Deuteronomy 7:12–11:25
By Rabbi Shira Milgrom for ReformJudaism.org
"All
the world needs is love." We hear that refrain in our music, in our
theologies, in conversations prosaic and profound. While there is no
denying the power of love as the essential and irreplaceable core of our
lives, there are also other things we need: a home, sustenance (food),
and meaningful work—among others. And even love is multilayered and
often complicated.
While the Hebrew prophets often use the
metaphor of love and marriage to describe the relationship between God
and Israel ("I will betroth you to Me forever," Hosea 2:21), the Torah
uses different metaphors to describe that relationship. Deuteronomy
5:2–3 provides one of many beautiful examples:
"The Eternal
our God made a covenant with us at Horeb. It was not with our ancestors
that the Eternal made this covenant, but with us, the living, every one
of us who is here today."
How this covenant is understood forms
the center of the conversation about what it is to be a Jew. What is the
nature of this covenant? Is it binding? Who is included? What are its
obligations—upon us, and upon God? Are there consequences for violating
the covenant, and if so, what are they?
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