The Haftorah for this week comes from Amos where he points out that piety is not enough. We were chosen to build a just society. That it is not a one way street. God gives the land but if we do not build a just society then we will lose the land.
Acharei Mot–Kedoshim: Ritual and Responsibility
This week’s double parashah, Acharei Mot–Kedoshim, forms a powerful bridge in the Torah.
Up until now, the Torah has focused heavily on the Mishkan—the Tabernacle:
how to serve, what to offer, the precise rituals, the exact procedures.
Then suddenly, in Kedoshim, the focus shifts:
“קדושים תהיו” — You shall be holy
And what does holiness look like?
Not offerings.
Not rituals.
But how we treat other people:
- Honest business practices
- Care for the poor
- Respect for others
- Justice in society
The Torah is making a clear statement:
You cannot have a relationship with God without a moral society.
And just as importantly:
A moral society without divine grounding will not endure.
You need both.
The Haftarah of Amos: A Warning
This message is reinforced in the haftarah from Amos.
Amos delivers a stark reminder:
Yes, the Jewish people are chosen.
Yes, God gave them the Land.
But—
That privilege is conditional.
God did not give the land so the people could simply live comfortably.
He gave it with a mission:
👉 To build a just and moral society.
If that mission is abandoned, Amos warns, the consequences are severe.
Even the strongest nation cannot survive without justice.
A Modern Echo: Yom HaZikaron → Yom HaAtzmaut
This idea becomes especially powerful in the calendar we just experienced:
- Yom HaZikaron — remembrance of those who fell
- immediately followed by
- Yom HaAtzmaut — celebration of statehood
This sequence is not accidental.
It teaches:
- A nation is built through sacrifice
- But it is sustained through values
You can have:
- A strong army
- A thriving economy
But if society is not just—
those foundations will eventually crumble.
Morality: Natural or Built?
There’s a common claim that morality is “natural.”
But history suggests otherwise.
Even thinkers like Friedrich Hayek—not a religious figure—recognized that:
A functioning economy depends on a moral framework.
The Torah said this thousands of years earlier.
Without a moral core:
- Trust collapses
- Justice erodes
- Society weakens
Israel: A Case Study
When the modern State of Israel was founded, there was a fundamental question:
Would it be a Jewish state
or just a state of Jews?
Many founders were not traditionally religious.
But they carried a deep moral inheritance shaped by Torah values.
And that shows itself in moments like:
- The response to Ethiopian Jews during Operation Solomon
- The instinctive culture of giving
- A society built not just on survival—but on responsibility
The Bottom Line
Amos, Kedoshim, and modern Israel all deliver the same message:
God’s promises are not one-sided.
It’s a covenant.
God says:
- I will give you the land
- I will give you the opportunity
But you must:
- Build a just society
- Treat people with fairness and dignity
- Live up to the mission
A Closing Thought
A nation is not judged only by:
- its strength
- its wealth
- or its power
But by something deeper:
👉 How it treats its people
That is the true meaning of:
“קדושים תהיו” — You shall be holy
