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Ten Teachings On Judaism and Environmentalism
by
Rabbi Lawrence Troster
Director, GreenFaith Fellowship
Program
[download PDF]
1. God created the universe.
This is the most fundamental concept of Judaism.
Its implications are that only God has absolute ownership
over Creation (Gen. 1-2, Psalm 24:1, I Chron. 29:10-16).
Thus Judaism’s worldview is theocentric not anthropocentric.
The environmental implications are that humans must realize
that they do not have unrestricted freedom to misuse Creation,
as it does not belong to them. Everything we own, everything
we use ultimately belongs to God. Even our own selves belong
to God. As a prayer in the High Holiday liturgy proclaims, “The
soul is Yours and the body is your handiwork.” As we
are “sojourners with You, mere transients like our
ancestors; our days on earth are like a shadow…” (I
Chronicles 29:15), we must always consider our use of Creation
with a view to the larger good in both time (responsibility
to future generations) and space (others on this world).
We must also think beyond our own species to that of all
Creation.
2. God’s Creation is good.
In Genesis 1: 31 when God found all of Creation, “very
good,” this means several things. First of all it means
that Creation is sufficient, structured and ordered (the
rabbis called it Seder Bereishit, the Order of Creation).
It is also harmonious. It exists to serve God (Psalm 148).
This order reflects God’s wisdom (Psalm 104:24), which
is beyond human understanding (Psalm 92:6-7, Job 38-39).
All of God’s creations are consequently part of the
Order of Creation and all are subject to its nature (Psalm
148). Humans are also part of the Order, which can be said
to be a community of worshipers.
3. Human beings are created in the
image of God.
Human beings have a special place and role
in the Order of Creation. Of all God’s creations, only
human beings have the power to disrupt Creation. This power,
which gives them a kind of control over Creation, comes from
special characteristics that no other creature posseses (Psalm
8). This idea is expressed in the concept that humans were
created in the image of God (tzelem Elohim). In its
original sense, tzelem Elohim, means that humans were
put on the earth to act as God’s agents and to actualize
God’s presence in Creation.
This also has ethical implications which
stem from the fact that human beings have certain intrinsic
dignities: infinite value, equality and uniqueness. It also
means that human beings possess God-like capacities: power,
consciousness, relationship, will, freedom and life. Human
beings are supposed to exercise their power, consciousness
and free will to be wise stewards of Creation. They should
help to maintain the Order of Creation even while they are
allowed to use it for their own benefit within certain limits
established by God (Genesis 2:14). This balance applies to
both human society as well to the natural world. Since the
time of the expulsion from Garden of Eden, Creation has tended
to be out of balance because of the human impulse towards
inequality resulting from the misuse of its powers for selfish
ends. The earth is morally sensitive to human misdeeds (Genesis
4, Leviticus 18:27-30).
4. Humanity should view their place
in Creation with love and awe.
It may be said that there are two books of
God’s revelation to humanity: The Torah and Creation
itself. The book of Creation can help us to perceive ourselves
as “living breathing beings connected to the rhythms
of the earth, the biogeochemical cycles, the grand and complex
diversity of ecological systems.” (Mitchell Thomashow, Ecological
Identity) This knowledge is gained both through an understanding
of Creation through scientific knowledge. In Judaism, this
can be understood as the fulfillment of the commandments
to love and to fear God (Deuteronomy 6:5,13). Rambam (Moses
Maimonides, 1135-1204) interpreted these commandments in
the following way:
“When a person observes God’s works
and God’s great and marvelous creatures, and they see
from them God wisdom that is without estimate or end, immediately
they will love God, praise God and long with a great desire
to know God’s Great Name...And when a person thinks
about these things they draw back and are afraid and realizes
that they are small, lowly and obscure, endowed with slight
and slender intelligence, standing in the presence of God
who is perfect in knowledge.” (Mishneh Torah, Sepher
Madah, Hikhot Yesodei Ha-Torah 2:1-2)
Thus, when we study Creation with all the
tools of modern science, we are filled with love and a sense
of connection to a greater order of things. We feel a sense
of wonder but also a sense of awe and humility as we perceive
how small we are in the universe as well as within the history
of evolution. Love and humility should then invoke in us
a sense of reverence for Creation and modesty in our desire
to use it. We should, according to Abraham Joshua Heschel
see the world as God-centered, not human-centered. By putting
God at the center of life, we see the sacred in everything
and the natural world becomes a source of wonder and not
only a resource for our use and abuse.
5. The Sabbath and prayer help us to
achieve this state of mind.
The Sabbath is a way to begin to engender
this sense of love and humility before Creation. It is also
is a way to living a sustainable life. For one day out of
seven, we limit our use of resources. We walk to attend synagogue
and drive only when walking is not possible. We do not cook
and we do not shop. We can use the day for relaxation, contemplation
and to ask ourselves: what is the real purpose of human life?
Are we here on earth only to get and to spend? As Rabbi Schorsch
has written: “To rest is to acknowledge our limitations.
Willful inactivity is a statement of subservience to a power
greater than our own.” (To Till and to Tend,
page 20)
Prayer also helps us to recognize that everything
we are, everything we have and everything we use ultimately
comes from God (Babylonian Talmuid, Brakhot 35a).
When we say a blessing, we create a moment or holiness, a
sacred pause. Prayer also creates an awareness of the sacred
by taking us out of ourselves and our artificial environments
and allowing us to truly encounter natural phenomenon. Prayer
creates a loss of control which allows us to “ see
the world in the mirror of the holy.” (Heschel) We
are then able to see the world as an object of divine concern
and we can then place ourselves beyond self and more deeply
within Creation.
6. The Torah prohibits the wasteful
consumption of anything.
In Judaism, the halakhah (Jewish law) prohibits
wasteful consumption. When we waste resources we are violating
the mitzvah (commandment) of Bal Tashhit (“Do
not destroy”). It is based on Deuteronomy 20:19-20:
“When in your war against a city you have
to besiege it a long time in order to capture it, you must
not destroy its trees, wielding the ax against them. You
may eat of them, but you must not cut them down. Are trees
of the field human to withdraw before you into the besieged
city? Only trees that you know do no yield food may be destroyed;
you may cut them down for constructing siegeworks against
the city that is waging war on you, until it has been reduced.”
This law was expanded in later Jewish legal
sources to include the prohibition of the wanton destruction
of household goods, clothes, buildings, springs, food or
the wasteful consumption of anything (see Rambam, Mishneh
Torah, Laws of Kings and Wars 6:8, 10; Samson
Raphael Hirsch, Horeb, 279-80). The underlying idea
of this law is the recognition that everything we own belongs
to God. When we consume in a wasteful manner, we damage Creation
and violate our mandate to use Creation only for our legitimate
benefit. Modesty in consumption is a value that Jews have
held for centuries. For example one is not supposed to be
excessive in eating and drinking or in the kind of clothes
that one wears (Rambam, Mishneh Torah, Laws of
Discernment, chapter 5). Jews are obligated to consider
carefully our real needs whenever we purchase anything. We
are obligated when we have a simchah (a celebration)
to consider whether we need to have elaborate meals and wasteful
decorations. We are obligated to consider our energy use
and the sources from which it comes.
7. The Torah gives an obligation to save human life.
The Jewish tradition mandates an obligation
to save and preserve life (called in Jewish legal sources: pikuach
nefesh) based on an interpretation of Leviticus 18:5, “You
shall keep My laws and My rules, by the pursuit of which
man shall live: I am the Lord (See Babylonian Talmud Sanhedrin
74a).” Jewish law forbids us from knowingly harming
ourselves (Leviticus 19:28). There are also numerous sources
mandated the proper disposal of waste is properly and that
noxious products from industrial production must be kept
far from human habitation (see for example, Deuteronomy 23:13-15, Mishnah Baba
Batra 2:9) In the Jewish tradition, the public good overrides
individual desires. While there are many useful and even
lifesaving technologies that come from modern chemicals and
materials, we have an obligation to be cautious in their
use. Pikuach nefesh demands that we consider the impact
of our use of chemicals and other materials, not only in
the short term but also in the long term. For the Jewish
tradition, the Precautionary Principle can be seen as a modern
form of the warning not to tamper too much with the boundaries
of Creation.
8. The Torah prohibits the extinction
of species and causing undo pain to non-human creatures.
Our ancestors could not have anticipated
the loss of biodiversity that the modern world has produced;
from their perspective, there was no natural extinction rate
of species. God, they believed, had created all species at
one time and there could be no new creatures. Only humans
could cause extinction and bring about the loss of one of
the members of the Creation choir. In the Torah there is
a law that says:
“If along the road, you chance upon a bird’s
nest, in any tree or on the ground, with fledglings or eggs
and the mother sitting over the fledglings or on the eggs,
do not take the mother with her young. Let the mother go,
and take only the young, in order that you may fare well
and have a long life.” (Deuteronomy 22:6-7)
Ramban (Moses ben Nachman, Nachmanides, 1194-1270)
in his commentary to the Torah wrote:
“This also is an explanatory commandment
of the prohibition you shall not kill it [the mother]
and its young both in one day (Leviticus 22:28). The
reason for both [commandments] is that we should not have
a cruel heart and not be compassionate, or it may be that
Scripture does not permit us to destroy a species altogether,
although it permits slaughter [for food] within that group.
Now the person who kills the mother and the young in one
day or takes them when they are free to fly, [it is regarded]
as though they have destroyed that species.”
It is evident from the first chapter of Genesis
and other Biblical texts (Psalm 104, 148, and Job 38-41)
that God takes care of, and takes pleasure in, the variety
of life that makes up Creation. And although we might regard
a species as unimportant or bothersome to human beings, God
does not regard them so. The rabbis understood that we do
not know God’s purpose for every creature and that
we should not regard any of them as superfluous. “Our
Rabbis said: Even those things that you may regard as completely
superfluous to Creation – such as fleas, gnats and
flies—even they were included in Creation; and God’s
purpose is carried through everything—even through
a snake, a scorpion, a gnat, a frog.” (Breishit Rabbah
10:7) In environmental terms, every species has an inherent
value beyond its instrumental or useful value to human beings.
Related to this idea is the concept of Tzar Baalei Chayyim,
the prohibition of hurting animals without good purpose (based
on Deut. 22:6, 22:10, 25:4, Numbers 22:32, Exodus 20:8-10,
Lev. 22:27-8). These concepts bring to our relationships
with the non-human world limits and controls over our power
and greed.
9. Environmental Justice is a Jewish
value.
The Torah has numerous laws which attempt
to redress the power and economic imbalances in human society
and Creation. Examples are the Sabbatical year (Exodus 23:11,
Leviticus 25:2-5, Deuteronomy 15:1-4) and the Jubilee (Leviticus
25:8-24) There is a whole program in the Torah for creating
a balanced distribution of resources across society (Exodus
22:24-26, Leviticus 25:36-37, Deuteronomy 23:20-1, 24:6,10-13,17).
This is an expression of the concept of Tzedek, which means
righteousness, justice and equity. It is the value, which
tries to correct the imbalances, which humans create in society
and in the natural world. In the modern world globalization
has strived to achieve the free movement of people, information,
money, goods and services but it can also create major disruptions
in local cultures and environments. While globalization has
created great wealth for millions of people, many millions
more have been bypassed by its benefits and has had in some
cases a negative impact upon the environment and human rights.
The Jewish concept of Tzedek demands that we create a worldwide
economy that is sustainable and that is equitable in the
distribution of wealth and resources.
10. Tikkun Olam: The perfection/fixing
of the world is in our hands.
There is a midrash (Rabbinic commentary on
the Bible) which Jewish environmentalists are fond of quoting:
“When God created the first human beings,
God led them around the garden of Eden and said: “Look
at my works! See how beautiful they are—how excellent!
For your sake I created them all. See to it that you do not
spoil and destroy My world; for if you do, there will be
no one else to repair it.” (Midrash Kohelet Rabbah,
1 on Ecclesiastes 7:13)
In the Jewish liturgy there is a prayer called Aleinu in
which we ask that the world be soon perfected under the sovereignty
of God (le-takein ‘olam be-malkhut Shaddai). Tikkun ‘olam,
the perfecting or the repairing of the world, has become
a major theme in modern Jewish social justice theology. It
is usually expressed as an activity, which must be done by
humans in partnership with God. It is an important concept
in light of the task ahead in environmentalism. In our ignorance
and our greed, we have damaged the world and silenced many
of the voices of the choir of Creation. Now we must fix it.
There is no one else to repair it but us.
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Upcoming Events:
Meeting
the Sacred in Creation Retreats Offered in Hudson
Valley, Pacific Northwest, Southeast in April, May,
October 2007.
New
Brunswick Environmental Health and Justice Tour, April
18, 2007.
Prof.
Larry Rasmussen to Keynote April 23, 2007 Interfaith
Environmental Conference with Drew Theological School.
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