Month: June, 2010

Rabbi's Corner

The Mouth That Roared

Parashat Balak

Parashat Balak contains some fascinating narrative about the nature of the Jewish people, and some uncensored insight into the duality of human existence.

In the parasha we learn of the desires of Balak, the King of Moav, to eliminate Moshe and the Israelites. Balak is terrified by reports of the chosen people’s military victories over neighboring monarchies and, although not directly threatened by Israel, decides to take action . Since Moshe, the celebrated Israelite leader, spent his formative years under the tutelage of his father in law Jethro ,the high priest of Midian, perhaps the Midianite elders would have insights into his weaknesses as well.

Rashi (Num. 22:4) explains that the Midianites told Balak that Moshe has “no power except for his mouth”. Recall that the Torah says that G-d speaks to Moshe “Mouth to Mouth” (Num. 12:8). Yet, instead of assembling an army to destroy Moshe and the Israelites, Balak sends for the evil prophet Bilaam. Quoting the midrash Rashi writes, “We, too, will confront them with a man whose power is in his mouth”.

Bilaam is hired to use his mouth to curse the Israelites.

The parasha details how the mouth of Bilaam fails, and repeatedly offers blessings instead of curses. The power of the mouth is highlighted by the famous story of Bilaam’s donkey speaking, having a prophetic encounter beyond the ability of her owner.

In the end a frustrated Bilaam advises that Israel’s downfall would be through their eyes instead.

The Talmud explains the process, starting with lusting after articles of clothing, until physical lust takes over with an infamous episode of idol worship and debauchery.

The results are catastrophic, leading to the death of 24,000 Israelites via a divine plague.

Similarities with the episode of the golden calf abound.

Although the number of casualties (3000) is less, the conditions are almost identical. In Parashat Ki Tisa the Torah says “They arose early the next morning, and offered burnt offerings, and brought peace offerings. They sat down to eat and drink, and got up l’tzachaik.” (Ex. 32:6) Although commonly translated as playfulness and laughter, Rashi informs us that this means licentious behavior.

Here too, in our parasha, the illicit activities are preceded by eating and idolatry. “They (the Moabite women) invited the people to their idolatrous sacrifices, and the people ate and prostrated themselves before their gods (Baal Peor).”(Num. 25:2)

Rav Kook describes the worship of Baal Peor as the epitome of idolatry. Unlike the shiny and polished Golden Calf, Peor was worshipped in a disgusting ritual described in the Talmud (Sandedrin 64a).

After the Calf, the Torah tells us the people had exposed themselves spiritually, by their idolatry. Moshe issues the challenge, “….Mi Ad-nai elee, whoever is for G-d, come with me!….” (Ex. 32:26). All the Levites gathered round, and delivered justice.

In our parsasha the episode culminates with an Israelite having relations with a Midianite woman at the entrance to the Mishkan, in full view of all the Israelites, a physical exposure. Once again, the tribe of Levi stands up, as Pinchas takes action to stop the public desecration of the holiest spot on earth.

Once again, those who would deny the will of G-d tried to silence G-d’s witnesses, but in the end it is only the Jewish people themselves responsible for their downfall .

Even today, assimilation and intermarriage are able to achieve what no foe could ever do. We are our own worst enemy.

These days idolatry has shifted to the worship of money and power, and it is painfully obvious how this kind of worship leads to further erosion of the moral fabric of our society.

How many headlines over the past few years were filled with the rich and famous falling from grace due to the inability to control their basest urges!

Judaism teaches that humans are both physical and spiritual beings, and that our physical desires can be channeled, through the Torah’s teachings, into tools to help us reach our full potential.

Our mouths can create great beauty, and pray for divine assistance in the challenges of our earthly existence, or create damage and destruction worse than we can imagine.

Our eyes can keep us inspired by observing the presence of G-d in the world, or lead us into a world void of holiness and spirituality.

The choice is ours.

Shabbat Shalom,

Rabbi Greg

A Sense Of Life

Parashat Chukat

The birth of the nation of Israel was a sequence of miraculous events, and one of the most striking was the mass prophetic experience, culminating in the revelation at Sinai. The precursor to that ultimately defining moment was the spontaneous expression of the awesome power of G-d, as expressed in the Shir HaYam, the Song of the Sea that begins, “Oz yashir Moshe u’vinai Yisrael.., then Moshe and the children of Israel began to sing….” (Ex. 14:30).

It was a moment of unparalleled national prophecy, in the form of a song, the nations creative response to their deliverance.

This creative environment, brimming with life, was in fact short lived, and after being overwhelmed by Sinai, conditions eventually deteriorated.

This week’s parasha signifies the end of an era, and the sunset of the Mosaic triumvirate.

The Torah transports us from the beginning of the second year in the wilderness thirty eight years hence, and we are now in the fortieth year of the desert wanderings.

We have no record of any stories during this period, just the twenty locations the Bnai Yisrael encamped during that time (Rashi on Num. 33:10).

According to the classic medieval commenter Ibn Ezra, the interim period was dark, without prophecy or divine contact, save for the miraculous nature of their shelter and sustenance.

Most commentators agree that the details of the parah adumah, the red heifer, which would purify one exposed to the spiritual residue of death, took place in the first year or two after leaving Egypt. This makes sense, as the decree that the generation of the Exodus would live out their lives in the desert, and death would be a fact of life in the wilderness.

Over the next thirty eight years the adults who left Egypt gradually died out, and now the Israelites, consisting of the next generation, were at the edge of civilization, ready to begin their conquest of the land.

Moshe’s sister Miriam and brother Aaron die, and Moshe himself is informed that he will not live to see the promised land.

Then G-d said to Moses and Aaron, “Since you did not have faith in Me to sanctify Me in the eyes of the children of Israel, therefore you shall not bring this assembly to the Land which I have given them.” (Num. 20:12)

In order to merit admission into the Holy Land, the people would need new leadership, and a more mature relationship with G-d and each other.

We know that Joshua would be the one to assume the role as leader of the congregation, and lead them into the land. How do we know the people themselves have demonstrated their worthiness for deliverance?

The stain on the collective psyche of the Israelites, after their parents were led through the split sea, and spontaneously erupted in prophetic songs of praise, only to be dancing around a golden calf a few weeks later, must have been substantial. The ensuing period was void of joyous outpourings, and triumphant melody was replaced with the dissonance of complaints and lamentations.

Aaron the high priest was loved by all and his passing a terrific loss:

“….the entire house of Israel wept for Aaron for thirty days.” (Num. 20:29)

The death of Aaron was transformative for the nation, because next the Torah records them reaching out to G-d for help in a military confrontation:

The Canaanite king of Arad, who lived in the south, heard that Israel had come by the route of the spies, and he waged war against Israel and took from them a captive. Israel made a vow to G-d, and said, “If You deliver this people into my hand, I shall consecrate their cities.” G-d heard Israel’s voice and delivered the Canaanite. He destroyed them and consecrated their cities, and he called the place Chormah. (Num. 21:2-3)

The nation temporarily relapses and express their frustration by falling back on a familiar refrain: The people spoke against G-d and against Moses, “Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in this desert, for there is no bread and no water, and we are disgusted with this rotten food.” (Num. 21:5)

They are quickly punished with an attack by a bevy of poisonous snakes, but this time the people are remorseful, and take the first step in repentance:

The people came to Moses and said, “We have sinned, for we have spoken against G-d, and against you. Prayto G-d that He remove the snakes from us.” (Num.21:7)

Moshe is told by G-d to make a sculpture of a snake, and the people could be healed by using artwork to reflect on their current state.

This would be the last recorded complaint by the Israelites.

A few verses later the Torah tells us of a book called

“The Wars of G-d” and an entry that makes a connection between Sufa (The Sea of Reeds that split miraculously 40 years earlier) and the streams of Arnon, which border the land of Israel.

Rabbi S.R Hirsch notes that the mention of this book in the Torah proves that there was literary activity among the Israelites.

The people are given the gift of water, and there is a striking similarity to the miraculous splitting of the Sea of Reeds just after Egypt; The entire nation, after remaining tacit an entire generation, once again erupts into spontaneous song: Oz Yashir YISRAEL…

Then Israel sang this song: “‘Ascend, O well,’ sing to it!

A well dug by princes, carved out by nobles of the people, through the lawgiver with their staffs, and from the desert, a gift.

From the gift, to the streams, and from the streams to the heights.

From the heights to the valley in the field of Moab, at the top of the peak, that overlooks the wastelands.” (Num. 21:17-20)

But this enthusiastic performance did not require the conducting skills of Moshe, for the nation had developed their spiritual skills to create on their own.

After the next documented military victory (they were on a roll!) we hear the Torah mention the words of hamoshlim, the poets! The creative spirit is back, and in full swing. The Torah quotes the poets saying:

“Come to Cheshbon, may it be built and established as the city of Sichon…”(Num. 21:27).

The Talmud (Bava Batra 78B) teaches that the word hamoshlim, the poets, can also mean “the rulers”, those who have dominion over their urges.

Chesbon means an accounting. Those who are in control of their urges can make a chesbon, calculate the result of their actions ahead of time, and make informed decisions.

Art is the result of people engaging, taking the time to calculate, to reflect on their experiences, and have domain over sound, shape, color and thought.

Through the artistic outpouring of image, word and verse, the nation is revitalized and can joyously express their sense of life.

As to the role of emotions in art and the subconscious mechanism that serves as the integrating factor both in artistic creation and in man’s response to art, they involve a psychological phenomenon which we call a sense of life. A sense of life is a pre-conceptual equivalent of metaphysics, an emotional, subconsciously integrated appraisal of man and of existence. Ayn Rand: “The Psycho-Epistemology of Art,” The Romantic Manifesto

There will be challenges ahead, but a nation that can stop, reflect , make an accounting, a cheshbon, and grow, will not be held back from achieving their spiritual and material potential.

Here’s to all of us achieving all of ours, creatively.

Shabbat Shalom,

Rabbi Greg

Cold As Ice

Parashat Korach

You’re as cold as ice
You’re willing to sacrifice our love
You never take advice
Someday you’ll pay the price, I know

I’ve seen it before
It happens all the time
Closing the door
You leave the world behind

You’re digging for gold
Yet throwing away
A fortune in feelings
But someday you’ll pay….

Lou Gramm, Mick Jones (Foreigner)

This week’s parasha is named after one of the most oft-vilified characters in Tanach.

Korach, conventional wisdom tells us, wanted to usurp the authority of Moshe and Aaron, command the kahuna (priesthood), avenge the forty year sentence of wandering in the desert as a result of the episode with the scouts in Parashat Shelach, and organize a revolt by the Israelites. Knowing exactly what Korach wanted, or his precise motivation for challenging Moshe is difficult to ascertain, because he never really goes on record. We do not find a direct quote from Korach anywhere in the entire parasha, but perhaps he is included here:

“Korach the son of Yitzar, the son of Levi, took, along with Datan and Aviram, the sons of Eliav, and On, the son of Pelet, sons of Reuven. They confronted Moses together with two hundred and fifty men from the children of Israel, chieftains of the congregation, representatives of the assembly, men of repute. They assembled against Moses and Aaron, and said to them, “You take too much upon yourselves, for the entire congregation are all holy, and the Lord is in their midst. So why do raise yourselves above the Lord’s assembly?“  (Num. 16:1-3)

But, perhaps not..why would Korach say that?

Read the full post »

Got Sticks?

Parashat Shelach

The end of this week’s parasha is an enigmatic story about the mekoshesh, the wood gatherer, who is executed for gathering sticks on the Shabbat. On the surface this seems incredibly harsh, inflexible, and autocratic.
Got sticks? You’re a dead man….
Of course, there is much more here than first meets the eye, so let’s dig a bit deeper together.
First, a little background.
Last week’s reading, Parashat Beha’alotcha, recorded some misgivings by the Israelites, complaining and asking to go back to slavery. Like modern day prisoners freed after decades behind bars, wanting to go back to the confined familiarity rather than adjust to a life of free choice, the Israelites, in a moment of weakness, have some second thoughts.
This led to the incident of the m’raglim (scouts) in the beginning of this week’s sidra, Parasha Shelach.

The m’raglim bring back a report recommending that the people NOT try to enter the promised land, “ …. a land that devours its inhabitants..” (Num. 13:32). A breakdown in faith led to the inability to see the big picture, and the Israelites tumble from their exalted spiritual heights. The slave comes out of Egypt, but Egypt will not come out of the slave.  It is decreed that the current generation would wander for forty years, and only their children, who did not know servitude to a human master, would take possession of the promised land.
“Your children, they shall be wanderers in the desert for forty years, and they will bear [the burden of] your dissoluteness, until the last of your corpses are in the desert. According to the number of days which you scouted the land; forty days, a day for a year, a day for a year you will bear the burden of your iniquity forty years, and you will know My displeasure.” (Num. 14:33-34).
But what of the covenant? What was the obligation of those exiled in the desert?

Read the full post »


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