• 'I •• 41, ....... • .• • !TORAH PORTION Reception for the Rosh Yeshiva RABBI YERUCHIM OLSHIN shlita BETH MEDRASH GOVOHA Tuesday, Feb. 9, 8:15 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. JOSEPH NUSBAUM 15041 Burton, Oak Park Religion And Ethics Cannot Be Separated MORTON F. YOLKUT Special to The Jewish News T his week's Torah portion recounts the quintessential event of Jewish history: the Sinaitic covenant between God and Israel. When God gave the 'Ibn Commandments to our ancestors he presented them on two tablets. In so doing, he revealed to man the two-fold concern of Judaism. The first tablets delineate the mitzvot b'ain adam lamakon, the commandments regulating man's relationship to God. The second contain the mitzvot b'ain lachavero, the commandments which govern man's relationship to his fellow man. Judaism thus addresses itself to the two most impor- tant relationships in human existence. The first deals with piety — fealty to God, Shabbat Yitro: Exodus 18:1-20:23, Isaiah 6:1-7:6, 9:5-6 reverence for Him and the recognition that He is the master of the world. The se- cond relationship is between people. Here our religion is concerned with respect for human life and property, feel- ing and sensibilities, freedom and dignity. Throughout history, various philosophies of life have directed man's attention to one or the other of these two relationships. From the Revelation of Sinai, however, it is clear that neither can exist independently. Religion and ethics are one, according to Judaism, even as the God who revealed them is One. This was the implication of the sage who said: "The Ten Commandments parallel the ten divine imperatives which brought the world into being." Just as the world is a unified system — we cannot imagine it without a sun, vegetation, without man — so God's moral revelation is a unified system. "Thou shall not murder" is as integral a part of it as is "I am the Lord your God." It is clear that religion without ethics is unaccep- table. Imagine a God-fearing man being a murderer. We would denounce him, ostracize him and abhor his hypocrisy. Surely we would Morton F Yolkut is rabbi at Cong. B'nai David. say that the religious man who is unethical and immoral is a caricature of religion. But, if religion without ethics is a farce and a sham, then ethics without religion is equally unacceptable. Of course, there are many today who will not accept this asser- tion. There are many self- described religious people whose religion is confined to the second tablets, to the ethical realm exclusively. Why does traditional Judaism insist that ethics cannot exist or survive without a religious founda- tion? One reason is that the ethical life is not always the easiest life. Practically speak- ing, it doesn't always pay to be honest and above board. "Nice guys," said the sage of the baseball diamond, "finish last." He was absolutely right — in the practical sense. One great scholar of the last century is said to have own- ed a store in which he sold galoshes. When a man came in for snow shoes, the rabbi, instead of trying to sell him his own goods, would advise him to go across the street for a larger and better selection of sturdy boots. This sage was ethically pure, morally perfect — but a dismal failure in the business world! Conversely, the recent Wall Street scandals remind us that when exorbinant profits and greed are one's raison d'etre, ethical standards can often and conveniently be put aside. Business ethics are not always practical and pro- fitable. You practice ethics not for pragmatic gain, but because you believe in a religious way of life, because you accept the yoke of the Kingdom of Heaven upon yourself, because the ethical way is also God's way. It may not be the easiest or most lucrative way, but it is the right way "When a problem in socie- ty arises," says Moses in this week's portion, let the dispute be brought to me. I shall judge between man and man." This capacity to search for an answer to ethical problems by turning to God's law, is a quality peculiar to the Jewish people according to the late Chief Rabbi Abraham Kook. The original source of that quality is the two-fold revela- tion of God, religious and ethical — two theoretical realms that are fused into one integrated philosophy of life, indivisible in theory, and in- separable in practice. Guest Speaker RABBI MOSHE EISEMANN shlita Dean of Men Ner Israel College Baltimore, MD Chairman of Sponsors Committee Master of Ceremonies MR. YEHUDA ELCHONEN RABBI ARTHUR GOLD Rabbi and Mrs. Joseph Nusbaum Rabbi and Mrs. Dov Loketch Mr. and Mrs. Sol Nusbaum HOSTS GEL DELI & PRODUCE C ► 6088 W. MAPLE AT FARMINGTON RD. • W. Bloomfield • 851.9666 OPEN MON. 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