Tocheichah
The Tocheichah or Tochacha, meaning admonition or reproof, is the section in chapter 26 of Leviticus which highlights the consequence of a failure by the people of Israel to follow God's laws and keep his commandments.[1] It forms part of the parashah Bechukotai, the final portion of Leviticus. It is distinguished from the preceding section,[2] which relates to God's blessings which will be bestowed if the people of Israel do walk in God's ways and keep his commandments.
Deuteronomy 28:15-68 has a similar series of curses proclaimed by Moses as the consequence of a failure by his people to follow God's laws and keep his commandments.
Because of the distressing nature of the admonitions - terror, disease, warfare, famine and desolation - this section is traditionally read in a low voice in synagogue readings (but loud enough to be audible by the congregation)[3] The Kitzur Shulchan Aruch of Rabbi Shlomo Ganzfried prescribed that the Tocheichah must always be read without a break, and that three verses before the admonitions and three verses after the admonitions, read in a normal, fully audible voice, must always be included in the reading.[4] Thus the admonitions would always be accompanied by the message that God would remember his covenant with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
References
- ↑ Lev. 26:14-29
- ↑ Lev. 26:1-13
- ↑ Rabbi Simcha L. Weinberg, http://www.thefoundationstone.org/en/beitmidrash/bible/3214-the-shelah-hakodesh-the-tochacha.html
- ↑ Ganzfried, Kitzur Shulchan Aruch 78:4 - http://www.yonanewman.org/kizzur/kizzur78.html