BEREISHIT PARDES - Gan Eden

Monday, October 13, 2014 · Posted in , , , , ,


Bereishit 2:8
וַיִּטַּע הי אלוקים גַּן-בְּעֵדֶן-מִקֶּדֶם
Vayita HASHEM ELOKIM Gan-be'eden mikedem
HASHEM ELOKIM planted a garden eastward in Eden...


HASHEM ELOKIM PLANTED

According the plain meaning, the Torah attributed the planting of this garden to HASHEM.  He did not bring a variety of trees from different parts of the globe and placed them there in the garden, but the very trees were His handiwork, designed to glorify Him. Accordingly, King David referred to these trees as עצי הי, (etz HASHEM) "trees of HASHEM..." (Tehillim 104:16)

EASTWARD

This garden, Paradise, was planted in an eastern location מקדם (mikedem). Beneficial effects of winds originate in the east of the earth due to Paradise having been planted that part of the globe. It is a well known fact that the best fruits grow in the East.

Moshe in his blessing to the Tribe of Yosef wrote, "and with the bounty of the sun's crop" (Devarim 33:14).  All crops depend on the sun, Moshe must have had in mind the area where the sun rises, i.e. the Eastern part of the Land of Yisrael.

The words "HASHEM Elokim planted a garden eastward in Eden" refer to planting which had taken place a long time ago - מקדם "since primeval times."  The Torah describes HASHEM as "having planted it", rather than as having commanded it to come into existence is proof that the garden preceded the creation of the universe. In fact this "planting" had already been alluded to in he very first word of the Torah, the word בראשית (Bereishit).


וַיָּשֶׂם שָׁם אֶת-הָאָדָם אֲשֶׁר יָצָר
vayasem sham et ha'adam asher yatzar
and there He put the man whom He had formed.

This garden dated back to an era preceding that described in chapter one of the Torah.  The words "He put there the man whom He had formed," must have a different connotation.  The words אשר יצר (asher yatzar) are a reference to the source of man, his soul.  Refined souls originate in the East.  This is the meaning of the statement by Rabbi Nechunyah ben Hakanah (Sefer HaBahir) that the זרע (zera' - semen) of Yisrael, it's descendants originated in the Eastern parts of universe because the marrow in the spinal cord comes directly from he brain from which it is transmitted to the male organ and converted into semen.

"For from the East will I bring your seed (descendants) and from the West will I gather you in" (Yeshayahu 43:5).  The prophet is telling us that when Yisrael will perform HASHEM's commandments, their souls will (once again) originate in that Eastern regions. If, however, they will fail to live up to HASHEM's expectations, their seed, the souls of their children, will be gathered up from the Western part of the universe. Why is it called "West"? Because there all the seeds intermingle, i.e. sanctity is being compromised by intermingling with souls who originate in spiritually negative areas.

When we read "a generation goes and a generation comes" (Kohelet 1:4), this means that all the souls have already been assigned to this world and until each one has been noted by a body the Redeemer cannot come.

From that region (East) the souls travel to the foundation of the universe, a region known ברית (brit - covenant). This is why the author of Sefer HaBahir wrote that the seed comes to the Jewish People by means of the spinal cord which gets its input from the brain traveling down to the male member.

The prophet Yeshayahu alluded to this when he said, "Listen to this O house of Yaakov who bear the name Yisrael and who have emanated from the waters of Yehudah" (Yeshayahu 48:1). The expression "who have emanated from the waters of Yehudah," means "from the seed of Yehudah." The reason the prophet called Yisrael "Yehudah," is because the flag of Yehudah represented the Eastern part of the encampment of the Benei Yisrael in the desert.


2:9
וַיַּצְמַח הי אלוקים מִן-הָאֲדָמָה
Vayatzmach HASHEM ELOKIM min ha'adamah
HASHEM ELOKIM made grow from the earth...

These words prove that there is such a thing as Paradise on earth and that it contains a Tree of Knowledge as well as a Tree of Life. The fruit of the Tree of Life causes those who eat it to enjoy long life, whereas the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge instills in those who consume it willpower and freedom of choice to do either good or evil both in matters physical as well as in matters spiritual.

The term עץ הדעת (etz hadaat) does not mean "the Tree of Knowledge," but means "the tree permitting choice." We find support for this meaning of the word דעת (daat - knowledge), "What is man that You should have granted him grace?" In other words, "Why have You extended Your goodwill, Your love to man?" The meaning of the term עץ הדעת then is the tree which causes HASHEM to relate to man with either favor or disfavor. Originally, HASHEM had withheld this kind of choice from Adam as he ad been "programmed" in his deeds prior to his sin. This does not mean he was not free to sin but that his actions were guided exclusively by his intellect thus practically excluding sin as he had not been subject to temptation from within. Once man had sinned, i.e. had eaten from the fruit of that Tree, he became possessed of an independent will, i.e. obedience to HASHEM's will was no longer automatic, dictated by his intellect. The new found "independent will" meant that he had acquired an attribute reserved for HASHEM, an attribute that he could handle only at great potential cost to himself.


וְעֵץ הַחַיִּים בְּתוֹךְ הַגָּן וְעֵץ הַדַּעַת טוֹב וָרָע
ve'etz hachayim betoch hagan
and a Tree of Life in the midst of the garden.

The Torah made the point of describing the location of this Tree, "in the midst of the garden," as opposed to the precise location of the Tree of "desire," which has not been spelled out.

The two words בתוך הגן (betoch hagan - midst of the garden) exactly between the words עץ הדעת טוב ורע (etz hadaat tov vara - Tree of Knowledge [of what is] good and evil) and עץ החיים (etz hachayim - the Tree of Life) makes it clear that both these Trees stood next to one another. Although they were two trees, and is physically impossible for both Trees to be precisely in the center of the garden, we must assume that they had a single trunk and that the two Trees branched out at a certain point above the ground, one side becoming the Tree of Life, the other the Tree of Knowledge.


2:10
וְנָהָר יֹצֵא מֵעֵדֶן לְהַשְׁקוֹת אֶת-הַגָּן וּמִשָּׁם יִפָּרֵד וְהָיָה לְאַרְבָּעָה רָאשִׁים
Venahar yotze me'eden lehashkot et-hagan umisham yipared vehayah le'arbaah rashim
A river went out of Eden to water the garden, and from there it separated and became four headwaters.

The Torah describes the rivers that originated in that garden by describing their parameters and the countries which surround the garden.  There were a total of four rivers which were all branches of a single river which flowed out of Eden. As long as that river was a single river it function was to irrigate the garden. Subsequently, this river split into what the Torah called ארבעה ראשים (arbaah rashim - four headwaters).

You should understand that though the Torah describes a scenery on earth when describing Gan Eden and what is related to it, the manifestations described by the Torah are metaphors for phenomena in the celestial regions.


2:11
שֵׁם הָאֶחָד פִּישׁוֹן
Shem ha'echad pishon
The name of the first is Pishon.

A Midrashic view sees in the four rivers a reference to four kingdoms. The river Pishon is a reference to the kingdom of Bavel (Babylon). The verse in Chavukuk 1:8 ופשן פרשין "describing the riders of the army of the Chaldeans (Babylonians)" refers to this.


הוּא הַסֹּבֵב אֵת כָּל-אֶרֶץ הַחֲוִילָה אֲשֶׁר-שָׁם הַזָּהָב
hu hasovev et kol-eretz hachavilah asher-sham hazahav
Which surrounds all the land of Chavilah where there is gold

The land of Chavilah which is described as being surrounded by the river Pishon is none other than the Land of Yisrael, a land which the king of Bavel will ascend and come across which he and his army will spread out. This is based on Bereishit Rabbah explaining Tehillim 42:6 "Have hope in HASHEM for I will yet praise Him for His saving Presence."

The gold referred to here are the words of Torah which have been extolled as "more desirable than gold, than much fine gold" (Tehillim 19:11).

We are taught by this verse that the quality of Torah studied in Eretz Yisrael is superior to Torah studied elsewhere as is the wisdom acquired in Eretz Yisrael.


2:12
שָׁם הַבְּדֹלַח וְאֶבֶן הַשֹּׁהַם
sham habedolach ve'even hashoham
There can be found the bedolach and the shoham stone.

These are names of gems and they symbolize different disciplines of Torah study such as Holy Scripture, Mishnah, Talmud, Halachot, interpretations and aggadic material.


2:13
וְשֵׁם הַנָּהָר הַשֵּׁנִי גִּיחוֹן
veshem hanahar hasheni gichon
And the name of the second river is Gichon.

This is reference to the kingdom of the Medes.


2:14
וְשֵׁם הַנָּהָר הַשְּׁלִישִׁי חִדֶּקֶל
veshem hanahar hashelishi chidekel
And the name of the third river is Chidekel.

This is reference to the kingdom of Greece which imposed a particularly draconian rule on the Jewish People in Yisrael.


וְהַנָּהָר הָרְבִיעִי הוּא פְרָת
vehanahar harvi'i hu ferat
And the fourth river is Prat.

The fourth river, the Euphrates, represents the Roman Empire which oppressed the Jewish People inordinately. The word פרת is equated by the Midrash with the word הפרה (hafarah - breach of trust). Alternately, the name of the river symbolizes the final destiny of the Roman Empire as alluded by Yeahayahu, "I trod out a vintage alone." (63:3) the prophet describes the red stained clothing of Yisrael returning from defeating the kingdom of Edom.

Man's sin consisted of both a sinful deed and a sinful design. Man's sin in deed consisted of eating from the tree and what it represented. It was not a denial of the Supremacy of G-d (an heretical act) by Adam when he sinned. Even though Adam had seen the Tree of Life next to the Tree of Knowledge, he had considered the Tree of Life as essential but considered the Tree of Knowledge the key to his existence. The Tree of knowledge provided those who consumed its fruit to perform all kinds of activities both in the terrestrial as well as in the celestial regions, this is what he considered as essential. This is why the Torah in describing the Tree of Knowledge spoke of the allure of its fruit, whereas there is no mention of fruit made in connection with the Tree of Life. Adam's sin consisted of קצץ בנטיעות (pursued alien philosophies) (The same heresy of Elisha be Avuyah, known as Acher - Chagigah 14. Elisha’s interest in a non-Jewish ideology caused him to question his Judaism, and in the end the questioning morphed into eresy. He thought he had proof that there were separate origins of celestial authority)


וְנָהָר
Venahar
and a river

According to the Targum the Hebrew Word אור (ohr - light) is equivalent to the Aramaic נהורא (light). The Torah therefore tells us that a "light" comes forth from Eden, and that this light originates in the region known as אין סוף (Ein Sof), G-d's Essence. The meaning of the word מֵעֵדֶן (me'eden) is that it emanates from regions which are not bounded by any boundaries, or which defy further definition by man. The region has been so named by our Sages because they cannot define it. It is beyond the outermost boundaries of our understanding. We do find allusions to this such as in Iyov 25:5 "even the moon is not bright and the stars are not pure in His sight." The speaker in this verse, Bildad, describes "light" as we know it as far inferior to light in the celestial regions. The words וְלֹא יַאֲהִיל (velo ya'ahil - no brightness) in that verse refer to G-d's ability to withhold the light of the moon.  It is contrasted with the light emanating in Ein Sof which is never withheld.


לְהַשְׁקוֹת אֶת-הַגָּן
lehashkot et-hagan
to water the Garden.

(2:10) This task would be performed by the emanation Malchut.

For pratical purposes all the emanations are unified, there is no division within them. However, starting with the emanation Malchut, downwards, i.e. into the realm of the physical universe including the disembodied creatures such as the angels, "separations" are the order of the day.  This is what the Torah means when it states that "umisham" (and from there) the "light" was divided into four categories.  This is a reference to four separate "camps." These "camps" provide "energy" for the four "rivers" or "lights" of Gan Eden. Therefore this energy or different forms of energies are channelled to the four kingdoms on earth.

May HASHEM continue to enlighten us with the light of His Torah.

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Bereishit Pardes - Creation
Bereishit Pardes - Etz HaChayim - Etz HaDaat Tov vaRa
Bereishit Pardes - Nishmat Chayim - Living Soul

BEREISHIT PARDES - Creation


Bereishit 1:1
בְּרֵאשִׁית
Bereishit
In the beginning.

According to Rashi, the word בראשית (bereishit) is a possessive form (grammatically speaking) as it is every time it appears in the Torah. It signals that on the first day G-d created only the light. The meaning of the full verse then is, "at the beginning of the creation of heaven and earth there was Tohu Vavohu, chaos. G-d said, 'Let there be light.'" Everything else developed from that point on including the creation of heaven and earth. The word בראשית (bereishit) here is comparable to the verse in Hoshea 1:1 "When G-d began to speak to Hoshea, G-d said to Hoshea..." Rashi's opinion was that if the Torah had wanted to tell us the heaven and earth had been created on the first day, the Torah should have written בראשונה (ba-rishonah).

The fact is however, that the word is not a possessive form at all but an independent word and is equivalent ot the Torah having written ba-rishonah.  Proof of this is found in the tone-sign tipcha on the word which separates it from the word which follows it. 

The paragraph tells us that heaven and earth with all their derivatives were created on the first day, none of them having been preceded by any physical matter at all. This fact is attested to by the word bara, which describes the creation of "something out of nothing." This, at any rate, is the opinion of Rabbi Nechemyah who is quoted to this effect in Midrash Tanchuma. On the hand, Rabbi Yehudah who disagrees with him, claims that the universe was created during six days. He bases himself on the repeated directives of the Torah that something new shoud emerge and the Tora's reporting that it indeed did, using the words ויהו כן (vayehi chen - and it was so) to inform us that G-d's instructions had been carried out. Rabbi Nechemyah claims that the proof that the whole universe was created already on the first day are the words תוצא הארץ (totze ha'aretz) "let the earth bring forth" (1:24). The wording "bring forth" indicates that G-d referred to matters which had already been in existence, ready to emerge, but had not yet seen the light of day until commanded to do so by G-d. The matter can be compared to a farmer who sows six grains of corn at the same time only to find that they take root at different times instead of all sprouting forth simultaneously. The six days of creation described by the Torah report the sequence in which G-d's creative activity became manifest. This is whta the psalmist had in mind, "for He had given a directive and then it materialised" (Tehillim 33:9). David taught us that G-d's directive and its execution as visible fact occurs simultaneously.

Afterwards, the creation of heaven and earth, He gave these various directives introduced by the Torah with the words ויאמר אלוקום (vayomer Elokim) "and G-d said," G-d's work became manifest, was covereted from being a potential to become actual.


אֵת הַשָּׁמַיִם וְאֵת הָאָרֶץ
et hashamayim ve'et ha'aretz
the heaven and the earth.

Whenever the word את (et) appears it adds something to the meaning of the plain text. At the most basic level, the two words את here are meant to convey that two additional matters or raw materials were involved in the creation of heaven and earth.

According to Peshat (the plain meaning) of the text, we understand the two words as references to the two different raw materials (elements) G-d employed when creating heaven and earth, seeing the two are obviously not made of the same material. This is the meaning of "the earth was tohu vavohu", i.e. that after the initial act of creation earth was still in a chaotic state. The specific meaning of the two words is that the material tohu, was covered with a form bohu. This is what is meant by Yeshayahu 66:2. The first three words of that verse refer to existing material, whereas the last words "My hands have fashioned," refer to G-d supplying this material with distinctive form, צורה (tzura). According to this verse in Yeshayahu, G-d first created the raw material, bara, but subsequently His activities consisted only of refining such raw material by acts of יצירה (yetzirah) respectively. בריאה (beri'ah), creation of matter, consisted of merely creating the smallest physical particle, a נקודה (nekudah), "a point," something barely perceptible. This little particle formed the beginning of the entire solar system.

Looked at from an homiletical point of view, the extra words את (et) in the phrase "heaven and earth," include the sun, moon, stars in the word שמים (shamayim) and the entire range of vegetation in the word ארץ (eretz).


1:2
וְהָאָרֶץ הָיְתָה תֹהוּ וָבֹהוּ
veha'aretz hayetah tohu vavohu
and the earth had been in a chaotic state.

This is reference to the raw material which had not yet been properly defined and therefore could not yet be named. This explanation is analogous to what Chazal have said in Kiddushin 40 "He had second thoughts on what He had thought before." The Torah called this indefinable material "tohu." The word "bohu," on the other hand, refers to this material once it had been equipped with a distinctive shape and had assumed a definite form. The word בהו (bohu) is actually two words comprised of בו הוא something which does have a certain form by which it is identifiable.  That is what Yeshayahu 34:11 had in mind when he said, "He will measure it with a line of chaos and with weights of emptiness." The prophet related the word "a line," to possessing substance. Incidentally, this word is related or derived from Tehillim 40:2, i.e. intense hope precedes concretisation of one's wishes. An artisan envisages a building in his mind's eye before he builds it. The relationship of the word is that the stones are the manifestation, the format of the building the artisan had first envisaged.

To sum up the whole passage, "At the beginning G-d created a minute amount of matter out of absolute nothingness. This contained within itself the potential and energy to expand into what we call 'heaven and earth.' After this initial stage of creative activity by G-d the earth had still remained in a chaotic state, matter without separation into shape or form of the four basic raw materials (elements) of the universe, i.e. fire, wind, water and dust." The word הארץ (ha'aretz) includes all these four basic materials the earth is made of. Even though the material עפר (dust) is only the last one described in the record of maaseh bereishit (work of creation) the Torah refers to it first when speaking about ארץ (eretz) which was a minute point. Philosophers called it a "point," to distinguish between the solar system which appears in constant motion, whereas earth appears stationary. They viewed the earth as if it were a point surrounded by the planetary system. Earth was viewed as stationary based on Kohelet 1:4 "and the earth remains in its place forever." This is in contrast to the planets surrounding it which move from place to place and never remain in the same spot. Only a small part of earth is in motion, ever. The reason the planetary system, i.e. shamayim, is called lofty, high, is because the material it is made of is so delicate, so fine, and so pure. Earth, on the other hand, is made of the coarsest, the most opaque material.

Once the Torah had begun to discuss the properties of earth it returns its attention to the heaven and lists the other basic raw materials (elements) in their proper order i.e. fire, wind, and water.

וְחֹשֶׁךְ עַל-פְּנֵי תְהוֹם
vechoshech al-penei tehom
and darkness covered the face of the deep

The word חשך (darkness), is a reference to elemental fire which is dark (compare Shemot Rabbah 2:10) This recalls the statement of Chazal that the Torah was written with black fire on white fire. It is listed ahead of the second element רוח (ruach), wind, seeing that fir is more comprehensive element than wind. The wind precedes water, i.e. "the wind (spirit) of G-d hovered over the deep." This is because wind is a more comprehensive element than water. Water, on the other hand, is a more comprehensive element than earth (dust). We find this order of the basic elements both in Kohelet and in Iyov. 

Just as the Torah in this instance began its detailed description with the נקודה (nekudah), the "point," when it wrote, "and the earth was chaotic," so the Book of Kohelet begins with this "point" describing it as something which remains in place forever (Kohelet 1:4). Next, Shlomo mentions the element fire when he wrote "the sun shone and the sun set" (Kohelet 1:5). After the fire Shlomo mentions the wind in Kohelet 1:6 where he wrote, "the wind goes round and round." Finally, Shlomo mentions the water when he wrote, "all the rivers flow into the sea" (Kohelet 1:7).

In the Book of Iyov (28:24) the description of creation also begins with the "point," i.e. earth, or "dust," when the author wrote, "for He sees to the ends of the earth, observes all that is beneath the heavens." The reference to the heavens is a reference to fire. The text continues "when He fixed the weight of the winds, set the measure of the waters." We observe that the elements are listed in the same order as in Kohelet and in Bereishit. The reason for this is that all these three Books concern themselves with some degree of research, and its words are based on our knowledge of nature.

Here the Torah informed us that the earth assumed a shape, that the darkness which is the fire, spread out above the mixture of dust and water. This mixture is called תהום (tehom), "the deep," in the Torah. It describes the ocean which has earth dissolved in it. Compare Yonah 2:6, תהום יסובבני (tehom yesovveni) "the deep surrounds me."

The wind was blowing, entering the darkness and hovering above the water. When the Torah speaks of ורוח אלוקים (veruach Elokim) we would have expected ורוח ה-אלוקם, i.e. "the wind (spirit) of G-d," the reason the Torah chose to omit the letter ה, thereby apparently identifying wind as something divine, is because of all matters in the physical universe wind is the closest to the invisible abstract force called G-d. Even though in some respects fire is even more insubstantial than the wind, the Torah did not want to associate this word with G-d seeing that we described fire as synonymous with darkness.

May HASHEM continue to enlighten us with the Light of His Torah.

- Bachya; Chazal

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Bereishit Pardes - Gan Eden
Bereishit Pardes - Etz HaChayim - Etz HaDaat Tov vaRa
Bereishit Pardes - Nishmat Chayim - Living Soul

Sukkot 5775

Sunday, October 5, 2014 · Posted in , , ,




Chag Sameach!

Sukkot 5775 (2014) begins in the evening of Wednesday, October 8 and ends in the evening of Wednesday, October 15.

Shmini Atzeret 2014 begins in the evening of Wednesday, October 15 and ends in the evening of Thursday, October 16

Simchat Torah 2014 begins in the evening of Thursday, October 16 and ends in the evening of Friday, October 17.

Yamim Noraim - Days of Awe

Saturday, September 27, 2014 · Posted in , ,


Yamim Noraim - Days of Awe - Ten Days of Repentance

You are great and do wonders, You alone, O G-d...In Your hands are the depths of the land and the loftiest mountains too... In His hands are the souls of all living things, and the spirits of all men (Selichot)
May we be inscribed in the Book of Life, blessing, peace, good sustenance, favorable decrees, salvation, and consolation... (addendum to the daily Amidah for the Ten Days of Repentance) 

On Rosh HaShanah, the Gates of Heaven are opened to receive our petitions and prayers.  Ten days later, on Yom Kippur and during the final moments of the Neilah service, these gates will close as we pray that all be sealed in the Book of Life.  Rosh HaShanah is the beginning and Yom Kippur is the culmination of the special ten day season within which man is offered the opportunity of a spiritual recovery by strenuous personal effort.

The theme of the Days of Awe is the concept that G-d has three books that in one He writes down who for the next year will live and who will die, who will have a good life and who will have a bad life.  These books are:

"The Perfectly Righteous which are immediately inscribed and sealed to life; the Completely Wicked who are also immediately inscribed and sealed to death; and the Intermediate who are in suspense since they will neither be punished nor acquitted until Yom Kippur.  If they repent, they are inscribed to life; if not, they are inscribed to death." (Rosh HaShanah 16b)

Our actions during the Yamim Noraim can altar G-d's decree.  The actions that can altar the decree is Teshuvah (Repentance), Tefillah (Prayer) and Tzedakah (Good Deeds, i.e. usually Charity).  These books are then sealed on Yom Kippur.

In Dani'el 7:10 we find mention of books openeed in the Heavenly Court:

"The court sat in judgment and the books were opened."
The Mishnah (Avot 2:1; 3:20) speaks of the record of man's actions in the Books of Heaven:

"The ledger is open and the hand writes."
Yeshayahu  (65:6) and Malachi (3:16) both allude to the divine recording of the deeds of the righteous and of the wicked.  The Book of Life is mentioned in Yeshayahu 4:3Tehillim 69:29Dani'el 12:1.

During the Day of Judgment (Rosh HaShanah) each of us pass in front of HaShem like a flock of sheep, the tenth day of this month is Yom Kippur, the day on which the decree penciled in on the Day of Judgement will be signed and sealed.  The ability of Yom Kippur to forgive our sins is dependent on our sincere teshuvah.  People who do not repent their sins do not have them forgiven in spite of having lived to this date and beyond it.

The first of the month (Rosh HaShanah) which is a Day of Judgment is applicable both to repentant sinners and those who do not repent.  However, Yom Kippur and its benefits apply only to those who have repented.


TESHUVAH

"Whenever you find the word "now" in the Torah, it refers to repentance" (Bereishit Rabbah 21)

The key to teshuvah (repentance) is prompt recognition and admission that we have done something wrong.  We must admit now, rather than later.  Too often we may tend to rationalize and explain away our behavior, insisting that we were right in what we did.  Only after all our rationalization are exhausted do we reluctantly concede that we were wrong.

The Rabbis teach us that it is unwise to defend a mistake.  If we promptly admit a mistake, it is so much easier to correct it.  After all, correcting mistakes is really what repentance is all about, and a major portion of spiritual growth is just that - correcting mistakes.

Although repentance is effective and desirable at all times, the Talmud says that the days between Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur are especially propitious for repentance.  At the end of the year, a person is more apt to make an accounting of the bygone year, and see whether he is indeed where he had hoped to be at this time.  If he sees that he has not utilized the year well, he may be more determined in his resolve to improve in the year to come.  In addition, during these special days one is joined by many others in repentance, and the collective virtue is of great merit.

"I am He who removes your sins for My sake, and your transgressions I will not recall" (Yeshayahu 43:25)
"If You, O G-d, will mark the iniquities of man, then who can stand before You?  For with You there is forgiveness, so that You may be feared" (Shacharit; Tehillim 130:3,4)  

Fear of G-d...the true meaning of fear of G-d is that we should be aware that when we deviate from His will, we are injuring ourselves jut as if we were to ingest a poisonous substance.  Sin is destructive,a nd we should therefore fear it as we would fear anything that is very dangerous.  Although we may not be able to undo the physical harm that we do to ourselves, G-d assures us that if we repent, He will undo the spiritual harm that we have done to ourselves.

We dare not abuse this grace, this wonderful gift of forgiveness.



לְשָׁנָה טוֹבָה תִּכָּתֵבוּ וְתֵחָתֵמוּ

(May you be inscribed and sealed for a good year!)

Parashat Devarim

Friday, August 1, 2014 · Posted in , ,

Devarim 1:1 - 3:22
Shabbat Chazon

In the fortieth year, on the first day of the month of Shevat, 
Moshe began translating the Torah into the various languages of his time.

  • Moshe's Admonishment
  • Encountering Esav
  • Encountering Moav



Parashat Devarim by Rabbi Pinchas Winston -
The next installment of “Long On Exile, Short On Breath” and the current situation.


Parashat Massei

BaMidbar 33:1-36:13
Birchat HaChodesh


  • Recounting of the journeys of the Benei Yisrael in the desert.
  • G‑d instructs the Benei Yisrael to eradicate all Kenaan's inhabitants and destroy their idols.
  • Division of the portion of land between the Tribal members.
  • The Leviim are provided 48 cities where they would dwell -- 42 cities plus the six cities of refuge. 
  • The Command to designate six cities of refuge. 
  • G‑d instructs Tzelafchad's daughters to marry men from their own tribe, so the land they inherit will remain in their ancestral tribe.

Rabbi Pinchas Winston's "Perceptions: Parashat Massei




Parashat Mattot

Sunday, July 13, 2014 · Posted in , , ,

BaMidbar 30:2 - 36:13

[Eretz Yisrael]

  • The laws of personal vows are detailed
  • Battle with Midyan
  • Moshe instructs the soldiers regarding the applicable laws of Tumah
  • The laws of how to make kosher our vessels
  • Moshe is approached by the Tribes of Reuven, Gad, and half of Menashe to acquire the Trans-Jordan territories captured from Sichon and Og
  • Moshe instructs the Benei Yisrael to clear out Eretz Yisrael from all negative influences, and sets the Biblical boundaries of Eretz Yisrael
  • New leaders are appointed to oversee the division of Eretz Yisrael
  • The laws regarding the inadvertent murderer are detailed
  • Prohibition against marrying outside one's tribe is established. This prohibition was only for the generation that occupied Eretz Yisrael.

Video Shiur by Rabbi Pinchas Winston on Parashat Mattot (and Massei) [Part 1 & 2]

Rabbi Winston uses this week's portion to help understand the meaning of the Three Weeks and Tisha B'Av.



Video Shiur by Rabbi Daniel Glatstein on Parashat Mattot

The Transjorden And The Lesson Of Being Maaver Sedra


Video Shiur by Rabbanit Iris Odani Elyashiv on Parashat Mattot




Parashat Pinchas

BaMidbar 25:10 - 30:1

[Daughters of Tzelafchad]

Parashat Summary
  • Pinchas is rewarded for killing the Hebrew and the Midiani woman who cursed G-d.
  • Yisrael fights a war against the Midiani.
  • A second census is taken.
  • The daughters of Tzelafchad force a change in the laws of property inheritance.
  • Yehoshua is chosen to be Moshe's successor. 
  • The sacrificial ritual for all festival occasions is described in detail.

Video Shiur by Rabbi Pinchas Winston on Parashat Pinchas

Rabbi Winston discusses why Pinchas became a kohen and how, as well as his transformation to Eliyahu HaNavi.




Video Shiur by Rabbi Daniel Glatstein on Parashat Pinchas:

Eliyahu HaNavi – A Necessary Blast From The Past


Women's Shiurim


Video Shiur by Rabbanit Iris Odani Elyashiv on Parashat Pinchas:


Parashat Balak

Saturday, June 28, 2014 · Posted in , , , ,

BaMidbar 22:2 - 25:9


Parashat Summary

  • Balak, the king of Moav, persuades the prophet Balaam to curse the Benei Yisrael so that he can defeat them and drive them out of the region.  Balaam blesses the Benei Yisrael instead.
  • Balaam prophesies that Yisrael's enemies will be defeated.
  • G-d punishes the Benei Yisrael with a plague for consorting with the Moavi women and their god. 
  • The plague is stayed after Pinchas kills an Hebrew man and his Midiani woman.

Video Shiur by Rabbi Pinchas Winston on Parashat Balak


Rabbi Winston discusses the reason why Balak and Bilaam were compelled to stop the Jewish people from entering Eretz Yisrael even though Moav and Midyan were not part of the nations destined to be conquered.



Video Shiur by Rabbi Daniel Glatstein on Masechet Berachot: The Desire to Put Parashat Balak into the Shema'



Women's Shiurim

Video Shiur by Rabbinit Iris Odani Elyashiv on Parashah Balak




Parashat Chukat

BaMidbar 19:1 - 22:1
Rosh Chodesh Tamuz

[Parah Adumah - Red Heifer]

Parasha Summary

  • The laws of the Parah Adumah (Red Heifer)
  • The people arrive at the wilderness of Zin. Miriam dies and is buried there
  • The people complain that they have no water. Moses strikes the rock to get water for them 
  • G-d tells Moshe and Aharon they will not enter Eretz Israel
  • After Aharon's priestly garments are given to his son Ele'azer, Aharon dies
  • The Benei Yisrael are punished for complaining about the lack of bread and water
  • The Benei Yisrael repent and are victorious in battle against the Amori and the people of Bashan

19:1 vayedaber HASHEM el-Moshe v'el-Aharon lemor
HaShem spoke to Moshe and Aharon, saying,
2 zot chukat hatorah asher-tziva HASHEM lemor daber el-benei Yisrael v'yikchu eleicha fara aduma t'mima asher ein-ba mum asher lo-ala aleiha ol
This is the statute of the Torah which HaShem commanded, saying; speak to Benei YIsrael that they shall take to you a completely red cow without a blemish, upon which no yoke was laid.

The Torah here reveals the law of the Red Heifer.  G-d commanded that a red heifer, perfect in its redness, be brought to the Anointment Hill - Mount of Olives, directly facing the Temple.  There it would be slaughtered and burned.  Its ashes would be mixed in a special container with spring water, and sprinkled on any one who was ritually impure (tamei).

This water, called Niddah Water, had the special property of purifying those who were tamei, and rendering ritually impure those who were pure (tahor).

This commandment is one of the very deep secrets of the Torah that cannot be investigated, nor can its observance be explained. It is to be fulfilled as a divine edict, in awe and love of G-d. The secret of the Parah Adumah was revealed to our teacher Moshe alone as indicated in the word "you" ("take to you a completely red cow"). That is, only to "you" was this explained, not to anyone else. Even King Shlomo, whom the scripture calls the wisest of all men and expert in every realm of knowledge, did not penetrate the secret of the Parah Adumah. He says in Kohelet (7:23), "I said, I will be wise; but it was far from me." In other words, he is saying that he thought he would become wise enough to fathom the secret of the Parah Adumah, but "it is far from me," the words "Vehi rechokah," being numerically equivalent (441) to the words "parah adumah," Red Heifer.

A non-Jew once challenged Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai, saying: 
"All those things you do in connection with the Parah Adumah seem to me like witchcraft. You take hold of a cow, you burn it; then you take its ashes and place them in water, and after sprinkling them a number of times upon someone who has been defiled by a corpse, you declare that he is clean. Does that make sense?"  
"Has your body ever been invaded by a foul spirit?" asked Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai.  
"No."  
"But have you ever seen anyone who was so affected?"  
"Yes." 
"And what medical treatment was this man given?"  
"An aromatic root was placed under the man, and when water was sprinkled upon him the foul spirit fled."  
"Then let your ears heed what your mouth speaks," exclaimed the sage. "The very same thing applies to the Parah Adumah: the condition of ritual impurity is that foul spirit which affects a person who has been defiled by a corpse. Just as it is written, "And the impure spirit I will remove from the land" (Zecharya 13:2) - which means when the Mashiach comes, the spirit of impurity will disappear from the land - so too the sprinkling of the water in which ashes of the Parah Adumah have been mixed accomplishes the same purification."  
This explanation found favor in the eyes of the non-Jew and he went his way. 
But then the disciple turned to Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai. "That pagan you fended off with a straw. But what explanation would you give us?" 
He replied, "That of which the Torah speaks here is a divine law, a commandment that encloses a great secret. Therefore, do not try to fathom it for it is a law that G-d has mandated, a decree issued that you are not permitted to question. 
The Parah Adumah cost a great deal of money since it had to be completely red, and two white or black hairs were sufficient to render it unfit. Preferably, it had to be three to four years old, although a greater age was not in itself a disqualification. It could not be bought as a young heifer and raised since the Torah specifically states, "Have them bring you a completely red heifer;" that is, at the time of purchase it already had to be grown. If only a calf was to be found, the purchase price would be agreed upon with the owner, and it would remain in his possession until it matured and was taken away. One could also buy the Parah Adumah from a non-Jew.

The animal had to be flawless. For just as a blemish renders an offering unfit, it also renders unfit the Parah Adumah even though it is not offered as a sacrifice.

A further constraint on the admissibility of the Parah Adumah which was not applicable to an offering, was that any work it performed rendered it unfit. Even if only a yoke was harnessed to it without the animal having done any plowing, it was nonetheless disqualified. For the scripture says, "and which has never had a yoke on it."

It was rendered unfit also when used very slightly; for example, if it was ridden upon, used for crossing a river, if a garment was placed over it, or if one only leaned against it.

If one bridled the Parah Adumah in order to prevent it from moving about and becoming injured, the animal was not disqualified. Not so, however, if it was bridled for reasons other than to safeguard it, in which case it was rendered unfit. If a covering was placed over it to protect it from flies, the animal was not disqualified since that had been done for its benefit. Generally speaking, anything done to the animal for its own needs did not disqualify it. Only that which was performed for the benefit of the owner or others rendered it unfit.

The Torah reveals that the first Parah Adumah that Moshe commanded to bring was burned by the assistant to the Kohen Gadol (High Priest); thus the verse says, "Give it to El'azar, the kohen." He was the assistant to Aharon, the Kohen Gadol, who was still living.

It was not necessary, however, that the Cow be slaughtered by the Kohen. Even a non-Kohen could do it, provided it was done in the presence and under the supervision of the Kohen since the scripture says, "It shall then be slaughtered in his presence." Anyone could slaughter it in the presence of the Kohen, El'azar, who then collected the blood. He did not, however, collect it in a vessel, but into the palm of his left hand. He then sprinkled it with his right forefinger seven times in the direction of the Tent of Meeting entrance, keeping his eyes on the entrance to the Tent of Meeting while doing so. Thus the verse says, "and sprinkle it toward the Tent of Meeting."

After the Kohen concluded the sprinkling, he wiped his hands on the body of the Cow. He would then kindle the fire, place the Cow upon it, and taking cedar wood, some hyssop, and some crimson-dyed wool weighing five shekels (four ounces) exclaim three times before those present: "Behold this cedar wood, behold this cedar wood, behold this cedar wood." They in turn would reply: "Yes, yes, yes." He would then say, "Behold this hyssop, behold this hyssop, behold this hyssop," and they would answer "Yes, yes, yes." The same thing was repeated for the crimson wool. He would say, "Behold this crimson wool, behold this crimson wool, behold this crimson wool!" and be answered "Yes, yes, yes."

This triple calling-out ceremony served the purpose of drawing attention to the particular cedar wood, hyssop and dye extract specified by the Torah. This was necessary because there are seven different species of cedar and four species of hyssop; and as for the red dye, some use extract of the madder or of some other herb, while others use the tola'at which the Torah mentions here. These refer to deep-red grains that resemble carob seeds and are round like the fruit of the sumac plant; the tola'at itself was a species of small gnat found inside those grains. The hyssop referred to is oregano, which is eaten by men of means and also used as a condiment.

The Torah further specifies that the hyssop and the cedar wood were to be tied with the crimson wool and then cast into the entrails of the burning Cow. This was to be done after a large part of the animal had already caught fire but prior to it becoming nothing but ashes. If the animal was thrown into the flames before this point of the ceremony, it was rendered unfit.

When the burning was completed and the animal actually turned into ashes, its remains were beaten with sticks and a sieve was then used for sifting it out from the firewood. Blackened and charred pieces that could be crushed into soot were retained and used with its ashes for purifying those who were ritually contaminated. The residual ashes were divided into three parts. One part was placed in the Chail, the wall facing the Women's Gallery of the Temple; another part was deposited on the Anointment Hill, the Mount of Olives; and the third part was distributed to those on guard duty outside the enclosure of the Temple, to be used for purifying anyone who was ritually contaminated.

The ashes on Anointment Hill were reserved for purifying the Kohen-priest who had performed the burning of the Parah Adumah. This was necessary in order to enable him to perform the same service again.

Just as the Kohen Gadol would be separated from his home and his wife for seven days prior to Yom Kippur, the Kohen performing the burning of the Parah Adumah would also go into retreat for seven days prior to that ceremony. The chamber that was prepared for him for this purpose was located in the Azarah and was called the Stone Chamber. On each of the seven days preceding the ceremony, he would be sprinkled with purification water that had been prepared by using the ashes kept on Anointment Hill.

The ashes in the Chail were not used at all but held there for safekeeping in accordance with G-d's command that "They shall be a keepsake for the community of Yisrael." (BaMidbar 19:9) 

A person rendered ritually impure by a corpse would remain in this condition for seven days. On the third day and the seventh day he would be sprinkled with the aforementioned purification water, or Niddah Water, which, as we have explained, was prepared by mixing the ashes in a vessel containing spring water. It was also called sprinkling water and Sin-Offering Water.

This water was sprinkled not only on the contaminated person but also on any garments or vessels that were ritually defiled as a result of having been in the same tent with a corpse.

The sprinkling was not done directly by hand, however. The ritually clean person, the Kohen, would take three hyssop roots, each branch with a single bud on it, tie them together and dip the tips of these buds in the Niddah Water. The Kohen then pointed the branches toward the man or the vessels requiring purification, and then sprinkled the water on the ritually impure person or objects. This was done on the third day and on the seventh day, after sunrise. If the sprinkling was done earlier but after the onset of the morning light, that was also effective. For the sprinkling to achieve its intended purpose, it was sufficient for the water to fall on any part of the person or the vessel requiring purification; it was even enough for a drop to touch the tip of a finger or lip.

Everyone involved in handling the Parah Adumah at any stage of the ceremony became ritually impure both the person and their robes. To become ritually clean again, they had to immerse themselves in a mikvah and have their garments washed.

The incomprehensible profundity of the commandment of the Parah Adumah is a source of perplexity that the nations of the world have exploited against the Jewish people. For how can this mitzvah make sense, they contend, if it involves a contradiction: on the one hand of purifying the ritually impure, and on the other hand defiling those who are ritually pure?

It is for this reason indeed that the scripture says, "The following is declared to be the Torah's decree." It does not say, "The following is declared to be the teaching Torah" but rather, that it is an unexplained decree and should not be pondered.

Accordingly, if any non-Jew asks for an explanation of this matter, he is to be told that it is a decree-by-fiat of the Torah, a commandment given without explanation. Thus, the Torah says, "The following is declared to be the Torah's decree as commanded by G-d, saying, "leimor." That is, when speaking to the nations on this matter, you should be saying to them the following and no more: It is a decree of the Torah.

Although we have just said that the deep reason for this commandment is hidden from us, our sages have provided a clue to its secret by telling us that it is related to the sin of the Golden Calf: the Parah Adumah was an atonement for that sin as the cow is mother to the calf.

The son of a servant girl once soiled in a palace whereupon those present said, "Let the mother come and clean up the feces." It is the same here. G-d said, "Let the Cow atone for the sin of the Calf."

This also explains why the Cow had to be red for sins are compared by the prophet Yeshayahu to the color red: "Though your sins be like scarlet, they shall be white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be white as wool." (Yeshayahu 1:18)

That the Cow had to be complete in its perfection is also related to the fact that the Benei Yisrael were in a state of perfection before being flawed by the sin of the Golden Calf. Accordingly, an unblemished cow was involved in returning them to their condition of perfection.

Moreover, since they had thrown off the yoke of Heaven in worshiping the Golden Calf, the regulation required that the Parah Adumah must never have had a yoke placed upon it.

That the first Parah Adumah was to be given to El'azar the Kohen rather than to Aharon himself, is explained as follows: the populace had assembled before Aharon and demanded that he make them the Calf, which he proceeded to do. An accuser [or witness for the prosecution] cannot become an advocate for the defense.

The burning of the Cow recollects the burning of the Calf.

That the cedar wood, the crimson wool, and the hyssop - three items - were combined together contains an allusion to the 3000 people who died on account of the Calf. These particular three things were taken because the cedar is the tallest of all trees and the hyssop is the most lowly. The Torah thus teaches us that anyone who is excessively proud should learn to see himself as lowly as a tola'at, worm; as King David declared, "But I am a worm (tola'at) and no man." (Tehillim 22:7) When a man demeans himself, his sins will be forgiven.

Furthermore, just as the sin of the Calf would be transmitted throughout the generations as it is written, "When I grant special providence to the people, I will take this sin of theirs into account" (Shemot 32:34), so did G-d command the ashes of the Cow to be kept for all generations: "They shall be a keepsake for the  community of Yisrael."

The reason why the Parah Adumah contaminated anyone who came in contact with it is indicated in the Torah law that states that any object of idol worship renders ritually impure by carrying contact. The Talmud declares: "What is the proof that an idol renders tamei by contact like a niddah? Because it says, 'You shall defile also the silver plating of your carved idols and the gold binding of your molten images: You shall cast them away as a menstruous thing.'" (Yeshayahu 30:22) In other words, just as a menstruating woman (niddah) renders ritually impure by contact, so does an object of idol worship defile by contact. Since the Golden Calf idol defiled all who were involved with it, the Parah Adumah renders impure all who come in contact with it.

Conversely, just as the Benei Yisrael were purified by the ashes of the Calf that Moshe burned and ground up, so do the ashes of the Parah Adumah purify those who are ritually impure.

The Midrash relates that when Moshe went up to Heaven, he heard the voice of G-d teaching the angels this chapter on the Parah Adumah; it was saying, "My son Eliezer declares that a cow is two years old."

That is, the opinion of Rabbi Eliezer was quoted to the effect that the animal is called a cow only at age two.

Whereupon, Moshe exclaimed, "The entire universe is under Your dominion, yet You quote the ruling of one who is mere flesh and blood?"

And G-d answered, "Let it be known to you that a righteous man will arise in the future whose words will begin the tractate dealing with the laws of the Parah Adumah, the tractate of Parah."

"May it be Your will that this man be a descendant of mine," said Moshe. And so it was for Rabbi Eliezer the Great was of the progeny of Moshe.

A prophetic allusion to this fact can be found in the Portion of Yitro, where the scripture says, "The name of the one was Eliezer" (Shemot 18:4). By omitting the word "other"- even though he was the second or "other one" of Moshe's sons - the Torah deliberately stresses that Eliezer will be that "one" bearing the distinction of descent from our teacher Moshe.

Why did Moshe specifically ask that Rabbi Eliezer be of his descendants? After all, G-d had revealed to Moshe all the generations and its sages, and He had no doubt also revealed to him the views of many others of the sages on this question of the age of a cow, so why did he settle on Rabbi Eliezer specifically? This is all the more puzzling when we consider that the accepted view is not the one quoted in the name of Rabbi Eliezer, but that of Rabbi Meir who says that [the animal is designated as] a "cow" when it is three and a half years old. Should not Moshe, then, have asked that Rabbi Meir, whose opinion prevails be of his descendants?

The answer can be found by recalling what our sages said on the meaning of the Parah Adumah in telling us that it atones for the sin of the Golden Calf. This clue means that all the detailed regulations affecting the ceremony of the Parah Adumah have some bearing on the episode of the Calf. Rabbi Meir was among those who maintained this connection between the Parah Adumah and the Golden Calf, and the reason was that he had not penetrated to the true secret of the commandment of the Parah Adumah. He considered that the natural age for a cow to bear a calf is between three and four years, and in accordance with the view linking the episode of the Golden Calf and the Parah Adumah, held that the Cow had to be between three and four years old.

Rabbi Eliezer, on the other hand, maintained that it was two years old for he knew the true secret of the Parah Adumah, which had nothing to do with the link to the Golden Calf.

Moshe therefore expressed the wish that Rabbi Eliezer should be of his progeny.


The Parah Adumah in History

Altogether nine Parah Adumah were burned from the time of our teacher Moshe until the destruction of the Second Temple. The first was that of Moshe, the second was burned by Ezra the Scribe; two by Shimon HaTzaddik; two by the High Priest Yochanan; the seventh was burned by the prophet Eliyahu; the eighth by Chanamel the Egyptian; and the ninth by Yishmael, son of Piabi. The tenth one will be burned by the Anointed King (the Mashiach) who will be purifying all of the Jewish people that will have become defiled by their transgressions.

21:6 vayeshalach HASHEM ba'am et hanechashim haserafim vayenashchu et-ha'am vayamat am-rav miYisrael
HaShem sent against the people the consuming snakes, and they bit the people, and many people of Yisrael died.
We must now explain why, when G-d dispatched snakes into the midst of the people, they were described as ha-nachashim ha-serafim "poisonous snakes" or "snakes and fiery serpents," while when the Benei Yisrael pleaded before Moshe to rid them of the snakes, they mentioned only the term nachash; "Take the snakes away from us."

Moreover, when G-d instructed Moshe to make a copper snake, He told him to make a "seraf," but when Moshe proceeded to make the copper snake it says that he made a copper "nachash" rather than a seraf.

The Torah is teaching us here that G-d is more severe with those who insult or otherwise cause injury to a righteous man than with those who are irreverent toward Him. Thus we find that when the seer Ido came to Yerav'am with an evil prophecy and Yerav'am reached out to grab him, his hand dried up. (1Melachim 13:4) Notwithstanding that Yerav'am worshiped idols, he remained hale and untouched. When he wanted to harm the prophet, however, his hand dried up.

The Benei Yisrael were guilty here of two transgressions, and on account of these, correspondingly, G-d sent against them the nachashim, snakes, and the serafim, seraphs. For speaking rebelliously against G-d, they were afflicted with the snakes, that having been also the sin of the original serpent. The seraphs, or "fiery" snakes, were sent as retribution upon the Benei Yisrael for having maligned Moshe, whom the scripture calls an angel or seraf. Thus, it says, referring to Moshe, "He heard our voice and sent a representative (malach, literally, angel) to take us out of Egypt" (BaMidbar 20:16), a malach being called, interchangeably, a seraf, as it is written, "Serafim stood above Him..." (Yeshayahu 6:2)

That the punishment for insulting a Torah sage is to be bitten by a seraf-snake is reflected in the statement of the Talmud: "Be circumspect in relation to Talmidei Chachamim (Torah scholars) for their hiss is the hiss of a seraf."

Accordingly, when the Benei Yisrael came to Moshe they asked him to rid them of the snakes, not mentioning the seraf. They were saying, "We know you for a man of humility and, therefore, that you have forgiven our irreverence towards you. But we ask you to plead for us before G-d for our having profaned Him, the punishment for which is snakes."

When Moshe prayed on their behalf, however, G-d said to him, "I regret more the insult to you than to Me; you are therefore to make the image of a seraf." But Moshe showed his humility by making a snake rather than a seraf as if to say, "The injury to my honor I have forgiven, and it is for the honor of Heaven solely that I grieve."

Similarly, we find elsewhere in the Torah [a discrepancy between G-d's instructions to Moshe and his ensuing actions. At the exodus from Egypt,] G-d commanded Moshe regarding the preparations for the Passover celebration, saying, "They [the Benei Yisrael] must take the blood and place it on the two door posts and on the beam above the door of the houses in which they will eat." (Shemot 12:7) The two door posts represent Moshe and Aharon, and G-d refers to them first, indicating that it was only on their account that the Benei Yisrael were found worthy of deliverance. The beam above the door symbolizes G-d, who acted with loving-kindness toward the Benei Yisrael.

On his part, however, Moshe later mentions the beam over the door first: "Touch the beam over the door and the two door posts with some of the blood in the basin" (BaMidbar 12:22) This indicates that the redemption was due primarily to G-d's grace with the merit of Moshe and Aharon being only a contributory factor.

We note that by his prayer on their behalf, Moshe had caused the attribute of Mercy to replace the attribute of Law or Judgment that was to be applied to the Benei Yisrael. The manner in which this is conveyed is the same as is indicated in the Book of Ester; the Scripture first alludes to the Tetragrammaton in a reversed sequence, and then by a proper sequence of words. The Tetragrammaton symbolizes the attribute of Mercy, and its obverse, the attribute of Judgment.

When the decree for the destruction of the Jewish people in the time of Queen Ester was issued, the Tanach writes, "v'chol zeh ainenu shoveh li," "Yet all this avails me nothing, as long as I see Mordecai, the Jew, sitting at the King's gate." (Ester 5:13) Taking the last letters of the words in reversed order, we get the Tetragrammaton, which tells us that the Attribute of Judgment prevailed.

But after Mordechai and Ester had spent three days in fasting and prayer, the Attribute of Judgment was replaced by the Attribute of Mercy. Then it says, "yavo hamelech v'haman hayom," "if it seems good to the King, let the King and Haman come this day to the banquet that I have prepared for him." (BaMidbar 5:4) The first letters of the words taken in order form the Tetragrammaton.

Similarly, in the present instance, the verse says (BaMidbar 21:9), "Vay'samayhu al hanes," instead of, "Vayasem oto al hanes." The explanation is forthcoming, however, once we notice that "Vay'samayhu" provides the letters Yod Heh Vav, which when combined with the letter Heh that begins the following word (hanes), gives the Tetragrammaton. It means that through the prayer of Moshe, G-d's Name, signifying the Attribute of Mercy, was set right. This is conveyed by the Torah then writing, "Whenever ("v'hayah," literally, "When it was that") a snake bit a man..." That is, before Moshe had offered his prayer, if a man was bitten by a snake, the Attribute of Judgment---"vahayah" the letters of the Tetragrammaton in improper ordering prevailed.  (The natural consequence of being bitten by a snake, as determined by the laws of nature - Judgment or Law - then inevitably following.)  After Moshe's prayer, however, the Attribute of Mercy prevailed.


The Copper Snake in History

The copper snake that Moshe made lasted a long time, serving to remind successive generations of the harsh punishment incurred by those who spoke maliciously - whether against G-d or against the prophets. During the reign of King Chizkiyahu, however, when idolatry was widespread, many fell into the error of regarding the copper snake as an object of idol worship. They reasoned that since Moshe had made the snake at G-d's bidding and that since it could heal any victim of snake bite who just looked at it, the copper snake must itself be a source of power. Whereupon the king pounded the copper snake into dust as it is written, "He... broke in pieces the copper serpent that Moshe had made: For until that time the Benei Yisrael burned incense to it; and he called it Nechushtan" (2Melachim 18:4)

That is, King Chizkiyahu ridiculed it by calling it "Nechushtan," a mere block of copper (nechoshet) that could not possibly have any intrinsic powers. This action of King Chizkiyahu was one of the six things that he did. For three of them the sages acclaimed him; but of the three others, they did not approve.


The Six Acts of King Chizkiyahu (Hezekiah)

King Chizkiyahu's father Achaz was a thoroughly wicked man, a heretic who committed every conceivable crime. When he died, his son Chizkiyahu refused to afford him the customary honorable funeral and instead humiliated his remains by having them dragged to the grave on a travois. His purpose, on the one hand, was to obtain forgiveness for his father; on the other hand, it was to set an example for the wicked to take to heart lest they suffer the same kind of humiliation.

Chizkiyahu's second act was the aforementioned destruction of the copper serpent, to prevent people from worshiping it.

His third act was to conceal the Book of Medications that King Shlomo had authored. The book dealt with every illness, and whenever anyone fell ill, if he consulted it, he would be healed.

When King Chizkiyahu saw, however, that no sick man would now humble himself by asking G-d for mercy, instead placing his trust in this book, he hid the book away so people once again would place their trust in G-d, the true Physician. (Berachot, Chapter 1; Pesachim, Chapter 4)

One view has it that this Book of Medications relied on astrological considerations in effecting a cure. The patient would be healed by having him draw a designated figure at a given hour corresponding to a particular constellation. Such pagan methods were forbidden, and its author had not intended it to be used in this way but as a text for acquiring theoretical knowledge.

Accordingly, when King Chizkiyahu saw that the book was proving to be a bad influence on the people, he concealed it.

In addition to the above three actions for which he was commended by the sages, the following three did not meet with their approval.

When the Assyrian King, Sancheriv, attacked Yerushalayim and lay siege to the city, Chizkiyahu became frightened and tried to appease him with enormous gifts of silver and gold, even taking down the golden doors of the Sanctuary of the Temple and sending them to the Assyrian monarch.

When Sancheriv besieged Yerushalayim a second time, however, Chizkiyahu, after consulting with his advisors, stopped up the water of the Gichon Spring to deprive the enemy of water. Thus it is written, "He took council with his princes and his mighty men to stop the water of the springs which were outside the city: and they helped him" (2Divrei HaYamim 32:3) The sages did not approve of this action, concluding that he should have put his trust in G-d instead.

They also objected when he did not act in time to declare a leap year by intercalating a second month of Adar, but waiting until the onset of Nissan before naming it Adar II. (Rashi, ad. loc.)

21:10 vayisu benei Yisrael vayachanu b'ovot
Benei Yisrael traveled on and camped in Ovot.
The Scripture here omits to mention the two intervening encampments, Tzamonah and Punon, where the people wre bitten by the snakes, (Targum Yonatan, Masai) between their leaving Hor Mountain and arriving at Ovot.

These are listed in Parashat Massei where all the journeys are recorded.  Here, however, only those places where miracles were performed for the Benei Yisrael are listed. (Abarbanel)

Another reason for mentioning those places and no others, is that these four particular place names - Ovot, Iyyei HaAvarim, Nachal Zared, Ever Arnon - serve as reminders of what the Benei Yisrael has perpetuated. Thus, Ovot is generic with oiyev (an enemy):  they became enemies of G-d.  Iyyei HaAvarim conveys that they were full of sin (averah).   The words of Nachal Zared allude to the fact that because of their sins, in all those 38 years they covered only a palm-sized distance, the word zared recalling the word zeret - a span of the hand.  Finally, Ever Arnon refers to their having repented and passing beyond (over) their sins, thus deflecting away G-d's anger. (Tanchuma; Yalkut Shimoni; Bachya)

21:11 vayisu me'ovot vayachanu b'iyei ha'avarim bamidbar asher al-penei mo'av mimizrach hashamesh
They traveled from Ovot and camped in the wasteland passes in the wilderness, facing Moav, eastward of the sun.
12 misham nasau vayachanu b'nachal Zared
They traveled from there and camped in the valley of Zered.
13 misham nasau vayachanu me'ever Arnon asher bamidbar hayotze migvul ha'emori ki arnon g'vul Mo'av bein Mo'av uvein haEmori
They traveled from there and camped opposite Arnon, in the wilderness, extending from the Emori border; Arnon being the Moav border between Moav and the Emori.

A strip of Amori territory extended from the mainland of the Amori to the border of Moav.  The Benei Yisrael confined themselves to this strip; they did not tresspass over the border of Moav, since the Moavi, too, had refused them passage.  Arnon was the boundary separating Moav and Emor. (Rashi)

Since G-d had commanded the Benei Yisrael, "Do not attack Moav and do not provoke them to fight: (Devarim 2:9), the Torah here tells us that although the Benei Yisrael were about to enter the land of Yisrael and were close to the cities of Moav, they did not capture these cities but moved on, taking only those cities that had at one time belonged to Moav but subsequently came under the rule of Sichon, the king of the Amori.  Thus, their conquests by the Benei Yisrael was permitted.  Arnon, however, was not of those cities that Sichon had conquered and placed under his dominion, so the Benei Yisrael could not occupy it.  The Territory conquered by Sichon extended up to Arnon, but did not include Arnon itself; therefore, the Scripture says here it became the Moavi border, separating Moav from the Amori.

As indicated in the following verse, Arnon was situated on waterways along the coast of the Dead Sea, and it remained unconquered Moavi territory. (Ramban; Abarbanel)

21:14 al-ken ye'amar b'sefer milchamot HASHEM et-vahev b'sufa v'et-hanechalim arnon
Concerning this will be told in the Book of the Wars of HaShem, "I have given [you] at the Reeds [Sea] the valleys of Arnon."
In this Book of the Wars of HaShem it is written that the wise men of the age would keep books where they recorded great battles and wondrous events.  These people were known as ministers (moshlim) or writers of parables, for they would write down everything in the form of parables and metaphors.  This particular book was called the Book of the Wars of HaShem (Book of G-d's Wars), since everything that happens in all wars is the work of G-d.

This and many other of the books written by those people of renown were lost with the onset of the exile.  Among them was the book of the prophet Natan and the prophet Eido, the chronicles of the kings of the Yisraeli Kingdom, and the poems and the parables of King Shlomo. (Ramban; Abarbanel; Ibn Ezra)

21:15 v'eshed hanechalim asher nata l'shevet ar v'nishan ligvul Moav
And the spillage in the valleys when it turned to dwell at Ar, and then leaned on the border of Moav.
The following was the great miralce that G-d performed for the Benei Yisrael at the streams of Arnon.  We noted earlier that the Benei Yisrael found themselves in the strip of Amori territory that lay between the country of Emor proper and the boundary of Moav, including the Moavi border town of Arnon.  This patch of land, which the Amori king had permitted the Benei Yisrael to enter, was hedged between two mountains, one on the Moavi side directly facing another one on the Amori side.  The slope of the former was marked by many caves, while directly opposite on the Amori mountain were many projections directly in line with those caves.  A very deep valley of about 7 mil across separated the two mountains, and there the river Arnon flowed.  In order to reach the land of Yisrael, the Benei Yisrael had to cross this valley.

Just as they were approaching the vicinity of the city of Arnon, the seven kings of Kenaan massed there untold numbers of army divisions, some of them in the valley directly in line with the advancing Benei Yisrael, and some of them concealed in the caves of the Moavi mountain.  Since the Benei Yisrael had to pass through this valley on their way to the land of Yisrael, the Kenaani's strategy was for some of their armies to attack the Benei Yisrael frontally, while their other armies would be in the caves, utilizing the advantage of their position to hurl down upon the Benei Yisrael boulders and arrows to annihilate them all.

Miraculously, however, G-d prepared another route for the Benei Yisrael.  Just as they were approaching the point of ambush, He uprooted the mountain on the Amori side and joined it to the moutain on the Moavi side.  Its projections penetrated the cave openings, crushing and squashing the armies of the enemy trapped inside.

That the Amori mountain was shifted towards the other mountain, and not the other way around, can be understood if we think of the Benei Yisrael as returning beloved son who is met in welcome outside the city by a servant.  The Benei Yisrael were coming to the land of Yisrael and a mountain of the land of Yisrael came forth to greet them.

When the two mountains came together, there was no longer any height or valley visible there, only a level throughway which the Benei Yisrael traversed. They did not know that it was not always thus, and were unaware of the great miracle which G-d had performed for them.

Then, however, the mountains returned to their original positions, it being G-d's will to reveal to His children what He had done for them. The well that accompanied the Benei Yisrael thereupon overflowed into the caves and, through the strong suction of the waters, drew forth human organs, heads and limbs. (BaMidbar Rabbah; Rashi; Bachya; Mizrachi)

The Benei Yisrael, who had known nothing of this, now went looking for the well of which they had lost sight, and suddenly beheld this great waterfall sweeping along heads and arms and legs.  This is conveyed by the verse that follows. (Rashi;  Tanchuma; Yalkut Shimoni)

21:16 umisham b'era hiv habe'er asher amar HASHEM l'Moshe esof et-ha'am v'etna lahem mayim
From there, [the Benei Yisrael traveled] to the well; this is the well of which HaShem said to Moshe, 'Gather the people and I will give them water.'"
This verse is not to be interpreted as saying that the Benei Yisrael received their well at this point. The well had been with them ever since the Exodus, when they began their travels forty years earlier, and did not appear now, at the end of the forty years.  That is, the Scripture is not saying that the Benei Yisrael traveled fro mthere to the well, but that a stream of blood reached from there up to this well, causing them to become aware of the miracle that was performed for them.

Accordingly, they began to chant: "It was then that Yisrael sang the song: 'Rise, O well respond...'" (21:17)

We can now also offer an alternate rendering: "Therefore speak in the book, as wars are for G-d..." In other words, G-d is saying to the Benei Yisrael, "You need not occupy yourselves with war; be preoccuped with the Torah and I will then wage war for you."  Thus, too, had G-d advised David that if he was taken up with the Torah, He would wage war for him. (Yalkut Shimoni; Yalkut Reuveni, quoting Yalkut Shimoni on Tehillim)

21:17 az yashir Yisrael et-hashira hazot ali v'er enu-laIt was then that Yisrael sang this song: "Arise , O well, sing to it!
18 b'er chafaruha sarim karuha n'divei ha'am bimchokek b'mishanotam umimidbar matana
The well dug by princes, that the nobles of the nation excavated, through the lawgiver, with their staffs; from the wilderness a gift.
19 umimatana nachali'el uminachali'el bamot
The gift [traveled] to the valley, and from the valley to the heights.
20 umibamot hagay asher bisde Mo'av rosh hapisga v'nishkafa al-p'nei hayeshimon
And from the heights to the valley that is in the field of Mo'av, at the top of the peak that overlooks the wastelands."
Of that well they sang in thanksgiving to G-d which had floated the splintered bodies of their enemies.

"The well dug by princes" - a well carved out by Moshe and Aharon with their staffs. They had not actually dug this well, of course, since G-d had made it available in the desert and there was no need to dig or to do anything else.  What the Toarh is telling us is that the well continued to serve them in the merit of Moshe and Aharon. (Rashi; Mizrachi)

According to another interpretation, "princes" is an allusion to the Patriarchs; as it is written, "He opened the rock, and the water gushed out; it ran in the dry places like a river. For He remembered His holy promise to Avraham His servant" (Tehillim 105:41, 41). (Tanchuma; Yalkut Shimoni

"that the nobles of the nation excavated":  Whenever the Benei Yisrael traveled, the well would follow them; and when they camped, the peoples' leaders would seat themselves about the well and use their staffs to indicate the direction in which the waters should flow in order to reach the individual families and tribes.  Whereupon the waters would pass before every tent, and thus make it unnecessary for anyone to have to go to the well for their water.  Moreover, if a woman wanted to pay a visit to a friend in another tent, she did not have to walk but would be taken to her destination by passing dinghies.

Yalkut MeAm Lo'ez
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