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LEVITICUS — 19:18 love

LEV649 (Continued from [[LEV1119]] Leviticus 26:16 wreak OXFORD 313-4). Rabbi Moses ben Nahman ("Nahmanides," 13th century) understands the obligation to care for others through medicine as one of many applications of the Torah's principle, "And you shall love your neighbor as yourself" [this verse] [B. Bava Kamma 85a, 81b; B. Sanhedrin 73a, 84b (with Rashi's commentary there. Lengthy further footnote omitted)]. God is still our ultimate Healer, and hence Jewish liturgy has Jews pray to God for healing of body and soul three times each day; but the physician, in Jewish theology, is God's agent in establishing that task, and so use of the medical arts is not only permissible, but required. Jews, in fact, may not live in a city lacking a physician (B. Sanhedrin 17b with regard to "students of the Sages"; J. Kiddushin 66d, with regard to all Jews), for that would mean that people could not take reasonable care of their bodies, which belong to God. This appreciation of medicine has led to a virtual love affair between Jews and medicine for the last 2,000 years, and it means that Jews trust medicine--and use it extensively--when they encounter medical problems, including those involving sex or procreation. (By Elliot N. Dorff)

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LEVITICUS — 19:18 love

LEV663 In light of the biblical and rabbinic sources mentioned above, there is no question about whether animals matter, but only why and how. Abraham Ibn Ezra (1089–1164) goes so far as to include animals in the command to "Love your neighbor as yourself" [this verse] [Elijah Judah Schochet, Animal Life in Jewish Tradition (New York: KTAV, 1984, p. 263)]. Moses Hayyim Luzzatto (1707-1746) makes compassion for animals a basic virtue. [The Path of the Upright=Mesillat Yesharim), Mordechai Menahem Kaplan, trans. (Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson, 1995), p. 155]. Noah Cohen concludes that the classical rabbis see compassion for animals as "categorical and undeniable.… not a proposition to be proved." [Tsa'ar Ba'ale Hayim--the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals" (Ph.D. dissertation, Catholic University of America, 1959)]. This notion constitutes the opening horizon of Jewish animal ethics: our treatment of animals matters. Human-animal relations are an important religious issue. While it is clear that animals matter, it is equally clear that there is widespread agreement in rabbinic sources that whatever human and Jewish responsibilities there are to protect the lives of animals, such protections should not preclude the use of animals for legitimate human interests, such as--paradigmatically--satisfying the desire to eat basar, flesh. This principle, rarely explicit but constantly operative, constitutes the closing horizon of Jewish animal ethics. One can argue that Judaism is a tradition friendly to and even encouraging of ethical vegetarianism (though this is a position many would dispute), but one cannot persuasively argue that traditional and modern forms of Judaism demand a complete ban on meat consumption such as, for example, we find in several south Asian traditions. Significantly, some powerful minority streams within Judaism would insist that consuming meat is in principle unethical--a moral compromise--and would argue that vegetarianism is an ideal even though not a mandatory practice. These minority streams, perhaps as old as the book of Genesis, are found in traces throughout the Talmud and classical commentaries on the Bible [Yael Shemesh, "Vegetarian Ideology in Talmudic Literature and Traditional Biblical Exegesis," Review of Rabbinic Judaism 9 (2006)] and are vibrant in Jewish materials throughout modernity. In light of the way in which Judaism has evolved over time, there is no reason these now marginal views could not one day become dominant. This simultaneous insistence on both the value of animal lives and the greater value of human well-being is articulated in a dialectical fashion throughout Jewish texts by juxtaposing countervailing principles of, on the one hand, kindness to animals (often coupled with an emphasis on human creatureliness), and, on the other hand, human ascendancy, (often coupled with an emphasis on human distinctiveness). [Aaron Gross, "The Question of the Animal: Dietary Practice, Ethics, and Subjectivity" (Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, 2010), chap. 6)]. We have in fact already seeing this dialectical strategy in the story of Rabbi Judah [B. Bava Metzi'a 85a; Genesis Rabbah 33:3] and in Genesis's juxtaposition of God's violent command to dominate ("master" and "rule") animals with a command to be vegetarian. As the modern Orthodox rabbi Irving (Yitz) Greenberg explained, "the Jewish strategy was to combine human activism and restraint, yoking mastery over in nature with a reference for the national order." [Irving Greenberg, The Jewish Way (Northgale, JH. Jason Aronson), p. 105)]. (Continued at [[LEV896]] Leviticus 22:28 young OXFORD 422-3). (By Aaron S. Gross, "Jewish Animal Ethics")

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LEVITICUS — 19:18 love

LEV694 The mention of Sabbath observance and reverence for parents/elders both at the beginning and end of Leviticus 19 [vv. 3,30,32) suggests that we should view its central point, v.18's "Love your fellow as yourself: I am the Lord," [this verse] as the apex or climax of the chapter. Thus the verse that provides the greatest motivation for godly behavior in the social realm is situated at the focal point of the entire Pentateuch: there is no better indication than this of the centrality of ethical behavior in the Torah. Despite the Bible's consistent emphasis on God's demand for ethical behavior, the summation of the Torah in ethical terms, such as Hillel's "that which is hateful to you, do not do the others (B. Shabbat 31a) is a product of the period after the closing of the Bible. Exclusive fidelity to Israel's God and reverence for the holy, for example the Sabbath, were also essential in defining aspects of Israelite religion, according to the Torah and prophets. (By Elaine Adler Goodfriend, “Ethical Theory and Practice in the Hebrew Bible)

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LEVITICUS — 19:18 yourself

LEV729 In his essay about Kierkegaard, Buber notes that the biblical command to love God reads, "Love God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your might" (Deuteronomy 6:5), and the command to love humans says, "Love your neighbor as one like yourself" [this verse]. The neighbor--the one encountered fairly regularly--is to be loved "as I wish it may be shown to me." Between Man and Man, Smith, trans. (Boston: Beacon Press, 1947) p.66. That this love given to the unique other is to a certain degree self-serving does not revert this I-Thou relationship back to an I-It relation automatically. Rather, this idiosyncratic expression of love expresses both the concrete uniqueness of the loved and lover. Love among humans thus differs in degree. Love between humans and God, however, is a different kind: it is to be done with all one's heart, soul, and might. (See Deuteronomy 6:5. This verse and the following five verses constitute the first of the three paragraphs of the Shema, the watchword of Jewish liturgy and faith). (By Jonathan K. Crane)

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LEVITICUS — 19:34 love

LEV795 The most frequently mentioned non-Israelite is the ger or "stranger," the non-Israelite resident of the land who appears mostly in the guise of the landless poor. According to the Torah, some may have left Egypt alongside Israel (Exodus 12:38, Numbers 11:4), but a more likely source is those who inhabited the land of Canaan before Israel's conquest and settlement (Joshua 9, 1 Kings 9:20–21). For reasons of religious purity, Deuteronomy demands their extermination (7:1-4, 20:16-18). At the same time, much legal rhetoric is aimed at their protection. [this and following verse]. Admonitions against abusing the ger are found four more times in the Torah (Exodus 22:20, 23:9, Deuteronomy 10:18–19, 24:17). Israel's God is praised as "the guardian of strangers" (Psalm 146:9). They are mentioned as one of the recipients of compassionate giving, along with the poor, the widow, and the fatherless (Leviticus 19:10, 23:22, Deuteronomy 14:29, 16:11, 14, etc.). The Israelite is required to afford them Sabbath rest (Exodus 20:10, 23:12). The stranger was afforded equal protection by Israel's laws regarding homicide and assault (Leviticus 24:22, Numbers 35:15), and he was obligated by all the same prohibitive or negative commandments as the Israelites, for violation of these endangered the purity of the land of Israel. For example, the ger was also required to obey the restrictions in Leviticus 18 regarding illicit sex because these "abominations" polluted the land of Israel no matter who was the perpetrator (Leviticus 18:26). However, he was not obligated to observe positive or performance commandments such as dwelling in booths during Sukkot (Leviticus 23:42). (Jacob Milgrom, The JPS Torah Commentary: Numbers (Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society, 1989), pp. 398-402). The ger, therefore, belongs to a distinct legal category in Israelite law: he is generally subject to the same laws as the Israelite but not required to perform the same religious duties. [The rabbis of the Roman era identify the ger with the convert to Judaism because of the Torah's requirement that he observe many of the same laws as Israelites do.] At the same time, the Israelites is commanded to treat him according to the highest ethical standards, to "love him as yourself" [this verse]. (By Elaine Adler Goodfriend, “Ethical Theory and Practice in the Hebrew Bible)

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