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Impurity
Porn's spring 1998 HIV outbreak and the issues it raises parallel thoughts
in the weekly Torah portions of this time from Leviticus (Vayikra).
In Judaism, we read largely concurrent portions of the five books of
Moses during the year. Religious Jews thus tend to measure time not so
much by the Hebrew calendar but by that week's Torah portion, which is
usually named after the first word in the portion.
The name of the Torah portion for the week that it was officially revealed
that veteran male porn star Marc Wallice had tested HIV positive was tsara'at
(Leviticus 12-14), which can be translated "impurity" or "leprosy." The
Talmudic sages suggest that frequently tzara'at is the means through which
God sends an individual a message of spiritual rebuke.
The following thoughts (which I've frequently rewritten and adapted)
are taken from the superb Anchor Bible Commentary on Leviticus 1-16 by
Conservative Rabbi Jacob Milgrom:
The Priestly theology posits the existence of one supreme God who contends
neither with a higher realm nor with competing peers. The world of demons
is abolished; there is no struggle with autonomous foes because there
are none. With the demise of the demons, only one creature remains with
"demonic" power - the human being. Endowed with free will, his power is
greater than any attributed to him by pagan society. Not only can he defy
God but, in Priestly imagery, he can drive God out of his sanctuary. In
this respect, humans have replaced the demons.
…Humans can drive God out of the sanctuary by polluting it with their
moral and ritual sins. All that the priests can do is periodically purge
the sanctuary of its impurities and influence the people to atone for
their wrongs.
For the people Israel, Jews, impurity was harmless. It retained potency
only with regard to sancta. Lay persons - but not priests - might contract
impurity with impunity; they must not, however, delay their purificatory
rites lest their impurity affect the sanctuary.
The sanctuary represented the presence of God; impurity represented the
wrongdoing of persons. If persons unremittingly polluted the sanctuary
they forced God out of his sanctuary and out of their lives.
The Priestly texts on scale disease (chaps. 13-14) and chronic genital
flows (chap. 15) give ample witness to the Priestly polemic against the
idea that physical impurity arises from the activity who must be either
exorcised or appeased. Purification is neither healing nor theurgy. The
afflicted person undergoes purification only after he is cured. Even though
the scale-diseased person does bring sacrifices for possible wrongdoing,
the only determinable "wrong" is that his impurity has polluted the sanctuary.
Another example of the way the Priestly legists excised the demonic from
impurity is the case of the person afflicted with chronic genital flux
(15: 1-15, 25-30). It is the discharge that contaminates, not the person.
In Israel, the afflicted person does not contaminate by touch as long
as he washes his hands.
To translate these thoughts into porn's HIV outbreak, it is the HIV that
contaminates, not those persons who have HIV. And they do not contaminate
by touch as long as they take the appropriate precautions against sharing
their virus.
Marc Wallice and company have not been visited by demons, but by a physical
disease. There is no world of demons. There is a creature, however, with
demonic power -the human being. To use IV needles, and to engage in risky
sex, places those around you in danger. To knowingly have sex with someone
when you have a lethal disease that is transmitted through sex is demonic.
Thus, the human being can act like a demon. He can defy God, and drive
God, the source of healing, out of the community. The way to retain the
healing element in a community is by atoning for your sins.
From a Torah perspective, there is one law which rules the universe -
and that law is both physical and moral. If we grossly violate God's moral
law, there will be physical repercussions. There will be consequences
to driving the source of healing out of the community. |