Appreciation in Times of
Parshas Beshalach
(https://torah.org/parsha/beshalach
Pain
Parshas Beshalach
(https://torah.org/parsha/beshalach
/)
Posted on January 24, 2018 (5778) By Rabbi Berel Wein | Series: Rabbi Wein (https://torah.org/series/rabbiwein/)
| Level: Beginner (https://torah.org/level/beginner/)
The people of Israel had a charmed
existence in their
life in the desert. Unlike us, their descendants, they
did not face
economic downturns or long lines waiting at the supermarket checkout counter. Their
food was delivered to them daily (for
the righteous at their doorstep) and a magical
well of Miriam sustained their needs
for water without
bills and taxes
and surcharges.
The great clouds
of honor protected them from heat
and the sun and their clothing was miraculously laundered and cleaned for them. It was the idyllic
life. But apparently it wasn’t.
The rest of the Torah, including this week’s parsha, is replete
with repeated complaints about the food,
the water, about everything, about life itself.
Their
memories of Egypt
become fonder and fonder and their ingratitude towards
Moshe and G-d reaches
startling proportions. Moshe,
the redeemer of Israel
and their unquestionably revered leader, is heard to say to G-d in this
week’s parsha that he feels
his life endangered by the murmurings of dissatisfaction of the people against
G-d and him.
“Soon they will stone me,” he states.
What happened to their belief
in “G-d and in Moshe,
His servant?” How
did it occur that
they could complain about the marvelous situation of security
and freedom in which
they now found
themselves? How can they proclaim
that they want to return to Egypt, the country of their oppression and persecution? These questions are very disturbing ones
and all of the great Jewish commentators to the Torah have attempted to deal with
them.
Though
each of the commentators offers a differently nuanced answer to these questions there is a common thread
that runs through
all of their
words and ideas. And that is that human
beings are basically dissatisfied creatures.
The rabbis taught us that
he who has one hundred
(million, billion, trillion?) always wishes for two hundred!
The rabbis, therefore, defined wealth in terms of personal satisfaction and gratitude and they ruefully remarked
that there are
rather few wealthy
people present in our world.
“Most of the world is poor,” they declaimed and they
were not speaking of material artificially and statically arrived
at poverty lines. In fact, the generosity and ease poured
unto our ancestors as they left
Egypt was meant to teach
them that no amount of material well being would
ever be enough for them.
There
had to be another dimension that had to enter their
lives and beings. And that was an intangible one of spirit
and holy purpose,
of G-dly behavior and gratitude for life itself. It was represented by the Torah
that they would receive and accept
at Mount Sinai fifty days after their liberation from Egyptian
slavery.
For fifty days
their ingratitude would
be forgivable for they had no other insight into life except the always unsatisfactory material
one. After receiving the Torah
at Sinai they
would now be held to a higher
standard of appreciation and thankfulness.
That has been the secret
of Jewish resilience and survival throughout many a very bleak
physical time. It remains valid
and true for our current
time as well.
Shabat shalom. Rabbi Berel Wein
No comments:
Post a Comment