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Rabbi Arthur Segal’s love of people, humanity, and Judaism has him sharing with others “The Wisdom of the Ages” that has been passed on to him. His writings for modern Jews offer Spiritual, Ethical, and eco-Judaic lessons in plain English and with relevance to contemporary lifestyles. He is the author of countless articles, editorials, letters, and blog posts, and he has recently published two books:

The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew

and

A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud

You can learn more about these books at:

www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org
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Saturday, September 13, 2008

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:PREGNANT w ETERNITY:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL

  RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:PREGNANT with ETERNITY:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
  •  

    Search Shopping in the Lowcountry and the Coastal Empire.

    Please don't squander opportunity at hand

    Published Saturday, September 13, 2008
     

    The theater of the absurd is being played upon our national stage regarding pregnancy vis-a-vis qualifications for federal office. As a rabbi, I am reminded of the opening prayer of our Sept. 29 Rosh Hashana services: "Hayom Harat Olam! Today is the birthday of the world!" Literally the Hebrew means: "Today is pregnant with eternity!"

    What wonderful opportunities we in America are given with our election process. Rosh Hashana and our ballots conceive new intentions and birth new possibilities. Today we are alive on this planet. Our choices today will gestate our children's destiny. This moment is pregnant with hopes, with insights, with opportunities as great as eternity.

    While we search our hearts and listen to that "still small Voice," let us balance justice with lovingkindness. Jews sound a ram's horn, as our shofar, because it is spiraled. It reminds us to turn back toward what is right, to return from the escarpment's edge.

    The Kabbalists teach that the Hebrew word "king" alludes to Hebrew words for "brain, heart and liver." Just as the liver filters blood before it enters the heart, the heart refines it further before sending it to the brain. So must a good leader be intellectually and spiritually refined.

    The blasts of the shofar tell all humanity, as we vote, quoting Rabbi Seidenberg, "Today you will find courage. Today you will be blessed. Today you will be inscribed to live. Today, if you will listen to the Voice."

    Rabbi Arthur Segal

    Hilton Head Island




    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:PINCHAS:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL: ORGY

     RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:PINCHAS:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL: ORGY
     

    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:NUMBERS 25:10-30:01:PARASHA PINCHAS:"Pinchas Interruptus"

     
    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:NUMBERS 25:10-30:01:PARASHA PINCHAS:"Pinchas Interruptus" 
     

    PARASHA PINCHAS
    NUMBERS 25:10-30:01
    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
    HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
    BLUFFTON, SC
    JEWISH RENEWAL:
    JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL

    "Pinchas Interruptus"

    SYNOPTIC ABSTRACT:

     

    A zealot murders a sinning Jew in the middle of an orgy. God rewards the
    zealot with the high priesthood. The Talmudic rabbis struggle to try to
    understand this incongruity. At times their conclusions appear to be like
    reruns of Star Trek with Trills and souls hopping from one body to
    another. The Spiritual and Renewal Judaism believes that all Jews are welcome
    regardless of what spoke on the Judaic wheel they find themselves-- as
    all spokes are equidistant to God's love. To learn more about this week's
    Parasha, please read on.

    This week's Parasha continues with the story that was started at the end
    of last Shabbat's portion. To review, we learned how the King of Moab,
    Balak, hired the sorcerer Balaam, a hit-man for hire, to curse the Jews.
    Balaam failed in his mission. In the last few verses of
    Parasha Balak (Num. 25:1-9) we read how Balaam, not to be outgunned by
    God, convinces Balak to take one last stab at the Jews. They send their
    daughters into the Israelite camp. An orgy begins, which includes
    worshipping the idol Ba'al Pe'or. The Midrash teaches that this rite
    involves defecation in front of this idol and cleaning one's self with
    this idol's nose.

    God brings a plague onto the Jews. Pinchas, a grandson of the recently
    deceased high priest Aaron, follows the Jew Zimri and the Midianitess
    Cozbi, into Zimri's tent. (These two "sinners" are not named until
    Parasha Pinchas.) The name Cozbi means "voluptuous." Pinchas spears them
    in their "stomachs," which the Talmud explains are their genitals, while
    they were "belly to belly." The plague stops.

    This week's parasha continues the tale. Pinchas is rewarded for his
    zealotry by God promising him the high priesthood for himself and
    his sons. The Jews are commanded to smite the Midianites.
    A new census is taken of the tribes and of the Levites. Moses rules on an
    inheritance involving fatherless sisters who have no brothers. Moses
    officially picks Joshua to be his successor. More priestly sacrifices are
    enumerated including those for Shabbat and our major holidays.

    The rabbis of the Talmud had trouble trying to be apologists for
    Pinchas's actions. The law in Talmud Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin is clear. Before someone
    is put to death for a crime he is given a trial. There must be two
    witnesses. These two witnesses must swear that not only did they see the
    crime, but also that they both warned the defendant that what he was
    about to do was illegal and punishable by death. They even had to state
    which of the four legal means of execution would apply to this particular
    crime. If these specific legalities were not done, the judges had to
    acquit the defendant.

    How did they explain Pinchas's actions as well as his reward? The rabbis
    of the Talmud in Tractate Sanhedrin 82A say that Pinchas remembered
    learning of a law that Moses heard from God which Moses had not yet
    taught the people. This law was, "He who has sexual relations with a
    heathen may be attacked by zealous people." This is why Pinchas skewered
    Zimri and Cozbi in their genitals while they were having sex. This is why
    he left them dead in this position. This would be proof that he had a
    God-given right to kill both of them. The Talmud teaches that the Hebrew
    word for "spear" is "romach." This word numerically is equal to 248,
    which is the number of positive mitzvot in the Torah.

    The Talmudic rabbis rule that this law is still in effect but that a
    zealot must catch the two in the act of sexual intercourse and cannot
    punish the offenders when the act is over. This is called the law of
    Pinchas Interruptus. Now many of you are saying to yourselves that you
    have never heard of this law. You have not--as I made up the name. This
    is because the Talmudic rabbis decreed that if anyone asks about this law
    "we should not instruct him" about it or to follow it. This is why they
    teach that the Torah never mentions this law. It is part of the oral law,
    or Mishna, which they believe also was given to Moses when he was on
    Sinai. Unfortunately, either Zimri was not in chedar (Hebrew school) when
    this oral law was taught or he chose to ignore it.

    The rabbis wanted to know why Moses didn't kill Zimri. They posit that
    maybe he forgot about the law that he taught Pinchas. Other rabbis argue
    that Moses knew that Zimri did idol worship to Ba'al Pe'or and that he
    would come to trial for this and be executed "civilly." Regardless, the
    Midrash rabbis realize that Moses erred in allowing Pinchas to kill Zimri
    zealously without trial. They wrote, "because Moshe did not kill Zimri,
    Moshe's burial place is not known." This is how God punished Moses for
    letting a zealot commit murder while on his watch.

    The rabbis knew that they had to develop some "wiggle room" on this law.
    Keeping it hidden would not work. Therefore, they ruled that a zealot had
    the commandment to kill two fornicators caught in the act but that these
    lovers could defend themselves and kill the zealot. This would not be
    considered murder but rather self-defense. The lovers would be pardoned.
    This is because no judgment of a Beth Din (Jewish court) had been decreed
    upon them.

     

    But then another rabbi asks, "Who is there that God would
    pardon, and yet we should kill him?" The rabbis come to an impasse as the
    Torah does state a punishment for sex with a heathen. It is "Karet."
    Karet is excision. It is carried out only by God. It means that one day
    God will cut the sinner's life short. But the rabbis say this punishment
    is for someone who has completed the sex act and did not get caught while
    doing it.

    The rabbis then posit that forbidden sexual unions must be the gravest of
    sins. They state that sexual union involves the whole essence of man
    (women are not mentioned). They say this because a child may be born with
    great powers. So therefore a Jewish man could transmit his Jewish powers
    to a child of a non-Jewish woman, and hence create a non-Jewish powerful
    person. The rabbis go on to say that "three partners produce a man: his
    mother, his father, and God
    who give him a soul."

     

    So if one has sex for pleasure in an illicit
    union, one is forcing God to watch. God is a jealous God, the rabbis
    remind themselves. The Torah says in Numbers 25:11 that Pinchas avenged
    God's jealousy with his zealotry. If Balaam in last week's parasha is the
    ultimate in evil, Pinchas is the ultimate party-pooper. There are no
    times today when kana'ut, zealous religious jealousy, is acceptable in a
    pluralistic society.

    The Hebrew word for desire with an intense longing for physical pleasure
    regardless of its spiritual value is "tiva." Balaam sent the Moabite
    women to entice our men. Somehow there was a switch in the Torah, and
    they are now called Midianite women. Balaam was a Midianite. But so was
    Ziporrah, Moses's wife. The Midrash states that Zimri publicly defied
    Moses by having sex with Cozbi, saying to Moses that it was not fair that
    Moses could have sex with a Midianite when the rest of the Israelite men
    could not. The Talmud in Tractate Sanhedrin 82A says that Zimri was
    really Shlumiel ben Tzurishadia the prince of Shimon who offered his
    tribe's sacrifices to the Tabernacle (Num.7:36).

    Tractate Bava Kama states that the Moabite daughters were forced by Balak
    to have sex with the Israelite men, but that the Midianite daughters of
    Balaam did so willingly. This is why God ordered that just the Midianites
    to be slain and that the Moabite women be spared. Of course we must
    recall that Ruth--the maternal founder of the David kingship lineage--was
    a Moabitess. If Moses ordered that all of the Moabites be killed, how
    would King David and his scion, the Messiah, be born?

    The actions of Pinchas lead to him and his children being granted the
    priesthood. The rabbis are concerned with this Torah statement as well.
    Why? God is contradicting Himself. God said that Aaron's descendants (who
    had not yet been born) would carry the Kohan name. Pinchas was already
    born. Pinchas was a Levite. He was "only" Aaron's grandson on his
    mother's side. Pinchas was originally left out of the Kohanem and spent
    39 years as a Levite. He did however study Torah directly from Moses, the
    Midrash states. Pinchas was not one of the Levites that rebelled with
    Korach. The Talmud says he was content being a Levite. His maternal great
    uncle was Nachshon ben Aminadav. The Midrash states that Nachshon was the
    first to jump into the Sea of Reeds when Moses gave the command. The
    rabbis posit that this situation also was an example of an unwritten law
    that Moses already knew.

     

     The rabbis of the Zohar remind us about the sons
    of Aaron, who would be in line for the priesthood. They were killed by God for
    offering "strange fire." These two sons were named Nadav and Avihu. These
    souls jumped into Pinchas body so that he could be a Kohan legally
    without God having to change His immutable law. This also allows God to
    break His own law by allowing a man who has killed to become a high
    priest. Pinchas is no longer Pinchas but really two other men. So this
    new law is not a new law but actually a continuation of the old law, the
    sages say. We will read of a third example of this later on in this
    parasha.

    The rabbi known as the Ba'al ha Turim writes that Pinchas also received
    another reward. He received Elijah's soul. Traditionally we are taught
    that Elijah was not born of flesh and blood parents. The idea of God
    being a parent is not a foreign idea to Judaism. His soul came down from
    heaven and lived in Pinchas's body. It was Elijah's soul that made
    Pinchas into a zealot. Eventually Elijah's soul years later found its way
    into Elijah's body. But Elijah never died. His soul went to back to
    heaven in a fiery chariot. We invite Elijah, who made Pinchas into a
    zealot, into our homes on Passover and also when we perform a Brit Milah
    (circumcision). During these occasions we remember Eliyahu HaNavi (Elijah
    the Prophet) as the loving helper of Israel. We forget that he too was a
    fiery zealot who confronted the evil monarchs of his generation.

    There are some striking similarities between the story of the Golden Calf
    in Exodus and the worship of Ba'al Pe'or in Numbers. In Ex. 32:06 and
    Num. 25:02 the Jews brought offerings to the idol, and they ate. Moses
    both times let each man kill his "brother" (fellow tribe member) who
    sinned. Both times Moses tried to appease God by calling for some
    punishment. Moses was successful in this in Exodus but it was Pinchas who
    took action in Numbers and appeased God. This theme of Moses no longer
    being a capable leader, which was addressed in Parasha Chukat when he
    struck the rock, is continued here. It culminates with Moses naming
    Joshua as the new leader in this portion.

    A close reading will reveal that Joshua will be a different kind of
    leader. He will not be allowed to rely on his own intuition in making
    decisions. He will have to be dependent on the priests and their divine
    "dice", called the Urim and Thummim, for leadership. This parasha
    established firmly a specific grandson of Aaron as the high priest and
    sets up the priesthood for a major role in leadership. It also tells of
    more offerings to be made, which sets up the priesthood to be wealthy.
    This is all done under the backdrop of the story of instant death
    without trial by a priestly zealot in the case of one who "misbehaves."

    The third new law that Moses teaches has to do with inheritance. The
    daughters of Tzelofchad have no brothers and their father is dead.
    Regarding the way the Torah law was given originally, their inheritance
    would go to their male cousins or uncles. Moses reveals a new law, which
    was part of the oral law that he learned from God. This law now becomes
    part of the written Torah law. A Midrash states that Moses might have
    been a bit overconfident when he told the Israelites to bring all
    questions of law to him.

    Now, where have we heard this sex and zealot story recently? When the
    AIDS pandemic hit did we not hear preachers say that this was a "gay
    plague" to punish homosexuals for their "immoral sex acts?" Did our own
    government not rush to do HIV research because politically they were
    pressured by zealots who stated that this was a Divine punishment? I
    guess the zealot preachers felt that if these gay men were in the bath
    houses and not at "chedar" it was their tough luck.

    The Talmud written by rabbis who were Pharisees had a different agenda
    than the obvious pro-priest authors of this Shabbat's portion. They do
    not want to see zealots abound especially for political reasons. The Jews
    were an occupied people and saw the destruction the Romans heaped upon
    them after Bar Kochba's failed rebellion. Tractate Kiddushin 70B states
    "if you see a Kohan who is arrogant, be assured that his lineage is
    genuine." Hoshea 4:04 writes "your nation is argumentative like a Kohan."
    Tractate Bava Batra 160B teaches that "Kohanem are bad-tempered." The
    Maharal says that they think that the "fire of holiness" is in them and
    their blood "boils." The Talmud records how Kohanem would kill each other
    in the Temple courtyard while arguing over who would perform the Temple
    services. Certain services yielded better cuts of sacrificed meats.

    Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan wrote in his Judaism as a Civilization: Toward a
    Reconstruction of American-Jewish Life that "a religion is as much a
    progressive unlearning of false ideas concerning God as it is the
    learning of the true ideas concerning God." Hadith of Tiridhi said that
    "one true scholar of religion is more annoying to Satan than a thousand
    of the faithful who perform only their ceremonial duties."

     

    Zealotry did not stop with Pinchas. Until recently Jewish communities could perform
    the act of excommunication on those with whom they disagreed. Rabbis in
    Israel zealously call immigrants "disease carriers" and "abominations."
    They compare liberal Jews to "Amalek and Satan." They pray that our
    "memory be wiped out." They pray to God that the head of the liberal
    Meretz party be "uprooted from the seed of Israel. Just as revenge was
    wrought on Haman, so will it be wrought on him."

     

    Recently Rabbi Yosef of
    Shas protested the Israeli Supreme Court's decision of finding Shas
    political leader Deri guilty of bribe-taking. He called the justices
    "goyem" who were "led astray by Satan." Unfortunately, it appears that
    both Aryeh Dari and Rabbi Ovadia Yosef forgot about the Torah law
    forbidding the taking and giving of bribes. Perhaps they missed this
    lesson at their "chedar."

    Our rabbis wrote in Pirkei Avot (3:21) that if there is no Torah there
    is no proper behavior. But they also said that if there is no proper
    behavior there is no Torah. Our synagogues and our Jewish communities do
    not need zealots acting like Pinchas spearing us with their tongues,
    calling us names, and criticizing our actions. This type of behavior only
    serves to push one away from Judaism.

     

     Rabbi Lawrence Hoffman in the
    summer 2000 edition of Reform Judaism writes that "the needs of the
    Jewish community have fundamentally changed" in the past 100 years. At
    the turn of the last century our synagogues were like a "general store in
    a tiny farming community." By the 1950s our temples were organized as
    enterprises. "Dues were exchanged for programs and services." Jews joined
    but it occupied only a small corner of the congregants' lives.

    Our synagogues in the twenty-first century need to be transformed into
    spiritual centers. The last 20 year have shown how society is fragmented
    and fragile. People feel alienated from each other. Our temples need to
    be places where all are welcome and are welcomed.


    Our temples really need to be a place of sanctuary where inner peace and
    tranquillity can be found.

     

    This God-centered place needs to teach
    people actively how to connect spiritually to God and to each other.
    Rabbi Hoffman continues: "A transformed synagogue reveals the profound
    mystery of the universe of which we are in integral part, connected to
    each other, to the cosmos, to eternity and to God." 

    Jewish Spiritual Renewal   opens   doors to all who seek to enter in
    peace and in search of God. We do not rebuke those who have married out
    of the faith. Nor do we call their children anything but Jews. We accept
    people on whatever spoke of the Judaic dharma wheel they wish to place
    themselves--as every spoke is equidistant to God's love. We will not
    allow zealots or chastisers into our midst who speak of knowing what God
    wants but act as if they have no clue.

    I was positively stuck by Newsweek magazine's July 17, 2000,
    edition. After 60 years writer Tom Ross decided to take back his last
    name (legally) of Rosenberg. He had attended a temple for years
    where he was not harassed for his "mixed marriage" or for his home's
    celebration of both Christmas and Hanukkah. For 60 years he denied his
    family's heritage and now he is learning to embrace it. In undergoing a true Jewish Spiritual Renewal he picked out his new Hebrew name. Mr. Rosenberg said the
    following to his children. "Every time I step into a temple, I'm reminded
    that Judaism has survived for 4,000 years. It survived because it is a
    positive religion. My parents, (your grandparents), changed their name
    out of fear. I'm changing it back out of pride. I chose the name Tikvah
    because it means hope." The Hope of Israel, Ha Mickve Israel, rests with
    a loving, open compassionate way of being and not with hateful,
    exclusive, malevolent bigotry disguised as religious zealotry.

    Shabbat Shalom,
    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL

    HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
    BLUFFTON, SC
    JEWISH RENEWAL:
    JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
     
    ORIGINAL VERSION WRITTEN WHEN SCHOLAR-IN-RESIDENCE AT CONGREGATION TEMPLE MICKVE ISRAEL, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA











    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL: CHUKAT:BALAK:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:BALAAM

     RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL: CHUKAT:BALAK:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:BALAAM

    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:NUMBERS 19:01-25:07:PARASHOT CHUKAT AND BALAK:"Smart Ass"

     RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:NUMBERS 19:01-25:07:PARASHOT CHUKAT AND BALAK:"Smart Ass"
     
     
     
    PARASHOT CHUKAT
    AND BALAK
    NUMBERS 19:01-25:07
    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
    HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
    BLUFFTON, SC 
    JEWISH RENEWAL:
    JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
     
     


    "Smart Ass"

    One definition of a smart ass is one who can sit on a falafel and tell
    you in what type of oil the chick peas were fried. In this week's double
    portion we will read, among other things, about Balaam's talking donkey.

    A close inspection of our two portions, doubled so that we can catch up
    to our brothers and sisters in Israel who are a week ahead of us since
    the Shavuot holiday, will show a repeated theme of juxtaposition of
    opposites. There is a subtle interplay of antinomianism, where good
    becomes evil, evil becomes good, and where the holy becomes defiled and
    the defiled becomes holy. This shifting takes place through kavenah
    (intention).

    Our first of these two parashat, Chukot, begins with the law of the Red
    Heifer. This d'var Torah series discussed many aspects of this strange
    ritual in the special Shabbat called Parah (heifer), which preceded
    Pesach.

     

    The Torah story is now 38 years after the Exodus. Aaron and
    Miriam will die in this portion, and Moses is told that he will be dead
    in two years. Jews have been taught by Moses that they become impure when
    they come in contact with the dead. They are now taught that if they burn
    this perfect-looking red cow and sprinkle themselves with its ashes, they
    can become pure again. However the person doing the sprinkling becomes
    impure.

    The Midrash in trying to explain this paradox sites examples of how evil
    fathers begot good sons, that is, Abraham from Terach, Ezekiel from Ahaz,
    and Josiah from Ammon. The Talmud reminds us that we are forbidden to
    drink blood as it's the source of life but that we are allowed to drink
    milk which is a baby's source of life (Tractate Niddah 9A). King Solomon
    said concerning this paradox in Proverbs 7:23, "I said I would be wise
    but it is far from me."

    Rashi writes that when Numbers 19:14 says the cow should have no
    blemish, it means that it should be perfectly red in color. If there
    were two black hairs on it, the cow was disqualified. He then states that
    a Jew's perfection is disqualified by even the slightest "hairsbreadth"
    of dishonesty or deception.

    We are told of Miriam's death. When she dies, the portable well told of
    in Talmud Bavli Tractate Ta'anit 9A dries. The Jews again rebel because of the
    lack of water. Yet this is the new generation. The old generation who
    griped and moaned is dying off. But their children sound just like the
    older generation! God tells Moses to speak to a rock and ask it for
    water.

     

     Moses, who just lost his sister and is burnt-out by this job he
    never wanted, angrily strikes the rock twice. Water flows. God punishes
    Moses by telling him he will die in the wilderness and will not go into
    the promised land.

     

    If you recall, back in Exodus 17:2-6, Moses also
    strikes a rock for water. God commands Moses in Exodus to take his staff
    and strike the rock. This time Gods tell Moses to take his staff and
    speak to the rock. Maybe God was setting up Moses, giving him confusing
    instructions and giving him a way out of playing nursemaid to the
    Israelites. Ramban writes that this is the same rock from the Exodus
    story as well as the same rock from the Hagar and Ishmael story (Gen.
    21:19).

    The parasha is called "Chukat." Chukat are statutes that were to be
    obeyed traditionally even if we do not understand why. The word is
    related to "l'chakei," which means "to engrave or impress." Moses
    improvised on his own personal chuk. God punished him perhaps as a
    lesson to the Israelites to obey the Torah to its very letter.

    Aaron is given an almost immediate death. Aaron does not hit the rock,
    yet he is punished. The Talmud teaches that Aaron's sin is not blessing
    God when the water gushes out. This non-blessing seemingly causes the
    Israelites to think that the water comes from Moses and not from God.


    This new generation does not witness the miracle at Sinai, nor the ones
    in the desert, nor the greatest miracle of the Exodus from Egypt. This is
    the first miracle that this generation is to witness for themselves.
    Water was to come from a rock by Moses speaking to it in the name of God.
    Moses and Aaron steal the show.

    The Israelites are again of little faith. They rebel over food as their
    parents did. God gives them a plague of poisonous snakes. Moses prays for
    a cure. Gods tell Moses to make a brass statue of a snake on a pole. If
    an Israelite looks at this image of a snake he will be cured from the
    bite of the real snake. One of our Ten Commandments is not to make any
    graven image. Our golden calf was forbidden, but this brass snake is
    allowed.

    So far in our parasha we have learned of ashes that purify what was
    defiled and defile what was pure. We have read of a well that dried up
    when a righteous woman died and a rock that became a well when God was
    disobeyed. We are told that praying to a graven image of a snake will
    cure poisonous snake bites that came from praying (albeit complaining) to
    God for food.

    There is a Talmudic doctrine of "mitzvah ha ba'ah ba-averah"--fulfilling
    a commandment by transgressing it. This a concept of redemption through
    sin. Wherever great holiness exists, there is also great evil. The Talmud
    teaches that a body of a dead religious Jew gives more defilement to
    someone who touches it than a nonreligious person's body. The Ba'al Shem
    Tov, the founder of Hasidism, wrote, "Evil is the throne of Good."

     

     In Kabbalistic terms there is constant interplay between the sephirot of
    chesed (kindness) and gevurah (justice). The rabbinic kabbalists believed
    that the Messiah will also purify what is defiled and defile what is pure
    in order to break the kelippah (husks) surrounding the nitzotzot (holy
    sparks) to do tikun olam (repair of the world).

     

    Traditionally, we are taught that in the Messianic age man will be so pure that the Torah laws
    will not be needed and even pig meat will be kosher. Talmud Bavli Tractate Nazir 23B
    states that "a sin performed for its own sake is greater than a mitzvah
    performed for its own sake."

    The Talmud Bavli in Tractate Moed Katan 28A states that the reason Miriam's
    death is mentioned right after the Red Heifer is to teach that "just as
    the ashes of the parah adumah (red heifer) atones, so does the death of
    the righteous atone." The idea of a rabbi dying for his generation's sins
    is a traditional Jewish idea and not a foreign one.

    In Torah terms, and certainly in agreement with the Kabbalistic
    viewpoint, death is a technical term to describe transition. The Talmud Bavli
    in Tractate Bava Batra 15A asks how, if Moses wrote the whole Torah, he
    was able to write about his own death. The rabbis compromise and decide
    that Moses got all of the Torah from God, but taught these last few verses to Joshua, who wrote
    them down.

     

    But, according to the Zohar, one can die and still walk the
    "face of the earth." The snake in the Garden of Evil gave us spiritual
    filth (zuhama). This prevents the body from rising to the level where the
    soul can bring it to a higher, eternal level (Talmud Bavli Tractate Shabbat 146A).
    When we rot in the ground we shed our spiritual filth and regain our
    ketonet ohr--clothing of light, that Adam wore before Eve chatted with
    the snake, and they ate from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.

    Evil, Rabbi Moses Chaim Luzzatto (the Ramchal) wrote, has only one
    purpose, and that is to be uprooted completely. We are to work to remove
    evil from its existence. During the Messianic age, he teaches, God will
    remove all evil and the world will "perceive His Unity and His
    perfection like a blinding light." Our Aleinu prayer near the end of our
    daily service calls for this to occur.

    The human embodiment of evil is seen in our second of two parashat.
    Balak is the King of Moab (modern Jordan). He fears for his kingdom
    because he has seen what the Jews have done to Sichon and Og, his
    neighbors. So he hires Balaam, the Prophet, to curse the Jews. To Balak,
    Balaam is his secret weapon.

     

     Balaam is called a prophet because he spoke
    with God. God tells Balaam not to be hired by Balak (Num. 12:12).
    When Balak heard that Balaam would not come, he assumed the price he
    first offered was too low, and he increased it. Balaam made a
    counteroffer. God then tells Balaam he can go, but only to say what God
    tells him to say (Num. 22:20).

    Balaam "arose early in the morning and saddled his donkey" (Num. 22:21).
    While Balaam is on his way to curse Israel, his donkey sees an
    angel blocking the road three times. Each time the donkey veers to the
    side, and Balaam hits her. Balaam does not see this angel. Eventually
    Balaam does see the angel, and his curses become blessings.

    "Whoever has three particular traits is counted among the students of
    Abraham, and whoever has three other traits is among the students of
    Balaam. He who has a good eye, humility and contentedness is a student of
    Abraham, while he who has an evil eye, arrogance and greed is a student
    of Balaam" (Mishna Pirket Avot 5:22).

     

    The Talmud Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin 102B reminds us that Abraham, when he was commanded

     by God to sacrifice Isaac,
    also "arose early in the morning and saddled his donkey" (Gen. 22:03). In
    Hebrew the word for saddled (yach'vosh) is related to the verb "to
    conquer." The word for donkey (chamor) matches the word for physicality
    (chomer).

     

    When Abraham saddled his donkey, he conquered his physical
    drives of fear and love for his son in the service of God. When he went
    up to Mount Moriah he left his donkey, meaning his physical needs, behind
    (Gen. 22:05). Balaam gets up early to make a great deal of money by
    causing the destruction of others. Both Abraham and Balaam are tested ten
    times by God. Abraham passes each test. Balaam fails each test. The
    donkey hears the angel of God. The donkey is on a higher level than the
    prophet Balaam. The donkey speaks the truth for only her daily bag of
    feed, while Balaam is prepared to utter curses for his bag of gold and
    silver.

    Abraham's name means the "father of the nation." Balaam's name is from
    the contraction "bi-lo Am," which means "without a nation." Abraham was
    known for his moral integrity, kindness, and loyalty to God. Balaam was a
    hired gun whose loyalty went to the highest bidder. The rabbis also say
    that his name means "swallow" (bilaam) as no matter how many times he was
    humiliated, he would not swallow his pride and admit that he was wrong.

    Talmud Bavli Tractate Eiruvin 13B says that God can tolerate many things but He
    despises the proud. The Zohar points out that the last two letters of
    King Balak's name and the last two letters of Balaam's name spell
    Amelek, the eternal enemy of the Jews. The remaining letters spell Bavel,
    the Hebrew name for Babylonia, the first country to capture the Jews into
    Exile. Bavel also means to "confound" (Gen. 11:09) as we are taught in
    the story of the Tower of Babel.

    The Midrash teaches that Balaam was one of Laban's sons. That means
    Balaam was Jacob's bother-in-law. Balaam is the children of Israel's
    uncle. The Midrash states that the stone wall that Laban and Jacob made
    to seal their truce is the same wall against which the donkey smashes
    Balaam's leg (Num. 22:25).

     

    Jacob and Balaam studied together. But Balaam
    also learned to be hateful and jealous of Jacob from Laban. Balaam was a
    gifted student of the occult. It is taught that he was the advisor to
    Pharaoh who suggested enslaving the Jews. Pharaoh's other advisors were
    Jethro, who advised against Balaam, and Job, who remained neutral. The
    Talmud teaches that Balaam was one of two men who knew "da'at Elyon,"
    God's holy knowledge. The other man was Moses. The Talmud compares Balaam
    with Moses.

    The Talmud teaches in Tractate Berachot 7A that there is an instant each day when
    God is angry, and if you curse someone at that instant it will work.
    Balaam knew how to judge this specific time. This moment is "one
    fifty-eight thousand eight hundred and eighty-eighth part of an hour."
    This is 1/16 of a second. What curse could be pronounced in such a short
    time? The rabbis answer "kelahm," which means "destroy them." When does
    this time occur, they ask. During the first three hours of the day during
    a moment when the comb of a rooster pales as he stands on one leg, they
    answer.

     

    Rabbi Yehoshua wanted to curse a heretic who was continually
    harassing him. The Talmud reports that he therefore tied a rooster to the
    foot of his bed and tried to stay up all night to watch when its comb
    turned from red to pale. But just before that moment came he dozed off.
    The rabbis conclude that God never wants us to ask Him to curse anyone.

    The text called Eicah Rabbah Pesikta 2 states "there never arose a
    philosopher the likes of Balaam son of Beor." The Midrash says that
    "Balaam was granted prophecy for the benefit of Israel." Yet his she-ass
    reprimands him when he threatens her by asking rhetorically, "Am I not
    your she-ass that you have ridden all of your life until this day?" (Num.
    22:30).

     

    Balaam is perceived rabbinically in the Midrash as the last of
    the prophets of the non-Jewish nations who received revelation from God.
    The Midrash says he surpassed Moses in the wisdom of sorcery. Balaam's
    donkey not only could see the angel with his fiery sword but understood
    his intention and refused to go past him. Balaam, the great prophet,
    could not see the angel and beat his donkey three times for bowing to the
    will of God. This donkey not only could hear, understand, and speak, but
    had a soul greater than Balaam's. Balaam was on his way to sin, and his
    she-ass was trying to redeem him. This was one smart ass.

    Again in this parasha we see a juxtaposition of good and evil. We read
    about evil becoming good, about seers who are deaf and blind, and
    about farm animals that are astute and wise. Balaam's speaking donkey
    left him speechless. Balaam eventually blessed us instead of cursing us.
    He said, in words that we hear each Shabbat morning in our service, "How
    goodly are your tents, O Jacob, and your dwelling places, O Israel."


    Rashi says that Balaam really wanted to curse our houses of Torah study
    and our prayer houses. Rashi says if one really wants to kill the Jews,
    one should destroy our synagogues and Torah study. Why does evil persist?
    Why did God give permission for Balaam to proceed toward his goal? The
    Talmud Bavli in Tractate Avodah Zara 3A asks why, if God does not play games
    with his creations, did He not stop Balaam immediately. The Talmud Bavli
    answers, "In the way in which a person wants to go, God will lead him
    there" (Tractate Makkot 10B).

    The Bible has few examples of the application of curses, but has numerous
    blessings expounded. The Jewish prophet Elisha cursed a group of school
    children who mocked him and 42 of them were eaten by two bears (2 Kings
    2:23-24). And we have discussed previously the curse of the Sotah ordeal
    in Numbers 5:11-29 where the words of a curse written on parchment are
    scraped into bitter water and given to a woman, who is suspected of
    adultery, to drink.

    Life really is not a battle of God versus man or good versus evil. Life
    is an eternal battle inside each of us between what we know is right and
    what we know is wrong. It is man's battle against himself. We all have
    the power to curse and the power to bless. The Zohar also teaches that
    the best way a Jew can rid himself of the Amalek, Balaam, Balak, and
    Babylon inside us all is with yira (fear and awe) and ahavah (love) for
    God. The first two letters of yira, combined with the first two letters
    of ahavah spell "yira." The last two letters of yira and the last two
    letters of ahavah spell "ahavah."

     

    When God tells Abraham to leave his
    home and "go forth" he is promised that he "shall be a blessing"
    (Gen.12:2-3). Traditionally, when one dies, we say "zichrono/zicrona
    l'vracha--may he/she be remembered for a blessing." If Balaam's curses
    could be turned into blessings, perhaps we could turn our own personal
    adversities into opportunities for blessings as well.

    At the end of parasha Balak we read that when Balaam fails to curse the
    Jews the Moabites send their daughters to entice the Israelites away from
    God. The men become attached to the idol worship of Baal P'or. The Talmud
    in Tractate Sanhedrin 64A explains that one worshipped this idol by
    defecating in front of it. One would clean one's self by using the nose
    of the idol for wiping.

     

     The rabbis teach that food grows from the
    "accursed" earth. By eating food, we take the good from it. Our body
    eliminates the bad. They teach that manna was from God and was pure good.
    Therefore, the Jews during their 40 years in the desert did not have to
    eliminate bodily waste. So service to Ba'al P'or was 100 percent
    evil. If one could worship in this way one could free himself to do any
    act. Hence in next week's parasha we will read about the orgy with the
    Moab women.

    A sad day on the Jewish
    calendar falls around the time of this Torah portion.  It is called the Fast of Tamuz 17.
     It is the beginning of the three weeks of
    mourning ending with Tisha B'Av.  Tisha B'Av is the 9th of Av.
      Tisha B'Av is when both Temples were destroyed.


    Tamuz 17 is when the walls of Jerusalem were forced open by the Romans.
    During this period traditional Jews do not shave or get their hair cut.
    No marriages are performed. No court cases are held. There is no
    rejoicing with music or dance. The wearing of new clothes or eating a new
    fruit, which would require a "shehechiyanu" blessing, can not be done.
    This fast is not a 24-hour fast like Yom Kippur. It starts at sunrise and
    ends at sundown.

    We are taught traditionally that many tragedies befell the Jewish people
    on the 17th of Tamuz. Moses returned from Mt. Sinai and witnessed the
    Golden Calf and smashed the Tablets. During the fall of the first Temple
    there was starvation. The animal sacrifices stopped as there were no
    animals left. The Romans breached the walls of Jerusalem (the Babylonians
    breached the walls on the 9th of Tamuz). The Talmud in Tractate Ta'anit
    recounts that just before the story of Hanukkah a Syrian governor,
    Apustomus, publicly burned a Torah as well as placed a idol in the Second
    Temple. Historians think it was really a Roman officer, but the rabbis
    censored themselves to avoid the wrath of the Romans and called him a
    "Syrian." King Menashe placed an idol in the First Temple on this day. Menashe, the Talmud teaches, was one of three of Israel's worst kings. He murdered the Prophet Isaiah.  It
    is interesting to note from a modern historical perspective that Saddam
    Hussein's nuclear reactor, from which he planned to create a bomb to drop
    on Israel, was called "Tamuz 17."

    Our two parashat teach us that good and evil can be found paradoxically
    in what we have assumed to be evil and good. Evil exists in man, as God
    gave us the freedom to choose our actions. We can work to eradicate evil
    by choosing intentionally, with the force of kavenah, to make evil into
    good. We can with kavenah make the disallowed into the allowable. We do
    not have the power to keep bad things from happening to us. But we do
    have the power to decide how we will react to it. We cannot change the
    cards that are dealt to us or the way others behave. We can not change
    the inevitable. However, we can control our attitude and the way we think
    about situations. If we "awfulize" them and make everything into a
    catastrophe, we will emote anxiously, angrily, fearfully, or jealously.

    The Mishna teaches that "in a place where there are no leaders, strive to
    be a leader" (Pirkei Avot 2:06). We know wrong from right. Let our lives
    be for a blessing, even when we are cursed for doing so.

     

    The Mishna teaches that Balaam's she-donkey was created right before the first
    Shabbat by God, along with Miriam's well. The Midrash teaches that God
    killed that multi-millennia year old talking donkey to spare mean Balaam
    the embarrassment of having people point to it and say "there goes dumb
    Balaam's smart ass." God went to this great length to preserve the human
    dignity of a wicked character.

    In this week's Haftarah, the prophet Micah (6:08) says that all God asks
    of us is to be just, do acts of loving kindness (ahavath chesed), and be
    humble. Let us try to live with Father Abraham's attributes of a good
    eye, humility, and contentedness and not Uncle Balaam's traits of an evil
    eye, pride, and jealousy. It is not always easy to do, but in both the
    short run and the long haul it is a healthier and a more spiritual way of
    living.

    Shabbat Shalom,
    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL

    HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
    BLUFFTON, SC
    JEWISH RENEWAL:
    JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
     
    ORIGINAL VERSION WRITTEN WHEN SCHOLAR-IN-RESIDENCE AT CONGREGATION TEMPLE MICKVE ISRAEL, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA





    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:KORACH:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:makloket

     RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:KORACH:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:makloket

    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL: NUMBERS 16:01-18:32;PARASHA KORACH:"Burn, Baby, Burn!"

    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL: NUMBERS 16:01-18:32;PARASHA KORACH:"Burn, Baby, Burn!"
     

    PARASHA KORACH
    NUMBERS 16:01-18:32
    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
    HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
    BLUFFTON, SC
    JEWISH RENEWAL:
    JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL

    "Burn, Baby, Burn!"

    This week's Torah portion tells the story of Korach and the rebellion of
    Korach's followers against Moses and Aaron. They fail, of course. Some
    are swallowed up by the earth, some die from a plague, others are burned
    alive. God then "proves" through a "miracle" involving the rod of Aaron
    growing almond buds that the priesthood belongs to Aaron's progeny
    forever. God also gives more laws regarding the tasks and duties of the
    Levites. The Levites are firmly reestablished as being secondary to the
    Kohanim. Laws concerning first born sons, fruits, and animals are also
    given to establish each Israelite's duties to God via the priests. The
    priests are given the rights to 24 special gifts that the Israelites will
    continually owe them.

    Traditionally, Nachmanides and Rabbi Ebn Ezra agree that this revolt
    happened about one year after the Exodus from Egypt. Ebn Ezra says Korach
    revolted after the inauguration of the Mishkan, the desert Tabernacle.
    This is when Aaron and his sons were designated to replace the firstborn
    as the only ones who could perform the service of the sacrifices. Korach
    was a firstborn and a first cousin of Moses and Aaron. He was angry and
    jealous. Nachmanides however states the event took place after the "12
    spies" story. He states that  the people were upset over God's decree
    that they would die in the desert. Korach took advantage of the low
    morale to lead a rebellion. The Talmud Bavli teaches in Tractate Pesachim 6B
    that the Torah does not always follow chronological order. Ebn Ezra
    relies on this to support his claim. Nachmanides disagrees.

    The critical-theory biblical scholars believe that this parasha is
    actually two stories of two similar rebellions. One is of Korach
    revolting against Aaron and the priestly succession, which is also
    reviewed in Numbers 27:03. The other is of two of the co-conspirators
    (Dathan and Abiram), who planned a political coup against Moses to which
    Deuteronomy 11:06 and Psalm 106:17 refer. Some students of Torah say that
    this event occurred not one year after the Exodus, but 38 years later.

    This d'var starts with what may seem to some to be Talmudic hair-
    splitting. This is being done for a reason. Jews have a tradition of
    being able to disagree on many of the most fundamental of issues. The
    rabbis teach in Pirkei Avot (5:20) that "any dispute this is for the sake
    of Heaven will have a constructive outcome; but one that is not for the
    sake of Heaven will not have a constructive outcome. What sort of
    dispute was for the sake of Heaven? The dispute between Shammai and
    Hillel. And what was not for the sake of Heaven? The dispute of Korach
    and his entire assembly."

    Hillel and Shammai would argue over so many points, even as to which way
    to light the Hanukiah.(Hanukah menorah). But they always addressed each other politely.
    Their children married each other (Tractate Yevomot 14B). One did not
    call another one less of a Jew. The Talmud in Tractate Eruvin 13B records
    that while Hillel's views won most of the time, "the utterances of both
    are the words of the living God."

    The Midrash records Korach arguing with Moses quite differently. He had
    his followers dress in four-cornered garments made totally out of
    turquoise wool that had been died with the techeilet coloring that is
    used for the blue thread in the Tzitzit fringe. He would then confront
    Moses and derisively ask if an all-techeiltit garment still needed
    fringes with a single thread of blue in its tzitzit. Moses answered yes,
    and Korach publicly scoffed at him. Korach was really asking if the
    entire people was holy and a kingdom of priests, why should Aarom and his
    sons be priests alone. Korach also asked if a mezuzah (containing part of
    the Torah) was needed on the door of a storage room full of Torahs.
    Please remember this Midrash as we will refer to it later.

    The Hebrew word for a quarrel not done for the sake of Heaven is
    machloket. Judaism regards divisiveness as one of its gravest sins. The
    Midrash Bamidbar Rabba (11:07) says that the tension caused by
    quarreling, along with its allegations, incriminations, loshan ha ra,
    and snubbing undermines the harmony of creation. Our word for peace is
    Shalom. Its root word (shalem) means "complete and whole." We ask for a
    r'fua shalemah, a complete healing, for our ill friends and loved ones.
    We need to be cooperative and respectful to one another in order to
    achieve real peace.

    We Jews are constantly praying for peace but do we truly seek it in our
    daily lives? We all love swaying to the folk tune of Henay Ma Tov U. But
    do we really reflect on the words from Psalm 133:01? "How good and
    pleasant it is for brothers to sit peacefully together." We ask for
    peace numerous times in the thrice daily prayer the Amidah. Our Grace
    after meals ends with a prayer for Shalom as well as our priestly
    blessings. Shalom is one of the names of God. Shalom is even the last
    word of the Talmud. In our parasha Moses exposed himself to continued
    insult for the sake of peace. Even though Dathan and Aviram were part of
    the rebellion , Moses gives them a chance to back out. They refused, but
    Moses tried for the sake of peace.

    There was a third conspirator mentioned by name along with Korach, Dathan
    and Aviram in Numbers 16:01. This is "On, son of Pelet." There is a cute
    Midrash to explain what happened to On. His life was saved by his wife.
    Mrs. On found out about her husband's plan to join the rebellion. So she
    got him drunk and he feel asleep. She then sat in front of their tent
    immodestly with her hair down. When Korach came to the tent to summon
    him, they saw Mrs. On dressed immodestly and they decided to leave
    without On. Therefore On did not participate in the rebellion and did not
    die with the others. Why is the showing of a traditional Jewish woman's
    hair considered immodest? The rabbis of course have the answer in Talmud Bavli
    Tractate Eiruvin 100B. "Since a woman (Eve) caused Adam to sin, thus
    bringing death upon humanity, married women cover themselves like
    mourners." Rashi states that this means that women should be ashamed to
    go out with their hair uncovered. So that you do not think the Midrashic
    rabbis have gone "soft" on women, they do write that it was Mrs. Korach
    who nagged her husband into rebelling.

    Jews are most certainly allowed to have well-intentioned controversy. The
    Talmud teaches "just as no two faces are exactly alike, likewise no two
    opinions are exactly alike." Any trip to a Yeshiva will show Talmud
    students yelling at each other to make a point. However our Torah
    portion this week has a mitzvah which is parallel in importance to the
    one asking us to love our fellow as our self. Numbers 17:05 commands us
    "Do not be like Korach." The Talmud Bavli in Tractate Sanhedrin 110A states
    that this is a prohibition against makloket . The Talmud Bavli states in
    Tractate Yoma 9B that the second Temple was destroyed because Jews had
    baseless hatred ( sinat chinam) toward each other. The Kabbalistic Zohar
    states that Korach quarreled not with Moses or Aaron but with peace
    itself and "he who quarrels with peace quarrels with the Holy Name."

    Korach argued with Moses because he was jealous. He says that Moses had
    "taken too much for" himself (Num. 16:3). He claimed Moses and Aaron had
    unfairly seized the leadership roles. Korach recruited 250 men who were
    also jealous. Datan and Aviram were from the tribe of Reuben. Reuben was
    the first born of Jacob. As first-born they felt they should have
    received a double portion of land as well as the rights to the priesthood
    over their brothers, the Levites. They were swallowed up by the earth.
    This is literally what the Mishna warns of in Pirkei Avot (4:21) when it
    states "Jealously, desire and pride take a man out of the world."

    The Talmud Bavli in Tractate Bava Batra 74A states that Rabbah bar Bar-Chana
    said that when he traveled in the desert an Arab merchant took him to the
    place where Korach and his men died. There was a crevice in the earth and
    you could hear Korach say "Moses and his Torah are true, and we were
    liars."
     
    Talmud Bavli Tractate Rosh Hashanah 17A tells of what happens when sinful
    Jews go to hell. They go to Gehinnom (hell) for 12 months. Their bodies
    and souls are burned. And the winds scatter their ashes under the souls
    of the righteous. But, the Talmud also reports what happens to those who
    deny that God gave Torah and the Talmud. They roast in hell but never
    get burned. Even when Gehinnom is destroyed they will still roast and
    never be consumed. Talmud  Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin chapter 11 which states that "all
    Jews, and the righteous of all nations, have a share in the World to
    Come" but that Korach will not (Sanhedrin 108A). But the Kabballah holds
    that not ONE soul will ever be lost because in the future all evil will
    be destroyed. At this time all souls will merit resurrection of the dead
    and live in the World to Come.

    The Talmud Bavli describes Korach as wealthy (Sanhedrin 27B). The Sefer Etzot
    states that Korach was humiliated by Moses when he had his head shaved
    for Levitical service. The Hebrew word Korach means "bald." The Midrash
    points out similarities between Cain and Korach. Both had blind
    self-destructive jealousy. The earth swallows up the blood of Abel (Gen.
    4:11) and swallows up Korach (Num. 16:32). Korach was not a "nobody." The
    Midrash states he was the one entrusted to carry the Holy Ark of the
    Torah and that he was "exceedingly wise." He was a manipulative
    demagogue.

    The Midrash states that Korach's jealousy began when his cousin, Elzafan
    ben Uziel was made head of the Kehat family of Levites. Kehat was
    Korach's grandfather. Kehat was the father of Amrom and hence also the
    grandfather of Moses and Aaron . Kehat had two other sons after Amrom.
    First Yizhar and then Uziel. Korach was the son of Yizhar and was next in
    line after Moses and Aaron for appointment. But the son of Yizhar
    (Korach) was skipped over for the son of Uziel ( Elzafan). God may have
    made the selection, but Korach held Moses responsible for suggesting this
    to God.

    We as humans tend to get jealous over the silliest things. The Ramchal of
    16th century Italy recognized that jealousy has its place. King Solomon
    taught in Ecclesiastes that there is a time and a place for everything.
    It we see our neighbor doing well and we too become motivated this is
    good, he wrote. The rabbis recognized this when they wrote in Talmud Bavli Tractate
    Bava Batra 75B, "everyone is burned by his neighbor's canopy."

    If Korach is so bad, the Midrash asks, why is an entire Parasha named
    after him? As we mentioned above, his name means "bald." It connotes
    division; creating a bald spot between two factions where previously
    their had been unity and peace. Rambam writes that the Torah "was given
    to make peace in the world." The Midrash asks again, "why should a
    portion of the Torah be called by a name that suggests divisiveness?" The
    opening words of the this week's portion (Num. 16:01) are
    "Korach...took." The Targum translation of the Torah is
    "Korach...divided." This is compared to the division God made on the
    second day where it is traditionally believed that He divided the waters
    with a firmament.

    Korach saw the priesthood as an elevation. He saw a hierarchy and a
    division between the priests and the people. He saw everyone as equally
    holy and complained that he and others had just as much right to the
    priesthood as Aaron and his sons. While his motives were not pure, his
    concept was. He perhaps envisioned a time when every Jew was able to
    pray directly to God again the way the Patriarchs did. Maybe Korach was
    able to forecast a time when the Temple and Priesthood would be no more,
    and that peace and union with God would come through prayer and good
    works. Perhaps this is a lesson the sages were trying to teach when they
    named the Parasha after Korach.

    Numbers 26:11 states that Korach's sons did not die. Since Numbers 16:32
    says that all of his followers were swallowed up by the earth, we can
    assume that his sons were not part of the rebellion. They are recorded as
    authors of Psalms. The Midrash states that the Prophet Samuel was a
    descendant. They were honored to be able to sing in the Temple. They
    were not the superstars of the Temple drama. They were happy to be in the
    background and let the priests get the spotlight. Ironically little is
    mentioned of Moses' children in the Torah or the Midrash. Rashi suggests
    that maybe Korach knew the future of his sons and since they would be
    great, he wanted to be great also. His descendant Samuel is ironically
    supportive of the Kings of Israel. He anoints both our first king, Saul
    and David, our second king. The theme of this week's Haftarah is "behold,
    God has set a king over you...and you will not rebel "(Samuel 12: 13-14).

    But rebellion on an intellectual level has always been a hallmark of
    Judaism. It has allowed our religion to grow and adapt. The Talmud itself
    changed Torah laws, albeit via legal fictions. The Talmud in Tractate
    Moed Katan 16B states that God asks "I reign over man, but who reigns
    over Me?" God answers His own question by saying "The righteous ones.
    Because when I issue an edict, the righteous ones can overrule Me." In
    Tractate Bava Metzia 59B, Rabbi Elazer and Rabbi Yehoshua are arguing
    over a point of Jewish law (halakah). A Bat Kol (Heavenly voice) says
    that Elazer was correct. Yehoshua jumps up and says that the law is no
    longer in Heaven. Rabbi Yirmiah explains "the Torah was already given on
    Mt. Sinai and heaven no longer has authority. The Torah states 'follow
    the majority (Ex. 23:2).'" Later Rabbi Noson ,the Talmud reports, asks
    Elijah the long-dead prophet what God said when Rabbi Yehoshua made his
    statement?" Elijah said that God smiled and joylously exclaimed "My
    children have overruled Me, My children have overruled Me."

    The rationale that the Talmudic rabbis used to give themselves permission
    to amend the law is derived from Deuteronomy 32:07. This passage
    instructs the Israelites to abide by the Torah as taught to them by their
    sages. An amendment is called a gezira, a decree of the wise. It is
    limited by a ruling that states that "a gezira is not decreed unless most
    of the people can support it." This begs the question: Who are the
    "wise?" Traditionally we read in the Mishna that Moses taught Joshua,
    Joshua taught the Elders, who taught the Prophets, who taught the Men of
    the Great Assembly. We traditionally believe that this Assembly was a
    group of 120 sages at the time of the Second Temple. We are taught that
    Mordechai, Ezra, Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi were all members.
    Historians claim that this Assembly never existed.

    Traditionally rabbis who study with rebbes are granted a laying-on of
    hands called "Semikha." This implies that their teaching is transmitted
    through the generations over 3300 years from the mouth of Moses without
    error to them. Since we cannot verify the existence of the great
    Assembly, we most assume that the Talmudic rabbis were indeed learned,
    but many had their positions due to wealth, politics and nepotism. The
    frankness of the Talmud shows them all to be human and some with many
    human frailties. The first editors of the Talmud were called savora'im
    (reasoners). The did not do things blindly. They thought, they debated,
    they made decisions and they made changes.

    One of the human frailties that some of Talmudic rabbis had was a fierce
    protection of their status. The were protective of their authority and
    their right to decide who was awarded semikha ordination. In modern
    business terms, it was their franchise. Talmud Tractate Eiruvin 63B
    states that if one renders a halachic (law) decision in the presence of
    his rabbi, he is punished by dying without children. Tractate Sanhedrin
    110A equates one who challenges, quarrels with, or even thinks ill about
    his rabbi with one who challenges God Himself. Such an act is on the
    level of idolatry and punishable by death.

    Centuries later Maimonides combined his studies of Aristotle, Ptolemy,
    Galen and Hippocrates with his Judaic studies and produced a reworking of
    the Talmud called the Mishna Torah. It swept the Jewish world. But it
    also caused protest among the scholars who declared he had no Semikha.
    The Rambam was "just" a doctor who was the court physician to the Sultan.
    He was called an "upstart." He dared to answer questions that the
    Talmudic rabbis left unanswered. He laid down laws of Judaism and amended
    many without asking the "authorities." He quoted "idolaters" in his
    books. He showed his students where the rabbis had erred. 1000 years ago
    Maimonides was considered too radical a "reformer" and had a decree of
    Jewish excommunication placed on him. Would anyone today dare to say the
    great Ramban was performing machloket that was not for the sake of
    Heaven?

    Rabbi Israel Salanter, founder of the Ethical Mussar movement of 19th
    century Europe, wrote that "all valid attempts to reconstruct what God
    told Moses are subsumed under the title of "Torah," including the
    opinions that are ultimately nullified." The Maharal of Prague (Rabbi
    Yahudah Loewe) posited that "nothing is black and white at any time." The
    Kabballists wrote that all souls were present at Mt. Sinai. They received
    the word of God through 49 different conduits. "Every individual
    perceived God's word according to his own grasp of things, and according
    to the capacity of his soul. One could be at one extreme. A second could
    be at an opposite extreme. "A third would reach a middle ground. Yet all
    is Truth. All is Torah. Understand this."

    The major principle that kept our religion as a non stagnant developing
    philosophy of life is the idea of "acharei rabim le hatot" which is
    following the majority opinion in matters of dispute. Rabbi Yannai in the
    Talmud stated "the majority is to be followed--when a majority says it is
    unclean, it is unclean; when a majority says it is clean, it is clean."

    In the early 1800's Jewish leaders, for the sake of Heaven, wanted to
    preserve our people in response to the Enlightenment of Europe. Jews were
    no longer subjects but voluntary members of the Jewish community. Many
    chose to leave it. Some chose to convert to Christianity. Most became lax
    in their religious observance.

    Enlightened Jewish leaders attempted to counter these forces with
    religious reform. They modeled themselves after the German protestant
    reformation. They wanted to rid Judaism of any ritual that would
    mark us as "superstitious aliens." They revised the synagogue service to
    make it "more dignified and rational." They renamed their  houses of worship
    as "temples" and abrogated the messianic dream of the Temple being
    rebuilt in Jerusalem. Some wished to do away with Kosher laws and rules
    against intermarriage. The first Reform Temple opened in 1818 in Hamburg,
    Germany with prayers in German instead of Hebrew.

    New scholarship in Judaism occurred. Documentation that showed that
    Jewish rituals and rites were constantly changing over time was
    discovered and allowed to be discussed. Jewish excommunications such as
    those that happened to De Costa and Spinoza in Amsterdam no longer
    threatened modern-thinking rabbis. All of these changes were done to help
    Judaism survive. None were done to promote machloket or quarreling.

    In 1885, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, at the conference of the Reform
    Jewish movement, Rabbi Kaufmann Kohler presented a position paper with
    "ten propositions." He stated that "we can no longer be blind to the fact
    that Mosaic-Rabbinic Judaism, as based on Law and Tradition, has actually
    and irrevocably lost its hold on the modern Jew... Judaism is historical
    growth...We must accentuate and define what is essential and vital amidst
    its ever-changing forms and ever-fluctuating conditions." He helped pass
    the Pittsburgh platform which dismissed "such Mosiac and Rabbinic laws as
    regulate diet, priestly purity and dress" as anachronisms that can only
    obstruct spirituality in the modern age. Reform Judaism accepted as
    binding only the moral laws of Judaism and only those rituals that
    "elevate and sanctify our lives."

    The Reform rabbis reaffirmed the belief in a monotheistic God and a
    commitment to ethics and social justice. They wished to promote
    activities in furthering the Messianic age in which all people will
    acknowledge the one God and establish an era of "truth and righteousness
    among men." If any of us read this with an unprejudiced eye, does this
    sound like a disagreement for the sake of Heaven like Hillel and Shammai
    had two millennia ago or does it sound like that of Korach, based on
    jealousy?

    Reform Judaism along with Conservative , Reconstructionist , Spiritual and Renewal Judaism has
    helped keep Judaism alive the world over. Yet there are those who are
    being taught, against the long standing traditions of our people, that
    those in the above movements are ''not Jews.'' There are those that are taught
    there is only one correct way of Judaism and anyone not following that
    was is deluding themselves. Worse yet, liberal Jews are labeled
    Apikorit--apostates. And the Torah states that apostates should be
    killed.
     
    So it comes as no surprise that a few years back two synagogues in
    Jerusalem were vandalized with arson by Ultra right wing Orthodox Jews.
    One was a Conservative synagogue,
    the other Messianic. Prime Minister Barak called the attacks "a horrible
    deed, that every Jew should deplore." Even the Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi
    Israel Lau said that the "plague of violence between movements must
    end."

    As mentioned above, we are commanded "not to be like Korach" and not
    spend our time like little school children quarreling. Nothing is ever
    totally "black or white" in Judaism because no one can truly say they
    know the mind of God. We do know that baseless hatred is wrong, whether
    it be among different organizations of Jews or individuals. It is a
    chillul ha Shem , a desecration of God's name. We are all God's children
    and all the movements  of Judaism are trying to do what they think will
    help bring people closer to God, to each other and to our past, in order
    that we will continue to have a present and a future.

    We need to recall that even the great prophet Isaiah was punished with
    death for slandering the Jewish people by stating that "he sits among a
    people of impure lips." The the Book of Isaiah reports that after he
    said this, an angel came with a hot coal to burn these words off of his
    lips. The Talmud explains that he word for glowing coal, vimaw, is a
    contraction of the word, vi otmaw, which means "break the mouth of the
    one who slandered My people."

    Do you recall the Midrash that was quoted above which I asked you to
    remember? It was about how Korach quizzed Moses about the need for a
    mezuzah on the door of a room full of Torah scrolls. Let me please tell
    you of a "modern Midrash" from the 20th century concerning this story. It
    is told in some black-hatted traditional circles that the slogan of the
    Reform movement in Germany was "Yehudi beveitecha ve'adam beteitecha--be
    a true Jew at home, but on the outside be a person like everyone else."
    Similarly Korach said of the Jewish people "Kal ha'eida kulam
    kedoshim--the entire community is holy." Korach also said "uvetocham
    HaShem--and God is among them (Num. 16:03)." This modern Midrash
    explains that Korach meant that the Jews were all holy since they had God
    "betocham--in their hearts." He asserted that it is sufficient to be a
    good Jew on the "inside" without openly showing it on the outside. Hence,
    some traditionalists believe, that the Rabbis of the Reform movement are
    like Korach and they and their followers deserve the same punishment.

    Sadly the chasm that divides the ultra-orthodox and the Reform is so
    wide, that many Reform Jews would not find the charge that they are like
    Korach much of an insult. On the contrary, many modern Jews would happily
    identify with the aforementioned ideas contributed to Korach, that is it
    sufficient to be a good Jew on the inside without showing it on the
    outside. Most modern Jews would agree that one need not flaunt one's
    Judaism by wearing identifiable Jewish garb outside of the synagogue,
    such as kipah (skull cap) or tzitzit (fringes) flowing from one's
    trousers.
     
    All of us need to work on our own teshuvah, our own Jewish Spiritual Renewal and not look upon others as too Jewish or not Jewish enough.

    That these two synagogue arsons occurred in Jerusalem is another irony in
    the history of our people. One translation of the city's name means
    "peace will be seen (yeru- shalom)." Please join me in a berachah that
    "God bless us all with the patience and sensitivity to avoid destructive
    arguments and accord proper respect to all. Please help us heal the
    divides that rip our people apart from each other and from You." Amen.

    Shabbat Shalom,
    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
    HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
    BLUFFTON, SC
    JEWISH RENEWAL:
    JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
     
    ORIGINAL VERSION WRITTEN WHEN SCHOLAR-IN-RESIDENCE AT CONGREGATION TEMPLE MICKVE ISRAEL, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA







    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:SHELACH:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:SELF-ESTEEM

    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:NUMBERS 13:01 TO 15:41:PARASHA SHELACH:"Marty Feldman Eyes"

    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:NUMBERS 13:01 TO 15:41:PARASHA SHELACH:" You've Got Marty Feldman Eyes"
     
     

    PARASHA SHELACH
    NUMBERS 13:01 TO 15:41
    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
    HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
    BLUFFTON, SC
    JEWISH RENEWAL:
    JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
     


    "You've Got Marty Feldman Eyes"

    My apologies to songstress Kim Carnes and her hit "You've Got Betty Davis
    Eyes." I hope you remember the funny actor of blessed memory, Marty
    Feldman. He played "I-gor" in Mel Brooks' "Young Frankenstein." Marty had
    those bulging buggy eyes. We will weave Marty's "Bug Eyes" into this
    D'var Torah later on.

    Our Parasha this week gets it name from the Hebrew words that begin it.
    "Send forth (shelach) men, if you please, and let them spy out the land
    of Canaan." Moses assembles 12 men, one from each tribe, to go spy and
    report back on what is to eventually become Eretz Israel. Ten come back
    and give a discouraging report. Two men however are very positive. This
    parasha relates how the people listen to the ten who discourage them. God
    punishes the Children of Israel with 39 more years in the desert in which
    time this weak generation will die out.

    There are some very subtle wordings in this week's portion that need to
    be parsed in order to understand the deeper meaning. A first hint is
    given in the word following "shelach." This word is "lecha." This
    literally means "for yourself." God gave Moses permission to send spies
    if Moses needed reassurance. The word used for the spies is "regelem."
    Regel is a foot. The are literally "walkers." The Hebrew used for "to
    spy" is "yeturu." It is from the root word "tur", to explore. It is used
    12 times in this parasha alone, yet only ten times in the rest of the
    entire Torah. They are told to "look" (u'reitem ) at the land. One of the
    spies is Hosea bin Nun. He is later given the name Joshua by Moses by
    adding the letter Yud.

     

    Note the Hebrew "bin" for "son of" instead of the
    usual "ben." Nachmanides of 13th century Spain said this is foreshadowing
    Joshua's role by calling him "Binun" (wise one) which is from the root
    word Binah which means understanding. Joshua was one of the two positive
    spies. The Midrash says that Joshua's new Yud came from the Yud that God
    took from Sarai's name when he renamed her Sarah. Moses knew that Hosea
    would need God's help, Rashi says, in dealing with his fellow spies, so
    Moses renamed him with a name meaning "may God save you."

    Here is the scenario. Moses and the people have left Egypt a year ago.
    They just celebrated Passover a year after the first one when they were
    saved from Pharaoh and the angel of death who killed all of the first
    born in Egypt. They are only miles from the land of Canaan. They have God
    on their side. God has promised them the land. They have seen God do
    miracles on a daily basis. Yet Moses decided that he needed to send out
    human spies to double-check on God. Even though God had promised Israel
    and Moses "a land flowing with milk and honey" Moses asks his spies to
    see if the land is "fertile or lean? Are there trees in it or not (Num.
    13:20)?"

    So what happens when the spies return? Ten of them reported directly to
    the entire people as well as to Moses (Num 13:25). They agree that the
    land flows with milk and honey. They even bring back fruit samples. Then
    the Torah uses another word, "ahfaht." This word means "but." It is a
    qualifier. They negate the positive words about the land with this "but."


    They continue with stories of Giants, fortresses, and a strong
    unconquerable people there. They saw many dead people and said the land
    "devours its inhabitants (Num. 13:32)." They end their report with "we
    were like grasshoppers in our eyes, and so we were in their eyes (Num.
    13:33)." Please note the wording of "in OUR eyes."

    Caleb and Joshua are the two of the twelve spies that give good reports.
    But the other ten have rallied the people into a frenzy. There is
    actually a national hysteria. The Torah reports that the "entire assembly
    (Num. 14:01)" wished they had died in Egypt and wanted to appoint a new
    leader and return there (Num. 14:02-04). So of course God gets upset. He
    threatens the entire people with extermination (Num. 14:12). Moses pleads
    with God. The people's punishment is plea-bargained down to spending 40
    years in the wilderness. The slave mentality of the older generation
    will die there and a new free generation will be allowed into "the land."
    They decide on 40 years because the spies were away for 40 days.

    I would like to point out that the authors of the Torah blamed last
    Shabbat's parasha's insurrection on the "mixed multitude riff raff" that
    followed the Israelites. But here the Talmud takes the words of the Torah
    ("entire assembly") and says it was just two men, Dason and Aviram, who
    wanted to dump Moses and return to Israel (Talmud Bavli Tractate Nedarim 64B).
    We will read more about these two men in next week's parasha.

    As we can see, this mission was doomed to failure before it began. Moses
    would have been better off not sending spies at all. God told Moses he
    could send spies if he needed to do this for himself. Moses, of all
    people, should have trusted God with blind faith. The 19th century Rabbi
    Zvi Kalisher writes that Moses sent spies hoping they would come back
    with a report about the strength of the Canaanites, so that when Israel
    conquered them, they would realize another miracle of God. Rashi in
    discussing Deut 1:21-23 says that the people forced Moses to send spies.
    If he did not do so, they would have thought he has hiding something. It
    is like one asking to "test drive" a donkey before buying it and being
    told "no." If one is told "yes, please even take the donkey up a big hill
    and down a deep valley," one gets confidence in his purchase and may not
    even want to test the animal at this point.

    When the spies walked the land, they saw many funeral processions. They
    assumed that this was a violent land. The Midrash says that God sent a
    small plague into Canaan to distract the inhabitants so that the spies
    could travel unnoticed. The spies, however, interpreted the events the
    way they wished to perceive them. The spies saw the people living in
    walled cities. Rashi said this is a sign of weakness of faith. If people
    dwell in open cities, they think of themselves as strong. Rashi says the
    spies misinterpreted this fact. The spies also brought back big grape
    clusters, giant pomegranates and huge figs. They did this not to show
    how wonderful the land was, but how freakish it was.

     

    Rabbi Elya Bloch of the 20th century wrote that when one's intentions are bad, nothing can
    persuade him of the truth. Eight spies carried the giant grapes, one
    carried the pomegranates and one carried the figs. Caleb and Joshua ,a
    Midrash teaches, did not carry back these fruits, as they knew they would
    be used to demonstrate negativity.

    On another interesting note, the Talmudic rabbis say that the Torah says
    there are three ways to acquire land: payment, a deed or chazakah.
    Chazakah means performing an action that demonstrates ownership, such as
    harvesting fruits. The rabbis state that when Moses asks the spies to
    bring back fruits (Num. 13:20) he was asking them to legally, according to
    Jewish law, establish ownership of the land. The question as to why the
    negative spies, who did not believe they could conquer the land harvested
    fruits, and the two positive spies who thought they could conquer the
    land did not harvest fruits, is left unasked and unanswered.

    The Talmud Bavli in Tractate Sotah 35A discusses whether the spies actually
    overheard giants call them "grasshoppers." The rabbis say that the spies
    said the Canaanites said "there are people-ants crawling around in the
    fields." The rabbis may be missing a good lesson of psychology here. It
    is not really important what the Canaanites thought. What we need to
    focus on is how the spies thought of themselves. They obviously were in a
    trap of spiritual self-devaluation. They not only were lacking in faith
    in God, but were lacking in their own self-esteem. They saw themselves as
    grasshoppers. They had Marty Feldman's "bug eyes."

     

     Rabbi Yaakov Kamensky of 20th century New York City wrote "If you hold yourself to be a shmateh
    (rag), others will hold you to be a shmateh as well." If one thinks he
    will have no chance, he will have no chance. Should our modern
    psychiatrists call a self-esteem problem the "grasshopper syndrome?"

    The poetess Chana Andler wrote in her poem "Shelach":
    "Twelve spies went out
    To view the Promised land.
    Only two returned.
    The rest were lost along the way,
    Prey to doubt and indecision,
    The certainty
    That they were little men,
    Too small to face the future
    God might ask.
    Their bones were left
    Behind in the desert
    To bleach away their fear.
    A stern reminder
    Of the consequences
    Of little faith.

    How often do we
    Play out this drama,
    Measuring what can be
    By what has been before?
    We see the front
    That others wear,
    The illusion of perfection,
    And judge ourselves
    Inadequate to the task,
    Incapable of achieving
    Such heights of glory.
    They are giants
    To our children's eyes,
    Puffed with virtues
    We cannot possess.

    But what in truth
    Was ever asked of us
    That we could not survive
    Were we only
    To hold our ground
    And let the Spirit
    Carry us along?
    It's folly to gauge our strength
    Against the gods and monsters
    We create to undermine our dreams.
    To judge our soul's potential
    By the small amount
    We can perceive.

    Twelve spies went out
    To view the Promised Land,
    But only two returned.
    May we find our way out
    And back again,
    Untouched
    By what we think
    We see."

    Rashi writes that "the heart and the eyes are the spies of the body, that
    is, they led a person to transgress: the eyes see, the heart covets, and
    the body transgresses." Or, as King Solomon is credited with writing in
    Ecclesiastes 2:14, "The wise man's eyes are in his head, and the fool
    walks in darkness." Self-image is how we see ourselves. It is also how we
    think others see us. Self-esteem is our internal feeling and evaluation
    of ourselves based on our "perceived" self-image. Once we get some
    negative statements in our head that we may have learned in our
    childhood, we do not physically need to hear them again. The tapes become
    hardwired in our minds. Again and again those negative statements
    unconsciously repeat. It is like having a constant heckler in your mind.
    Psychologists say that one needs about 20 positive statements about
    ourselves to offset a negative personal statement.

    The best way of offsetting negative self-talk is to remind yourself that
    you have the internal resources to handle whatever challenges life gives
    you. When one feels powerless and sees others as "giants" one will
    develop low self-esteem. Instead of dealing with situations directly and
    assertively, one will use passive-aggressive behaviors. The spies did
    this. Instead of reporting directly to their boss, Moses, they went
    directly to the people with their bad report.

    When one has good self-esteem combined with a faith in God, one acts
    assertively and with kindness. One is not passive, or aggressive, or acts
    passive-aggressively. One does not blame others for their problems but
    takes responsibility for them. There is no room for apathy nor pessimism,
    and one's life has vision, focus, commitment and self-control. One
    trusts one's self and has a realistic trust of others. One has the
    confidence to choose friends who are safe and who will not injure or
    exploit . One learns to be self-nurturing and not looking for others to
    be parents. One is autonomous and has a strong sense of identity. And
    one relates closely and intimately with others and yet knows when to
    limit closeness.

    Positive self-esteem allows one to own up to one's failures, fears and
    weaknesses. It is not a cocksure attitude that one cannot do wrong.
    Conversely, good self-esteem would enable one to be able to admit wrong
    doing, apologize and do teshuvah. Self-esteem requires continual
    monitoring and "feeding one's head" with good statements. The rabbis tell
    of one of their elders describing his inner struggle. He said "Inside of
    me there are two dogs. One of the dogs is mean and evil. The other dog
    is good. The mean dog fights with the good dog all the time." When he was
    asked which dog wins , he reflected for a moment and replied, "The one I
    feed the most."

    We are all regelem. We are all walking and journeying through life. All
    of us will have a journey that is not balanced or straight. King David
    writes in Psalm 73:02 "My feet nearly faltered, my steps were almost
    washed away!" The Rabbi Judah the Prince (ha Nasi) ,the redactor of the
    Mishna circa 200 CE, in Pirkei Avot (2:01) reminds us that the right way
    to walk is one that is honorable and brings honor. If we try to keep to
    this path in what ever situation we find ourselves, no matter how hard
    that may seem at the time, our esteem for ourselves will always be high.

    The Torah recognizes this. It actually developed a physical "sting around
    the finger" to remind us to think positive thoughts. This idea was
    commanded to us after the sin of the spies in this week's parasha. I am
    referring to the mitzvah of Tzitzit.  I would ask you to explore
    the wording of the commandment with me.

    Tzitzit are fringes. It is from the root word "to peer at something
    intently." In Numbers 15:39 we are told to wear them on our four-
    cornered garments so we "will not go astray (saturu) after your hearts
    and eyes." The 12 men were asked to spy (latur). The root words are the
    same. We are asked to "see" the tzitzit (u'reitem oso), and the spies
    were sent to "see" the land (u'reitem et ha Aretz). There is an
    interesting twist to the mitzvah of wearing tzitzit. It is optional!
    Numbers 15:38 commands us to put tzitzit on the four corners of a four-
    cornered garment. There is no rule commanding us to wear a four- cornered
    garment. Traditional Jews have taken it upon themselves to wear a
    four-cornered garment so that they can fulfill the mitzvah of wearing
    tzitzit. Although wearing tzitzit is optional, there are 12 chapters in
    the Shulchan Aruch, the Set Table of Jewish law, on the rules of tzitzit.


    The sending of the spies and the wearing of tzitzit were both optional to
    us. How we look at things and the conclusions we draw from "our eyes"
    spying has been always left up to us as individuals. We are capable of
    seeing very far, writes Rabbi Frand, but only if we open up our eyes and
    be honest enough to see things as they really are.

    Rabbi Gunther Plaut translates the last half of the verse of Numbers
    15:39 as "so that you do not follow your heart and eyes in your lustful
    urge." The Art Scroll Tanach translates it as "not explore after your
    heart and after your eyes after which you stray." The Kings James Bible
    reads "that ye seek not after your own heart and your own eyes, after
    which ye use to go a whoring." While I can usually find mistranslation in
    the King James version, it has in this case the best rendering of this
    passage. The Hebrew word "zonem" is from the Hebrew word for harlot
    (zonah).

     

    Prostitutes are paid, or so I am told, to tell men what they
    want to hear. We must not prostitute our eyes into lying to ourselves
    to inflate our egos and let us be in denial about situations. Nor should
    we allow them to deflate our egos so that our self-esteem is lowered. We
    do not want to live our lives unfulfilled and waste 40 years of it
    wandering through a desert of irrational fears.

    An honest prostitute is the heroine of this week's Haftarah from Joshua
    2:1-24. Joshua sends out two spies 39 years after he was one of the
    original 12 spies. The two seek refuge in the "bait eshah zonah ushemah
    Rahchav " (the "house of women" of a harlot named Rahab). She hides and
    saves the two spies from the King of Jericho's soldiers. They promised
    her that when the Israelites invade Jericho she and her family will be
    spared. She hangs a red thread from her window to mark her home.

     

     Unlike the ten spies 39 years before, Rahab had faith in God's plan for the
    Israelites. She had heard tales of the Israelites' God helping to defeat
    their enemies. She knew about the Jews at Mt. Sinai, as well as hearing
    about their escape from Egypt. She had the same data, actually second
    hand data, that the original 10 defeatist spies had, yet she concluded
    that the Israelites would conquer her land of Canaan and she sided with
    them.

    Joshua kept his spies' word and after the battle of Jericho gave Rahab
    choice land as a reward. A Midrash relates that Rahab married Salmon and
    gave birth to Boaz. Boaz married Ruth. Rahab was to become the
    great-great-grandmother of King David. Our first great king had maternal
    lineage of both harlotry and idolatry. Ruth was a convert with a soul
    full of faith and loving kindness. Rahab was a "hooker with a heart of
    gold" with the faith to match. The Talmud says she was one of the four
    most beautiful women in the Bible.

    Thirty nine years after the original spies went out, Joshua was to lead
    the now-matured and with a positive attitude Israelites into Canaan. His
    two spies say "Truly the Lord has delivered into our hands all the land;
    and moreover all the inhabitants of the land do melt away before us."
    Thirty-nine years of desert therapy cured us of our Grasshopper Syndrome.
    We lost our Marty Feldman-like "Bug Eyes."

    Shabbat Shalom,
    RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL

    HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
    BLUFFTON, SC
    JEWISH RENEWAL:
    JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
     
    ORIGINAL VERSION WRITTEN WHEN SCHOLAR-IN-RESIDENCE AT CONGREGATION TEMPLE MICKVE ISRAEL, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA