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Chassidic Masters
The Calf's Mother



Certainly the most esoteric chapter in the Torah is the law of the "Red Heifer" (Parah Adumah), commanded by G-d to Moses (Numbers 19) as an antidote to the state of ritual impurity engendered by contact with death. The Midrash describes how King Solomon, "the wisest of men," was baffled by it; and how Moses, the very vehicle of G-d's communication of His Torah to man, turned pale upon encountering the prospect of contamination by death, and found utterly incomprehensible the process of its rectification, crying out to G-d: "Master of the universe! This is a purification?!"

It's not just that the law of the Red Heifer cannot be logically explained; indeed, there exists an entire category of mitzvot, called chukim ("decrees"), whose defining criteria is that they transcend human understanding. What's unique about the Red Heifer is that while the other chukim at least follow an internal logic of their own, the laws of the Red Heifer are fraught with paradox and inconsistency.1

Thus the laws of the Red Heifer are introduced by the Torah with the word "This is the chok of the Torah," as if to say: this is the Torah's ultimate chok, the mitzvah that most vividly demonstrates the supra-rationality of its divine commandments.  

The Mystery of Death

Indeed, explains the Lubavitcher Rebbe (in a talk delivered upon the conclusion of the sheloshim [30-day mourning period] for his wife), the most incomprehensible of human experiences--the phenomenon of death--can be sublimated only with the most incomprehensible of divine mitzvot, the ashes and water of the Red Heifer.

Physically and biologically, death makes perfect sense (indeed, it is the phenomenon of life that defies explanation). Yet we all--even a man such as Moses--find death utterly incomprehensible, utterly devastating to our sense of reality. Despite all the "evidence" to the contrary, something deep inside us insists that life is the natural, axiomatic state of the human being, and that its cessation is a violation of the most basic law of existence.

For such, in truth, is the fundamental nature of man. True, the human body is physical flesh, and as such, shares the dissolutive nature of all things physical. But it is animated by a soul that is a "spark of the Divine" and fortified with the eternity and indestructibility of its Source. In essence, human life is eternal.

Indeed, the first man was created to live forever. But then he violated the Divine will, thereby distancing himself from his Source and introducing the phenomenon of death into the human experience.

Our Sages tell us that when the Children of Israel stood at Sinai to receive the Torah from G-d, they were restored to the original perfection in which man was first created. The Torah reinstated the original, unadulterated bond between G-d and man, so that man was once more granted "freedom from the Angel of Death."

But this time, too, the state of perfect connection to G-d was short-lived. Forty days after the people of Israel stood at Sinai, they transgressed the divine decree "You shall have no other gods before Me" by worshipping a calf of gold. The pestilence of death, introduced into the world by Adam's sin and banished at Sinai, was reintroduced by the sin of the Golden Calf.

This explains the connection between the Red Heifer and the Golden Calf expressed in the Midrashic parable:

A maid's child once dirtied the royal palace. Said the king: "Let his mother come and clean up her child's filth." By the same token, G-d says: "Let the Heifer atone for the deed of the Calf" (Midrash Tanchuma, Chukat 8).

In our post-Calf world, the imperfection in our relationship with G-d finds its most noxious expression in the phenomenon of death. Contact with death thus spawns the most severe form of spiritual impurity, which can be mitigated only by the mother of the Golden Calf, the most supra-rational of the divine decrees--the Red Heifer.

This was G-d's reply to Moses' cry, Master of the universe! This is a purification?! "Moses," G-d said, "it is a chok, a decree that I have decreed." Certain things are so overwhelming to My creations that they can only be overcome by submitting to an absolute command from an absolute authority. I have therefore commanded laws to instruct you what to do when your lives are touched by death. These are supra-rational, even irrational laws, for only such laws can facilitate your recovery. It is only by force of an utterly incomprehensible divine decree that you can recover from such utter devastation to a living being's self-definition.

Ultimately, however, there will come the day when the original bond between man and G-d will once more be restored. This time, our prophets promise, it will be immune to disruption by sin, since G-d will "slaughter the inclination for evil" in the heart of man and "remove the spirit of impurity from the earth," with the result that "death shall cease forever."


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FOOTNOTES
1.

To cite but several of numerous examples:

a) The ashes of the Red Heifer remove the most severe of all impurities; yet those involved in its preparation become ritually impure themselves.

b) The Red Heifer must be completely red (as few as two hairs of a different color disqualify it, a color which has connotations of sin and deficiency in Torah and Torah law, yet it must also be "perfect, without blemish."

c) The Torah commands that it be slaughtered outside the holy city of Jerusalem (in contrast with other korbanot, which must be slaughtered in the courtyard of the Holy Temple). On the other hand, it must be slaughtered within the sight of the Holy Temple and its blood is sprinkled "toward the Holy of Holies"; according to one opinion, it must be slaughtered by the Kohen Gadol (High Priest) himself, wearing the "white garments" reserved for the Yom Kippur service in the Holy of Holies.

d) The two components of the purifying mixture--ashes and spring water--represent two contradictory forces: fire, which represents the power of ascent, and water, which embodies the quality of "settling down" and saturation.


Based on the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Originally published in "Week in Review"
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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Sep 13, 2009
To Paulo Sergio Freire:
Rabbi Chaim ben Attar (Ohr Hachayim, ad loc.) points out that the redness of the heifer, as well of some of its other characteristics, all point out to severity and judgment--as opposed to kindness or mercy.
Posted By Menachem Posner for Chabad.org

Posted: Sep 12, 2009
red reifer
Why was the reifer red? It has any sense or reason? red is related to sin?
Posted By Paulo Sergio Freire, rio de janeiro, rio de janeiro

Posted: Mar 15, 2009
For Felicitas
The question is good. But it applies equally to Adam and Chava in the Garden of Eden. How is it that they sinned?

If, however, G_d would remove the evil inclination from man, then what would be the point of giving them a Torah? This itself was the argument Moses used against the angels, who desired the Torah for themselves: Since they do not have an evil inclination, what relevance does the Torah have to them?
Posted By Tzvi Freeman, Thornhill, Ontario



 


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