Internal Combustion
Parshas Korach
Posted on July 3, 2019 (5779) By Rabbi Mordechai Kamenetzky
| Series: Drasha | Level: Beginner
“Any quarrel,” says the Mishnah in
Pirkei Avos (5:20) “that is made for the sake of heaven shall, in conclusion, last.
However, if the argument has selfish motivation it shall not last.” The Mishnah
offers Hillel and Shamai as an example of heavenly opponents. Their arguments
will last forever.
On the other hand, Korach and his
congregation are the examples given for those whose debate stemmed from
egotistical motivations. “Those types of disputes,” says the Mishnah, “are
doomed to fail.”
The Mishnah, is of course referring to the episode in this
week’s portion. Korach, a first cousin of Moshe, contested the priesthood. He
gathered 250 followers, formed a congregation, and openly rebelled against
Moshe and Ahron, claiming that Moshe and his brother underhandedly seized both
temporal and spiritual leadership. Moshe, in his great humility, offered a
solution in which divine intercedence would point to the true leader. Korach
and his followers were swallowed alive by a miraculous variation of an
earthquake.
Yet two questions occur on the Mishnah. By using the
expression that, “an argument for the sake of heaven will last,” it seems to
show that an ongoing argument is a proof of its sanctity. Shouldn’t it be the
opposite?
The other anomaly is that in referring to the kosher
argument, the Mishnah refers to the combatants, Hillel and Shamai. Each was on
one side of the debate. Yet, in reference to the argument that is labeled as
egotistical, it defines the combatants as Korach and his congregation.
Weren’t the combatants Korach and Moshe? Why is the latter
part of the Mishnah inconsistent with the former?
On the week following Passover 1985,
I began my first pulpit in an old small shul in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The
scent of herring juice permeated the building, and the benches did not creak as
they swayed, they krechtsed. As old as the furnishings were, the membership was
older. But the Congregation’s spirit of tradition of was feistier than its
physical appearance.
My first week, I was asked to bless
the new month of Iyar, Mevarchim HaChodesh. Then the trouble began. Every
Shabbos, a somber prayer, Av HaRachamim, which memorializes Jewish martyrs
during the era of the crusades is recited. On holidays or other festive
occasions such as Shabbos Mevarchim, in deference to the spirit of celebration,
the prayer is omitted. However, the month of Iyar is considered a sad time for
Jews. 24,000 students of Rabbi Akiva perished in that period. Many
congregations recite Av HaRachamim on Shabbos Mevarchim for the month of Iyar.
I assumed my new congregation did the same and began reciting, ” Av
HaRachamim.” Immediately I heard a shout, and an uproar began.
“We don’t say Av HaRachamim today. We just blessed the new
month,” announced the President.
“We say it this month! It’s sefirah, a period of mourning,”
yelled back the Vice-President.
” You know nothin’. We never ever say it when we bench
(bless) Rosh Chodesh,” yelled the Treasurer.
“We always did!” asserted the Gabbai.
The argument was brewing for five
minutes when they all began to smile and instructed me to say the prayer as I
had planned. Before I continued the service I sauntered over to the old
Shammash who was sitting quietly through the tumult and asked, “what is the
minhag (custom) of this shul?”
He surveyed the scene and beamed.
“This shul is 100 years old. This is our minhag.”
The Mishnah gives us a litmus
test. How does one know when there is validity to an argument? Only when it is
an argument that envelops eternity. The arguments of Shamai and Hillel last
until today, in the halls and classrooms of Yeshivos and synagogues across the
world. Each one’s view was not given for his own personal gain, it was argued
for the sake of heaven. However, Korach’s battle with Moshe was one of personal
gain. Moshe had no issue with them. It was a battle of Korach and his cohorts.
Each with a completely different motivation — himself. It did not last. A battle with divine
intent remains eternal. In a healthy environment there is room for healthy
differences. And those differences will wax eternal.
Dedicated in honor of the anniversary of Joel & Robbie
Martz by Mr. and Mrs. Perry Davis
Mordechai Kamenetzky – Yeshiva of South Shore
Good Shabbos
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