Scapegoats and Shortcuts
Chapter 1, Law 2
"The scapegoat (lit., 'goat which is sent'), since it affords atonement to
all of Israel, the High Priest confesses upon it on behalf of all of Israel
(lit., 'in the language of all Israel'), as it is stated, 'And he will
confess upon it all the sins of the Children of Israel' (Leviticus 16:21).
"The scapegoat atones for all the sins [enumerated] in the Torah, both minor
and major, whether a person transgressed them wantonly or unintentionally,
and whether or not he [afterwards] became aware [that he had transgressed]
them. All is atoned through the scapegoat. This is [so provided] the person
has repented, but if he did not repent, the scapegoat atones only for minor
[transgressions].
"What are minor and major [transgressions]? Major [sins] are sins for which
one deserves the death sentence or excision ('karais'). False and vain
oaths, even though they do not carry [the punishment of] excision, are
considered major. All other negative prohibitions and positive commandments
for which one does not receive excision are considered minor."
Last week the Rambam introduced the concept of teshuva (repentance) by
discussing it from the Biblical perspective -- meaning, by citing the Torah
verses relevant to it. As we noted, the Torah surprisingly never actually
obligates us to repent our evil ways. What it does command is that we
confess our wrongs -- presumably regretting them in the process. We
discussed last week the centrality of confession to the teshuva process.
This week the Rambam too views teshuva from the Biblical perspective --
focusing in particular on the scapegoat offering of the Yom Kippur Temple
service.
Leviticus 16 outlines the Temple services the High Priest performed on Yom
Kippur. A part of his duties involved the taking of two goats, of equal size
and appearance, and casting lots upon them, determining which would be
offered to G-d and which to "Azazel" (simply translated, a place of hard and
rough terrain). The High Priest subsequently confessed the sins of Israel on
the scapegoat. It was then given to a messenger, who led it into the
wilderness and pushed it off a cliff to its death. As the Torah explains, it
carried with it many of the sins of Israel.
There are many Kabbalistic interpretations to this rather atypical Jewish
practice -- generally understood to be a form of bringing an offering to
Satan. I once discussed a more down-to-earth understanding of it (Laws of
De'os 5:13), in which the gift represents our disassociating ourselves from
our past acts and all benefit we derived from them. We return to Satan the
"gift" he had earlier granted us -- all the illicit pleasures we enjoyed (or
thought we were enjoying) throughout the year. I won't cover this topic
again, but anyone interested is welcome to view our past discussion:
www.torah.org/learning/mlife/chapter5-13.html.
One of the basic ideas here which requires understanding is the efficacy of
the scapegoat. As the Rambam explained, in Temple times if we would repent
the scapegoat would atone for all of our sins. If we would not, it would
atone for our minor sins only. Now the first statement we can understand. If
we *do* repent and strive to return to G-d, the scapegoat can help the
process along. It performs some of the mechanics of repentance -- as the
Divinely-ordained instructions for facilitating the teshuva process.
But what is the idea that the scapegoat can effect atonement -- even for
minor sins -- when we do nothing ourselves? I can sin and not care less
about it, and the High Priest just does some hocus pocus in the Temple and
viola! -- my slate is clean! Doesn't this fly in the face of everything
Judaism teaches us about religion and spirituality? Isn't closeness to G-d a
result of work and effort, of conditioning ourselves to become spiritual
beings able to enjoy a relationship with our Maker? No one else can do
*that* for me! Yet here we are told that at least a fraction of our sins
just go poof -- while I'm loafing on my hammock the entire Yom Kippur not
lifting a finger to return to G-d!
As a matter of fact, one opinion in the Talmud goes even further -- that the
day of Yom Kippur itself atones for virtually all of our sins (Yoma 85b). I
sinned the entire year and never regretted it for a moment, yet somehow just
being alive for the day of Yom Kippur (okay, presumably you have to fast
too) expiates all of my sins. How could someone possibly hold such an
opinion? This almost sounds like other religions (or at least corruptions of
them): be a lowlife the entire year, just pay me the right price and I'll
sell you your pardons. Not a bad deal! (In fact, the lower you were the
entire year, probably the more able you are to afford the pardons.) A
guaranteed clean slate every year, no strings attached! I mean, why would
anyone ever behave the rest of the year with an offer like that?
This question is even stronger if we read the Rambam's point more carefully.
The Rambam stated that the scapegoat on its own, without personal
repentance, atones for minor but not major sins. At first glance that seems
logical. Yet keep in mind that the Rambam also taught that the scapegoat
atones for both wanton and unintentional sins. Putting these two points
together, we find that without repentance the scapegoat atones for minor
sins even when done wantonly, but not for major ones even when done
accidentally.
Taking a simple illustration, let's say person #1 eats a ham sandwich
(technically a minor one) knowing full well G-d forbade it but preferring
filling his stomach to obeying G-d's will. Person #2, on the other hand, was
out taking a walk on the Sabbath (not in an enclosed area) and happened to
forget that he still had his key in his pocket. Which person is worse -- the
G-d-fearing person who carelessly forgot about his key, or the one who did a
"minor" sin because he cared for his stomach more than G-d? Yet the
scapegoat atones for the latter person but not the former!
The answer to this is one of the fundamentals of Judaism. It's true that in
Temple times at least some sins could be pardoned for free. The High Priest
would do a little magic and poof! my sins would disappear. But so what? I
have fewer sins? G-d *still* can't stand me! Is being sinless the ticket to
Divine favor? Is that what Judaism is about -- lay low and stay out of
trouble? Keep your nose out of harm's way so you don't get zapped but live
for yourself the rest of the time?
Rather, as we all know, Judaism is about developing a relationship with our
Creator, conditioning ourselves for greatness, and becoming the type of
person who appreciates G-d's Torah and values. If a person does do this,
then even if has a few sins G-d will still love him. Sure, sins require
atonement. Such a person will have to amend his sins and that may well be a
painful, protracted process. Yet, having slipped in the past does not of a
necessity mean I have forfeited my relationship with G-d. I still love Him
and He loves me.
Conversely, a person who merely has no sins -- such as someone who let the
High Priest do all the work for him (while he was dozing off in the
synagogue), may *not* have sins which require expiation, but he still has no
relationship with G-d to speak of. As we've discussed in the past, the World
to Come is a place in which we will enjoy a relationship with G-d. It will
be built upon the degree to which we conditioned ourselves for such a
relationship in this world. If we developed ourselves to become people who
appreciate G-d's wisdom and values, then a relationship is possible. If we
merely dodged the bullet, stayed out of the way, and let the High Priest do
the dirty work for us, we will have very little to show for ourselves after 120.
Thus, true, there *are* a few magical potions in Judaism. In Temple times,
through the Temple offerings, the priests could provide you with quick
expiation (if you at least confessed your wrong, as we discussed last week).
And today too, perhaps you can visit a Rebbe and receive a generous and
often effective blessing for health or success. Yet none of this truly makes
us close to G-d. In temporal systems perhaps pulling the right strings may
be a fine method of getting what we want fast. But there are no shortcuts to
closeness to G-d. Shortcuts to atonement or shortcuts to blessings perhaps,
but not to G-d. For when all is said and done, we will be what we've made
ourselves in our lifetimes, nothing more and nothing less.
Based on a lecture heard from my teacher R. Yochanan Zweig
(www.talmudicu.edu & www.torah.org/learning/rabbizweig).
Text Copyright © 2010 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org