The
Slavery Riddle
Parshas Mishpatim
Posted on February 7, 2024 (5784) By Rabbi
Naftali Reich | Series: Legacy | Level: Beginner
The gavel bangs down, and
the room falls silent. The defendant approaches and stands before the three
solemn judges. One of them begins to speak. “Young man, you have completed your
six-year term of indenture and are free to return to a life of liberty. But you
wish to remain a Jewish slave in your Jewish master’s house and not take on the
responsibilities of liberty. You heard the Creator declare, ‘The Jewish people
are my slaves,’ and yet you choose to be the slave of a slave! Therefore, we
will drill your right ear. Then you may remain indentured until the Jubilee
year.”
This scene dramatizes the
instructions with which this week’s parashah opens. But how are we to
understand them? When a person violates any of the commandments, he “heard,”
the Torah does not require that we physically drill a hole into his ear. Why
then are we instructed to use this drastic method to point out the folly of
choosing slavery to humans over slavery to Hashem?
Let us consider for a
moment. A master has complete control over his slave and demands absolute
obedience. We consider this a negative relationship to which we attach the
pejorative term slavery. Parents and kings also have complete control and
demand absolute obedience.
Yet we consider these
positive relationships. How do they differ from each other?
The answer is really quite
simple. The slave master exercises authority to serve his own interests. The
parent and the king exercise authority for the benefit of their children and
subjects, and if they lose sight of this purpose, their authority loses its
legitimacy.
When Hashem took the Jewish people out of Egyptian
bondage on the condition of their absolute subordination and obedience, it was
clearly not to serve His own needs. What could we possibly give Him that He does not already have? Hashem, by definition, is perfect and without
needs. Rather, our subordination was completely for our own benefit. By loving Hashem unreservedly and submitting completely to
His wisdom and will, we would rise above our mundane physical existence and
elevate ourselves to the realm of the divine. By accepting the values and
ideals of the Torah, we would free ourselves from the tyranny of our corporeal
needs and pursuits and experience the exhilaration of the transcendent
expansion of our souls, minds and spirits. This was not slavery in the
negative sense. It was the priceless gift of absolute attachment to the Creator
of the Universe. It was an opportunity to bring ourselves to the highest levels
of existence and fulfillment.
The Jewish slave who chose
to remain in bondage heard Hashem speak of us as His
“slaves” – but he did not really hear. To him, slavery to Hashem and to a man were one and the same, and
to suit his comfort and convenience, he chose slavery to a man. Therefore, we
drill his ear as a symbolic penetration to his consciousness, to help him truly
“hear” what Hashem had said.
As a “slave” of the
Creator, he had been given the opportunity to gain eternal life on the very
highest level, and instead, he chose the base existence of a bonded slave who
lived only to fill his master’s needs.
Two friends went to study
in the school of a famous philosopher in a distant city. The older one, a
brilliant fellow, attended all the lectures of the philosopher religiously. The
younger one, however, also devoted every waking moment to the philosopher,
hanging onto his every word, observing his every movement, running to fulfill
his slightest wish. Two years later, when their course of study was completed,
both friends did extremely well on their examinations. Nevertheless, only the
younger was invited to join the faculty.
“Why not me?” the older
fellow wanted to know. “I did even better than my friend. I got a perfect score
on my examination, didn’t I?”
“Indeed, you did,” the
philosopher replied. “You know all the answers about philosophy, but it has
never become part of you. You are no philosopher. Your friend, however,
subordinated himself to me completely and became a philosopher.” In our own
lives, we sometimes need to take a step back and evaluate the focus and
direction of our lives. We struggle and strive to live as we choose – to be
free.
But somehow, we never seem
to break free. Even when we achieve financial success, there are always
responsibilities, obligations and distractions that direct our lives.
Although we can never
escape the entanglements of life, we can find freedom in another direction. We
can subordinate ourselves completely to the will of our loving Creator. By linking
ourselves to Him, our spirits can drink the heady wine of true liberty even as
we continue to grapple with the demands of living in this world.
Text Copyright © 2008 by
Rabbi Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
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