| Nissan 3, 5771 · April 7, 2011 Adjusting to Holiness Freedom from a mysterious illness is the opening topic of this week's Torah reading.1 A person who suffers from this condition is called a metzora. This is often translated as "leper," but in fact the metzora is not the leper of modern Africa, nor of Europe in the Middle Ages. Rather he suffers from a condition which has a spiritual origin, relating to the special task of the Jew and to his or her special relationship with G-d. One of the explanations given for this illness is that it is the result of speaking badly about other people-lashon hara.2 However another explanation, found in the Kabbala and Chassidic teaching, is rather different. The condition of being a metzora is the product of an imbalance. In this it is similar to the mild physical problems such as acne which might be caused, for example, by a hormone imbalance. This could be as a result of the natural process of maturation, such as during adolescence. In the case of the metzora the imbalance is spiritual in nature. The condition of being a metzora is the product of an imbalanceIn the physical condition of adolescent acne, the extra hormone which has caused the problem is actually something good. In time the body's system will adjust to it, balance will be restored and the problem will disappear. The spiritual condition of the metzora is similar. The person is actually being confronted with an intense burst of holiness. This is really a good thing. The problem is that the person is not yet able to absorb this holiness properly into his system. As a result he shows symptoms of the spiritual illness which renders him a metzora. Hopefully he will gradually adjust to the increased holiness and regain his spiritual balance. He achieves this through the process described in this week's Torah reading. This involves being seen by the kohen (priest), who spiritually helps the person absorb this intense holiness. There might also be a time of seclusion, as described in the haftorah, which tells of four metzora sufferers who were staying outside the city of Samaria and who helped end the famine caused by a siege.3 Finally the person regains his or her spiritual balance and returns to their normal activities. In Temple times this was part of the pattern of Jewish life, precisely because of the great intensity of spiritual awareness while the Temple stood in Jerusalem. After it was destroyed, our senses became more dulled. Although each individual has a close personal relationship with G-d, and is given a tremendous task to achieve in order to reveal the Divine in the world, people no longer become a metzora. If we get white patches on our skin we go to a doctor, not to a kohen. Despite this, at the heart of the Jewish people the concept of the metzora still exists. In a striking passage, the Talmud describes the Messiah as being a metzora.4 How can this be? Because the coming of the Messiah represents the fulfilment of the process of climbing to higher spiritual levels and the absorption of intense holiness. Using our earlier image, the "adolescent" Jewish people will suddenly mature, with smooth and healthy skin. There will be no more wars between nations, and each person will become focused on awareness of the Divine and observance of G-d's law: for the Jew, the 613 Mitzvot, and for all humanity, the Seven Noahide Laws. We will adjust to and advance in the intensity of holiness, reaching the goal that "the world will be filled with knowledge of G-d as the waters cover the seabed."5
By Tali Loewenthal More articles... | 
Dr. Tali Loewenthal is Lecturer in Jewish Spirituality at University College London and author of Communicating the Infinite: The Emergence of the Habad School. | |