Who Invented the "Jewish Soul"?
Last week's topic — Once Upon a Time a Jew? (a true story of a lapsed convert) — struck a chord with many people, but not all for the same reason.
For some, the issue of membership in the Tribe is one of sincerity—if you're a sincere convert, how could you possibly revert to your previous idolatry?
For others, the issue is one of kindness—it's the community's responsibility to welcome and nurture the stranger.
For others the main issue is neither legal nor social, it's spiritual—about gaining a "Jewish soul."
Yet as one person wrote,
I've always wondered about the Jewish Soul, if it exists, when it comes online for converts, or if it's always been there. The people I've seen rail against the idea so clearly have one, whereas the people who push the idea, I'm not so sure about. and what does that mean for those of us, that no one can figure out their halachic status? that one day we have a jewish soul, the next we don't, depending on paperwork? at a certain point, it's absurd.
Her sense of absurdity comes (I believe) from the fact that you won't find any mention of a "Jewish Soul" in the Written Torah, only in the Oral Tradition.
Perhaps that fact points us to what's ultimately at stake but also to a resolution to the feeling of absurdity.
What's at stake is the fundamental nature of Torah. Is Torah—including its application to real-world questions—in Heaven or on Earth?
If the Talmud famously insists that the Torah is lo b'shamayim hee (it is not in Heaven), then perhaps the soul operates by the same rule. Is holiness something dropped perfectly from heaven, governed by rigid, celestial paperwork? Or is it realized here on Earth, through the deeply human process of wrestling with identity, law, and community?
If the tradition tells us that the Torah is not in heaven, is it possible that the soul isn't either? Is it perhaps found—and forged—right here in the struggle?
What do you think?
Shabbat Shalom
This message may also be read at Times of Israel.
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