From our Torah this week (parashat Emor) we read: “You shall not profane my holy Name, that I may be made sacred among the people of Israel” (Lev. 22:32), which the early sages said provides the basis for “kiddush HaShem” (קידוש השם), or the duty to always honor God, even if that might mean accepting martyrdom for your faith. Jewish halakhah (law) furthermore says we are to think of kiddush hashem whenever we recite the Shema, that our inmost intent should be self-sacrifice (mesirat nefesh), or the willingness to give up your life to God in complete surrender. After all, if we are not willing to give up our lives for God, how can we be willing to genuinely live for him? The purpose or goal of our existence is to know and love God, to be sanctified in truth, but if we value our carnal lives on earth as more important, we exist in a state of contradiction. Therefore people obsessed with their own physical safety, health, pleasure, happiness, well-being, etc., do not know the true meaning of life. Our lives on this earth were not meant to be an end in themselves, but rather a means to the greater end of knowing and loving the Eternal God. Indeed, God’s love is better than any sort of life this present world can afford. As Jim Elliot once said, “He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose.”
Hebrew Lesson:
Sanctifying God’s Name means we regard our relationship to God to be an end in itself – our ultimate concern – and there is therefore nothing higher that may challenge our duty before heaven. “Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness” (Matt. 6:33). Indeed our mortal life in this fleeting world is a means to the end of reaching our eternal destiny, and esteeming the means above the end is therefore idolatry (Rom. 1:25).
Our faith in the LORD may lead us into collision with the world and its spurious power structures, however “we ought to obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29). Taking a stand for Torah truth will make you an outsider to the “crowd” and its endless idols and vanities. Indeed a person of genuine moral conviction may be labeled an “enemy of the state,” may be persecuted as a “terrorist,” and may even suffer martyrdom. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego rightfully defied the king’s decree to bow down before the “golden image,” and they confessed that they were willing to die rather than betray the truth of the LORD of Israel (see Dan 3). This is a prime example of kiddush HaShem, of honoring the truth of God even at the risk of losing our lives. For many Jews, reciting the Shema is a solemn declaration that we esteem the truth of God above all things, that God alone is our ultimate good, and that we must be willing to surrender our lives rather than to deny the greatness and glory of His Name. May tzaddikim have died with the Shema on their lips…
Kiddush HaShem may be understand both literally and metaphorically. Literally understood, kiddush HaShem (i.e., martyrdom) is a possibility, one of the severest tests that may be given to the soul, and the temptation is to shrink back from the threat of death by denying the faith… Metaphorically understood, kiddush HaShem is a necessity, an essential act of the will that decides to “take up the cross” and follow Yeshua, and the temptation is to minimize the truth, to compromise the faith, and to slowly fade away… Yeshua asks, “What will it profit a person if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul?” (Mark 8:36). Indeed, finding your life, value, and “place” here is to exile yourself from the promise of heaven. As Yeshua said, “Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it” (Matt. 10:39). What is required, in other words, is categorically everything, with nothing left over…
Hebrew Lesson: