Parshat Tazria-Metzora: From Destructive to Redemptive

As fires raged through the beautiful Jerusalem Hills this week—just as we moved from Yom HaZikaron to Yom Ha’atzmaut—many were asking: is this a Divine message, and if so, what are we meant to learn? 

Parshat Tazria-Metzora teaches about tzara’at, a condition that appeared not only on a person’s skin, but also on clothing and even homes. While some interpret skin tzara’at as a physical ailment, the afflictions on garments and houses have no medical basis. For this reason, Rambam explains that they are supernatural signs—stages of spiritual warning. He describes a progression: the lesions appear first on the home, then on clothing, and finally on the person, signaling increasing distance from God—often due to speaking negatively about others.

Yet tzara’at isn’t only a punishment. The Torah teaches that when the people enter the land of Israel they will have tzara’at on their houses.  Surprisingly, Rashi calls this a “besora,” good news, because hidden treasures left in the walls by the previous inhabitants would be uncovered through the affliction. What seemed destructive was actually redemptive. The kohen would then oversee a process of purification—restoring and renewing the home.

We may no longer live in a biblical world of manifest miracles or clear signs of reward and punishment. Yet tzara’at teaches us to listen more closely for God’s messages. As the chilling final words found on Shauli Greenglick’s phone after he fell in Gaza remind us: “God speaks to me much more than I speak to Him.” As we witness the fires on the outskirts of Jerusalem, we are called to reflect inward—on our land, our homes, and ourselves. It is a time to examine how we speak about others, and how, through that process, we might emerge renewed and draw closer to Hashem. Shabbat Shalom -Karen Miller Jackson

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