Parshat Tazria: “As Pure as a Gnat” – This week’s Torah reading
focuses on purity and impurity when it comes to human beings. It follows discussions about animals and the Tabernacle. The Rabbis don’t miss this fact, noting that
as human beings were created last of all animals, the rules for their ritual
lives come last, at least in a manner of speaking, after the others. This is valuable to us in our lives where we
all-too-often fear seeing thing, especially people as better or worse than
others or as better or superior to animals and other living things.
Yet the Rabbis do not fear taking this view. In fact, the Midrash tells us that humans
were created last so that it could be said that unless you act in a moral and
upright manner it could be said, “a gnat was more important to you” meaning,
God made them first, so don’t get all uppity about how important you are.
A healthy dose of perspective is good for us as human
beings. Recognizing that God did make a
whole ton of beetles before he got around to us, and yet at the same time gave
us abilities and powers far greater than all those beetles is meant to give us
pause. Are we really acting in a
meritorious way towards each other? Are
we really being good people as often as we can?
Are we seeking to improve and make amends when we don’t hit the
mark? A lot – a world, even – depends on
us and how we act towards each other and towards that world.
While our methods for describing “impurity” and for becoming
“pure” have changed vastly, our place in the world as powerful and responsible
remains. Let a reading like Tazria
remind us of the need to act carefully in the world around us.
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