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    PARASHAT BEHUKOTAI: THERE’S NO SUBSTITUTE FOR KNOWLEDGE

    The opening
    verses of Parashat
    Behukotai describe
    the beautiful
    blessings that G-d
    promises to bestow upon Beneh
    Yisrael in reward for their compliance
    with the Torah’s laws. The Torah
    introduces this section by saying, “Im
    Be’hukotai Telechu, Ve’et Misvotai
    Tishmeru” – literally, “If you follow
    My statutes, and you observe My
    commandments…”
    The Or Ha’haim Ha’kadosh
    (Rav Haim Ben-Attar, 1696-

    1743), remarkably, offers forty-
    two interpretations of this verse,

    uncovering for us the deeper layers
    of meaning behind this seemingly
    straightforward sentence.
    In presenting one of these explanations,
    the Or Ha’haim cites the Mishna’s
    famous teaching in Pirkeh Abot (2:5),
    “Ve’lo Am Ha’aretz Hasid” – “An

    ignoramus is not a pious person.”
    The plain meaning of the Mishna is
    that one cannot properly observe the
    Misvot without educating himself,
    without investing time and effort into
    the process of learning so he knows
    what the Torah wants of us. The Or
    Ha’haim adds a deeper reading of
    the Mishna, explaining that it refers
    to acts of piety and measures of
    stringency beyond the Torah’s strict
    requirements. The Or Ha’haim writes
    that a person cannot be a “Hasid,” a
    devoutly pious person, who observes
    additional stringencies, without
    learning Halacha, without properly
    understanding his basic obligations.
    If a person decides to adopt
    stringencies without learning, the Or
    Ha’haim writes, these stringencies
    might actually lead him to grievous
    transgressions, because the person
    will not know what Halacha allows
    and what it doesn’t.
    The Or Ha’haim explains on this

    basis the opening verse of Parashat
    Behukotai. The phrase “Im Be’hukotai
    Telechu,” as Rashi famously writes,
    refers to the study of Torah. The second
    phrase, “Ve’et Misvotai Tishmeru,”
    speaks of additional safeguards and
    stringencies, as the root of the word
    “Tishmeru” – “Sh.M.R.” – means
    “guard” or “protect.” The Torah here
    teaches us that only “Im Be’hukotai
    Telechu” – if a person devotes time
    and effort to the study of Torah – is
    it then appropriate for him to take
    on voluntary stringencies (“Ve’et
    Misvotai Tishmeru”). Piety must
    be pursued only with knowledge of
    Torah law. A person who thinks he can
    decide for himself how to be “pious,”
    how to be holy and G-d-fearing, he
    will end up making terrible mistakes
    and transgressing grave violations.
    The Or Ha’haim here conveys to us
    the message that there is no substitute
    for knowledge. If we want to achieve
    spiritual greatness – which, of course,

    we all should – then there are no
    shortcuts. Our intuition and “gut
    feelings” are not good enough. We
    cannot serve Hashem by doing what
    seems right to us, what we intuitively
    sense is noble and spiritual. We need
    to learn, to ask questions, to consult
    with Torah scholars, to seek guidance,
    and to make the time to acquire the
    knowledge we need to act the way the
    Torah wants us to act.