Shabbat Forshpeis
A Taste of Torah in Honor of Shabbat
SEIZING THE OPPORTUNITY FOR REFLECTION AND ACCOUNTABILITY
PARSHAT MATOT-MASEI
JULY 25-26, 2003 / 26 TAMUZ 5763
Why does the Torah spend an entire chapter outlining
all of the Israelites encampments in the desert? (Numbers Ch. 33) The classical answer is that this listing shows Gods love for the Jewish people and our love for God.
Rashi, quoting the Midrash insists that it is the former (God showing His love for the Jewish People). It can be compared to a king whose son was ill and whom he took to a distant place to cure. As they returned, the king would recount to the lad all the experiences they went through... here we slept, here we had a cool resting place, here you had a headache. Hence, these places are enumerated to teach just as a parent cares endlessly for his/her child, so did God lovingly carry His children through the most difficult moments in our migration through the desert.
Sforno sees the mentioning of these places as revealing the Jewish Nations love of God. In his words: He (Moses as per Gods instructions) wrote down...the details of their journeys because it involved leaving for a new destination without any previous notice, which was very trying. Jeremiah recalls, as we read in the usual Haftorah for this week, Gods expression of love for Israel who, despite all odds, followed Him into the wilderness. (Jeremiah 2:2)
When considering that, at this point in time, the Jewish Nation was just days before coming into the Land of Israel, another approach comes to mind. When taking any major step in life and certainly entering into Israel constituted such a step it is a good idea to carefully re-evaluate ones past. The listing of each halting place was an attempt to remind the nation of these historical events. It allowed for a moment of serious individual and national reflection and accountability.
No doubt some of these places evoked memories of the Jewish Peoples rebellion and even betrayal of God. Rather than avoid recalling those more difficult moments, it is preferable they be remembered with the goal of learning from those mistakes and turning them into positive learning experiences.
And, bearing in mind that Am Yisrael was assuredly overwhelmed with enthusiasm, believing that the liberation of the Land of Israel would come in an instant, it was important that we be reminded that accomplishments come in small steps, much like the Jews gradual travel through the desert.
Hence the Torah elaborates for an entire chapter on our journey. It teaches invaluable lessons for life: The importance of self-reckoning, the importance of changing misfortune into fortune, and the importance of realizing that any improvement which is lasting comes slowly rather than precipitously.
Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Avi Weiss
|
|
|