Today is Memorial Day in the United States. We have to acknowledge and respect those who gave their lives for us and the Constitution. The two are intertwined.
Now for a quick devar Torah.
Today is Memorial Day, and we should take stock of the fact that we are living in the United States and are able to enjoy freedoms that countless others throughout history never had. Memorial Day is a day to remember the men and women who died defending this country.
What is interesting is that when someone enters the United States military, they do not take an oath to defend a particular leader, nor even simply the land itself. Their oath is to defend the Constitution of the United States — the system of law and liberty upon which the country is built.
That is actually a very Jewish idea.
For us, the central idea is the Torah. In many ways, you could say the Torah is our constitution. The Jewish people did not leave Egypt merely to escape slavery. God did not take us out of Egypt because He had nothing better to do that day, nor simply because we were suffering slaves — there were many slaves in the ancient world. God took us out for a purpose: to receive the Torah at Mount Sinai and to build a society based on justice, morality, and holiness.
That is why the Torah repeatedly reminds us: “I am the Lord your God who took you out of Egypt.” Freedom alone is not enough. A free society must have principles, laws, and responsibilities. We are not truly free until freedom is tied to moral purpose.
The founders of the United States understood this idea very well. Many of them were deeply influenced by the Bible. In fact, scholars have often noted that the Book of Deuteronomy — Sefer Devarim — was among the most influential biblical books during the founding era. The founders looked carefully at the Torah’s description of limited government, especially the laws concerning the king in Parshat Shoftim. Even the American presidency was shaped by the idea that no ruler stands above the law.
After the Constitution was completed, Reverend Ezra Stiles, the president of Yale College, explained the Constitution in biblical terms, comparing aspects of American government to the system described in Sefer Shoftim, the Book of Judges. The founders were not Jewish, but many of them believed that the Bible was the foundation of liberty and moral government.
There is a reason why throughout the United States you find so many biblical place names. The Bible shaped the moral imagination of early America.
There is a famous story about the last surviving veteran of the Battle of Bunker Hill. In the 1840s, people asked him what inspired him to fight. Was it John Locke? Montesquieu? The philosophers of the Enlightenment? He answered, “Never heard of them. It was my Bible.”
That answer says a great deal.
In the United States, the oath is to defend the Constitution — not a king, not a president, not a political party. The idea is to defend a system of liberty under law. That concept has deep biblical roots.
And so on Memorial Day, as we honor those who gave their lives defending this country, we should also remember what they were defending: the ability to live freely, to worship freely, and to build a society based on law, responsibility, and moral purpose.
As Jews living in America, we especially should appreciate that freedom — the freedom to live openly as Jews, to pray, to study Torah, and to contribute to society in accordance with our beliefs.
Something to think about.
