Become a Member
Judaism

Never mind the bullocks - just heed the prophets

Leviticus, with its lengthy account of sacrifices and purification rites, is tough going for Liberal Jews

April 30, 2009 10:11
The priests around the sacrificial fire — Pauline Frankenberg’s illustration of Tzav, the second sidrah of Leviticus, in her Picturing the Parashah series

By

Rabbi Pete Tobias

3 min read

It is a beautiful spring morning. The months (years?) of planning are over and the barmitzvah boy is about to be called up to read from the Torah, the book at the heart of the Jewish faith in which he is symbolically taking his place this Shabbat. Nervously, he lifts the piece of paper on which is his dvar Torah, his explanation of the portion he is about to read, and its significance for him as he becomes a Jewish adult. Glancing at the congregation, he begins to read words he has prepared on the subject of … menstruation. Or leprosy. Or lists of animals his ancestors are not supposed to eat or people they are not supposed to sleep with.

An essential element of a Liberal bar- or batmitzvah ceremony is for the young person to offer his or her own thoughts on the relevance of the section of the Torah that is to be read. And much of the book of Leviticus, currently being recited in our annual cycle of Torah readings, has little to offer. Of course, this weekend’s portion includes the stunning insights of the Holiness Code in chapter 19, a blueprint for social justice that still demands to be implemented some three millennia after it was written. But even these timeless instructions are punctuated by more rules about sacrifices and which bits of hair not to cut.

Fortunately, the time of the year at which the first half of the book of Leviticus is read coincides with Pesach, so bnei mitzvah in my Liberal synagogue read excerpts from the Exodus story instead. This means that their 13-year-old thoughts about their religion can focus on the significance and effect of that event for their ancestors and subsequent generations of Jews, instead of minute details of sacrificing lambs and bullocks.

The significance and effect of the Exodus was the emergence of our ancestors from slavery into freedom and a recognition that no one should be treated as the Israelites were. That message is repeated throughout the Torah: “Remember that you were slaves in Egypt” is the refrain following the most profound demands that those ancestors establish justice in their society (eg at the end of Leviticus 19).

To get more from judaism, click here to sign up for our free daily newsletter.