torah: rabbi david etengoff

‘Be wholehearted (tamim) with your G-d’

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Our parasha, Shoftim, contains the pasuk: “Be wholehearted (tamim) with the L-rd, your G-d.” (18:13) This English version reflects Rashi’s midrashically-based comment on our verse: “Conduct yourself with Him with simplicity and depend on Him, and do not inquire of the future; rather, accept whatever happens to you with [unadulterated] simplicity and then, you will be with Him and to His portion.”

In contrast to Rashi’s analysis, the approach of Onkelos to our pasuk, and throughout the entirety of his Aramaic translation of the Torah, suggests a different connotation for tamim, namely, she’lim, or perfect and complete. Furthermore, while Rashi focuses upon a person being wholehearted with G-d, Onkelos emphasizes the proper manner that one must adopt in his approach toward the Creator: “Perfect and complete you shall be regarding the awe and fear you should have for the L-rd your G-d.”

Whether we adopt Rashi’s or Onkelos’ explication of our pasuk, it is apropos to turn to a halachic investigation of “Be tamim with the L-rd, your G-d,” and examine its relationship to the Taryag Mitzvot (613 Commandments). As in nearly all matters of Jewish jurisprudence, there is a machloket (disagreement) as to the status of our verse (is it included or excluded from Taryag Mitzvot?). In this instance, the major disputants are the Rambam (Maimonides) and the Ramban (Nachmanides). 

Maimonides neither includes “Be tamim with the L-rd, your G-d” as a commandment in his Sefer HaMitzvot, nor offers any justification for his omission. Nachmanides, however, suggests a rationale as to why Maimonides excluded our verse from the Taryag Mitzvot:

Perhaps the master (the Rambam) thought that [“Be tamim with the L-rd, your G-d”] is a general command that incorporates all of the mitzvot in regards to the proper manner that one is obligated to walk on the paths of the Torah. [As such,] this matter is similar to the verse, “Praiseworthy are those whose way is perfect (temimei derech), who walk with the law of the L-rd.” (Tehillim 119:1) Therefore, he [Maimonides] did not bring this verse into his accounting [of the Taryag Mitzvot, since he clearly requires specificity regarding the mitzvah action to be performed, and not a meta-statement describing the ideal spiritual approach to serving the Almighty]. (Critical Notes to Maimonides’ Sefer HaMitzvot, Positive Commandments Uncounted by Maimonides, number 8, translation my own)

Nachmanides disagrees with Maimonides’ decision to exclude “Be tamim with the L-rd, your G-d” from the Taryag Mitzvot and, instead, includes it in this classification. He formulates the general parameters of this commandment in the following fashion:

The eighth mitzvah that we are commanded is for our hearts (i.e. minds) to be perfectly aligned with Him may He be blessed. And this is as it is stated in the Torah: “Be tamim with the L-rd, your G-d.”

The essential matter of this command is that we should associate our hearts (minds) with Him alone, may He be blessed, and believe that He, and only He, performs all actions in the universe, and that He alone knows the truth as to what the future will bring. Moreover, it is solely from Him that we are allowed to ascertain the nature of future events, through the vehicle of his prophets, or His men of mercy — namely, through the Urim v’Tumim [under the direction of the kohan Hagadol]. As such, we are prohibited from seeking out soothsayers and their ilk, and we must never believe that their words will surely come to pass. (ibid)

In sum, the Ramban maintains that “Be tamim with the L-rd, your G-d” is a constitutive element of the Taryag Mitzvot which mandates that we turn to the Creator and His earthly representatives for knowledge of forthcoming events.

Concomitantly, we must eschew the words and visions of necromancers who purport to foretell the future through divinations. Thus, by turning solely to the Almighty, and by consciously rejecting the so-called prophecies of human oracles, we demonstrate our unmitigated allegiance to Hashem and live lives that are tamim with Him.

Rav Tzadok ha-Kohen Rabinowitz of Lublin (1823-1900) views our verse, “Be tamim with the L-rd, your G-d,” in a different light. Rather than discussing the substantive content of “be tamim,” he emphasizes the expression, “with the L-rd, your G-d,” as the modality through which one can attain temimut (perfection or completeness). Yet, how does one achieve the status of being “with the L-rd, your G-d”? To answer this question, Rav Tzadok quotes a pasuk from Sefer Shemot: “And you shall worship the L-rd, your G-d, and He will bless your food and your drink, and I will remove illness from your midst” (23:25). He notes that the verse explicitly states, “I [Hashem] will remove illness from your midst,” and proceeds to metaphorically explain its import:

All of this [the removal of illness from our midst] does not take place by itself. Only Hashem, may He be blessed, has the ability to remove [illness]. This is similar in kind to a filthy garment — even though you soak it in water, the person who is washing it must scrub at it until he removes its grime. Nonetheless, without water the dirt will not be removed. (Likutei Mamarim, page 86; this and the subsequent passage, translation my own)

According to Chazal, water often symbolizes Torah.

By way of illustration, Midrash Rabbah, Sefer Bereishit 24, explains the verse, “And they [Joseph’s brothers] took him [Joseph] and cast him into the pit; now the pit was empty there was no water in it,” (Bereishit 37:24) in this fashion: “Rav Acha said … ‘there was no water in it’ connotes that there were no words of Torah — which is allegorically referenced by the word ‘water.’ Rav Tzadok follows this line of reasoning and states that the water he references in his parable is none other than Torah.

Moreover, it is Torah that ultimately enables one to ‘Be tamim with the L-rd, your G-d’:”

The reference to “water” specifically refers to divrei Torah [halacha] and divrei Aggadah [non-halachic Torah subjects]. This is so, since through them, one may recognize He who spoke and thereby created the world, and, thereby, bask in the light of the face of the living King. [As such,] the Torah states: “Be tamim with the L-rd, your G-d,” [this means,] when one is with Hashem and His followers [Torah scholars], then he will be perfect and complete without any lack whatsoever.

When viewed from the widest perspective, our pasuk is ultimately urging us to fulfill the moral, ethical and spiritual charge issued by Hashem to Avraham Avinu: “I am the Almighty G-d; walk before Me and be perfect (tamim).” This message is particularly apropos for the month of Elul, as we prepare ourselves for the Yamim Noraim and the coming year.

Like Avraham, may we, too, strive to strengthen our relationship with the Holy One blessed be He, so that we may serve Him in faithfulness, authenticity and temimut.

V’chane yihi ratzon.

Contact Rabbi Etengoff: Columnist@TheJewishStar.com