Shabbat
Shalom: Parshat Matot-Masei Numbers 30:2-36:13 Efrat, Israel - For me, the saddest Book of the Bible
is what is called the Book of Numbers according to the Greek, Latin and
English translations and the Book of the Desert according to most
renderings of the Hebrew Bamidbar. It begins with a sublime description of
the twelve tribes, united by the great liberator-leader Moses, stationed
and bannered surrounding the Sanctuary of the Divine Presence, poised to
enter the Promised Land of Israel, and it concludes in disgruntled
disillusionment, a catalogue of reversions, rebellions and recalcitrance,
with Moses discredited and disregarded by the people, forbidden to enter
his beloved Israel by G-d, and virtually the entire desert generation
doomed to die in the wilderness of their wanderings. These last two portions of Matot-Masei, seem to at
least provide a ray of hope for continuity, and they serve as the segue
into the Book of Joshua and the eventual conquest of the land of Israel.
This bridge actually begins at the end of the portion of Pinchas, with a
second, truncated census, (which suggests a new, if sobered, beginning),
then the daughters of Tzlofhad who valiantly struggle for inheritance
rights to land in Israel, Moses bittersweet glimpse of Israel from atop
Mount Neboh, the appointment of Joshua, the sacrifices for the Festivals,
the settling of scores with Midian, the two and one-half tribes who wish
to settle Trans-Jordan, a record of the desert way-stations, the procedure
for the parcelling out of the land, the areas set aside for Cities of
Refuge and a final tribute to the faith and persistence of the daughters
of Tzlofhad. All of these accounts provide closure to the desert
generation and pave the way for the generation of conquest and inheritance
- except for what appears to be a disjunctive legal intrusion right at the
beginning of Matot. Our Torah reading begins: When an individual makes a
promise before the Lord or makes an oath prohibiting something upon
himself, he dare not profane his word.. (Numbers 30:2-17). The Biblical
text goes on to delineate the various kinds of possible oaths an
individual can make, including vows to G-d, as well as oaths which may
impinge on ones relationship with ones spouse or with ones parents. In
fact, it is this segment of sixteen verses which serves as the basis for
no less than two Talmudic Tractates (Shavuot and Nedarim) and is the theme
of the melodically haunting Kol Nidre prayer which opens our Yom Kippur
liturgical service. Why attribute such overriding importance to the laws
of oaths and promises, and why place it here at the end of the Book of
Numbers? I believe that the Torah is here stressing the power
of the word- the word which can create reality and the word which can
destroy reality, the word which can establish a relationship and the word
which can besmirch a relationship. After all, we are the people of the
word, the Ten Words (Dibburim, Dibrot), which were more powerful than the
massive Egyptian pyramids and which continue to influence the standards of
world morality to this very day. Moses inability to properly utilize the
word- to speak to the rock rather than strike the rock (and the rock is
probably symbolic of the Israelite nation, hard-necked and stubborn as a
rock) is what causes him to be banned from entering the Promised Land. Indeed, from the very outset of his ministry, Moses
seeks to deflect the Divine Call and to cast G-ds call for leadership upon
another because he (Moses) is inadequate, he is a kvad peh heavy of
speech, a man of thought rather of words, a prophet who seeks spiritual
contact with the Divine rather than verbal relationships with people. He
has neither the patience nor the wherewithal to verbally persuade the
people to reject the report of the Scouts and to conquer the land of
Israel; he cannot even verbally defend himself against the hateful
recriminations of Korach, Datan and Aviram! All he can do is to fall on
his face in prostration before G-d. At the end of the day, the negative,
inciting words of the ten scouts influence the nation and doom the
generation to die in the desert. Korachs unchallenged (by the Israelites)
rebellion paved the way for Zimri's flagrant defiance of Moses and his
Torah morality. Just consider how Winston Churchill's and Franklin
Roosevelt's Fireside Chats rhetoric uplifted a nation to transcend itself,
and how Hitler's incitements and Islamic Fundamentalist preachments have
destroyed untold innocent lives. From this perspective, the laws of oaths and
promises, the legal ramifications of the power of the word, encapsulate
the promise of the people of the word as well as the tragedy of the Book
of Numbers. It is hardly accidental that the Hebrew and Aramaic word for
leader is Dabbar, for a great leader guides and directs by means of
speech. I would even submit that the root word of Bamidbar is dbr, the
leader-shepherd, who grazes his sheep in the oases found in the desert (he
must walk his flock around arid land or else the sheep world destroy all
the vegetation), and guides his flock largely by words and sounds which
come forth from his mouth. In the words of the Yiddish folk-saying, A slap goes away, a word lasts forever.
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