Readings for Saturday, September 20, 2025
29:9 - 30:20 Devarim (Deuteronomy)
Nitzavim is the eighth sedrah in the Book of Deuteronomy or Devarim. It is one of the shortest of the weekly readings with only forty verses. The sedrah takes its name from the second Hebrew word in the first sentence. “You are standing (Nitzavim) today, all of you before the Lord, your God.…” This sedrah does not contain any of the 613 commandments. According to some commentators this is the end of Three Discourses that have comprised the book of Devarim up to this point. Other commentators contend that Moshe is speaking on the last day of his life. If you read these words as the declaration of an old man who is weary from responsibility but determined to instill hope in the people who are leaving him and whom he is leaving, they take on a special majesty and poignancy. The language is so majestic that commentary, at one level, almost seems self-defeating. I would suggest that you read the text aloud at least once. Ignore the footnotes and listen for the sound. There are no new themes this week. The whole portion is “Recurring Themes.”
Themes
Covenant
Moshe opens with a reminder that we are a covenanted people. The detailed mentioning of so many different groups in the audience indicates that the covenant and the Torah are for all Jews. The reference to those “not here” means that this covenant is for all times and for all Jews. We may turn away from our birthright, but it is always there waiting for us.
Idolatry
Moshe follows with yet another admonition about our old nemesis, worshipping idols. Moshe shows insight into human nature as he warns against those who are arrogant enough to think they can break the laws. This is another one of those themes that resonates throughout Jewish teachings. In Pirke Avot, Yochanan, son of Berokah, says, “Whosoever profanes the name of Heaven in secret will suffer the penalty in public….” (4:4)
Justice
System/Communal Responsibility
The reference is to 29:28. “The secret (things) belong to the Lord our God; but things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, to do all the word of this law.” Some commentators might contend that this reinforces a basic concept of the Jewish judicial system. God is the ultimate judge. You might beat the jury, but you cannot hide from the ultimate judgment. At the same time, the second half of the verse would indicate that we are responsible not only for our own conduct but for helping others with theirs.
Elul and
The Days of Awe
How appropriate to read the first ten verses of Chapter 30 just before or just after Selichot Services. After we have endured the blessings and the curses, when we are ready to “return,” God will find us no matter where exile has taken us and He will restore us. Of course the concept of exile is spiritual as well as physical. So as we utter the penitential prayers, the sedrah assures us that they are being heard.
Torah is
for Everybody
The words of 30:11-14 say it all so beautifully:. “…it is not hidden from you and it is not distant.” Unlike other religions, Torah is open to all Jews. There are leaders and teachers, but they do not own the text. According to some, Torah study has a similarity to prayer. It is another avenue for reaching out to God.
The
Choice
“11.
For this commandment which I command you this day, is not hidden from you, nor
is it far off.
12.
It is not in heaven, that you should say, Who shall go up for us to heaven, and
bring it to us, that we may hear it, and do it?
13.
Nor is it beyond the sea, that you should say, Who shall go over the sea for
us, and bring it to us, that we may hear it, and do it?
14.
But the word is very near to you, in your mouth, and in your heart, that you
may do it.
15.
See, I have set before you this day life and good, and death and evil;
16.
In that I command you this day to love the Lord your God, to walk in his ways,
and to keep his commandments and his statutes and his judgments, that you may
live and multiply; and the Lord your God shall bless you in the land which you
are entering to possess.
17.
But if your heart turns away, so that you will not hear, but shall be drawn
away, and worship other gods, and serve them;
18.
I announce to you this day, that you shall surely perish, and that you shall
not prolong your days upon the land, to which you are going over the
19.
I call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set before
you life and death, blessing and cursing; therefore choose life, that both you
and your seed may live;
20. That you may love the Lord your God, and that you may obey his voice, and that you may cleave to him; for he is your life, and the length of your days; that you may live in the land which the Lord swore to your fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, to give them.” (31:11-20).
In brilliantly clear language, Moshe lays out the choice: Good and Evil, Life or Death. But it is exactly that, our choice. “‘Therefore choose life.’ Jewish ethics is rooted in the doctrine of human responsibility, that is, freedom of the will. ‘All is in the hands of God, except the fear of God,’ is an undisputed maxim of the Rabbis. And ‘to subject our will to the will of our father in Heaven’ is the great purpose of man’s life one earth. According to the historian Josephus, the doctrine of Free-will was maintained by the Pharisees both against the Sadducees, who attributed everything to chance, and the Essenes, who ascribed all the actions of man to predestination and Divine Providence. ‘Free-will is granted to every man. If he desires to incline towards the good way, and be righteous he has the power to do so; and if he desires to incline towards the unrighteous way, and be a wicked man, he has also the power to do so. Since this power of doing good or evil is in our own hands, and since all the wicked deeds which we have committed have been committed with our full consciousness, it befits us to turn in penitence and forsake our evil deeds; the power of doing so being still in our hands. Now this matter is a very important principle; nay it is the pillar of the Law and of the commandments.’” (Maimonides as rendered in the Hertz Pentateuch.)
There
is much that man does not have control over in his physical universe. But “though man cannot always even half
control his destiny, God has given the reins of man’s conduct altogether into
his hands.” (Hertz Pentateuch). A great deal has been written on the subject
of Free-Will versus Predestination versus Life as a Random Crap-shoot. One book that is worth the read (or re-read)
on this subject is Victor Frankel’s Man’s Search For Meaning. It is only 154 pages long, but it is a million
miles wide and two million miles deep. From
the bowels of
All Jews
Are Gems
The sedrah opens with a recitation describing all who are present at the acceptance of God’s law including those with the lowest of professions, “From the hewers of your wood to the drawers of your water” (29:10). This verse has spawned many commentaries and rabbinic tales including this one.
“A
Chassid, who was a wealthy dealer in gems, was once sitting the presence of Reb
Shalom Ber of Lubavitch. In the course
of their conversation the Rebbe spoke highly of certain unlettered folk.
‘Rebbe,’
asked the Chassid, ‘why do you make such a fuss of them?’
‘Why,
they have many noble qualities,’ said the Rebbe.
‘Well,
I can’t see them,’ said the Chassid.
The
Rebbe was silent. Later on, he asked the
Chassid whether he had brought his package of diamonds with him. The dealer said that he had, but he would
prefer to show them to the Rebbe a little later, not in the sunlight, so that
they could be seen to their best advantage.
Later, the diamond dealing Chassid opened the package in a nearby room,
arranged the gems carefully on a table, and pointed out a particular stone to
the Rebbe, saying: ‘this one is
something really special!’
‘I
can’t see anything in it,’ said the Rebbe.
‘Ah,
but you have to be a connoisseur to know how to look at diamonds!’ said the
Chassid.
‘Every Jew too is something really special,’ said the Rebbe, ‘but you have to be a connoisseur to know how to look at him.’”
The
Nameless Shabbat
As
Barry Holtz and Behtamie Horowitz point out in their commentary on Nitzavim
entitled “It Depends on each of Us”, there are several Sabbaths with special
names. The Sabbath before Pesach is
called Shabbat Hagadol. The Sabbath
between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur is called Shabbat Shuvah, the Sabbath of
the Return. But there is no special name
for the Sabbath before that most holy of days, Rosh Hashanah. Since the Torah portion Nitzavim is always
read on the Sabbath before Rosh Hashanah the sedrah itself must contain a
message that makes it a harbinger for the upcoming event. The sedrah begins, “You are standing this day
all of you before the Lord your God.…” (29:9). Just as the Israelites were standing before
God to hear Moshe’s final words, so are all of us today standing before Him who
is the Judge of us all. Furthermore, we
are all seeking to be inscribed in the Book of Life and Moshe urges us to
follow the laws of God and Life, “…therefore (you) choose life, that thou
mayest live, thou and thy seed.” (30:19). When the Sedrah opens it uses the plural form
of the word “You.” Later when the Sedrah
urges us to choose life, it uses the singular form of the word “you.” Why the change? Possibly to remind us that renewal for
another year depends on the behavior of the whole house of
Hewers of Woods,
Drawers of Water - Unsung Heroes
“You are standing this day all of you before the Lord your God: your heads…your elders…your officers…the hewer of thy wood and the drawer of thy water.” As the story below reminds us, the covenant belongs to all of the Jewish people. This means that in Judaism, there are no mundane people and that the most mundane act can be a mitzvah in the truest sense of the term.
When Rebbitzin Mirl, the saintly wife of the sage Reb Avraham Yehoshou Heschel of Apta heard that Reb Yaakov the wagon-driver had died she cried out in grief. The sage’s students were surprised to hear her express such anguish over this simple man. When she had calmed down she explained. “It once happened that on a freezing winter’s day I was left without a single splinter of firewood in the house. I went to Reb Yaakov who immediately harnessed his horse and drove off to the forest. He came back with a wagon stacked high with firewood. He stoked up the stove in the study hall and dozens of you young scholars were then able to sit there and study Torah in warmth and comfort. On another occasion I ran out water - not a single drop left. Again I went off to Reb Yaakov. He brought me a huge barrel full of water, so that I was able to cook in honor of Shabbat.” “Master of the Universe!” she pleaded in conclusion. “May it be Your will that from every piece of wood that he brought, an angel be born - to speak up now on his behalf. And may all those drops of water be transformed into so many merits - to turn out and greet him as arrives in the World Above.” Apparently the Heavenly court heard and heeded her prayers for this simple man was immediately admitted into the Heavenly Host. (Based on the teachings of Rabbi Shlomo Yosef Zevin, of blessed memory)
Haftarah
61:10-63:9 Isaiah
The Man/The Book: This haftarah is a product of the writing of
the Second Isaiah, who is also called the Isaiah of the Exile. This unknown author produced the last 26
chapters of the Book of Isaiah. His was
a message of hope and imminent redemption offered to the Jewish community of
The Message: The theme is that of a triumphant restoration. The prophet opens with imagery of
The Theme-Link: The link here is with the calendar, not with
the Torah portion. This is the last of
the Seven Haftarot of Consolation, which were intended to comfort the
Israelites after the destruction of the
Copyright,
September, 2022, Mitchell A. Levin
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