This may not be the place to ask these questions but I will give it a go anyway. What is the purpose of obedience? of laws? of rituals? Is the Divine so unknowable that we have to be good obedient followers in order to experience a taste of the Essence?
Very good questions that I wanted to revisit.
At first glance, obedience might seem like humans' part in a covenantal relationship. But consider this: most of the covenants G-d entered into with the Israelites were unconditional. That is, G-d is portrayed
as intending to bless the Israelites no matter what in order to show His commitment.
Let's proceed with the understanding that G-d's loving concern toward the Israelites was indeed unconditional. Would that make their commitment and obedience irrelevant? I think not.
Obedience is based on a appreciation for G-d's sovereignty. There is a kind of an authoritarian orientation where obedience appears as a duty. But There are other ways to understand it. Obedience doesn't have a coercive quality if it reflects a religious attitude. In particular, obedience can express these kinds of awareness:
1) recognition of our dependence (and the dependence of Creation as a whole) on the Creator
2) appreciation for G-d's involvement, loving concern, and fidelity towards Creation
3) a shift in the sense of G-d as
"the first and foremost and only reality" (Adin Steinsaltz)
Probably not a complete list, but these things seem most important to me.
When the term
obedience is used in reference to these expressive aspects, its goal is mainly to recognize and affirm G-d's presence and involvement. Again, it does not have a coercive quality, as though a duty gets imposed from the outside by an overbearing task master.
In this connection, I'd appreciate some elaboration from a Jewish person as to how Divine Command can accomplish a person's holiness, as reflected in the Jewish prayer
"Blessed are You, sovereign who has made us holy with the mitzvot."
Thanks and may you have a good and sweet year!