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Monthly Archives: September 2014

Repentance: The 614th Commandment

21 Sunday Sep 2014

Posted by ndanzig in Holidays

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Maimonides, Mishne Torah, Rambam, repentance, Rosh HaShana, tshuva

It always bothers me when I read the first sentence of the Laws of Repentance from Maimonides’ Mishne Torah. He writes there the following (my translation):

Regarding all the mitzvoth of the Torah, whether positive or negative, if someone violates any one of them, whether intentionally or accidentally, when he repents and ceases sinning, he must confess his sins before God … this confessing is a positive commandment.

What is strange about his description is that we would expect Maimonides to write that repenting itself is a mitzvah. But by writing “when he repents” Maimonides seems to be saying that if a person should happen to repent then he gets to do the mitzvah of confession. So is a person required to repent in the first place?

Maimonides uses the word “when” not “if” so that seems to imply a person is expected, even required to repent from his sins. Still this is a pretty vague way of commanding people to repent. And when it comes to counting mitzvoth, Maimonides only considers the act of confession to be a mitzvah, not the actual repentance. He titles this section of his book, Laws of Repentance, but does not consider repentance to be a law!

So if there is no commandment to repent but there is nevertheless a requirement to repent, what is the source of this requirement? Usually when a person has a job, his employer has certain expectation of his employee that may be communicated orally or in writing. For example, Come on time, Don’t use social media on work time, Work on your assignments. If the employee comes late or does not do his assignments, the employer should not have to tell the worker to to stop coming late or stop neglecting his work. The expectation to cease breaking the rules is subsumed within each
work rule. The employer does not say, And if you break any of these rules, stop breaking them! That is the meaning of the rules themselves.

Similarly each Torah laws contains within it the obligation to stop violating it, that is what a law is. If the Torah says eat kosher food, then the Torah is saying to stop eating that cheese burger. So the concept of repentance, tshuva , is concomitant to any law system and there cannot be a separate law prohibiting the violation the law. So too, there cannot be a mitzvah that we must keep the Torah. It is a logical redundancy.

That is the reason Maimonides does not count tshuva as a commandment but nevertheless assumes there is a requirement to do tshuva. The only mitzvah left to actually count is the act of confession. Maimonides considers this act to be crucial. Without expressing one’s commitment in words, a person will begin to view his commitment as ephemeral and will begin to create excuses for his laxity. Tshuva itself is part of every law of the Torah.

Nitzavim Kids – Stand Tall

18 Thursday Sep 2014

Posted by ndanzig in Parsha for Kids

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bible, chumash, nitzavim

Do you ever stand together with your class in school?  Or maybe at assemblies? How do you feel at those times? When I am standing together with a group doing something or saying something together I feel very connected to everyone in the group. I feel like they are all my friends. Maybe I feel connected because there are no desks and chairs separating us. Connected because I can move around and be near someone I am not normally near. In this weeks parsha, Moshe had all the Jewish people stand together. We can only imagine how they must of felt in that huge group standing together.

And what were they doing? They were all promising to Moshe that they would keep the Torah.  Moshe wanted everyone to stand together and shout out all at once that they promised to always keep the Torah.  He wanted them to stand so that they would feel like one nation and one person. They should feel connected to each other.  And that is also why he brought together not just the adults but also the children. All Jewish people no matter their age are part of the Jewish nation.  Moshe wanted the whole nation with one heart like one person to promise to keep God’s Torah because he knew that he was going to die soon and would not be there anymore to remind the people to keep the Torah. Only their promise would be left to remind them.

Has someone ever promised you something or told you that if you do something he will do something for you – and then he did not do what he said he would?  A person can feel pretty angry and frustrated when that happens. Your brother promised to play Legos with you if you would play checkers with him first.  And then after the game, he decided not to play Legos with you.  You were excited to play Legos with your brother and now you feel cheated.  It is not fair. Promises must be kept.  So you get angry and tell him you are never going to play with him again.  And you are still sad. So it did not really help. But since we know how bad we feel when people break promises to us, we should always keep our promises to others.

I bless you and me that we should always keep our promises – our promises to each other, our promises to God –  our promises to ourselves.

Shabbat Shalom

-Nachum

Nitzavim – I Swear!

16 Tuesday Sep 2014

Posted by ndanzig in Parsha

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bible, chumash, Deuteronomy, nitzavim, oaths, parsha, parshat shavua, shem mishmuel, torah

The Land of Israel is in sight and the nation is about to enter and conquer it.  Moses and the people know this mean that Moses must die very soon. And so Moses is giving his last speech to the nation to encourage them to keep the commandments when he will no longer be around. The speech begins with Moses saying, “Today you are all standing before God your Lord… You are thus being brought into the covenant of God your Lord, and [accepting] the dread oath that he is making with you today.”(D 29:9-11)  The word used to mean “standing” is nitzavim.  This is not the normal way to say standing.  The normal word would be omdim.  And in fact, this word is use later, in verse 14 . So why does Moses use this unusual word here to tell the people they are standing before him?

And there is even a more essential question that needs to be answered, there have been several previous events where a covenant was made between God and the Jewish people (not counting the pacts between God and the forefathers), why the need to do this again?  There was the communal pact of the Pascal Lamb in which blood was use as a sign of the pact. There was the pact at mount Sinai.  And now there is this pact which is referred to as brit arvot moav. What is it’s purpose? It cannot be a pact to keep the commandments, that was already done at mount Sinai. And our being His people was already established with the Pascal Lamb. Commenting on verse 12, Rashi offers an answer to this question:

‘He will be your God’: He spoke with you and swore to your forefathers that He would not exchange their progeny with another nation, therefore He makes you take these oaths so that you do not provoke Him to anger [knowing] that He is not able to abandon you. This is the literal explanation. In the Midrash it is asked, why is this section subsequent to the curses? Because the Israelites heard 98 curses (not counting the 49 in Leviticus)  they turned pale, saying ‘who can withstand these [curses]?’ So Moses began to comfort them:  You are standing today even though many times you have angered Him. He has not destroyed you. You still exist before Him. [So too in the future if you anger him, you will survive.] – Rashi

The Jews’ covenant with God that has now gone through 3 phases and intensifications is an unusual pact.  Even if the Jews break their side, God will never leave them for another nation.  They might take advantage of this situation and ignore their side of the agreement knowing full well they will face no consequences.  Hence the preceding curses and blessing are integrally tied into to this pact. Since God cannot throw them out, and He is stuck with them, He makes the Jewish people swear not to violate his covenant.

But what use is an oath? The Jewish people already agreed to the covenant. What extra purpose does the oath to keep the covenant serve? Why should  a person obey his own oath more than the original agreement to the covenant? And what is the meaning of the Midrash that Rashi also mentions? If Moses is pronouncing all these curses to scare the Jewish people into keeping the covenant, why after achieving the intended emotional  reaction would he comfort them and tell them they will survive?  He wants to frighten them into keeping the laws.  Leave them scared!

The intent of the curses was not to scare the people but was an expression of their own commitment to the laws. Rabbi Shmuel Bornsztain in his book Shem MiShmuel explains what is the purpose and meaning of an oath. When a person experiences an extraordinary event he can gain new clarity about his life and his behavior. For example a smoker may visit the cancer ward of a hospital and see the patients dying from lung cancer and suffering terribly.  He then resolves to never smoke again.  He throws away his cigarettes.  He rushes home and throws away all his packs of cigarettes.  He tells his neighbors to never give him a cigarette.  He calls all the shops in town and tells them not to sell him any more cigarettes again. But several hours pass and the shock of the experience begins to wear off and his desire for a cigarette increases until at last he goes to his neighbor and ask for a cigarette.  The neighbor says, I can’t give you a cigarette, you yourself told me not to.  The smoker responds, Yes, that was 5 hours ago and now I am telling you to give me a cigarette! Do my previous words have any more weight than my current words?  Rabbi Bornsztain says Yes, they do!

The smoker had clarity of the truth and knew that some time later this clarity would wear off.  He took every precaution to ensure he would keep his commitment. In the Torah this is done by swearing an oath. In so doing, one creates a certain level of commitment that can outweigh future views and opinions. Rabbi Bornsztain compares this to the oath of marriage. You are dating someone and at a certain point you realize all your thoughts are only about them and you want to be with them always – you are in love.  So you commit yourself to this person through marriage.  Much later an outside viewer might not see any signs of love. But you know that there is a deeper you, from an earlier time that was truly committed. So even now you are love.  If you could penetrate to that previous level, you would see it. Your oath of marriage is the reminder of your true feeling even if they are not visible now.

The law in the Torah of nazir, neder and shavua are legal structures which are founded on this principle. Why is there an oath at all? If I feel strongly now I will probably feel strongly next year too. And if I don’t feel strongly next year, why should I commit myself now? Because you know that now you have a special insight that might not last till next year.  You use the oath to tell your future self that your past level of commitment outweighs any future opinions.  This same concept can be applied to a nation and its future generations.

As long as Moses was alive, the Jewish people had a high level of clarity of God and their responsibilities to Him. They knew that with Moses’ death their clarity would fade. Therefore they took these oaths to create a level of commitment that would stand for them in all future times, even when that clarity fades.  This it the reason for the use of the word nitzavim instead of omdim. Nitzavim is related to the word matzeiva,  monument.  The monument is a constant reminder of some great event or person from the past.  Even if today we don’t remember how great that event or person was, when we see the monument we realize that it must have been very significant if they built this monument.  The standing of the Jewish people here was to create a similar monument by means of taking an oath. In this way, future generations should know that at one time the presence of God was clear and that the nation’s level of commitment to Him was without fault.  Even if today we do not readily see this commitment the oaths remind us that on a very basic level we are committed to God.

The people’s fear of the oaths was a fear that perhaps future generations would be so far removed from the events that the oath would not serve its purpose and the curses would crush the people.  To this Moses comforted them and responded that the current generation is just as much lower than the preceding generation as any future generation will be lower than they are. Just as the current generation is far removed from the actual generation that left Egypt and experienced that high level of awareness of God that was a result of being involved in the great miracles first hand and yet, they are still here and committed to God, so will any future generation be committed to God.


A similar clarity and oath followed the Flood.  After such a great event, Noah committed himself to keep for himself and all future generations the 7 Noahide Laws.  The monument to remind us of that commitment from a state of intense clarity is the rainbow.

 

Nachum Danzig

BeHa’alotcha – The Secret of the Manna

14 Sunday Sep 2014

Posted by ndanzig in Parsha

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Rambam tells us (1) of three approaches to understanding the Midrashim of the Rabbis. The first approach is to take them as literally true, believing them fully even in spite of any incongruence or impossibilities. The second approach, too, takes them literally, but rejects them when they contradict reason or science. The first approach is common among the religiously faithful community, while the second typifies the non-believing public. But Rambam favors a third approach. Realizing that the Rabbis were very wise, he says one should not take their words literally; but instead one should interpret any incongruence or scientific impossibilities found in their word as metaphors for deeper, more abstract concepts.

A classic example of this may be found in the description of the manna. The Sages describe the manna as a miraculous food. (2) It had any taste its consumer wished. It came from heaven to each man’s door, or further away if he sinned. It was exactly the right amount for each person, and it left no residue in the body such that there was no need to expel waste. Observant Jews take this in its literal sense. Alternatively, there have been various attempts by modern scientists to try to identify a plant in the desert fitting these descriptions. This endeavor may be of some interest, but we must ask ourselves, how would Rambam want us to read these explanations? Surely, we are meant to find a deeper meaning.

The latter half of parshat beha’aholtekha provides some clues to this deeper meaning of the manna.

In verse 11:4 the marginal element among the Jews “lusted a lust” and began to complain. Rabbi Meir Simcha of Dvinsk in his classic text, Meshech Chochmah (3) asks what does it mean to “lust a lust”? Before we answer this let us look at verse 11:5. Here the Israelites go on to complain that they remember the free fish they enjoyed in Egypt. Yet as Rashi points out, nothing in Egypt was free. So what did the Jews mean? Rashi states that they really meant they wanted to be free from mitzvot. Rabbi Meir Simcha explains that since fish needs no special laws to eat it, such as shechitah, it was unencumbered, “free” food. So their lust for meat was a desire to eat meat like they used to eat fish – easily, with no mitzvah or spiritual element. In their complaint against the manna, the Israelites say, (verse 11:6) “ein kol”, there is nothing there. Meaning, this food doesn’t go through the ordinary digestive process – it has no residue. (4) And this is precisely what they disliked; they wanted to eat normally. The Torah then in verse 11:7-8 explains how great manna was, tasting like “leshad hashemen,” a fried sweet dough (Rashi).

But this physical description is countered by the Talmud’s metaphysical description of the taste of the manna. The Talmud points out that for evil people the manna was troublesome. The taste is dependent on ones spiritual level. How could this be? Rabbi Meir Simcha explains that although we may try to describe the manna, we cannot succeed. It is similar to Rambam’s explanation regarding the impossibility of understanding heaven, which is non-physical, as long as we live steeped in a physical world; this being like trying to explain colors to a person blind from birth. The manna having a taste dependent on your spiritual level is a metaphor meaning that eating the manna was a spiritual experience of pleasure, not a normal taste. It is as though the soul’s taste buds tasted it. But it was not a physical food as we understand food. In the same way that with a number of people listening to the same music, some may like it and others won’t. The music is the same; one just has to develop sensitivity to it. By complaining that they didn’t like the taste of the manna, the Israelites were in fact complaining that they were not spiritually ready for it and wanted to be left at a lower spiritual plane.

Just as learning Torah is pleasurable only if you are ready for it, so too the manna needed spiritual readiness to be enjoyed. And in fact, those who appreciated Torah appreciated manna. Let us elaborate on this comparison. In whose merit did the Israelites receive the manna? Aaron brought protective clouds, Miriam brought water, and Moshe brought the manna. He also brought the Torah. Eating and loving manna shows ones love of Moshe’s teaching. Rejecting manna is a rejection of his teaching. Rabbi Meir Simcha goes on to explain that normally eating meat develops all types of physical desires, but eating manna, causes the reverse, as one eats it, ones physical desires dissipate. By eating the manna, the Israelites had lost their physical, sensual, desires. It follows then that the Israelites should have lost their desire for meat. Why then did they ask for meat? We must realize that the Israelites did not like this state of affairs. They wanted to redevelop their physical desires. Thus it says they lusted the lust. They wanted to attain once again the lust for physical pleasures. They lusted to have the lust again. They had lost their enjoyment for life and they were not on a high enough spiritual level to find life’s pleasure in Torah. Their request for meat symbolizes their desire to reenter the world of sensual pleasures.

Now we can understand Moshe’s harsh reaction starting at verse 11, where he says: “Did I give birth to these people so that I have to support them physically? Where should I get enough meat?” We might ask, what kind of a question is this? Of course G-d can provide Moshe with meat. But we must realize that Moshe is expressing the difference between being rabbenu (teacher) and not being avinu (father). Avinu is an eternal relationship – your child is always yours. But this is not so with a teacher. Moshe is the nation’s teacher, and the moment the gap is too great, the people can no longer be his disciples, and Moshe ceases to be their leader. Rejecting the manna and opting for a more physical existence is rejecting Moshe.

This explains G-d’s reply to Moshe’s complaint. G-d tells Moshe he must choose a Sanhedrin of 70 elders (verses 11:16-18). On first sight this makes no sense. Will the elders be in charge of acquiring, collecting and distributing meat? It doesn’t seem so. Once we realize that the real issue is not manna, but Moshe as leader we can understand it. The gap between Moshe’s high level and the nation’s low level is filled by the Sanhedrin. By Moshe saying, I cannot give them meat, he means I am not a physical leader, I cannot provide physical food. I can only be a spiritual leader.

Now, when the Sanhedrin was chosen, they received a prophetic experience – just like Moshe. But two people, who despite their prophetic state, would not join the Sanhedrin. They were Eldad and Medad. But they did reveal their prophecy to Joshua. Moshe will die and Joshua will bring people into land. Moshe is not bothered by this prophecy, but Joshua is. What is the meaning of the timing of this prophecy here? Moshe can no longer be their leader. His inability to take them into Eretz Yisrael is further proof of that. The gap between leader and nation is too wide. The gap was caused by many failings of the people, such as their complaint, after leaving the sea of reeds, that they want water; their sigh of relief after revelation at Mount Sinai; their worshiping the golden calf; and finally their request for meat. At the moment of Matan Torah there was the closeness of teacher and student, and, had it lasted, Moshe would have been able to lead the people into the land. Thus, even the prophecy relates to the issue of Moshe as leader, and the inability of the nation to be at the level of the manna which represents a spiritual existence.

Chapter 12 may at first seem unrelated to the preceding chapter. Miriam and Aaron criticize Moshe for not having normal marital relations with his wife. All the other prophets need not separate from their wives, but Moshe does. Normal prophets are attached to their bodies; their bodies are not prophetic bodies, so they can have relations. But Moshe was in a constant state of prophecy and marital relations would disturb that state. Miriam’s critique was not simply aimed at Moshe’s behavior with his wife. She was telling him that while it is true that there must be a gap between teacher and disciple, or else there can be no real education, the gap cannot be too wide.

There are two ways to close a gap – either to raise up the nation, or to lower Moshe. Miriam’s advice was essentially that Moshe should talk down on the level of the nation. She wanted Moshe to remain leader even if it meant he would have to come down from his level. This is the meaning of Miriam’s advice that Moshe be with his wife; he should become a physical leader. The only problem with this is that G-d says that Moshe was in such a high state that it was impossible for him to lower himself. Either the nation must elevate itself or an intermediary must be found: the Sanhedrin.

Thus we see a common thread unifying the parshah: the rejection of the manna, the establishment of the Sanhedrin, and the prophecy that Moshe won’t bring the Jewish people into the Land, all point to the people’s inability to be the disciples of Moshe. The manna is the symbol of Moshe’s Torah teachings and a metaphor for the spiritual life. In this light we can understand the seemingly bizarre statements in Midrash Rabba. When it says that the manna has any taste its consumer wishes, it may mean that Torah needs to be adjusted to the needs of the student, and that each student will discover something uniquely his own in the Torah. That the manna comes from heaven to each man’s door, or further away if he sins indicates that the Torah, like the manna, is a Divine gift, which is difficult to obtain without spiritual purity and readiness and Divine help. Using Rambam’s principle of searching out the hidden meaning of obscure rabbinic statements, we have hopefully uncovered gems of wisdom hidden in the Torah.

Rabbi Nachum Danzig, JCT alumnus, teaches in the Overseas Student Division.
SOURCES

(1) Rambam, Commentary to the Mishnah, Sanhedrin 10, Introduction .
(2) Yoma 75a.
(3) Meshekh Chokhmah Numbers 11:4 (Vol.2 p.80-81in Copperman Ed.)
(4) Yoma 75b.

 

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