"If you walk in My statutes (...)" (Leviticus 26:3)
Our sages say in the Talmud (Avodah Zarah 5a) that we have to
understand that the word if is not meant to be taken as
conditional but as a plea from God.
In the context of "in My statutes" (bechukotai)
they represent what makes us God's image and likeness, also part
of Him. Here we understand this as God's love. This is what unites us to Him as our common bond with Him, and it is
our choice to exercise this sacred identity.
These statutes are God’s
ways and attributes we can be fully aware of when we elevate our consciousness
to that primordial principle. The effects for being and doing His ways and
attributes are His blessings.
"And the trees of the field shall yield their
fruit." (26:3)
Rashi
understands this verse as a divine promise for the future in Messianic times,
saying that then "every species of trees will bear edible fruit". The
question is when this promise is fulfilled.
Everything
seems to be conditional in this material world except for the divine essence that
created it and sustains it. We can see it clearly in nature: the air, the rain,
the sun and the earth don't impose conditions for us in order to benefit from
them. This is how God's love works, hence we have to follow
His ways. The rest is conditional in this world, and it is us who impose the
conditions, usually pursuing personal interest or individual convenience
rather than the collective well being, including us.
In
a deeper sense this verse means that when we are and manifest love as our true
essence and identity in every aspect of consciousness, our thoughts, emotions,
feelings, passions and instincts will bear its fruits as goodness in everything
they manifest.
We
already said that love is the cause and the effect, and this is the inner
meaning of the verse. Therefore the only condition, the phrase "if you do
it" implies that it's up to us
to return to our true essence and identity, and not up to God. When we make the choice we allow
the divine promise to be fulfilled here and now, then God's redeeming love will manifest with all
might and power with His blessings (26:4-13).
"And
I will walk among you, and will be your God,
and you shall be My people." (26:11)
The portion immediately
states the conditional effects of choosing ego's agenda and rejecting love as
our true identity (26:14-41, 43). Though these consequences are
detailed as negative actions apparently "imposed" to us by our
Creator for not following His commandments, they are the obvious results of
separating ourselves from His
ways. The Torah makes this clear.
"(…)
and they shall be paid the punishment of their iniquity (…)" (26:43)
Transgressions
are our choice, not God's.
Interestingly in verse 42, although among the "curses", the following
is not one of them.
"Then
will I remember My covenant with Jacob, and also My Covenant with Isaac, and
also My covenant with Abraham will I remember, and I will remember the land."
And
continues…
"And
yet for all that, when they are in the land of their enemies I will not reject
them, neither will I abhor them, to destroy them utterly, and to break My covenant
with them; for I am the Lord their God."
This
again clearly shows that God's love never has and will never be
separated from us because He created us and sustains us, in spite of our choice
to separate from Him. Love is our bond with God
as our covenant, just because He is our Creator.
The
rest of the portion, which is the final chapter of the book of
Leviticus, ends with details that represent our full and complete
commitment to God, His ways and attributes in how we
relate to Him and our fellow man.
This
chapter mentions in a symbolic way that we can't change our intention and willingness to do what
is sacred, what is right and proper when we offer our sacrifices, our offerings
to become the means to fulfill God's ways
and attributes.
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