Taamei Hamitzvos - Excessive Mourning « @OHR « Ohr Somayach

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For the week ending 23 November 2024 / 22 Cheshvan 5784

Taamei Hamitzvos - Excessive Mourning

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Reasons Behind the Mitzvos

By Rabbi Shmuel Kraines

“Study improves the quality of the act and completes it, and a mitzvah is more beautiful when it emerges from someone who understands its significance.” (Meiri, Bava Kama 17a)

(Vayikra 19:28 and Devarim 14:1-2; Mitzvos #467-468 in Sefer HaChinuch)

At the beginning of Parashas Chayei Sarah, the Torah relates that Avraham came “to eulogize Sarah and to cry over her" (Bereishis 23:2) In this verse, the word livkosah, “to cry,” is written with a small kaf. Most commentators interpret it to mean that Avraham cried only a small amount over his wife's passing (see Sefer Katan V’Gadol). Let us explore the Torah's outlook on the proper measure of mourning as it is reflected in two Mitzvos: the prohibitions against cutting oneself and making a bald spot as an expression of mourning. Then we will return to examine Avraham’s conduct.

The Torah states in Parashas Re’eh (Devarim 14:1-2): You are children of Hashem, your God! Do not cut yourselves and do not make a bald spot between your eyes over a dead person. For you are a holy nation to Hashem, your God, and Hashem chose you for Himself as a treasured nation, out of all the nations on the face of the earth.

What does the fact that the Jewish people are Hashem's children have to do with these two prohibitions? Rashi explains that as Hashem's children, we ought to appear beautiful, and we therefore cannot mar ourselves with cuts and bald spots. The next verse adds that we are a holy nation, and it is not fitting for holy people to ruin their features (Chizkuni).

Ibn Ezra has a different approach to the above verses: You are children of Hashem, your God! Know that He loves you more than a father loves his son, and therefore: Do not cut yourselves and do not make a bald spot between your eyes over a dead person. This because whatever your Father in Heaven does to you is for your good. Focusing on the word "children," Ibn Ezra adds that we should realize that with respect to Hashem's conduct, we should be like little "children" who do not understand their father's conduct and yet trust him unquestionably.

Taking a third approach, Rav Yosef Kara explains the Torah is addressing mourners as follows: “Even if your father has passed away, do not grieve excessively by making cuts and bald spots, for you are not orphans. You still have a Father [in Heaven] — Who is great, living, and enduring! The next verse (v. 2) points out that we are Hashem’s holy nation whom He selected from all the nations. The Torah means to say that an idolater has good reason to mourn the loss of his relatives, but a Jew can never be separated from his closest and most significant relative: Hashem.

Ramban explains that the Torah’s description of the Jewish people as Hashem’s “holy nation” and “treasured nation” is a reference to that which the Jewish soul is Hashem’s holy treasure that He stores for eternity after a person's passing. Since a person's soul, the primary element of his being, lives on after death, it is not fitting to mourn excessively over its departure from the body.

Elaborating on this theme, Tzror HaMor writes based on the Zohar (see Vayechi 245b): The Torah admonition against excessive mourning can be compared to a king who sent his son to a small rural village for an extended period to engage in study and to prepare himself for his future position of kingship. Eventually, the king summoned his son to return home and the friends that the son had made in the village mourned greatly over his departure. A wise man said to them: “Fools! Your friend is about to become king over the entire land, and you cry over his departure from this little village?” So too, Hashem sent the soul down to this lowly world to prepare himself for kingship by engaging in Torah and mitzvos. When Hashem summons him to return to Heaven and take up his position of kingship, his family and friends cry over his loss, sometimes too much. The wise Moshe addresses them, saying, “Don’t cry over him! He is ascending to the treasure room of souls in the loftiest heavens.” According to this interpretation of the verse, “You are Hashem’s children” means that the deceased is Hashem’s child and is now returning to his Father in Heaven.

The Sages cautioned against mourning excessively over the deceased, even in ways that do not include making cuts and bald spots (Moed Kattan 27b). Ramban writes that the Sages based their words of caution on the Torah’s prohibition against these two specific expressions of mourning. The Sages add that if a person extends the mourning period beyond that required by Torah law, Hashem says: “You do not care about the deceased more than I do!” In other words, excessive mourning implies that Hashem was cruel in removing the deceased from the world. In truth, Hashem’s love and compassion for each Jew is greater than that of a human father for his son, and all that He does is with the best possible intentions.

One might ask: If so, why does the Torah not prohibit mourning altogether? Abarbanel explains that it is natural for people to mourn over the loss of a relative or close friend, and it is also a fitting expression of honor for the deceased. However, in recognition of the fact that Hashem’s ways are just and good, the Torah sets limits for mourning.

When the Torah states that one may not make a bald spot "between your eyes," it means anywhere on the head (Makkos 20a). As to why the Torah specifies the region “between the eyes,” Rav Menachem HaBavli suggests that this hints at the head-tefillin, which are places “between the eyes” (Devarim 11:18). The Torah intimates that it is not fitting for the holy nation to deface their scalps by making a bald-spot, for indeed, that is the place where we ought to place the glorious crown of tefillin that represents Hashem’s kingship over the Jewish people.

We return to the Torah’s account of Avraham’s limited weeping over the sudden passing of his great and irreplaceable wife with whom he had forged a nation. The Vilna Gaon explains that Avraham realized that Sarah had accomplished all she was meant to accomplish in her lifetime. He therefore had no reason to cry over the departure of her soul, which was rising to its rightful, complete reward, so he cried only over the loss of her body (cited in Beis Avos, pg. 69). The words “Avraham came to eulogize Sarah and to cry over her” may thus be interpreted to mean that after eulogizing Sarah as the quintessential Eishes Chayil who had nothing left to accomplish in this world,he saw reason to cry only a limited amount. As the Torah goes on to relate, Avraham honored Sarah’s body to the greatest extent possible, expending much effort and a great sum of money to acquire for her a burial plot among the greatest people in history.

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