The warnings in this week’s portion do not mention a lack of spirituality. It goes into the breakdown of society. And that breakdown is caused by fear & insecurity. That eventually leads to disaster.
The Torah captures something central about the tochacha in Parashat Bechukotai: the collapse described by the Torah is not random punishment descending from Heaven, but the gradual unraveling of society itself.
What’s especially insightful is the progression it points out.
The Torah does not begin with:
- “You failed to bring the offerings correctly,” or
- “You made a ritual mistake in the Temple.”
Instead, it begins with fear, mistrust, insecurity, and social breakdown:
- “You will flee though none pursues you.”
- People will fear one another.
- Economic life becomes unstable.
- Agriculture fails.
- Violence spreads.
- Political independence collapses.
- Finally comes exile.
The Torah is essentially describing what we would today call civilizational decline.
And as noted, after each stage comes:
“And if after this you do not listen to Me…”
Meaning: pay attention to the warning signs. A healthy society does not collapse overnight. It deteriorates step by step when people stop trusting one another and stop seeing themselves as responsible for the collective good.
That also ties beautifully into the prophets of the First Temple period. The prophets repeatedly warned that ritual alone could not save society. Isaiah says God is tired of offerings without justice. Amos condemns corruption and exploitation despite religious observance. The message is:
spirituality without a moral society is hollow.
At the same time, the Torah is not rejecting spirituality either. Rather, it insists on the partnership:
- spirituality must elevate society,
- and society must sustain spirituality.
Without ethics, religion becomes empty ritual.
Without higher values, society becomes pure self-interest and eventually collapses.
Friedrich Hayek understood something many economists ignore: markets depend on trust. Contracts, investment, credit, and commerce all assume a moral framework. If everyone believes everyone else is cheating, the economy freezes. The Torah understood this thousands of years earlier.
There is a story from Bnei Brak that illustrates that idea perfectly. Competition itself is not condemned. Judaism is not against ambition, success, or business rivalry. The key question is whether competition destroys the social fabric or strengthens it.
The older printer understood:
- parnassah ultimately comes from God,
- competition should improve society rather than poison it,
- and unity and mutual respect come before profit.
That is a profoundly Torah-based economic philosophy: vigorous competition combined with communal responsibility.
“The spirituality has to back up society, but society has to back up the spirituality.”
That may actually summarize the entire structure of Sefer Vayikra:
- holiness,
- ritual,
- ethics,
- economics,
- justice,
- and national survival
are all interconnected.
The tochacha is therefore not merely a threat. It is a diagnosis of how societies decay when trust, morality, and responsibility disappear.
