A Taste of Torah in honor of Shabbat
from Rabbi Avi Weiss
Parshat Devarim 5760
August 4-5, 2000/4 Av 5760
THE NATURE AND
STRUCTURE OF THE BOOK OF DEVARIM
At first glance, the portion of Devarim
is a random recapitulation of events the Jews experienced in the desert.
It seems unstructured and repetitive. Yet, a closer look reveals that
there is a logical form at work.
The first major section deals with the experiences and episodes of the Jews
during the first two years in the desert. Up until God's decree that
we were to wander there for 40 years.
The section describes God telling us immediately after our departure for
Egypt that we will enter the land of Israel. (Deuteronomy 1:6-8) In
preparation for that entry, Moshe (Moses) lays out a system of jurisprudence
necessary for the proper functioning of the nation. (Deuteronomy 1:9-18) With
Am Yisrael now ready to enter the land, (Deuteronomy 1:19-20) the people ask
Moshe to send spies to Canaan to investigate how it can best be conquered.
A description of the spy story follows with the recounting of God's decree
that the Jews would wander in the desert for 40 years. (Deuteronomy 1:21-48)
The second section in Devarim (Chapters 2,3) are brief reviews of what
happened to Am Yisrael in the last two years of its wanderings. Here
is described our contacts with the nations of Edom, Moab, Amon, Sichon and
Bashan as we took a circuitous route into the land. What follows is
Moshe's unsuccessful appeal to God that he be permitted to enter the land
found in the beginning of next week's portion, Va-etchanan.
Rabbi David Tzvi Hoffman points out that these two sections open and close
with similar phraseology setting them off as distinct units. The first
section begins with the phrase "rav lakhem, it is enough [that you've
bee at Sinai]" and "pnu lekhem, turn [to the land of
Israel]." (Deuteronomy 1:6-7) The second section begins with
similar terminology: "rav lakhem, it is enough [that you've wandered
here in the desert]," "pnu lekhem, turn [to enter the land of
Israel]." (Deuteronomy 2:3)
Each section, writes Rabbi Hoffman, similarly conclude with similar words-vateyshvu
and vaneyshev. (Deuteronomy 1:46, Deuteronomy 43:9)
Both of these sections are preceded by the first five sentences in
Deuteronomy which summarize the forty years described in brief in the first
two sections we have already discussed. The first two sentences of
Deuteronomy are headlines for the earlier events as found in the first
section, and the next three sentences for the final happenings as laid out
in the second section.
A mere surface reading suggests that
Deuteronomy is a book which haphazardly repeats our travels through the
desert. Yet, when one looks deeper and more carefully, one realizes
that Devarim is a book of exact and precise structure-much like the entire
Torah.
Shabbat Shalom!
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Rabbi Avi Weiss, Hebrew Institute of Riverdale
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