RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:CHUMASH CANDESCENCE: PARASHA BA-MIDBAR: NUMBERS 01:01- 04:20
CHUMASH CANDESCENCE
PARASHA BA-MIDBAR 
NUMBERS  01:01 TO 04:20
RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
Via Shamash Org on-line class service
Jewish Renewal www.jewishrenewal.info
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA
"One Is the Loneliest  Number"
This week's Torah portion brings us to the fourth  book of the "Five Books
of Moses," known as the Chumash. This book takes its  English name 
(Numbers) from the Greek and Latin translations, as the first  chapters
deal with the census of the twelve tribes and their encampment in  Sinai.
In Hebrew, the name of this book and its first chapter is Ba-midbar.  This
means "in the wilderness."
Shavuot usually falls around the  time this parasha is read. 
This  holiday commemorates the giving of the Torah
to Moses on Mt. Sinai. Some  3,310 years ago, by traditional accounting,
our people stood in the  wilderness of Sinai in front of a small,
humble-looking mountain. On this  mountain, Moses, who the Torah calls
"the most humble man who ever lived"  (Numbers 12:03), was given the Law.
We are taught in the Chumash that we accepted the Torah  by saying "we
will do and we will listen." Traditionally, this means we  accepted the
Torah before we knew what it required of us. However, the Talmud  in
Tractate Shabbat 82A tells us that at Sinai "the mountain was poised  over
the Jews like a barrel." In other words, we Jews were forced  into
acceptance.
The Midrash tells us another allegory. When God was  preparing to give the
Torah, all the mountains stepped forward and declared  why they thought
the Torah should be given on them. One said he was the  highest. Another
said he was the steepest. In the end, God choose Mt. Sinai  because it was
the most humble. To quote Rabbi Shragas Simmons, humility to  Jews is
"living with the reality that nothing matters except doing the  right
thing." 
Our  Jewish religion, to paraphrase Herman Melville's view of
freedom, is only  good as a means; it is no end in itself. As Jews, our
humility means that we  are not dependent on the opinions of others.
Sometimes doing the right thing  is popular. Many times it is not. The
humble Jew will set aside his ego and  consistently strive for
righteousness. Let us not confuse humility with  arrogance. An arrogant
man declares that he is all that matters. A humble man  believes that what
is greater than he is what counts.
Rabbi Simcha  Bunim of Pshischa in nineteenth-century Europe always
carried two slips of  paper. One he placed in his right pocket, the other in his left.
One piece  had a quote from Tractate Sanhedrin 38A . "The entire world was
created just  for me." On the other slip of paper was a quote of Abraham
in Genesis 18:27.  "I am but dust and ashes." A humble man knows when to
act and when to be  silent. A humble man knows when to lead and when to
follow. A truly humble  person says upon awakening "Modeh Ani...Thank you
God for returning my soul  for yet another day."
We were in the wilderness of Sinai when we received  the Torah. We
received the Law there because a desert is empty. Also it  belongs to no
nation. In order to receive God's word, we had to be in a place  that had
room for it. 
Every day we need to open our hearts and let God  inside.
Every day needs to be a Shavuot for us as individuals. We were  not
chosen by God, as the Midrash also says that God offered the Torah  to
other nations before us who rejected it. We chose God. We need to continue  to
choose God through our daily behaviors. 
Not everyone at every time  can achieve a higher level of contact with God
through personal search. Nor  will God reveal himself to every generation.
As Martin Buber wrote, we need  to develop an I-Thou relationship with God
on our own. We begin this by  developing I-Thou relationships with those
around us. We cannot have object  relations with our friends and loved
ones. We cannot relate to others in I-It  scenarios during the week and
expect miraculously to have a spiritual I-Thou  relationship with God on
Shabbat or in times of personal crisis.
While the Torah indeed was given to us on Shavuot, we  must learn to 
cling daily to the Torah (develikut b' Torah), as Rabbi  Yehudah Loewe,
known as the Maharal, of sixteenth-century Prague has  written.
The Talmud also teaches that each child is taught the whole of  Torah
while in his mother's womb. An angel comes prior to birth and sucks  that
knowledge out of him, causing the mark we each find above our upper  lip.
The Talmud says that if we had not first known the Torah as a  fetus,
albeit to later forget it, we would not be able to relate to it later  as
an adults. 
The  Talmud in Tractate Shavuot  39A further states that all
Jewish souls  past, present and future were at Sinai. The memory of Sinai
deep within each  of us drives our continual search for God and meaning in
our lives. Perhaps  this is why we ask in our daily prayers to be guided
"to know and understand,  learn and teach, observe and uphold with love"
the Torah (Gates of Prayer,  page 56).
I think the authors of the Chumash knew life well enough to  know that we
would always be "ba-midbar." 
Some are in a wilderness of  their own
making. Others find themselves in a desert caused by situations out  of
their control. 
The  Talmud in Tractate Shabbat 33b tells us of two men who
endured both types of  situations. Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai was a student
of  Rabbi  Akiva.
He was one of five students that survived the plague.  About 1,900 years
ago he defied the Romans' ruling against study of Torah. A  death
sentence was pronounced against him, and he went into hiding. Rabbi  Shimon and his
son Elazer fled to a cave in the Galilee. It is said that a  carob tree
and a well miraculously appeared in the cave to provide them  sustenance.
Since they had only one set of clothes, they removed them  so that the 
garments  would not wear out, and they buried themselves in  the sand except for
their heads. They studied Torah all day and did not wish  to be immodest while
engaged in "God's words." 
Rabbi Shimon and  Elazer study and lived in this cave for twelve years.
One day Elijah the  prophet appeared to tell them that Caesar had died and
the death sentence had  been lifted. They left the cave but saw Jewish
farmers working. Rabbi Shimon  was shocked that they were free yet were
not studying Torah. He gave them the  look of the "evil eye," and the
farmers vaporized. God was upset at this and  told the rabbi that His
"world is not to be destroyed and to return" to his  cave.
A year later, when Rabbi Shimon and his son emerged they again saw  Jews
involved in mundane worldly pursuits. He then realized that Torah  study
and religious pursuits were not enough in life, but that we need  to
balance them with worldly goals while still maintaining holiness.  Rabbi
Shimon went on to reveal the Zohar, a Kabbalistic text showing us how  to
"transform our material daily world into transcendent energy."
 Zohar literally means "shining light." His death is  celebrated on Lag ba Omer,
which occurs between Passover and Shavuot during  the 7 weeks of counting the Omer.
 My wife Ellen and I had the
occasion to visit  Rabbi Shimon's tomb in Meiron, Israel, in the Galilee. 
Can our humility  and our justice-seeking help us through the
daily wilderness encounters in  our own lives? Certainly by walking humbly
with God, as Micha suggests, will  help us to avoid deserts of our own making.
 In Pirket Avot 4:17, which we read during the  omer-counting season between Pesach and
Shavuot, Rabbi Shimon taught that  "there are three crowns---the crowns of
Torah, royalty and priesthood, but  the crown of a good name is above them
all." 
While it is wonderful to study Torah and read about  doing
mitzvoth, it is the actual doing of these good deeds that will lead us  out of the
wilderness. 
As  the Tchortkover Rebbe, Nachum Friedman, wrote, "all of
the Torah, royalty,  and priestliness in the world are worthless, if their
owner does not earn a  good name as well."
Rabbi Elazer taught in Pirket Avot 3:21 that one whose  wisdom exceeds his
good deeds "shall be like an isolated tree in an arid  land, dwelling on
parched soil in the wilderness." As I wrote in a previous  d'var Torah,
the fifty-day period in which we are now is the time to prepare  for the
Revelation by taking a good hard look at ourselves.
Rabbi ibn  Paquda of eleventh-century Spain writes in his Duties of the
Heart: "Are you  to accept Jewish ideals on the authority of those rabbis
learned in Torah and  tradition and exclusively rely on their traditions?
On the contrary! The  Torah expressly bids you to reflect and exercise
your intellect on such  themes. 'Know this day and lay it on your heart,
that the Lord, He is God'  [Deut. 4:39]. This admonition refers to
everything in which rational methods  of investigation can be used." 
We  are obliged to study and to question. We are to each seek paths to "make
our  lives a blessing." We are not to waste life on the trivialities of a
modern  wasteland. Regardless of what we are doing, we need to clarify our
spiritual  relationship with God. Every day needs to be our Shavuot.
"Man is the  creature created for the purpose of being drawn close to
God," wrote the  RaMChaL, Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto of eighteenth-century
Italy. As King  David wrote in Psalm 6:4: "Save me if you love me God, for
in death there is  no remembrance of You." "What do You gain by my death,
as I go down to the  pit? Can the dust praise you or proclaim your
faithfulness?" (Ps. 30:09).  David also penned in Psalm 115:17: "The
dead cannot praise God, they have  gone down to silence." 
God  gave life to us humans so that we can sing His praises and work toward Tikkun  Olam
(repair of the world). God needs us, in other words, to complete His  plans for
the world. We have to seek God continually. God is not something  you find
once and then stick in a drawer. Nor are our relationships with  each
other meant to be handled in this fashion. They must be continually  
nurtured. The question of "what have you done for me lately?" is a  valid
one.
 Martin Buber in his "Instructions in Intercourse  with God" quotes
the Bal Shem Tov as asking that we "Pray continually for  God's Glory,
that it may be redeemed from its exile." In doing Tikkun Olam,  we must
also repair the face of God. We need to be Sha'ar Elohim (portals  of
God). We need to find daily ways to do "shikrur Elohim,"  actually
liberate God. David asks us in Psalm 105:04 to "seek God's  face
untiringly." 
This d'var's title is "One Is the Loneliest  Number." As Jews believing in
God, we are never truly alone. Our name comes  from Yehudah and means "he
will give thanks." We are Yehudim because we  always thank God for all of
our blessings. Most times He has given us more  than we could ever
deserve. Everything we have, including life itself, are  undeserved gifts
from God. 
Who  would wish human companionship when no human could compare
to God's  benevolence? Yet God Himself declared in Genesis 2:18 that it is
"not good  (lo tov) for man to be alone." This is the first thing in the
universe that  God created that was not "tov." It was "lo tov" to be
alone.
The  Oneness of God is crucial to our understanding of God. We declare
God's  Oneness multiple times each day in our "Shema" prayer. Maimonides
wrote that  the highest level of wisdom that a human can attain is to comprehend
God's  Oneness. By doing so, we then know that everything is God. This
includes all  of humankind and even both good and evil.
 The yetzer ha ra is our
self-destructive  inclination to move away from God and goodness.
God gave us free will. And  God gave us the yetzer ha ra. It is our task
to harness this energy and use  it for goodness. Luzzatto, quoted above,
says in his Path of the Just that  creation's purpose is to earn us
pleasure. He writes that the ultimate  pleasure is attaching to God. So
although the evil inclination (yetzer ha ra)  seems to be leading us away
from God, it provides us opportunities to come  closer to God. 
We  get pleasure and satisfaction when we do not give in to our "bad" impulses.  
There is joy in not trapping ourselves in our self-made  wildernesses.
Yet we as humans can feel isolated when we are not in  relationships with
others. We are not meant to live in a cave like Rabbi  Shimon and his son.
On Shabbat in the Mincha service, we traditionally praise  God by 
saying , "You are One, Your Name is One, and who is like your people  Israel." We
are not only blessing God, but in the same breath blessing  ourselves as a
people. This prayer is part of the Menuchat Shalom (total  peace). It
implies that while we need to be one with God, we are not supposed  to be
one, solitary, like a lonely number. 
Rabbi Tzadok taught in  chapter 4, Mishna 7, "Do not separate yourself
from the community." We are  taught to seek out loving, friendly
relationships with others. In the  Talmud's Tractate Ta'anit 22A, the
story is told of Rabbi Beroka who would  visit the market in Bei Lefet. He
would often have visions of the prophet  Eliyahu. Once the rabbi said to
the prophet, "Is there anyone in the  marketplace who is destined to the
World to Come?" Eliyahu pointed to two  men. The rabbi asked them what
they did. They replied that they were  comedians and cheered up those who
were depressed. They also said that  whenever they saw two people involved
in a quarrel, they strove hard to make  peace between them. Rabbi Hillel
said, "Be among the disciples of Aaron,  loving peace and pursuing peace,
loving people and bringing them closer to  Torah" (Pirket Avot 1:12).
In ending this d'var Torah on this week's  parasha, I will quote from its
Haftorah from Hosea 2:21-22. This prophet  gives us a broad clue on
surviving wildernesses that we get trapped in along  life's path. He
describes God speaking to Israel. It is also a formula for us  to speak to
God and to each other in our relationships. "I shall marry you to  me
forever. I shall marry you to me with righteousness, and with  justice,
and with kindness, and with mercy. I shall marry you to me with  
fidelity." Certainly if we allowed ourselves to work toward  
relationships with our spouses, families, friends and also with God within  this
framework, we would never be a lonely number Ba-midbar. 
Shabbat  Shalom,
RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL
Via Shamash Org on-line class service
Jewish Renewal www.jewishrenewal.info
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA
Join Shamash's Groups on Facebook and LinkedIn.
For other options go to: http://listserv.SHAMASH.ORG/




