ceremony of the Sanctuary. The nation is exalted, the leadership is inspired – but joy is turned into tragedy when Nadav and Avihu, the two sons of Aaron the High Priest, are consumed by a fire sent down by God [Leviticus 10:1–2]. Why? The text seems to say it was because “they offered a strange fire which (God) had not commanded.” What possible sin could these two “princes” have committed to make them worthy of such punishment?

The expression “strange fire” is so ambiguous that the various commentaries offer a number of possibilities. Immediately after the deaths of Aaron’s sons, the Torah issues a command forbidding Aaron and his sons to ever carry out their Sanctuary duties under the influence of any intoxicants. If a person cannot “distinguish between the holy and the mundane, and between the unclean and the clean” [Lev. 10:10] he doesn’t belong in the Ohel Moed (Tent of Meeting). It’s not surprising that one Midrash [Vayikra Raba 12:1] looks upon this injunction as a biblical hint that Nadav and Avihu were inebriated when they brought the incense offering.

Another Midrash explains that Nadav and Avihu so envied Aaron and Moses that they couldn’t wait for them to step down so that they could step up. This is the strange fire of jealousy which hadn’t been commanded of them; they themselves initiated a sacrificial offering without asking permission of their elders, Moses and Aaron. They were too ambitious for their own good.

Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, my rebbe and mentor, often taught that in order to grasp how the sages wanted us to understand a given Torah portion, we should always turn to that week’s haftorah (the reading from the Prophets),.

Three separate events take place in the haftorah [II Samuel 6:1-7:17] usually associated with Shemini (when the haftorah is not the one associated with Parshat Parah).

In the Samuel haftorah, 30,000 of the nation’s chosen join with King David on his journey to restore the Holy Ark to Jerusalem, turning the occasion into a celebratory procession accompanied with all kinds of musical instruments. The ark is transported in an oxcart that belongs to the brothers, Uzzah and Ahio; when the oxen stumble, Uzzah reaches out to take hold of the ark. Right then and there, God strikes Uzzah dead.

Three months pass before David again attempts to bring back the ark; and when he arrives triumphant, he dances with all of his might, upsetting his wife who chastises him: “How did the king of Israel get his honor today, when he uncovered himself (before) the handmaids of his servants, as one of the vain fellows who shamelessly uncovers himself” [II Samuel 6:21].

The third incident records that David decides he wants to build a permanent dwelling for the ark of God, rather than allowing it to rest in a curtained enclosure. At first the Prophet Nathan is encouraging, but later in the night a voice tells him that although David’s throne will last forever, he personally will not build the Temple; his son Solomon will. In the account of the same event recorded elsewhere, the blood that David caused to flow in the wars he fought prevents him from building a Temple which must be dedicated to peace [I Chronicles 22:8].

All three incidents point to the same theme: the emotional instinct of the individual has to take a backseat to the desire to come close, too close, to the holy. The holy must be revered from a distance.

Uzzah certainly did not intend disrespect when he took hold of the ark; nevertheless, touching the holiest object in existence without permission was forbidden. Since Michal is the daughter of King Saul, and knows first-hand that a king’s honor is not his own but the nation’s, she cannot applaud David’s leaping and dancing in wild abandon — even if it be in religious ecstasy. Israel’s monarch of Israel must always behave honorably and respectfully, fully in control of his actions.

Like Uzzah, Aaron’s sons got too close to the sacred, and took the sacred into their own hands. Ecstasy, especially in the service of God, can turn into sacrilegious zealotry. Passionate religious fire in the name of God can turn into “self-righteous fanaticism” which can tragically lead to the desecration of the Divine Name, even leading to suicide bombers.

Nadav and Avihu are rare Jews, sons of Aaron, nephews of Moses, their lives dedicated to Temple service. We cannot even begin to comprehend their spiritual heights. Nevertheless, they die tragically because they brought a passionate fire not commanded by God. When people on the level of Nadav and Avihu fail to distinguish between Divine will and human will, allowing their subjective desires to take over, they are expressing their own emotions but not necessarily doing God’s will.

Confusing our will with God’s will is truly playing with fire. If we limit ourselves to God’s commands in the ritual realm, we can be reasonably certain that we are serving God and not our own egos and passions. One dare not get too close to the Divine fire, lest one get burnt by that very fire.

Rabbi Shlomo Riskin is chancellor of Ohr Torah Stone and chief rabbi of Efrat.

Candlelighting, Readings:

Shabbat Candles: 6:59 p.m.

Torah: Lev. 9:1-11:47; Numbers 19:1-22                                                               

Haftorah: Ezekiel 36:16-38

Havdalah: 8:00 p.m.

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