Your political opponent is not an idol worshipper

By Rabbi Leon Morris, Rabbi Zvi Hirschfield | September 29, 2020
Published by The Jewish News of North Carolina

Our ability to have civil conversations with the other side is deteriorating rapidly. The differences between the left and the right are an ever-widening gulf, and we are all deeply entrenched within communities that shield us from real engagement with or deep understanding of the other side. Indeed, it is no longer even clear to many of us when it is of value to engage with the other side, and when such engagement is in itself legitimating perspectives we view as abhorrent.

While clearly not everything is open to debate, the range of issues that are not open to debate is expanding rapidly, and the threats to ensuring a civil society that is truly diverse and pluralistic are significant. This is true in Israel where we both live, and even more so in America, from where we immigrated and from where our students come to study.

At the beginning of this new Jewish New Year, perhaps one gift that Jewish experience can offer the world is an approach to living with, and engaging with, different notions of truth. As Jews, we take pride in celebrating a culture that embraces a multiplicity of opinions. But it did not start out that way. In looking carefully at how that approach evolved over thousands of years, we may be able to offer some urgently needed wisdom to American society.

In the Bible, the worst thing a person can be is an idolater. From the first of the Ten Commandments, with its prohibition against making any graven image, God’s demand for exclusivity, and the related prohibition against visually depicting God in any way, is a theme repeatedly reinforced, from the Pentateuch itself, to the fiery messages of the Hebrew prophets. Of course, idolatry in the biblical age involved child sacrifice, sexual exploitation and other forms of immorality. The Bible also sees idolatry as an assault on truth, the foundation upon which a good society is built. In its day, idolatry was the sin of monumental proportions that was always threatening the vitality of the Israelite community.

When we consider today our political adversaries, those who promote an agenda that we think is wrong, unethical and destructive, we tend to see them in terms that are similar to how the Bible viewed idolaters. They are, after all, advocating a position I believe is false and destructive. What they espouse undermines the covenant around which society is built.

The Bible’s punishment for the sin of idolatry is utter destruction. “Tear down their altars, smash their pillars, put their sacred posts to the fire, and cut down the images of their gods, obliterating their name from that site” (Deuteronomy 12:3). In fact, anything tainted by idolatry is proscribed. This approach to idolatry even justifies murder. After the sin of the golden calf, Moses orders the Levites to kill 3,000 people implicated in its creation and worship. The biblical approach to idolatry is black and white. We do not engage in conversation with those who are doing evil. We destroy them.

The rabbis of the second century changed this conversation in a clear way. Their approach was decidedly different from the literal approach of the Bible they studied. Many of them lived in mixed cities alongside populations that worshiped idols. They understand that they would not have the power to conquer Rome. The Talmudic tractate of Avodah Zarah is replete with the attempt to draw boundaries that enable faithful Jews to avoid inadvertently supporting the idolatrous practices they disagreed with, while simultaneously embracing a shared public square. Rabban Gamliel, the renowned religious leader of the Jewish community in the land of Israel, even allows Jews to use the public bathhouse despite its mosaic of the goddess Aphrodite. In contrast to the biblical hero who confronts idolatry with force, Rabban Gamliel is the rabbinic hero who teaches how we might navigate our way in a society divided by deep disagreements without losing one’s integrity.

America, it seems, is rediscovering the Bible’s approach to idolatry — but it is the rabbinic approach that is most desperately needed in our time. We simply cannot afford to see our diverse society with its very significant political and ideological differences in biblical terms. The rabbinic tradition helps us to understand that we cannot remove or wipe out difference. We do have to draw lines, of course, as they did. Yet, we need to learn to live with difference. We need to co-exist with one another and to see ourselves as responsible for the health and well-being of everyone. We need to cultivate a shared space of respectful disagreement without sacrificing our most sacred values.