Published on Institute for Jewish Ideas and Ideals (http://www.jewishideas.org)
     Maintaining Purity and Integrity: Thoughts on Parashat Hukkat
The laws of the Red Heifer are considered to be among the inscrutable  commandments of the Torah. The elaborate ritual was ordained for the  purpose of purifying those who had become ritually unclean through  contact with a dead body.
One of the strange features of this  procedure was that while it purified the impure, it defiled all those  who were connected with the preparation of the ashes and water of  purification “It purifies the impure, and simultaneously defiles the  pure.” How could the exact same ingredients lead to opposite results? I  suggest a possible explanation.
Those engaged in purifying others  might naturally come to think of themselves as being highly important  individuals. The impure people must turn to them for help. Being in this  position of spiritual power could easily lead the “purifiers” to  aggrandize themselves, to subtly (or not so subtly) adopt feelings of  superiority. To prevent this eventuality, the Torah declares that the  purifiers must themselves be rendered impure. Thus, they will not  develop an inflated sense of self-importance, because they will realize  that they must become ritually defiled while they purify others. The  process does not raise them above those they serve, but actually lowers  their status of ritual purity.
The ancient Red Heifer ceremony  relates to a deeply significant aspect of religious psychology. Its  message continues to be relevant today.
Some years ago I attended a  meeting of Orthodox rabbis to discuss policies relating to conversion  to Judaism. One of the rabbis unabashedly proclaimed: “We have the  power! We can demand prospective converts to do everything our way. We  do not need to make any concessions because we have total control. They  need us, we don’t need them. We have the power!” 
I responded:  “Did we become rabbis so that we can gain and exert power? Isn’t it our  responsibility to help others and bring them closer to God and Torah,  humbly and sincerely? Isn’t it antithetical to our religious worldview  to arrogate to ourselves “power” to make people squirm, and bend to our  will, and meet our demands—even when these demands far exceed what the  actual halakha requires?”
He responded: “We have the power, let’s use it.”
His  attitude has largely prevailed in the Orthodox rabbinic establishment. I  frequently receive emails and phone calls from prospective converts who  have faced abuse and arrogance in their dealings with Orthodox rabbis  and rabbinic courts. Among the criticisms 
I’ve recently heard: the  would-be converts are treated like numbers, not like people; the rabbis  don’t return calls, don’t keep scheduled meetings, keep delaying the  actual conversion; the rabbis keep adding requirements, well beyond  anything stated in Rambam and Shulhan Arukh; in some cases the rabbis  have made rude comments, even questioning the morality or integrity of  the would-be converts.  “We have the power, let’s use it!”
This is  not “power” but arrogance and corruption. In halakhic terms, this is  called “inuy hadin”, a miscarriage of justice causing undue suffering.  It is a mockery of the halakhic process, not a fulfillment of it.
It  is not that the rabbis are bad people. Certainly, they consider  themselves to be good people who seek to implement Jewish law and  tradition in the best standards possible. The problem is that when  people are in positions of “power”, they are easily corrupted by this  “power”. They come to see themselves as the ultimate arbiters of halakha  and truth; they become part of a larger culture of power-grabbing and  power-holding; they see themselves as representatives of real truth and  they threaten or malign those who disagree with them.
The ritual  of the Red Heifer provides a vital lesson for those in positions of  religious leadership—whether rabbis or laypeople. It teaches us to see  our roles with humility and sensitivity, not to inflate our  self-importance, and certainly not to seek “power” over others. It  reminds us to focus full attention on those who turn to us, to do our  best to serve and to help.
It is not “power” that we seek, but compassion and justice. It is not lordship that we desire, but service to God and humanity. 

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