Anger: Avoid it at all Costs!
Parshas
Chukas
Posted on June 26, 2014 (5774) By Rabbi
Berel Wein | Series: Rabbi Wein
| Level: Beginner
Moshe is finally done
in by the requests of the Jewish people in the desert – this time again for
their water supply. In his exasperation about their constant litany of
complaints and grumblings, he transgresses over G-d’s commandment to speak to
the rock and instead he strikes the rock with his staff. His punishment for
this act is swift and dramatic. He will not step into the Land of Israel but
only be able to glimpse it from afar.
There are many
questions and difficulties raised regarding the narrative of this incident in
the Torah. Firstly, complaints about the lack of water are certainly legitimate
complaints. Human beings cannot survive without water and now that the
miraculous well of Miriam disappeared with her passing, the pressing need for a
replacement water supply was obvious.
So, why does Moshe
become so angry with them and describe them as a rebellious mob? And another
perhaps greater and more difficult question is why this sin is the one that
seals Moshe’s fate? Does the punishment really seem to be commensurate with the
crime? All of the commentators to Torah over the ages have dealt with these two
questions and have advanced a wide variety of insights and explanations
regarding the issues raised. It is apparent that the Torah somehow wished these
issues to be further explored and studied and therefore it left its own
description of the matter somewhat vague and mysterious – hiding in the
narrative more than it was willing to reveal.
Maimonides and other
scholars throughout the ages see the events of this week’s parsha as the concluding
part of a continuing and cumulative pattern of behavior, both on the part of
the people of Israel in the desert and of Moshe as well. Moshe realizes, as do
the people, that they require water to sustain them. But this request and the
manner that it is presented to Moshe is part of their long- running, nagging
behavior pattern in the desert.
For the Jewish people,
there is still a vestige of resentment against G-d for redeeming them from
Egypt. There they had water in abundance, and it was natural not miraculous
water. Miraculous water binds them to a commitment to G-d and His Torah – a
commitment that a portion of the people is always attempting to wriggle out
from.
With their seemingly
reasonable request for water, Moshe senses all of this background music. They
really want to opt out of the entire mission of Sinai, which results in Moshe’s
extreme display of displeasure. And Moshe’s anger again undoes him. There is an
entire literature of rabbinic study about the moments and causes of Moshe’s anger
that appear throughout the Torah.
For Moshe, the greatest of all human beings, it is agreed that
this is his one failing. And, therefore, Moshe unwittingly becomes the model
and example of the dangers involved in falling into the pit of emotional anger.
The incidents of his anger – past and present – were now cumulatively judged by
Heaven and the punishment is not for this one incident alone. Anger is a
character trait to be avoided at almost all cost.
Shabat shalom
Rabbi Berel Wein
The Power Of Prayer
Parshas
Chukas
Posted on June 26, 2014 (5774) By Rabbi
Yochanan Zweig | Series: Rabbi Zweig on
the Parsha | Level: Beginner
“And Moshe sent emissaries from Kadesh to the
king of Edom…”(20:14)
Moshe sends a
delegation to the king of Edom requesting permission to pass through his
country. He instructs his emissaries to relate the Jews’ experience in Egypt to
the king. The Torah records that one of the statements which was made to the
king was “vanitz’ak el Hashem vayishma koleinu” – “and we cried out to Hashem
and He heard our voice”.1 From the fact that the verse states that Hashem heard our voice,
rather than our cries, Rashi interprets that Moshe is sending a warning to Edom
that we have the legacy of our Patriarchal blessing received from Yitzchak,
“hakol kol Yaakov”, the power of the voice of Torah; Bnei Yisroel are
infused with the blessing that when we pray, we are answered.2
The king of Edom
responds by saying that he will come out with sword in hand if Bnei Yisroel
attempt to traverse his land. Rashi again comments that through his words the
king of Edom is invoking the Patriarchal legacy which was conferred upon Eisav,
the father of Edom, “by the sword you shall live”.3
Moshe must have been
aware that just as Bnei Yisroel have the power of prayer to facilitate their
success, the Edomites have the power of war. Why does Moshe assume that Bnei
Yisroel’s Patriarchal legacy is superior?
The key to solving this
dilemma lies in Rashi’s comment on the preceding verse. The emissaries relate
“and with us the Egyptians dealt evilly and with our fathers.”4 The construct of the verse appears
convoluted. Why does the verse not simply state that “the Egyptians dealt
evilly with us and our fathers”? Rashi explains that the verse is stressing the
notion that the affliction suffered by our fathers is a byproduct of our
affliction. The “fathers” referred to in the verse are not our biological
fathers who endured the servitude in Egypt with us, rather our Patriarchal
Fathers who, although they were not present with us in Egypt, suffered our
pain.5
Why is it necessary for
Moshe to allude to this concept in his message to the king of Edom? The power
of prayer which Bnei Yisroel have rests not only in our capacity to extricate
ourselves from our own predicament, but also in our ability to relieve our
Patriarchs of the distress caused to them by our situation. It is this ability
which motivates Hashem to answer our prayers, not only in our merit, but in the
merit of our Forefathers as well. The ability with which Edom is imbued
benefits only them, and not their forefathers. Their forefathers do not feel
the distress of the later generations, for they do not enjoy a closeness to
them as do the Forefathers of Bnei Yisroel to the Jewish nation.
1.20:16 2.Rashi ibid.
3.Ibid. 4.20:15 5.Ibid.
No comments:
Post a Comment