
Kashrut for the
modern believer.
Does the New
Testament permit violating the kashrut laws?
In
modern Christianity it is taught that with the death burial and
resurrection of Yeshua we are now able to eat whatever we wish. Common
scriptures that are used to justify this are
Romans14, 1st Corinthians
8:4-13, We are told in Mark
7 that Yeshua declared all foods clean. Many also use Peters vision
in Acts10 & 11. Many view
eating as a minor thing and ask "what is the big fuss about or suggest
that the laws pertaining to kashrut are justification as to why Yeshua
had to come to annul them in that they were strict and there really
should not have been a big issue with what one eats. Other common
thoughts on eating are
sayings like "well in the beginning he made everything tov tov or good,
good and that through Yeshua we have been restored back to that so I can
eat whatever I want". Or " Romans14:17 says "the kingdom of heaven is
not meat or drink". We will be taking an in depth look at these
scriptures and thoughts from a Hebraic perspective and dealing with the
issues of what seems to be an incongruent flow throughout the scriptures
on this subject.
The best place for us to start is at the
beginning and oddly enough the original sin began with eating
that of which Elohim said "don't eat". We all know what came with this
single act of lawlessness and failure to repent. This one act was the
root cause of all sin that exists today. So our first thought from a
Hebrew perspective has to be that eating is not a minor thing. We must
realize it is an act that we do virtually every day and the abuse of the
laws pertaining to it can result in devastating consequences both in the
physical and the spiritual. Let's look at what the thought is from a
spiritual Hebraic standpoint.
Shmini(Leviticus
9-11)
The Kosher Spirit
There is no precept more fundamental to Judaism than the Kashrut laws,
the phenomenon we refer to as "keeping kosher." This week's Torah
portion is the Biblical source of the entire concept of Kashrut, and we
shall therefore explore this most fundamental topic in this week's
essay.
After first enumerating the forbidden species of animals, fowl, fish,
reptiles and insects, the Torah sums up the list:
"This is the law of the animal and the bird, every living creature that
swarms in the water, and for every creature that teems on the ground, to
distinguish between the tamey
('spiritually impure') and
the tahor
('spiritually pure') and
between the creatures that may be eaten and the creatures that may not
be eaten." (Leviticus
11:46-47)
This same concept of tamey that
is presented by the passage as the reason for the rejection of the
species that are forbidden to eat, is a recurring theme in the next few
Torah portions. Yet it is far from clear what the concept means, and how
a single idea can be simultaneously applied to such varying themes as
species of living creatures, menstruating women and lepers, to mention
just a few of the topics to which the concept tamey is
applied by the Torah.
The words tamey and tahor have
no real parallels in English or indeed, in any other secular language,
and we have to delve more deeply into the Hebrew in order to even begin
to comprehend how it can be applied to the concept of Kashrut. The
discussion that follows is based on the work Derech
Hashem,authored
by Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzatto, better known as the "Ramchal," a
famous medieval Kabbalist.
The word tamey originates
in the Hebrew word atum, which
means "impermeable" or "sealed off." In the world of the immediate
present it is all too easy to present the flavor of what the word
implies. Following the first Gulf War, a law was passed in Israel that
requires all new apartments to be constructed with a cheder
atum, a
"sealed room" that can be made impermeable to poison gas by simply
closing its doors and windows. On the eve of the second Gulf War, as I
am writing this essay, the concept has become all too familiar to
Americans as well. When the Torah employs the concept of being sealed
off it does so in a spiritual sense; tamey refers
to a person or creature or substance that is sealed off from the
spiritual; it is impermeable to Divine emanation or light.
* * *
DIVINE LIGHT AND THE PROBLEM OF CREATION
When God created the world, He was faced with a problem. If He created a
universe completely open to His Divine light, such a universe would be
overwhelmed by the brightness of this light and would cling to God,
unable or unwilling to separate. On the other hand, if creation was
impermeable to Divine light it could not survive. A created universe has
no inertia. It needs the constant input of the fresh energy that we
describe as the Divine light in order to continue to exist.
Besides, not only were these extremes impractical, they also defeated
the purpose of creation. God wanted the universe to contain the
possibility of connecting to Him through a process of free choice. This
required a built in possibility of separating from Him and still
continuing to survive. Some restriction to the need for constant
exposure to the emanation of the Divine light had to be part of the
universe's basic design.
So God made a creation that is a mixture of tamey and tohar, of
substances that are porous mixed with those that are impenetrable. The
part of creation that is permeable to His Light is known as tahor;
but a portion was designed to exist in a state of spiritual darkness;
the portion we call tamey. Since
both parts are combined into a single entity, creation as an entirety
can function without either being totally overwhelmed by God's
emanations or in any way bereft of them.
The tamey portion
of creation that is impermeable to the Divine light keeps the whole
thing from fading back into the source, while the tohar portion
that is permeable can connect back to the source so that God is able to
keep creation going.
Not only does this dichotomy solve the problem of maintaining the
universe in existence in a state of partial separation, it also offers
the built in possibility of free choice. As anyone can connect to the tamey, a
part of the universe that exists only in a state of separation from God,
there is a built in existential alternative to clinging to the Divine
Presence.
Kashrut is an excellent way to bring this down to earth. We derive the
energy for continued life from the things we eat. If we eat the tamey, we
are choosing to live in separation form God by definition; if we wish to
connect we must eat the tohar.
We incorporate this concept into a blessing we recite every morning as
part of the Shacharit prayer, "Blessed
are You ... Who forms light and creates darkness, makes peace and
creates all." The
text of this blessing is taken verbatim from a verse in Isaiah (45:7),
except that in the original the concluding word is 'evil' instead of
'all.' The change of the word 'evil' to the word 'all' is not a
euphemism but the delineation of the place that evil occupies in the
universe; evil, the substance that is not permeable to God's light, was
created not as a thing onto itself, but as part of the 'all.'
* * *
HUMANITY AND THE ABSENCE OF EVIL
The combination of good and evil into a single composite 'all' applies
not only to the universe in general, but to human beings specifically as
well. Man's body was created impermeable to the Divine light or part of
the tamey, while
his soul was created to be utterly transparent to the same light, or
entirely tahor. The
secret of man's free will lies in this dichotomy; man has to define
himself and decide which part of his nature really represents him. He
must choose between connecting his life force to the body or the tamey, or
to his soul, the tohar.
We all have this same existential choice to make; nevertheless, there is
a great deal of difference between man as he was created and the way
that we are now. In his original pristine state, when man chose to
connect his life force to his soul, his neshama had
the ability to instantly transform his body and purify it so that the
body also became permeable to the Divine light. This ability to
instantly transform was only fair; when he was created, his connection
to the tamey was
wired into him and not a matter of his own choosing.
But when Adam ate from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, he
voluntarily formed a new connection to the tamey that
was not part of his original makeup. Having connected himself to the tamey in
the universe of his own free will, the tamey became
an irremovable part of his being. Man can no longer transform his body
and make it tohar, or
permeable to the Divine light during his lifetime on earth. He is doomed
to remain a creature divided for the duration of human history. His body
is impermeable to the Divine light whereas his soul is the most
permeable substance in the universe.
* * *
THE IMPORTANCE OF PURIFYING THE BODY
To appreciate the importance of the existential dichotomy between body
and soul we must remember that man's mission in the world is to connect
himself to God and thus gain everlasting life. In order to accomplish
this intimate connection his soul must transform his body to the extent
that it becomes capable of connecting to God as well, at least
indirectly, making use of the soul as a medium.
For as long as the body remains dark to the Divine emanation, man as a
whole, a creature composed of both body and soul, cannot fully connect
with God. Following Adam's sin, due to the fact that the soul lost its
ability to totally transform the body, it became necessary for man to
die before his connection to God can be fully activated.
In death the soul separates from the body, and each of man's parts goes
its own way. The soul goes back to unite with God, and the body returns
to dust. This allows the body to be regenerated by God in time for the
Resurrection, when each person will be re-equipped with the sort of body
that Adam was originally created with, the one that was transformable by
the soul. At this point man's soul, having been much strengthened by the
power of the good deeds he performed during his lifetime will indeed
transform his body and he will be ready to reap the fruit of his labors
and enjoy his connection to God throughout eternity. Hence God's warning
to Adam:
"For on the day you eat of it, you shall surely die." (Genesis
2:17)
By now it should be becoming apparent that the universe actually
contains three sorts of phenomena. A part of the universe is tamey, totally
impermeable to the Divine light, another opposing part is tahor, and
always totally permeable to this light, while there exists a third part
in between that is up for grabs.
* * *
WAR ZONE
If we analyze this startling conclusion, we realize that God planned the
universe as a war zone between diametrically opposing forces.
The tamey portion
of the universe was created to constantly struggle to separate the
entire universe from God, while the tahor portion
was given the impulse to attempt to reattach the universe to its source.
This is not due to good or evil intent as such, but is entirely
attributable to the fact that everything God created He also instilled
with a blazingly intense instinct for survival.
As survival requires fresh Divine input in a created universe, the tamey must
struggle to obtain such input as intensively as the tahor. But
the tamey itself
is quite impermeable to the Divine light; it must therefore turn to the
only source for obtaining the input it requires for its survival, the tahor. By
detaching the tohar from
God and attaching it to itself, the tamey can
get hold of the input of Divine energy that it needs to survive. The tohar is
always loaded with such input.
These basic facts are all that are needed to explain the dynamics of the
universe and account for the human condition. The soul or neshama of
man is entirely tahor. All
it desires is to cling stubbornly to its source. But the soul is
connected to the body in a shotgun marriage and the body connects all
too easily with the source of tamey that
we call the evil inclination.
This turns man's body into the ultimate battleground. If the neshama wins
the battle, the body becomes tahor,
forms a union with the neshama and
attaches itself to God. If the evil inclination wins, the body becomes tamey, and
maintains the neshama in
a state of enforced captivity.
The interest of the evil inclination in keeping a grip on the neshama is
clear. Since the neshama can
never be detached from its source, the tamey is
able to draw Divine light from the neshama into
itself through the medium of the body, and thus gain the fresh input it
requires for continued existence. Since the tamey lacks
the ability to connect to God directly by definition, subverting thetahor is
the only means at the disposal of the tamey to
ensure its continued survival.
This puts man in the position of the ultimate arbitrator between the tamey and
the tahor.
* * *
THE DYNAMICS OF CHOICE
When man surrenders to his evil inclination, he takes the Divine light
of God that is constantly being transmitted to his neshama,
passes it on to his body and delivers it to the tamey portion
of the universe by investing the energy of his body into the performance
of forbidden actions. With this freshly obtained creative power, the
evil inclination is able to carve out and expand the tamey
kingdom.
But when the neshama is
victorious in its war against the evil inclination and manages to hold
the body in its thrall, the body transfers no Divine energy to the tamey portion
of the universe. Lacking the fresh input of creative force that all
existence requires to keep going, the expression of the tamey in
the universe weakens and begins to fade; physicality becomes ever more
permeable to the Divine light; the flame of the Shechinah -
the manifestation of God in the physical world - glows ever brighter
until it actually becomes visible to the physical eye. A Temple is
established to house its Presence.
If on the other hand, the neshama loses
a battle in the continuing war against the evil inclination, and is
trapped into supplying Divine energy to the tamey
,this
process is reversed. The physical world becomes ever more impermeable to
the Divine light, the Shechinah less
and less manifest. The Temple is withdrawn and evil and darkness spread
over the world.
* * *
TRAPPED INTO EMPOWERING EVIL
If we employ our imaginations to project the sort of feelings we would
have if we were a neshama who
is trapped into supplying creative power to the tamey part
of the universe, the image that pops into mind is excruciating pain and
overwhelming dismay. The implication is clear. The pleasure the body
experiences in the commission of forbidden acts is experienced by the
neshama as
the opposite of pleasure; pain.
On the other hand, the pain and frustration experienced by the body from
the refusal to indulge in forbidden pleasures is experienced by the neshama as
an intense surge of delight. The intensity of this pain-pleasure
relationship follows an inverse proportionality rule. The greater the
forbidden physical pleasure, the more intense the spiritual pain. The
greater the frustration of self-denial the more intense the spiritual
joy.
In this physical world we are almost entirely numb to spiritual
sensations and it is almost beyond us to directly experience spiritual
pleasure or pain. But as soon as we leave the confines of physicality we
will fully taste our spiritual experiences. Unlike physical feelings
that fade very quickly, spiritual experiences last for unlimited time.
This allows us some insight into the pain and pleasure that awaits us in
the next world.
It is within the context of this battle between the neshama and
the evil inclination that the positive and negative commands of the
Torah must be understood. The Torah prohibits the sort of indulgence in
physical experience that translates into providing creative energy to
the tamey, while
the positive commandments encourage the activities that have the
capacity to transform the physical into spiritual and make it permeable
to the Divine light.
* * *
EATING TO LIVE
The Ba'al Hatanya, the first of the Chassidic Rabbis of the Chabad
Lubavitch dynasty, offers the following comment, which is perfectly
clear in terms of the conceptual outline presented above. In Hebrew the
expression used for describing something as forbidden is assur, a
word that literally means "bound", or "tied up", while the expression
for describing something as permissible is mutar, a
word that literally means "loose", or "untied." Forbidden substances are
bound up with the tamey. The tamey has
them all tied up; it is beyond our present capacity to loosen its grip
on them. Let us now tie all this back to Kashrut in greater detail.
We eat to provide ourselves with the energy to live. Eating forbidden
substances generates life-energy that is firmly tied to the tamey, and
has the immediate effect of drawing the consumer of such substances
under the influence of the tamey.
But even if this pull to the tamey is
successfully resisted, and the consumer of a forbidden substance
attempts to channel the life-energy he obtained from digesting his
forbidden meal into the performance of positive Torah commandments, he
is wasting his time. The purpose of such commandments is to transform
the physical and make it more permeable to the Divine light. But the
forbidden substance consumed was forbidden precisely for the reason that
it is bound to the tamey and
cannot be released from its grip at present. Using the life force taken
from the tamey to
drive the tamey out
of the world is a self-defeating process at best.
On the other hand, when we eat permissible substances, we obtain
life-energy that is entirely free of the grip of the tamey.
If we use the energy thus obtained to fulfill the commandments, we
purify part of the world and make it tahor and
permeable to God's light, and thus increase the presence of the Shechinah in
the world.
Rabbi Yishmael taught: "A transgression has the effect of stopping up a
person's heart [Rashi: closes it to receiving wisdom] as it is written, 'Do
not contaminate yourself through them you become contaminated through
them.' (Leviticus
11:43) The word tamey in
the verse is deliberately misspelled; it should be written with an
aleph, but
the aleph is
omitted so as to write the word that means 'stopped up.'" (Talmud, Yuma,
39a)
The passage establishes a special connection between being open and
receptive to Torah wisdom and the avoidance of commission of
transgressions. This connection turns out to be especially potent when
it comes to transgressing against the laws of Kashrut.
To give us an idea of just how holy the great men of previous
generations were, the Talmud (Chullin 7a) tells a story concerning R'
Pinchas ben Yair's donkey. The donkey was stolen, but the thieves
returned him after a few days. It stubbornly refused to eat. When it was
returned, R' Pinchas immediately fed it with grain that had been tithed;
he explained that the donkey had refused to eat any grain that had not
been so tithed even though it is permissible to feed untithed grain to
animals. As he belonged to a great tzaddik,
righteous man, R' Pinchas' donkey chose to apply the strictest kashrut
standards to what it would agree to eat. From this the Talmud derives a
principle; if God preserves even the animals of the tzaddik from
consuming forbidden substances, imagine what He would do to preserve the
tzaddik himself from consuming such substances?
Tosefoth (ibid. 5b) explains that this concept does not apply to other
sorts of sin. The consumption of forbidden foods is especially
pernicious because it 'stops up the heart' and closes it off from being
able to appreciate the wisdom of Torah. Normally a sin that is committed
inadvertently does little spiritual harm. The special Divine protection
enjoyed by the tzaddik attaches especially to the consumption of
forbidden foods because of the spiritual harm such consumption can
inflict even when the act of eating the food is inadvertent. Poison is
poison no matter how it is ingested.
An illustration of just how far this can go is provided by the response
of the famous sage Rabbi Akiva Eiger to the query sent by a mother who
complained about her son's apparent inability to absorb the wisdom of
Torah despite his brightness concerning worldly matters. In his response
Rabbi Eiger wondered if the son had ever been placed in the care of a
non-Jewish nurse as a young child who might have fed him pork. He
explained that if this had been the case, his present lack of ability to
study Torah in spite of his brightness was perfectly understandable. His
heart and mind could still be stopped up to the wisdom of Torah years
later by what the forbidden food he had ingested as a baby.
The laws of Kashrut are indeed fundamental to the practice of Judaism.
The food we put in our mouths is translated into the energy that we burn
in the service of God. Is it any wonder that God took the trouble to
point out to us the things that will make us tamey?
One of the most paradigmatic aspects of Jewish practice has been the
prohibition against non-kosher food in general and pork in particular.
The pig has never enjoyed a positive reputation in Jewish tradition. The
Talmud in one place labels the pig a "walking privy (toilet)."1 It
was considered a particularly abominable beast.2 At
times when making reference to the pig the Talmud was loath to even use
the term, replacing the word pig or swine with "something else."
* * *
While some of the laws of Kashrut had been introduced in previous
sections,4the
prohibition against pork is found in this week's Torah portion:
And the Lord spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying to them: "Speak to the
People of Israel, saying, 'These are the beasts which you shall eat
among all the beasts that are on the earth. What ever parts the hoof,
and is cloven-footed, and chews the cud among the beasts, that shall you
eat. Nevertheless, these shall you not eat of those that chew the cud,
or of those that divide the hoof; the camel, because it chews the cud,
but its hoof is not parted; it is unclean to you. And the coney, because
it chews the cud, but its hoof is not parted; it is unclean to you. And
the hare, because it chews the cud, but its hoof is not parted; it is
unclean to you. And the swine, though its hoof is parted, and
is cloven-footed, yet it chews not the cud; it is unclean to you. Of
their flesh shall you not eat, and their carcasses you shall not touch;
they are unclean to you. (Leviticus
11:1-8)5
In order for an animal to be kosher it needs both to chew its cud and
have split hooves. The Torah tell us that there are a few animals which
have only one of the two signs; these animals are deemed unkosher. But
only the pig-swine has split hooves but does not chew its cud, and is
consequently not kosher. The Talmud therefore deduces that if an animal
that is not a pig and has split hooves is ever discovered, it may be
eaten. It can be taken for granted that it will chew cud.
Rabbi Hisda further said: "If a man was walking in the desert and found
an animal with its mouth mutilated, he should examine its hoofs; if they
are parted he may be certain that it is clean, but if not, he may be
certain that it is unclean; provided, however, he recognizes the swine.
You admit then that there is the swine [which is the exception to the
rule]. But might there well be other species similar to the swine? That
should not enter your mind, for a Tanna of the school of Rabbi Ishmael
taught: 'The Ruler of the universe knows that there is no other beast
that parts the hoof and is unclean except the swine...'" (Chullin 59a)
* * *
SYMBOL OF HYPOCRISY
It is interesting that the pig is the only animal that has these unique
traits – outwardly acceptable, but the inner analysis reveals the
deficiency. The pig therefore became synonymous with hypocrisy.6 The
image of the swine presenting its split hooves as evidence of its purity
was a powerful image. Various personalities in the Bible who were deemed
by the rabbis as hypocritical were thus described:
And Cain went out... Whence
did he go out? Rabbi Aibu said: "It means that he threw the words behind
him and went out, like one who would deceive the Almighty." Rabbi
Berekiah said in Rabbi Eleazar's name: "He went forth like one who shows
the cloven hoof, like one
who deceives his Creator." (Midrash Rabbah Genesis 22:13)
That Pharaoh, Vashti, (the
wife of the king of Persia who preceded Esther),and
other denigrated characters were labeled as acting or actually being
like pigs. However, the major personality who was associated with the
pig was Esau in
particular, and, eventually, the Romans (his descendants) in general.
Rabbi Isaac said: "[God declared]: 'You have given a name to your swine
[Esau]; then I too will name My firstborn, as it says, Thus
says the Lord: Israel is My son, My firstborn'" (Midrash
Rabbah - Genesis 63:8)
Why does he compare it [the Roman State] to a swine? For this reason:
when the swine is lying down it puts out its hoofs, as if to say, "I am
clean," so does this wicked State rob and oppress, yet pretend to be
executing justice. So for forty years Esau used to ensnare married women
and violate them, yet when he attained forty years he compared himself
to his father, saying, "As my father was forty years old when he
married, so I will marry at the age of forty." (Midrash Rabbah – Genesis
65:1)
The superficiality of Esau, manifested by his "positive," ostentatious
outward behavior, was contradicted by his spiritually barren inner self. But
it is interesting that the Midrash went a step further and insisted that
Esau was the prototype for the entire hated Roman Empire.
* * *
ASSOCIATION WITH EXILE
The Midrash in fact associates the various exiles with the four unclean
animals enumerated in this week's Torah portion:
Moses foresaw the empires engaged in their [subsequent] activities.
[Among the unclean animals] the camel alludes to Babylon ... the rock
badger alludes to Media.
The Rabbis and Rabbi Judah ben Simon gave different explanations. The
Rabbis said: "Just as the rock-badger possesses marks of uncleanness and
marks of cleanness, so too did Media produce a righteous man as well as
a wicked man." Rabbi Judah ben Simon said: "The last Darius was the son
of Esther, clean from his mother and unclean from his father.
The hare alludes to Greece; the name of the mother of Ptolemy was
[Lagos, the Greek equivalent of] hare. The swine alludes to Seir [Edom,
i.e. Rome].
Why is it [i.e. Edom or Rome] compared to a swine? To tell you this:
Just as the swine, when reclining, puts forth its hooves as if to say,
'See that I am clean,' so too does the empire of Edom [Rome] boast as it
commits violence and robbery, under the guise of establishing a judicial
tribunal. This may be compared to a governor who put to death the
thieves, adulterers, and sorcerers. He leaned over to an advisor and
said: 'I myself did these three things in one night.'" (Midrash Rabbah –
Leviticus 13:5)
The comparison of the various animals to different empires is
intriguing. On the one hand, the relative length of the Roman exile
would justify the separate verse. On
the other hand, this association can help explain a fascinating
tradition. Various authorities have mentioned a teaching that in the Messianic
age the pig will become kosher. The ultimate symbol of treif becoming
acceptable would surely be a sign that the eschatological age has begun.
* * *