Moses is full of contradictions. Addressing the Creator, he says “’O God, You
who let Your servant see the first works of Your greatness and Your might
hand…’” (Deuteronomy 3:23). Moses’
reference to God’s anatomy is understood to mean God’s power. But when Moses continues, speaking to the
Israelites, he reminds them that “you saw no shape when God spoke to you at
Horeb out of the fire” (4:15).
Does God have a shape or not? Does God have a form that resembles the human
body? We are told, after all, that we
are created ‘b’tzelem Elohim -- in
God’s image.” Perhaps God is
anthropomorphic.
Embedded within Parshat Va-et’chanan -- and indeed
throughout Hebrew Scripture -- is the admonition “not to act wickedly and make
for yourselves a sculptured in age in any likeness whatever: the form of a man or a woman, the form of any
beast on earth…” (4:16). God has no
body, we hold, that can be represented through physical material like stone or
wood. God cannot be limited in such a way.
Perhaps this is because the human perception of God should
not be limited. At some times in our
lives, we relate to God in a particular way but that relationship changes as we
do. As children, we experience God as an
authority figure, like a king or a parent.
As adults, we may be engaged by God as friend or as energy. At Yom Kippur we contemplate God as a Judge;
at Passover God is the Redeemer. When we
concretize God in sculpture or in perception, we reduce God’s
possibilities. We also diminish the ways
we can connect with, and benefit from, the God-idea.
Although the Israelites did not see God, the Torah tells us that they heard God: “God spoke those
words – those and no more – to your whole congregation at the mountain, with a
mighty voice out of the fire and the dense clouds (5:19).” What is the difference between hearing and
seeing? For one, the ear can hear multiple
sounds simultaneously – the siren AND the music AND the child’s chatter. Perhaps the Torah uses the metaphor of
hearing God, while rejecting the metaphor of seeing God, to remind us of God is
available to us through a multiplicity of personae, and that one need not block
another.
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