I TORAH PORTION.I' Microcosm Continued from preceding page ( Then We'll Celebrate Shabbat Please join us with family and friends on August 24, at 6:15 p.m. for our Prospective New Member_Shabbat Picnic. You supply the food and papergoods, we'll supply the beverages, wine, good company and a wonderful atmosphere for the celebration of Shabbat. Then join us at 7:45 p.m. for Shabbat Services and learn more about Temple Emanu-El. Come worship with us tonight and see how nice our family oriented Temple can be. Maccabi athletes and Host families are welcome and encouraged to come. Also plan on attending our Prospective Member Open House on Sunday, August 26, from 9 a.m. to noon - Join us for Coffee, Bagels and a look at our Temple Temple Emanu-El 14450 W. 10 Mile Rd. • Oak Park, Michigan 48237 • (313) 967-4020 Rabbi Lane B. Steinger • Rabbi L. David Feder • Rabbi Emeritus Milton Rosenbaum Cantor Emeritus Norman Rose • Dorothy Dressler, Educ. Dir. • Ellen Goldman, Temple Mgr. CONGREGATION B'NAI MOSHE OF WEST BLOOMFIELD Rabbi Allan Meyerowitz the friendly, caring synagogue invites you to join its member families. Participate in exciting activities for all ages. . Cantor Louis Klein Enjoy Progressive - Conservative Services Reduced dues for young people. For membership information call: Dr. Marc Borovoy - 788-0951, Jay Welford - 788-1563 or the synagogue office - 788-0600 I s Iraq's Saddam Hussein a threat to Israel? Can Israel Cope with the Soviet-Jewish Exodus? What's ahead in U.S.-Israel relations? For answers call ZOA Speaker's Bureau 569-1515 SUMP PUMP failure OR POWER OUTAGE IS NO PROBLEM IF YOU $149.50 HAVE AN AUTOMATIC JET PUMP. INSTALLATION AVAILABLE H. B. LEWIS PLUMBING 42 FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1990 352-9350 for blessing too great and the threat of the curse too ominous? Is there really a choice here? One is reminded of the midrash concerning the children of Israel at Mount Sinai. It states that it was on- ly after God actually lifted the mountain and suspended it above the Israelites' heads, threatening to drop it on them if they rejected the Torah, that they accepted it "freely." One must ask if this choice between blessing and curse is being presented as if to a child's mentality. One might be tempted to view God here as a power-wielding autocrat. However, we can also consider God as a loving parent skillfully guiding the children of Israel, morally adolescent as they were at that time in their development. Although the portions of Bechukota and Nitzavim do present more vivid character- izations of the consequences of the blessing and the curse, Re'eh presents this very idea with its own special literary character and purpose. First, in Re'eh Moses ex- plains the idea of the choice by utilizing a concrete peda- gogical device. He evokes the imagery of Mount Gerizim and Mount Ebal, both on the other side of the Jordan (in a land he will never enter) as symbols, respective, of the blessing and the curse. Mount Gerizim is in the valley of Shechem, covered with greenery and fruit; Mount Ebal is on the north and bar- ren as it is bleak. Moses tells the people to keep the image of these two mountains in mind. When they look at Mount Gerizim, they are to think of the bless- ing. And when they see Mount Ebal, they will be reminded of the curse. These symbols would serve as strik- ing reminders to the Israelites long after Moses' passing. Perhaps the second function of this opening statement of God's sovereignty is that it establishes a dramatic and formal introduction to the specific laws that follow in the remainder of the sedra, and indeed, in most of the Book of Deuteronomy. Much of Re'eh is concerned with the centralization of sacrificial worship. The Israelites are told that all their private altars were to be destroyed, and they are warn- ed not to follow the ritual practices of their (pagan) neighbors. A central sanc- tuary would be created for them in a place that God would name. This idea of a DISCOUNTS sLisFg. $9999 INTERPLAK TOOTHBRUSH $6488 SEIKO WATCHES 40-50% OFF sLiiisr. MONT BLANC PENS 40% OFF ti.r. RAY-BAN SUN GLASSES RCA-ZENITH TVs Oscar Braun's 15075 W. Lincoln Oak Park 968-5858 CROSS PENS 40% OFF, centralized system of worship also helped to solidify the unification of the Israelite nation. What is striking, however, about the verses following the call for a central sanctuary is the radical adherence that is called for and the extreme caution that surrounds this adherence. The Israelites are warned that when they enter a nation which they are about to invade and occupy not to be "lured into their ways" or to even make inquiries into their modes of worship lest they be tempted to stray. The portion specifically calls upon the Israelites to ignore any models they may encounter of alternate styles of ritual in- Re'eh: Deuteronomy 11:26-16:17, Isaiah 54:11-55:5. eluding human sacrifice. It underscores, in vivid terms, the distinctiveness of the Jewish ritual of sacrifice. The text continues in a similar vein and cautions one to be wary of prophets and vi- sionaries who suggest turn- ing to other gods. In these cases, the prophet is at once deemed an imposter and is to be immeditely put to death. One is even instructed to kill, outright, one's own im- mediate relative for simply suggesting that other gods be served. Here the text is quite graphic, "thy hand shall be first - upon him with stones, that he die; because he hath sought to draw thee away from the Lord thy God." It is interesting to note here that the text makes no distinction for the punishment given males or females for these offenses. The closing chapters of Re'eh are strikingly different in tone and content from that which precedes them. We find the custom of the remission of debts every seven years. There is also mentioned the need to care for the poor. Take note of the sincerity in the language of the text, "If there be among you a needy person . . . thou shalt not harden thy heart nor shut thy hand from the needy kinsman." We are told that slaves are to be released in the seventh year of their service. In regard to the release of slaves, the text states that if a slave chooses to remain with his master after six years, a ceremony of driving an awl through his earlobe in- to the door must be perform- ed. After doing so the text