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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 love

LEV702 We are obligated to love fellow Jews. Rambam writes: "We are obligated to love every single fellow Jew as ourselves, as the Torah states, 'Love your fellowman as yourself.' Therefore, we must praise others [although it is ordinarily commendable to praise others, there are times when it is not permitted to do so. We should not praise someone in the presence of someone who dislikes him, for the person who dislikes him is apt to disparage him. Furthermore, it is improper to praise someone excessively, for either you or the listener might be tempted to add something derogatory to qualify or refute the praise. Moreover, we must not praise a person in the presence of a group, since someone in the group is apt to say something derogatory about this subject of praise. Chofetz Chayim, ch. 9 and Guard Your Tongue, pp. 109-110)], and we must care about their money just as we care about our own money and our own dignity. Whoever derives honor from humiliating someone else, loses his share in the world become." (Hilchos Daios 6:3). The commandment of loving your fellow man can be fulfilled at all times, every single second of the day. Any favor or kindness that you do for someone is a fulfillment of this commandment. But the commandment can also be fulfilled through thought. When you are happy about the good fortune of someone else, it constitutes an act of loving your fellow man. For instance, if you hear that someone just gave birth to a child and you feel happy, you fulfill this commandment. The same applies when someone suffers misfortune. If you feel sad because of his suffering, you fulfill this commandment. These thoughts are permissible at all times, even in places where it is forbidden to think thoughts of Torah. By fulfilling this commandment properly, a person can easily amass thousands upon thousands of mitzvos. (Yesod Veshoresh Hoavodah 1:7,8). The difficulty of feeling this commandment lies in the fact that most people are inclined to be jealous of others. When they hear about someone's good fortune (for example, he became wealthy or received great honor), their jealousy is aroused and prevents them from being sincerely happy. Therefore, it is extremely important for a person to work on rectifying his trait of jealousy. Another important factor that will enable a person to love his fellow man is judging them favorably. For if even once you do not judge someone favorably, you will no longer be able to feel a complete love for him. (ibid.). The Baal Shem Tov used to say: "'Love your fellow man as yourself.' You know that you have many faults, nevertheless, you still love yourself. That is how you should feel toward your friend. Despite his faults, love him." (Likutai Avraham, p. 221). Your behavior towards someone should be based on his feelings, not your own. If someone would want something to be done for him, even if you yourself would not need or want it, you should do it for him. The same applies in the negative. Even if you would not mind if someone said or did a particular thing to you, you must not do or say it to someone who will be bothered by it. (Pele Yoatz, section ahavah). [Transcriber's note: Author provides extensive discussion of "some of the fundamental details" of the commandment to Love one's fellow man, with numerous examples.]

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LEVITICUS — 19:18 love

LEV672 Nahmanides also finds that the obligation of the physician to heal is inherent in the commandment, "And thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy self" [this verse] (Torat ha-adam, Kitvei Ramban, ed. Bernard Chavel (Jerusalem, 5724), II, 43). As an instantiation of the general obligation to manifest love and concern for one's neighbor, the obligation to heal encompasses not only situations posing a threat to life and limb or demanding restoration of impaired health but also situations of lesser gravity warranting medical attention for relief of pain and promotion of well-being (See R. Eliezer Waldenberg, Ramat Rahel, no. 21).

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LEVITICUS — 19:18 love

LEV658 Furthermore, I feel it necessary to write openly about the following issue, because I have noticed that many people are in the habit of acting improperly in this regard. When a person delivers a speech in the beis hamidrash, it is halachically forbidden to ridicule him by saying that his speeches have no substance and there is no point in listening to them. Unfortunately, we see that many people are careless in this area, and do not consider such ridicule to be at all forbidden. Yet the halakhah is that this is considered full-fledged lashon hara, because such remarks are liable to cause another person financial damage, as well as distress and embarrassment in some cases. Furthermore, even if what the speaker says is true, we know that lashon hara is forbidden even if the information is true [unless there is a constructive intention, but] what constructive intention could this scoffer have with his ridicule? On the contrary, if he is a sincere person, then he should approach the one who gave the speech afterward in private and advise him to use a different style of speaking, for his current style is ineffective. By giving such advice, he would also be fulfilling the mitzvah of  וְאָֽהַבְתָּ֥ לְרֵעֲךָ֖ כָּמֹ֑וךָ, “You shall love your fellow as yourself” (Vayikra 19:18). At the very least, he should not turn this public speaker into a laughingstock.

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LEVITICUS — 19:18 love

LEV675 Scripture bids us, "You shall love your fellow-man as yourself" [this verse]. Self-love, a person's concern, acceptance, and affection for himself, needs no justification, excuses, or reasons. It is self-evident, axiomatic: I love myself because I am myself. So should we accept a friend without questions or reasons, with concern for his welfare as for our own.

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LEVITICUS — 19:18 love

LEV664 In order to fully understand the relationship between the self and the other in the moral system of Judaism, we must first submit to careful scrutiny of two classic formations of the general principle of man's duty to his fellow man. The first, of course, is "And Thou shalt love thy fellow man as thyself"] this verse].… The second is the formulation apparently given to the command by Hillel in his famous response to the would-be convert's request for a concise expression of the essence of Judaism: "That which thou despisest, do not do to thy fellow man" (Shabbat 31a, see also Targum Jonathan ben Uzziel on Leviticus 19:18). Maimonides in his treatment of this mitzvah speaks exclusively of behavioral rather than emotional implications. Although the Torah here speaks only of "love," which is a human feeling, the rabbis, either on the basis of grammatical considerations or because of the psychological difficulty of legislating emotions, saw the fulfillment of this command as primarily involving certain kinds of behavior (See comments of Nachmanides and Malbim, on Leviticus 19:18. The verb "to love" is usually used in the Hebrew in the accusative case (as in Deuteronomy 6:5), with the article et, which denotes a more direct object, but in this case the object stands in the dative case (le ...), which generally signifies a more indirect relationship. Thus, this passage should perhaps be translated as, "Be loving to thy fellow man" with the emphasis on deeds or works of love rather than emotions. Toward God one is directed to develop a more personal and intense love. See Rambam, Hilkhot Teshuvah 10:3).

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LEVITICUS — 19:18 love

LEV704 We suggested earlier that the moral rule "Love thy neighbor as thyself" posits a standard of impartiality and equality between the self and the other. "Do not do to your fellow man what you would not want done to yourself." Nachmanides makes it clear that this rule cannot be a requirement for the individual to become as involved with the other, and as devoted to him, as he is to himself (Commentary on this verse). We all obviously have certain duties to ourselves that take priority. As Rabbi Akiva said, "Thy life is prior to the life of others" (Bava Metzia 62). What the rule does require is that we cherish the person and property of the other even as we do our own, so that we do not cause any harm to him or damage to his property. The rule further implies that we must be concerned with his needs when it does not necessitate the neglect of our own. It also implies that we should desire for our fellow all that we wish for ourselves and not be envious of him.

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LEVITICUS — 19:18 love

LEV655 Effective medical care... not only involves the cost of a physician and hospitalization, but also requires a support system to alleviate the effects of illness on the peace of mind of the sick person and on the family unit. Modern medicine recognizes such a support system as an intrinsic part of communal health care and therefore expects home care and personal counseling to be funded either by the patient's health insurance or by the state. Such supports have always been part and parcel of the Jewish welfare system. The following ruling of Maimonides shows this support system to be legally binding and not just desirable. “It is a rabbinic commandment, incumbent on all, to visit the sick... and this may be done many times in the day... except in those cases where it is a bother to the sick. He who visits the sick removes part of his illness and eases his situation. He who does not visit the sick, it is as though he has shed blood [since visitors took care of all the patient’s needs, by refraining from such visits, one is harming the patient, perhaps even fatally.] Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Eivel, chapter 14, halakhot 1-5. See also Talmud Bavli, Nedarim 40a. Maimonides goes on to rule that visiting the sick is an act of righteousness performed with one's body, and thus without legal limit in its fulfillment (in contrast to monetary acts of righteousness, which the sages had limited to 20 percent of one's wealth). He sees the visiting of the sick as a fulfillment of the Torah’s commandment “You shall love your neighbor as yourself” [Leviticus 19:18]. This support system, like most moral and ethical injunctions in Judaism, is not left to the choice of the individual, to be observed or not according to his degree of religiosity.

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