why observe Jewish law?
Nov. 19th, 2005 11:27 pmA friend asked (in a locked post, so I won't link) why I follow Jewish law. What do I get out of it? I want to record my answer here.
I follow the law because it improves my relationship with God and because it elevates mundane tasks.
Consider eating. Animals eat. Humans need to eat, but we have minds and souls and we don't have to be like animals. The simple act of saying a blessing before ("getting permission") and giving thanks afterwards ("grace") elevates the otherwise-coarse act of eating to a holier status. Now consider actually choosing to restrict what I eat (and how I eat it) because I understand that this is what God asks of us. It's such a simple thing to skip the shellfish and, in return, God might reach out a little to me just as I reach out to God. That's a win!
When I was in the process of becoming more religious (that is, moving from being an apatheist to actually paying attention to God), I found that if I sincerely tried, even with baby steps, I saw positive results. Psychologists might well say that that's because I caused those changes through a more positive outlook; if so, so what? Does that matter if God -- or my God-concept -- was the underlying force? We're supposed to take an active role; if by praying to God I get no direct effect from God, but the act itself causes me to improve my own behavior, isn't that still a win? Well, it's not just prayer that can produce that effect. Keeping Shabbat, eating properly, striving to repair the world, studying torah... it's all bundled up in there.
I follow the law because it improves my relationship with God and because it elevates mundane tasks.
Consider eating. Animals eat. Humans need to eat, but we have minds and souls and we don't have to be like animals. The simple act of saying a blessing before ("getting permission") and giving thanks afterwards ("grace") elevates the otherwise-coarse act of eating to a holier status. Now consider actually choosing to restrict what I eat (and how I eat it) because I understand that this is what God asks of us. It's such a simple thing to skip the shellfish and, in return, God might reach out a little to me just as I reach out to God. That's a win!
When I was in the process of becoming more religious (that is, moving from being an apatheist to actually paying attention to God), I found that if I sincerely tried, even with baby steps, I saw positive results. Psychologists might well say that that's because I caused those changes through a more positive outlook; if so, so what? Does that matter if God -- or my God-concept -- was the underlying force? We're supposed to take an active role; if by praying to God I get no direct effect from God, but the act itself causes me to improve my own behavior, isn't that still a win? Well, it's not just prayer that can produce that effect. Keeping Shabbat, eating properly, striving to repair the world, studying torah... it's all bundled up in there.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-11-22 12:29 am (UTC)The rabbis were disputing whether an oven constructed a certain way could be kosher. The majority said no, and one rabbi (R. Eliezer) said yes. Eliezer said (several times) "if I am right let such-and-such prove it", and each time an unnatural event occurred. (There's an aside where R. Joshua rebukes the walls that are in the process of falling, saying "what right do you have to interfere?") In the end, even a voice from heaven says he's right. And the rabbis respond: the torah is not in heaven; it has been given to men to interpret. The halacha follows the rabbis, not Eliezer.
Does Eliezer know better than God? No, of course not -- but part of God's covenant with the people involved God giving up some authority. So I think it's ok to argue with God, to interpret, and to hesitate. If God really wanted it otherwise he could have wired us differently, but so long as he gave us free will and reason we have the right and responsibility to apply them to our relationship with him. A person who does something reprehensible because he thinks God said so is bringing scorn on not only himself but God.
I certainly do not claim to know as much as, or more than, God does about the world at large. But I know a fair bit about me (as does God), and I have to factor that knowledge, along with my understanding of what God wants, into my decisions.