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    SHOFTIM: IF JUDAISM IS IMMUTABLE, HOW CAN IT BE RELEVANT? A TALE OF TWO TORAH’S: THE TIMELESS AND THE TIMELY

    The King’s
    Torah’s
    In this week’s parsha,
    Shoftim, the Torah
    teaches us a
    fascinating mitzvah
    concerning every
    Jewish King:
    18 And it will be, when he sits upon his royal
    throne, that he shall write for himself a copy
    of this Torah on a scroll from [that Torah
    which is] before the Levitic kohanim.
    19 And it shall be with him, and he shall read
    it all the days of his life, so that he may learn
    to fear the Lord, his G-d, to keep all the words
    of this Torah and these statutes, to perform
    them.
    Asks the Talmud:
    Every Jew is obligated to write a Torah Scroll
    (Sefer Torah), as the Torah states
    explicitly (“And now, write for yourselves
    this song, and teach it to the Children of Israel.
    Place it into their mouths, in order that this
    song will be for Me as a witness for the
    children of Israel.” The Talmud understands it
    as an obligation to write the entire Torah). If
    so, why does the Torah give a separate
    mitzvah for the king to do this?
    The Talmud explains that the Torah is
    instructing the Jewish leader to write not one,

    but two Torah Scrolls. One travels with him
    wherever he goes, and one remains
    permanently at home, in his private treasury.
    But why? What’s the point of the king having
    two Sifrei Torah?
    Timeless and Timely
    There is, perhaps, a profound message
    here. The Leader must hold on to two Torah’s,
    as it were. One remains in his treasure chest;
    the other travels with him wherever he goes,
    in the words of the Mishnah: “He goes to
    battle, and it goes with him; he enters the
    palace and it enters with him; he sits in
    judgement, and it sits with him. He sits down
    to eat, and the Torah is there with him.”
    There are two elements to Torah: On one hand
    Torah represents the unwavering truth that

    remains unchangeable, unbendable, un-
    phased by the flux of time, space and history.

    Shabbos never changes. Tefilin, matzah,
    shofar, sukkah, mikvah, mezuzah, the text of
    Torah, the bris milah—these are eternal,
    unchangeable, Divine laws and truths. The
    same delicious or horrible “stale” matzah we
    ate 3300 years ago in the desert we still eat in
    the 21st century in New York, Miami, and Los
    Angeles. The same ram’s horn we blew two
    millennia ago is still blown today the world
    over. The same tzitzis, the same Shabbos, the
    same Yom Kippur, the same kosher laws, the

    same conversion laws, the same Torah.
    But there is another element to Torah—its
    ability to give perspective and guidance to
    each generation according to its unique needs,
    challenges, struggles and experiences. Each
    generation is different. The issues that plagued
    us a half-century ago are not the issues we
    confront today, and conversely: today we
    have dilemmas never experienced before in
    history. Our bodies, psyches, souls,
    sensitivities, and environments are different.
    Our world has changed in significant ways.
    Torah must also be a blueprint and luminary
    to the unique journeys of each milieu, to the
    climate of each generation, to the ambiance of
    every era, to the sensitivities of each age, to
    the yearnings of every epoch.
    Yeshayahu HaNavi says:
    My Lord has granted me a tongue for teaching,
    to understand the need of the times, to give
    knowledge to those who thirst for knowledge.
    A Jewish leader—and every one of us is a
    leader in our own individual way—must have
    two Torah’s. One Torah remains immune to
    change. One pristine Torah Scroll never
    leaves the ivory tower of the king’s treasury
    house. It speaks of truths of life and of G-d
    that are timeless. It transcends borders of
    time, geography, and people.
    The Kilogram
    There was once a report concerning ‘The
    Kilogram’ in Paris. ‘The Kilogram’ is a
    calibrated weight by which all other
    kilograms in the entire world are measured.
    It is kept in triple layered glass casing, to
    ensure that it is in no way influenced by the
    elements. Unfortunately, scientists are afraid
    that this standard kilogram has been losing
    some mass over the years. This, at least
    theoretically, has ramifications for all types
    of commerce throughout the world. The pure
    kilogram standard must never become
    corrupted!
    The famous Maggid of Dubno once told the
    story of a country boy whose fame as an
    archer had spread far and wide. A delegation
    of the finest archers traveled to his farm
    estate in order to see for themselves if the
    rumors were true. As they approached the
    estate, they observed hundreds upon
    hundreds of trees, each one painted with a
    target, and in the center of each bullseye
    there was a single arrow. Amazed at the
    sight, they asked the lad how it was that he
    had become such a fine shooter. He replied
    plainly that he would shoot the arrow first
    and then paint the target around it.
    This is the error some make with Torah. You
    can’t just keep on adjusting Torah to your
    predefined positions and desires. If Torah is
    truth, it is true in all times and in all places. If
    it is not true, who needs it all together?
    But it is not enough to just teach a timeless
    Torah. A leader must also find in Torah the
    language of G-d to this particular generation,
    to this individual person, to this unique
    situation, to this singular struggle, to this
    mindset and weltanschauung. Torah has the
    capacity to speak to the timely as much as to

    the timeless, to the modern as much as to the
    ancient, to the future as much as to the past, to
    the things that are always in flux as much as to
    those that remain unchangeable.
    To Find Your Bio in Torah
    This is also the deeper meaning of the Torah’s
    words: “And it shall be with him and he
    should read it all the days of his life in order
    that he learn to fear G-d, to observe all the
    words of this Torah…”
    The Torah is telling us more than just the fact
    that the king has to read the Torah throughout
    the days of his life. The actual literal
    translation reads: “He should read in it all the
    days of his life.” This means that the Jewish
    leader must be able to see in Torah a
    perspective for “all the days of his life,” for
    everything that transpires in his life and in the
    life of his people. He has to read in it (v’kara
    bo) his entire biography (kol yemei chayav),
    all the events of his life. Every new situation
    has a perspective from Torah, guidance from
    G-d’s blueprint for life.
    The Balance
    It is not always an easy balance. How can the
    same Torah address both the timeless and the
    timely? If it was relevant 3000 years ago how
    can it still be relevant today?
    The answer is: Since the Torah comes from
    the Creator of the world, He embedded into
    the Torah all the changes, developments and
    fluctuations of history. The Torah is the
    Divine blueprint not only for timeless truths,
    but also for timely issues and questions—it
    speaks to each generation addressing its
    dilemmas and concerns.
    The late Israel Shenker, a New York Times
    reporter, interviewed the Lubavitcher Rebbe
    for his 70th birthday. Here are his words
    published in April 1972, in The Times:
    “To the suggestion that his orthodoxy marks
    him as a conservative he [the Rebbe] objected,
    saying: ‘I don’t believe that Reform Judaism
    is liberal and Orthodox is conservative. My
    explanation of conservative is someone who
    is so petrified, he cannot accept something
    new. For me, Judaism, or halacha [Jewish
    religious law], or Torah, encompasses all the
    universe, and it encompasses every new
    invention, every new theory, every new piece
    of knowledge or thought or action.
    “Everything that happens in 1972 has a place
    in the Torah, and it must be interpreted, it
    must be explained, it must be evaluated from
    the point of view of Torah even if it happened
    for the first time in March of 1972.”
    These are the “Two Torah’s” a Jewish king—
    and by extension every Jewish teacher and
    leader—must possess.