You Are How You Eat
For I am Hashem that lifted you out of the land of Egypt, to be your God […] (11:45).
The last forty seven verses in this week’s parsha describe with intricate detail the laws of kashrus as it relates to the different animals, birds, and fish that may be eaten. The Torah also specifically prohibits certain animals and birds from being consumed. Additionally, the Torah excludes from consumption an entire group of animals that are disgusting to eat because they creep on the ground and consuming them would be “abominable” (11:43).
The Torah then gives the reason for all these laws of kashrus: “For I am Hashem that lifted you out of the land of Egypt, to be your God […]” (11:45). Rashi on this possuk quotes the Talmud (Bava Metzia 61b), which explains why the Torah uses such unusual language here.
Rav Chanina asked Ravina, why is it that everywhere in the Torah it says, “I am Hashem that took you out of Egypt” but here it says, “For I am Hashem that lifted you out of the land of Egypt”? The Gemara answers that not eating these lowly animals elevates a person, thus the Torah uses the language that Hashem “lifted” the Jewish people out of Egypt because this very commitment elevates us.
In fact, this concept, that keeping the laws of kashrus raises us up, really applies to all the mitzvos. In other words, Hashem took us out of Egypt to give us the Torah and we should keep His mitzvos so that we can grow and be elevated. But why is this statement made specifically by the laws of kashrus?
The Talmud (Yoma 75b) relates a fascinating (and for some reason little known) fact: “Rav Acha Bar Yaakov said, ‘In the beginning the Jewish people were like chickens pecking at the garbage continuously until Moshe Rabbeinu came along and established meal times for them.’”
This is quite remarkable on many levels; first of all what is this comparison to chickens eating garbage? Secondly, why is this so important that Moshe felt that he had to come along and change how people eat?
Maimonides, in his introduction to Pirkei Avos, discusses the issue of whether it is better to want to sin but refrain because Hashem commanded us not to, or rather to not even desire to sin to begin with. He concludes that there are two types of sins, those that are moral/ethical issues (e.g. stealing) and those that we don’t really understand (e.g. kashrus). He continues, those that are moral issues we shouldn’t even desire to sin by and those that are unknowable decrees from Hashem we should desire to transgress but exert an effort to control ourselves.
Controlling one’s food intake is one of the hardest ongoing challenges in many people’s lives. The drive to just consume whatever they desire stems from many parts of one’s psyche; a person may desire as much pleasure as possible or a person may binge to drown out emotional distress or other issues. One of the hardest parts of being on a diet is that one has to eat to live; it isn’t like smoking or a drug addiction where the vice can be entirely eliminated.
Thus, every time we decide what and how much to eat we need to exercise restraint and self-control. This effort is what highlights the difference between man and the animal kingdom. Man becoming restrained and in control of his desires is what truly elevates mankind and puts him in touch with his elevated soul. It is no coincidence that the original sin of Adam Harishon came through eating and permanently lowered mankind into physical beings by introducing death to the world (see next article).
This is why Bnei Yisroel were compared to chickens eating garbage – a lower animal doesn’t really care if it resorts to eating refuse, but people understand that it is beneath one’s dignity as humans to behave that way. This is why it was so important that Moshe felt it necessary to teach the Jewish people how to eat; it was a lesson that we are elevated beings not merely rational animals and therefore we need to always be in control. This is also why the laws of kashrus highlight the entirety of the Torah’s intent – to grow as humans and elevate ourselves to be God-like by exerting self-restraint.
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