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bechukOtai י ַתֹ ּ קֻח ְּב       nasO אֹ ׂשָנ








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 “If you walk in My decrees  and observe My commandments and   The portion of Naso introduces the laws of the Nazirite (nazir/ah), a
 perform them; then I will provide your rains in their time, and the   man or woman who takes an oath to refrain from eating or drinking
 Land will give its produce and the tree of the field will give its fruit”   any grape derivatives for a certain period of time (Numbers 6:1-21).
 (Leviticus 26:3-4). The Hebrew root word from which the name of this   This oath also includes the prohibitions against cutting one’s hair
 portion stems is chok. Like most Hebrew roots it has many meanings,   and coming into contact with the dead. In Mattot, at the end of the
 implications, and potential inferences. Simply translated it means   book of Numbers, we will discuss why oaths are taken, in general; in
 law or decree. The Rabbis defined three categories of mitzvot, based   this section, we will focus on the Nazirite oath.
 on how logical they appear to us. The first category is comprised   The obligation to bring a sin offering (in addition to a number of
 of those laws that any civilized  society would establish, such  as   other offerings) when the Nazirite period is completed highlights a
 the prohibitions against murder and theft. The second category is   central paradox underlying the Nazirite oath. On the one hand, as
 comprised of laws that, while not immediately obvious, make perfect   the Talmud explains, the sin offering is required because the Nazirite
 sense  upon further consideration, for instance, the  obligation  to   must atone for abstaining from certain worldly pleasures. On the
 desist from labor one day a week in order to create a day of rest on   other hand, one of the main reasons for vowing to be a Nazirite is to
 Shabbat. The third category includes mitzvot that seem to ignore or   provide one’s self with additional ammunition in the battle against
 defy logic and even appear counterintuitive. The name given to this   the sometimes overpowering desire to overindulge in these selfsame
 latter category is chukim (plural of “chok”).  worldly pleasures. Supporting this latter presumption, the  Torah
 The Torah’s quintessential example of  a chok is the laws and   presents the Nazirite laws immediately after those of a suspected
 rituals of the red heifer, explicitly introduced by the words: “this is   adulteress.  As Rashi  points out, anyone who sees  such  a woman
 the decree [chok] of the Torah” (Numbers 19:2). As Rashi notes the   “in her disgrace” would be motivated to take the Nazirite vow to
 nations will come and taunt Israel with the seeming irrationality of   avoid the pitfalls that unbridled sensuousness can lead to (Rashi on
 this mitzvah, for it not only contradicts other Torah norms but also   Numbers 6:2). If the Torah introduces the Nazirite laws to restrain
 paradoxically renders impure those who are pure and purifies those   people from indulging in the physical pleasures of this world, why
 who are impure. Answering this taunt, Rashi cites the tradition that   does it mandate a sin offering at the end of the period to atone for
 God has already told us that it is a chok, a Divine decree, and we   abstaining from those very pleasures?
 have no right to question its logic.
               To understand this seeming inconsistency, we must contemplate
 Thus, the term “chok” implies a  decree  that we must follow   the fine line that Judaism draws with regard to physicality, in general,
 whether  we understand it or not. Yet paradoxically  the opening   and bodily pleasure, in particular. Judaism seems to maintain two


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