This week’s parsha opens
with the tragic episode of the meraglim sent to scout Eretz Yisroel. The
posuk relates that the perpetrators were all great men. The mission
ended in disaster, with ten of the twelve spies returning from the mission
telling the people that they were facing insurmountable difficulties and that
it would be impossible for them to enter and capture Eretz Yisroel. Feeling
that they were doomed, the people were disconsolate and voiced their anger at
Moshe, Aharon and Hashem (Bamidbar 14:1-3) for directing them into a
quagmire that would lead to their death. “If only we had stayed in Mitzrayim,”
they proclaimed, “we would have been better off” (ibid. 4).
For all time, these individuals
are remembered with derision. People wonder how ten great men, chosen by Moshe
Rabbeinu to conduct a review of the land Hashem had promised to the avos,
could have gone so wrong. What lies at the root of their sin and how were they
able to convince the nation that their trek to the Promised Land was doomed?
How was it that the people who
experienced Yetzias Mitzrayim and Krias Yam Suf lost their faith?
The same people who recently experienced the tragedy of the Eigel and
begged forgiveness, and who complained about the monn and were plagued
by the slov in last week’s parsha, still doubted the ability of
Hashem to fulfill His promises. How are we to understand that?
The first Rashi in the parsha
holds a key to comprehending this. Quoting from the Medrash Tanchuma, Rashi
explains that the parsha of the meraglim follows the parsha
of Miriam because Miriam was punished for the gossip she spoke about her
brother, Moshe, and although the meraglim witnessed this, they failed to
learn anything from it.
The common explanation of this is
that witnessing the painful consequences of Miriam’s lashon hora should
have deterred the meraglim from speaking lashon hora on the Land of
Israel. I’d like to offer a different explanation of why Parshas Shelach follows
Parshas Behaaloscha.
Miriam criticized her brother,
Moshe, and said to Aharon, “Halo gam bonu diber Hashem. Why does Moshe
think he is superior to us? Hashem spoke to us as well, not only to him.” She
erred in thinking that she had reached the pinnacle of human achievement, as
Hashem had spoken directly to her. She didn’t understand that there is always a
higher level to aim for. Man must never be satisfied with his achievements.
Rather, he should continuously seek to grow more and reach a greater position
of holiness and purity.
This theme runs through last
week’s parsha. The people who were tomei and unable to
participate in the Korban Pesach complained to Moshe about their
exclusion from the mitzvah. Their distress is understandable, but what
compensation could Moshe offer them? The Torah clearly states that an impure
person cannot participate in the bringing of korbanos.
We see from here that a person
should never allow his limited understanding to interfere with his desire to
grow and improve and seek to perform mitzvos. Although there was no
apparent way for them to be able to bring a Korban Pesach, they appealed
to Moshe anyway. They said, “While it may be obvious that we have to be
excluded due to our impurity, we are making our hishtadlus to do the mitzvah
and have faith that Hashem will discern our sincerity and find a way to make it
happen.” And indeed, their wish was granted.
We see that people should never
complacently accept their situation and be satisfied with the minimum. We must
always aim for more and be ambitious in our pursuit of fulfilling Hashem’s
command. Even if by rules of logic there is no way for us to perform the
obligation, we must seek to do the maximum.
The meraglim were sent to
scout out the land that had been promised to the Jewish people centuries
earlier. Since the days of the avos, Hashem had been telling them that
this blessed land would be inhabited by the Jewish people. While they were
enslaved in Mitzrayim, they dreamed of the fulfillment of Hashem’s promise that
He would remove the Jews from the land of their oppressors and bring them to
the Holy Land.
When they were redeemed from
slavery and miraculously left Mitzrayim, they were told all along that they
were on their way to Eretz Yisroel, the land that had been promised to the avos.
Many of the laws that are included in the Torah, which was given to them on
their way to Eretz Yisroel, are only relevant in that Promised Land.
Here they were, on the cusp of
entering the coveted land, and the meraglim decided that it was a no-go.
It wouldn’t work. The Jewish people would not be able to enter.
If the meraglim would have
been conscious about their prime obligation in life to serve Hakadosh Boruch
Hu and to grow in kedusha, they would not have seen the land in a
way that led them to conclude that the Jewish people would not be able to enter
there.
Had they been thinking as they
walked through the country, from south to north and west to east, about how
blessed they were to be able to follow in the footsteps of Avrohom, Yitzchok
and Yaakov, how could they not have been overjoyed just to be there? How could
they have found fault with the land that Hashem promised flows with milk and
honey? If their motivation in life was to grow in mitzvos, how could
they have found fault with the land in which many of the mitzvos of the
Torah can only be performed there?
Apparently, the nesi’im, as
leaders of their tribes, felt that they had reached the apex of their ambition
and there was no higher designation they could attain. Had they been constantly
seeking to improve, they would have jumped at the opportunity to do the mitzvos
of terumah and maaser, for it would lead them to higher levels of
avodah and kedusha. They didn’t learn the lesson from Miriam’s
error and didn’t seek to attain higher levels than they already reached.
They didn’t learn from the impure
people who sought to be included in the Korban Pesach and seek added chiyuvim,
even though according to their understanding there was no way that it would
work. Had the nesi’im learned from them, they would have sought to go
beyond their understanding of the situation. They would have changed their
perspective and sought guidance from a higher authority to better comprehend
the situation. With their faulty vision and appraisal abilities, it appeared
that the Jewish people would not be able to beat back their enemies, but they
had an obligation to do their hishtadlus and have faith that Hashem
would keep His word and not leave His people to die in the desert or succumb to
battle on the border of the land He promised them.
The nesi’im also made the
error of presuming how they were viewed by the inhabitants of the land they
were scouting. They reported back to the Bnei Yisroel (ibid. 13:33),
“In their eyes, we were like grasshoppers.” As bnei Avrohom, Yitzchok
and Yaakov, recipients of the Torah and Hashem’s chosen people, we don’t pay
attention to how we are perceived by the nations of the world if it will cause
us to falter in obeying the word of Hashem. If Hashem has told us that He will
lead us to this land, why are we attempting to judge the strength of the people
there? It is of no consequence to us.
We proudly perform the mitzvos
that Hashem has commanded us and follow in the path He has laid for us,
conducting ourselves as befitting a priestly people.
They were standing at a crossroad.
On one side, they had the promises of Hashem, made repeatedly over many years,
that the Jews would inherit the Land of Israel and prosper there. On the other
side, they feared that the nations presently in the country would not let them
in. This, coupled with their uncertainty as to what their positions would be in
the new country, led them to fear the change and seek to malign it.
When we fear change, when we see
things that cause us to panic over what the future has in store for us, we must
not lose our Torah perspective and faith in the goodness of Hashem.
We are currently living in a
fearful time. We worry about being affected by the coronavirus. We worry about
the future of this great country in which we live. We must never lose our
faith, as prescribed in the sefer Chovos Halevavos. We must never feel
that we understand better than our forefathers and better than those who came
before us who faced similar situations, only to be saved by Hashem.
When things that we don’t
understand occur, we have to know that there is a higher purpose for all that
transpires in this world and that nothing happens by itself. Hakadosh Boruch
Hu tests us from time to time, and those who remain loyal and faithful are
rewarded, while those who lose faith face the consequence of ruination and
being cut off from a sublime future. When faced with a perceived difficulty,
sometimes what we need to do is examine our prejudices and influences that lead
us to think that we are in a hopeless situation. If we remember that nothing in
this world occurs by happenstance and everything that happens is for a reason,
it forces us to change our negative perspective, helping us out of the
predicament.
Torah study, coupled with emunah
and bitachon, helps us maintain a positive disposition and a positive
outlook on all that befalls us, preventing us from sinking into depression and
thinking that we are in a hopeless situation. Positivity not only reduces
stress and dispels sadness. It also helps a person escape negative situations.
When you maintain your faith, you retain your equilibrium and don’t become so
overwhelmed by fear, grief and panic that you are unable to think straight and
extricate yourself from a difficult situation.
Yehoshua and Caleiv pointed the
way for Am Yisroel. They didn’t pay attention to the nations. They
didn’t let their emotions guide them. They didn’t forget Hashem’s promises.
Wherever they went, they saw potential for kedusha, for gadlus,
and for more mitzvos. They perceived that every step they took as they
were fulfilling their shlichus in the eretz ha’avos was a mitzvah.
Thus, they retained their greatness and merited to enter the Holy Land along
with the next generation of the Bnei Yisroel, who had not become
despondent and dejected after hearing the frightful report of the meraglim.
A story is told about a water
carrier. A famous tzaddik came to town and met an old man weighed down
by pails full of water on each shoulder, with a very sad look on his face. The rov
went over to the man and asked about his welfare. The water carrier told the rov
his tale of woe, explaining that he had no money and had to work so hard
despite his advanced age. The tzaddik blessed the man and went about his
business.
The townspeople waited to see if
the water carrier’s situation would change. Alas, it did not. Every day, he
would trudge about, carrying water to people and getting paid pennies for his
intense labor.
Several months later, the tzaddik
was back in town, and again he met the water carrier. He went over to him and
asked him how he was doing. The man’s face lit up. “Boruch Hashem, I am
able to support myself, even at my age. How blessed I am to have a source of
income and the strength to carry the water pails.”
Word quickly spread through the
town and the tzaddik’s reputation remained intact after all. His brocha
actually worked. He had blessed the man that he should have a positive outlook
and find happiness in all he does.
Rav Nechemia of Bichov was the son
of the rebbe Rav Bunim of Peschischa. He would recite the Mishnah (Brachos,
Chapter 6) which states, “V’al kulom im omar shehakol nihiyeh bidvaro yotza,”
if a person makes the brocha of shehakol on any food product, he
has fulfilled the obligation to recite a brocha before consuming the
food.
With a play on the Hebrew words,
the rebbe would tell people who were sad, “If a person says shehakol
nihiyeh bidvaro on whatever happens to him, believing that all is from
Hashem, then yotza, he will be able to leave his sadness behind and be
redeemed in the merit of his bitachon in Hashem and His goodness.
Positivity breeds confidence in
the present and the future. People who go through catastrophic experiences and
maintain their faith and positive outlook are able to rebuild and regenerate
what they lost. People who lose their faith become negative and are unable to
resuscitate themselves. They become embittered and unproductive, unable to
overcome the catastrophe that befell them. Our nation has known great tragedy
throughout the ages, enough to destroy any other people, but we have
persevered.
When all was dark and the future
seemed bleak, we kept our faith and belief in a better day to come. When
evicted from our homes, we moved on, and established ourselves in a different
and strange land. We rebuilt from destruction. We never despaired. We never
became overly despondent. It’s in our DNA. We are people of faith. We have
ideals and we have spirit. We have a fabled past and a glorious future.
We are living in
difficult times and are at a difficult crossroad, but that is not a reason to
panic and lose hope. We must remember that in golus, we are like the
Jews in the desert, on the way to the Promised Land. Hakadosh Boruch Hu
has brought us here, and He will redeem us from here in the proper time with
the coming of Moshiach, may it be speedily in our day.
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