When we look at the foundation of the USA we cannot help but see the Biblical influences. Also, we Jews are grateful that the USA was the first country that would treat Jews as equal citizens.
A Quick Devar Torah: Freedom, Responsibility, and July 4th
This week’s parashah reviews the Jewish festivals. We begin with Passover, continue through Shavuot, Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Sukkot, and conclude with Shemini Atzeret. If you look carefully, there is a progression.
Passover is the festival of freedom. God took us out of Egypt and ended our slavery. But the Torah makes it clear that freedom was never meant to be an end in itself. We were not freed simply so that we could do whatever we wanted.
The next stop is Shavuot, when we stood at Mount Sinai and received the Torah. Freedom without law eventually becomes chaos. The Torah teaches that true freedom means living according to a moral code and accepting responsibility.
That leads naturally to Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. A free people must also be a responsible people. Every year we stop and take an accounting of our lives. How have we used the freedom God has given us? Have we lived according to His standards? We are judged not only on what we believe but on how we have acted.
Then comes Sukkot. We remember our years in the wilderness while celebrating God’s protection and the blessings He has given us. Having gained freedom and accepted the Torah, we rejoice in the privilege of living as God’s people.
This year, that message has special meaning because tomorrow is July 4th.
One of the remarkable things about the American Revolution is that independence was followed by constitutional government. The American Founders understood that liberty must be joined with law. Unlike revolutions that descended into violence and instability, the American experiment sought to build lasting institutions governed by a written Constitution.
As someone once observed, with the Declaration of Independence Americans ceased being subjects of a king and became citizens of a republic. A subject obeys because the king commands. A citizen has responsibilities as well as rights. Citizenship demands moral character and personal accountability.
Many historians have noted that the Founding generation drew not only on Greek and Roman political thought but also on the Hebrew Bible. Deuteronomy, with its teachings on limited government, justice, leadership, and the rule of law, was among the biblical books that profoundly influenced the political thinking of many early Americans.
There is another reason American Jews have always had cause for gratitude. In Touro Synagogue, George Washington assured the Jewish community that the United States would give “to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.” Jews were not merely tolerated; they were to enjoy the same rights and responsibilities as every other citizen. That was a remarkable statement in its time and helped set the tone for religious liberty in the United States.
As we celebrate both the festivals described in this week’s parashah and America’s Independence Day, we are reminded that freedom is never simply the absence of oppression. Freedom reaches its highest purpose when it is joined with responsibility, guided by moral law, and used to build a just and compassionate society.
Shabbat Shalom, and happy Independence Day.
