How Could This Happen?
Parshas Ki Sisa
Posted on February 20, 2008 (5768) By Rabbi Berel Wein
| Series: Rabbi Wein | Level: Beginner
After all of the commentaries and explanations regarding
the event of the Golden Calf that is the centerpiece of this weeks’ parsha, one is still left, somehow, with an
empty feeling of not understanding how such an event could have in fact
occurred.
After all, did not the splitting of the sea, the war
against Amalek, the manna and the miraculous wells of water, the revelation at
Sinai, make an impression upon them? No doubt that all of the answers and
explanations have validity, but how do we deal with this story? What is the
relevance of this story to us, a generation that has many Golden Calves but
certainly not that Golden calf of the parsha?
I think that the most direct and simple answer to this is
to view the event in its simple reality. It is enough to know that such an
event, though not understandable or rational, can and does occur. It
should teach us about the irrationality of people, nations and political
leaders. It should put us on notice that nothing in human affairs is unlikely
or impossible.
The possibility of a Golden calf incident is always with
us. By discounting the whims of human nature we expose ourselves to such sad
incidents as described in this week’s parsha. Moshe never
imagines that such an event can occur amongst the people of Israel and so he
ascends the mountain for his own spiritual development and to bring the Torah
down to the Jewish people. Aharon also never thinks that a Golden calf can
spring forth from his attempts to placate the frenzied mob that now surrounds
him. But, no matter, the Golden Calf arrives, alive and snorting fire. And
that is life’s lesson – that the unexpected and impossible is itself always
present in our lives and society.
Anyone who reviews the events of the twentieth century will
stand amazed at the events, wars, changes and profound diplomatic and political
errors that shaped its story. Nothing that happened was rational or predictable
in 1901.
Who could have thought that the great empires of Germany,
Russia, France, England, Austria and the Ottomans would never survive that
century? And who could have imagined the State of Israel arising and the
destruction of European Jewry? That disaster of the
Holocaust is a Golden Calf of unbelievably major proportions.
All rumors later circulated to the contrary not
withstanding, no one really envisioned such a catastrophe of so great a
proportion. Since prophecy is no longer present amongst us, the future is
always murky and undecipherable. Therefore, the only thing certain in our
lives, both personal and national, is uncertainty.
And that is the basic and troubling message of the Golden
Calf incident. The parsha is here to warn us of
trusting only in our judgments, conclusions and foresight. That is not how
life really works and not how events play themselves out.
The events of the Golden Calf constantly repeat themselves
in our life story. Fortunate are those who are not seduced by that idol and are
wary initially of the attempts to construct and deify it.
Shabat shalom.
Rabbi Berel Wein
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