The Lure
of Life
Parshas Shlach
Posted on June 21, 2022 (5782) By Rabbi
Mordechai Kamenetzky | Series: Drasha| Level: Beginner
Rarely do we find that
Hashem’s commands assume personal connotations. The commands are meted for the
sake of Judaism and the glory of Heaven. Yet, disturbingly, we find the mission
of the spies defined with very personal invectives.
The Torah begins with Hashem commanding Moshe, “Send
for yourself spies to scour the land of Israel.” Why is the command tainted
with such a personal epithet? Is Moshe sending
the spies for himself? In fact, Moshe reviews
the entire episode in Deuteronomy, stating how the idea of spies found favor in
his eyes. The commentaries are quick to point out that the idea found favor in
Moshe’s mortal’s eyes, but Hashem disapproved.
Therefore, He told Moshe send the spies for
yourself. “As far as I am concerned,” Hashem infers,
“it is a mistake, but if that is what you desire, then proceed.” Thus, the
words, “send for yourself spies.”
Of course, the dire
consequences of the mission are well known. The spies returned and maligned the
Land of Israel. They were punished along with the entire nation that joined
them in their misconceived sorrow, and the next 40 years were spent wandering
in the desert.
But we are human, and our
intentions are tinged with mortal bias. Isn’t every mortal action filled with
human bias and mortal partiality.
Adam Parker Glick,
President of the Jack Parker Corporation, told me a wonderful story:
A wealthy man decided to
take up the sport of fishing. He rented a cottage near a Vermont lake and
barreled into the local sport and wildlife shop and demanded to see the
manager.
“I want to buy the best of
everything: the most expensive rod and tackle, the best hooks, anglers, and even
the most exquisite bait!”
The store owner, who had
seen his share of city-folk, was not impressed. He instructed a young salesman
to follow the man around the store and serve as a human shopping cart. The man
chose the most exquisite rods and reels; he selected a mahogany tackle box and
a refrigerated bait cooler. Money was no object, and the fisherman-to-be
selected the finest of all. The enthusiastic young salesman was extremely eager
to please and offered him every imaginable fishing item and accessory. The
owner, a crusty and seasoned Vermonter just smirked at the naivete of the
new-found angler.
As the tycoon approached
the checkout counter, he noticed brightly colored, hand-painted fishing lures
whose prices were as outlandish as the colors. “Wow!” he exclaimed, as he
gathered a bunch into his hand. “These look really wonderful!” Then he turned
to the manager and in a voice sounding as well informed as possible, he asked
the owner, “do fish really go for these?”
“Don’t know,” shrugged the
old-timer. “I don’t sell to fish.”
Moshe reluctantly agreed to the whims and premonitions
of a nervous and anxious nation. He agreed to their pleading to allow spies to
check the land that they would ultimately inherit. But by no means was it a
Divine mission. Hashem told Moshe send
spies for yourself. He taught Moshe that
missions that are fueled by self-fulfillment are doomed.
Often, we stand at the
check-out counter of life and choose the impulse items with the view that they
are necessary for our success. We marvel at the brightly-colored lures and find it hard to imagine
life without them. We rationalize that they are needed for the sake of family,
livelihood, and even spirituality. We think we are purchasing them for lofty
reasons and negate the fact that perhaps selfishness and insecurity are the
driving forces behind the proverbial sale. We buy them thinking that they are
the items that will catch the fish, but ultimately, we are the only ones
caught!
Moshe was about to send spies on a seemingly sacred mission.
The mission may have been falsely justified in hundreds of different ways: the
operation would save lives, it would prepare a young nation for a smooth
transition and pave a new level of spirituality for the fledgling folk. But
those were not the true objectives. There was selfishness involved. And the
mission was doomed. For the road to the lowest of places is paved with
disingenuous holy-intent.
Therefore Hashem told Moshe that
there is only one motivation behind the mission. They are not sending spies for Hashem. The nation is sending spies for its own
ego and insurance. “Send them for yourself.” G-d does not
need scouts, guides, or pathfinders. He does not sell to fish. He just may
yield to those who are selfish. And ultimately they get the hook.
Good Shabbos
(c)1998 Rabbi Mordechai
Kamenetzky
Hard
Choices
Parshas Shlach
Posted on June 22, 2022 (5782) By Rabbi Naftali
Reich | Series: Legacy | Level: Beginner
The vast Jewish encampment
stands at the edge of the desert on the threshold of Canaan. It is a time of
incredible excitement. After centuries of bondage in Egypt, the Jewish people
are finally returning as a nation to their ancestral homeland. They know that Hashem has promised them the land, but they also
know they will have to fight a war of conquest. They choose twelve outstanding
men, one from each tribe, and send them off to reconnoiter the land before they
invade. The results of this ill-fated expedition are disastrous, to say the
least.
The spies deliberately
slant their reconnaissance reports to sow fear and despair among the people.
The generation of the Exodus loses its chance to enter the Holy Land and is
doomed to remain in the desert for forty years. Moreover, as our Sages tells
us, because of the betrayal and subversion of the Meraglim, the night of their
return, the ninth of Av, becomes an occasion of national mourning for
all time.
How could such a thing
happen? Was it a mistake to send the spies?
The Torah tells us that
the Jewish people asked Moses to send the spies, and as always, Moses presented
the question to Hashem.
“Shelach lecha,” Hashem replied. “Send for yourself.”
What did Hashem mean by “send for yourself”? Rashi explains that, in effect, Hashem was saying, “You decide. Send them if you
so choose, but I am not instructing you to send them. I leave it completely to
your discretion.”
Many questions immediately
come to mind: Why did Hashem refrain from giving
Moses specific instructions regarding how to proceed? Why didn’t Hashem spare the Jewish people all this grief by
simply instructing Moses not to send the spies?
Furthermore, since Hashem specifically declined to endorse the
reconnaissance plan, why did Moses choose to go ahead with it anyway? Why
didn’t he let the whole thing go, just to be on the safe side?
The answers to these
perplexing questions derive from one of the fundamental aspects of Judaism. We
all know how difficult it is to cope with the temptations and challenges of
life, and it would certainly be easy to deal with it by withdrawing into a
monastic life of sheltered meditation. But that is not what we are meant to do.
The Torah teaches us to live spiritually at the very center of civilization. It
teaches us not to run away but to face the issues squarely and make the hard
choices.
As long as the Jewish
people were in the desert, they lived in a spiritual cocoon, shielded from the
choices of everyday existence. Their food, water and clothing were miraculously
provided, nor did they engage in commerce or agriculture. But all this was part
of the process of preparation for their entry into the real world where they
would face the hard choices. In the desert, the bread falling from heaven
conditioned to the concepts of faith and trust in Hashem, but
the ultimate goal was to carry this faith forward to a time when bread would
grow from the ground. This was their national destiny.
As they stood on the
threshold of Canaan, this time had come. Soon they would inherit the land and
begin the daunting task of building a functioning society built on faith in
Heaven and Torah values and ideals. It was time to begin making the hard
choices.
When Hashem told him to decide on his own if he
should send spies to Canaan, Moses realized that Hashem, far
from expressing divine disapproval, was actually presenting the Jewish people
with their first opportunity to make their own choice. From the point of their
very entry, Hashem was telling them, would already be
allowed to choose. Moses chose to send the spies. But now the choice shifted
to the spies themselves, and tragically, almost all of them chose poorly.
In our own lives, we are
bombarded with myriad choices. The media and technology bring the temptations
and blandishments of contemporary culture into the innermost privacy of our
homes, making every day a never-ending struggle to maintain our sanity and
morals. How can we preserve
our ideals and values for ourselves and our children in such an environment? It
can only be done if we see beyond the glitter and hype that surrounds us, if we
reach into our reservoirs of faith and recognize the hand of Hashem guiding us – as it always has and as it
always will.
Text Copyright © 2007 by
Rabbi Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
Rabbi Reich is on the
faculty of the Ohr
Somayach Tanebaum Education Center.
Learning
from the Spies
Parshas Shlach
Posted on June 7, 2002 (5761) By Rabbi Yaakov
Menken | Series: Lifeline | Level: Beginner
“Send men for yourself, and
they will spy out the Land of Canaan, which I give to the Children of Israel,
one man for each of the tribes of their fathers shall you send, every leader in
them.” [13:2]
Our Torah reading relates
the tragic story of the Spies, sent to travel through the Land of Canaan in
advance of its conquest by the People of Israel.
G-d told Moses, “send men for yourself” — you, Moses,
should personally select the Spies. Should we imagine, given the disastrous
results, that Moses chose poorly, picking unreliable people for this important
task? We know that this is not so.
The Torah itself says that
those chosen “were leaders among the Children of Israel.” Even in the company
of the Holy Generation that stood at Mount Sinai, these twelve were exceptional.
They stood before Moses,
handpicked representatives of the Jewish People to go scout out their new
homeland. Forty days later, only two returned to discuss how wonderful this
land was and would be. The other ten Spies told the nation that the residents
were unconquerable giants — and besides, the land was killing its inhabitants.
The nation believed this evil report, and sat down to mourn its fate. As a
result, G-d decreed that this generation, which mourned
unnecessarily, would not be privileged to enter the land. They would, instead,
die in the desert.
These ten great men were
recorded in the Torah not for their good deeds, but for becoming an “evil
congregation” and inflicting forty years of desert wanderings upon the entire
nation. Obviously they fell before a destructive force of massive potential,
yet one so devious in its influence that they failed to see it.
In reality, what struck
them down was a toxic mixture of an evil eye and an evil tongue. One looks out
for the bad side of every story, and the other carries that tale to others.
The Spies entered Canaan,
and met with a wonderfully fertile land. A single cluster of grapes was so
large that two of them had to carry it back, hanging from a pole (as depicted
in the logo of today’s Israeli Tourism Ministry). And as they toured the
country, G-d arranged another miracle on their behalf,
timing deaths in various communities to coincide with the Spies’ arrival. The
populace was so distracted by funerals that they did not think to confront
their visitors.
How did the Spies respond?
They found the worst possible interpretation of events. With fruits so large,
the people were large as well — and the Spies discussed this as if G-d expected the nation to go in and conquer it
on their own, without His help. They confidently proclaimed that such conquest
was impossible. And furthermore, they viewed the funerals not as a sign of
Heavenly protection, but as an indication that the land was turning upon those
who lived on it, telling the nation that if they moved in, they would be its
next victims.
The Medrash asks
why the story of the Spies occurs immediately after that of Miriam, for whom
the nation waited while she was cured of the spiritual blemish of Tzora’as. The
answer is that she was afflicted by this blemish because of the same problem.
Miriam was punished because she spoke badly of Moses’ wife, and the Jewish
People saw that the evil of gossip can hit even the most upstanding members of
the community. Concludes the Medrash, “these
wicked men did not take the opportunity to learn ethics.” They should have
learned from what happened to Miriam, but did not.
If the Torah has one goal
for us, it is for us to learn ethics. It is for us to see the devastating power
of evil, and learn to pursue good. We cannot afford to be like the Spies, who
failed to take the opportunity that lay before them.
Who can claim not to
behave like the Spies? Who among us looks only for the good in other people,
refrains from repeating the latest gossip, and attempts to change the subject
when gossip comes their way?
There is no easy antidote
for this poison. Fortunately, we in the Jewish religious tradition have an
extensive body of literature upon which to draw, to learn to control our
nearly-instinctive penchant for evil speech. Just over a century ago, Rabbi Yisrael Mayer Kagen published a work
on these laws, called “Chafetz Chaim.” Several
derivative works are available in English, and there is a section of our web
site devoted to gossip-controlling behavior:
http://www.torah.org/learning/halashon/
.
We, like the spies,
already know how destructive gossip is. If we judge others more favorably, and
refrain from spreading every harsh rumor, we can hardly imagine the amount of
good we can and will do for our families, our neighbors, and our community.
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