RABBI'S
THOUGHTS: TETZAVEH
Parshas Tetzaveh: Look Beyond
the Label
The name of Moshe (Moses) does not appear in this
week's Parsha, even though he is alluded to. The reason for this is that
Moshe had requested of G-d, when the Children of Israel made the Golden
Calf, that if He was not prepared to forgive the Children of Israel, then he
should erase him 'from your book...' Although the Jewish people were
forgiven, the words of a Tzaddik (righteous individual) are powerful and
Moshe's decree was realized through his name being missed out from this one
Parsha.
The commentator Baal Haturim points out that while
Moses' actual name does not appear in this week's Parsha, Moses himself is
very much present. The entire Parsha consists of G-d's words to Moses!
Indeed, the Pasha's first word is "ve'attah", "and you [shallcommand...]" -
the "you" being the person of Moses.
A person's name does not reflect that person's
essential self. A name, or a descriptive word applied to a person, is used
by others to refer to that person. The essential self, the essence of the
person, however, is beyond description and limitation.
The word "you" at the beginning of the Parsha
connotes its subject's very self, in contrast to a person's name which is a
mere "handle" on his personality. This means that although his name does not
appear, Moses is, in essence, more present in our Parsha than if he would be
mentioned by name, limited to the description that a name implies.
Because Moses was prepared to forgo mention of his
name in the Torah for the sake of his people, he merited that his
quintessential self - that level of self that cannot be captured by any name
or designation - be included in the Torah. It is this level of Moses' self
that is expressed by his "nameless" presence in the Parsha of Tetzaveh.
We all have a tendency to label ourselves, and each
other. So-and-so is a this-ist or a that-ist. A name provides only a limited
window into what a person really is. There is a fundamental essence which we
each possess and which transcends limitation. When we stop trying to label
each other and focus on what is deep inside, on the essence, we realize that
we are not really so different and it is much easier to get along.
Shabbat Shalom |