DEVARIM
By Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
Torah Reading: DEVARIM,
Deuteronomy 1:1-3:22
Isaiah 1:1-27.
THE
BOTTOM LINE
As always, we commence the reading
of the book of DEVARIM (Deuteronomy), the last of the Five Books of Moses, on
the Shabbos preceding the fast of Tisha Be'Av (9th Av) commemorating the destruction of the Holy
Temple. Tisha Be'Av is a
call to Teshuvah (repentance), setting us on course
for the season of Teshuvah during the months of Av
and especially Elul, in preparation for the coming New Year and the Days of
Awe. Our study of DEVARIM will continue for the whole of this period, until we
conclude the annual cycle of the Torah reading at the end of the festival of Succos, on Simchas Torah.
The themes of DEVARIM are
appropriate for this period. The Book of DEVARIM is the Torah's
"mouth", summarizing all that has gone before in the "main
body" of the Torah. DEVARIM calls to the inner ear of the soul of Israel to hear
the essential message of the Torah. Each of the twelve months of the year is
integrally connected with one of the twelve tribes and one of the twelve basic
human faculties (Sefer Yetzirah). The month of Av
corresponds to the Tribe of Shimon and the faculty of hearing (see Genesis
29:33). It is significant that the phrase "SHEMA YISRAEL! Hear, O
Israel" recurs in four key passages in the book of DEVARIM. The message is
that we must "Hear the words of the wise!" (Proverbs 22:17).
"These are the words (DEVARIM) which Moses spoke." (Deut. 1:1) --
"SOF DAVAR, the last word, after everything has been heard: fear G-d"
(Kohelet 12:13).
We find in the opening
verses of our parshah that Moses began the concluding discourses of his career
"in the fortieth year, in the eleventh month on the first of the month"
(Deut. 1:3). This was on the first day of the month of Shevat (Jan.-Feb.),
thirty-seven days before Moses ascended Mount
Nevo to gaze
over the Land of Israel and leave the world on 7 Adar.
Each of the six winter months is thematically connected with its corresponding
summer month. Just as Shevat, fifth of the winter months, is the eleventh month
of the year counting from Nissan, so the month of Av, fifth of the summer
months, is the eleventh month of the year counting from Tishrei.
The months of Shevat and Av are particularly propitious for deeper
understanding of the Torah, and it is therefore fitting that Moses' concluding
discourses, delivered in the month of Shevat, are the focus of our Torah study
during the month of Av.
Moses' concluding discourses
constitute a Covenant which he struck between G-d and Israel in the Plains of
Moab, just as he had struck a Covenant between G-d and Israel at Sinai forty
years earlier (see Deut. 28:69). At the end of the forty years wandering in the
wilderness, Moses was now the undisputed leader of Israel. The rebellious generation
of the Exodus had all died in the wilderness, to be replaced by the new
generation that stood before him now, poised to enter the land under Joshua.
All the challenges to Moses leadership -- the Golden Calf, the sin of the Ten
Spies, the rebellion of Korach, the sin of Baal Pe'or, etc. -- had been overcome and were now part of
history. In DEVARIM, Moses again and again returns to this history, in order to
draw out its lessons for the future.
Thus the opening verse of
our parshah of DEVARIM appears on the surface to give the location in which
Moses delivered his discourse. However, since the various locations mentioned
in the verse are all somewhat different, they are construed by the Aramaic Targum and biblical commentators as being a series of
allusions to the various sins of the past and the lessons that were to be
learned from them (see Rashi on Deut. 1:1). It is with this veiled reproof to
the nation that Moses began his final task as leader: to forge the thousands
and thousands of Israel
-- who were "like the stars of the heavens for a multitude" (Deut.
1:10) -- into a single, unified, purposeful nation that would be worthy of
entering the land promised to Abraham and inheriting it for eternity. Thus it
is that the book of Deuteronomy begins with reproof but ends with blessing --
"And this is the blessing which Moses, man of G-d, blessed the Children of
Israel before his death. Happy are you, Israel! Who is like you, a people
saved by HaShem? . Your enemies will waste away for
you, and you will tread upon their high places" (Deut. ch. 33 v. 1 &
v. 29).
Throughout Deuteronomy,
Moses repeatedly addresses the people by the name of Israel. Not only does the name Israel carry
the connotation of victory, "for you have struggled with G-d and with men,
and you have prevailed" (Gen. 32:28). The letters of the name Israel also
include the word YASHAR, "straight", "upright".
This is even more explicit in the other biblical name for the Hosts of Israel -
YESHURUN (Deut. 32:15; 33:26). The names Israel and Yeshurun
indicate that when the people are united and purposeful under the sole,
unchallenged leadership of Moses, the archetypal Tzaddik, they are the epitome
of order and rectification. (Kabbalistically, YOSHER,
the "upright" scheme of the Sefirot,
indicates order and repair, as opposed to IGULIM, the "circular"
scheme, indicating repeated cycles of disrepair and chaos.)
Since the issue of
leadership is so crucial, it is the first raised by Moses in his discourses,
after recounting how G-d had told him to leave Mount Sinai and begin the
journey to the Land
of Israel. It was far
from easy to lead a people as fractious and argumentative as this. In order for
Moses' leadership to permeate to all levels of the people, it was necessary to
establish a hierarchical system of "captains of thousands and captains of
hundreds, captains of fifties and captains of tens, and police". The verses
in our parshah defining the necessary qualities of the people's leaders and
judges and explaining how they are to adjudicate (Deut. 1:13-17) constitute the
main foundation of the Torah laws of judges and judicial procedure. These
deserve particular attention today, when the absence of leadership of true
integrity and caliber is the bane of all our lives.
* * *
HISTORY
AND PREHISTORY
Moses' discourse in parshas DEVARIM covers some of the key events in the forty
years wandering in the Wilderness and the lessons to be derived from them.
These include the Sin of the Ten Spies, which is of particular relevance to us
this week as we approach Tisha Be'Av,
since this is not only the anniversary of the destruction of the Temple but
also of the evil report given by the spies in the Wilderness, the ultimate
cause of the destruction of the Temple. Similarly, the rectification of LASHON
HARA, evil speech, is one of the main preconditions for the rebuilding of the Temple.
Moses' historical survey
retraces the final stages of the journey of the Children of Israel to the Land,
including their circuiting of the lands of the Edomites,
the Moabites and the Ammonites and their conquest of Sichon
king of the Emorites and Og king of Bashan.
The original narrative of these journeys and conquests was given in the later parshiyos of the book of BAMIDBAR (Numbers) -- CHUKAS,
MATOS and MAS'EY.
The Children of Israel
were forbidden to try to conquer the territories of the Edomites,
the Moabites and the Ammonites. These three territories were among the ten
promised to Abraham (together with those of the seven Canaanite nations), but
they were forbidden to the Children of Israel (until in time to come) because
they were already in the hands of Abraham's descendants or associates. The Edomites were the children of Esau, Abraham's grandson,
while the Moabites and Ammonites were the descendants of the daughters of Lot. Lot had been rewarded with these territories because
of his loyalty to Abraham in Egypt
by not revealing that Sarah was Abraham's wife (Genesis ch. 12).
Moses introduces some
prehistory into his historical account by explaining how the Edomites, Moabites and Ammonites conquered their respective
territories from the frightening prehistoric giants who inhabited them
previously. For: " 'He explains the power of His works to His people give
them the inheritance of the nations' (Psalm 111:6) -- for if the nations of the
world say to Israel, 'You are robbers because you have conquered the lands of
seven peoples,' they can reply to them: 'All the earth belongs to the Holy One,
blessed be He; He created it and gave it to whom he saw fit. When he wanted, He
gave it to them, and when he wanted, he took it from them and gave it to us' " (Rashi on Genesis 1:1).
Kabbalistically, the Seven Canaanite Nations
correspond to the broken vessels of the seven lower Sefirot
(from CHESSED down to MALCHUT). The conquest of the Land of the Canaanites and
its transformation into the Land of Israel parallels the rectification of these seven
broken vessels (IGULIM) and their reconstitution in "upright" form,
YOSHER = Israel.
The territories of Seir,
Moab and Ammon correspond respectively to the three upper Sefirot of Keter, Chochmah and Binah. These will
become the inheritance of the true heirs of Abraham in time to come, when the
cycle is complete and the world attains perfect rectification.
The Land of Israel
was given to Abraham as part of the Covenant. The sign of the Covenant is BRIS
MILAH, the circumcision, in which the foreskin is cut off and the membrane over
the organ peeled away, signifying the peeling off and removal of the husks of
evil that conceal holiness. In order to conquer the Land
of Israel, it was first necessary to
conquer the two giant kings who were the main bulwarks of the Canaanites: Sichon king of the Emorites and Og king of Bashan.
Sichon corresponds to the foreskin, while Og corresponds to the membrane
(ARI). The removal of these "gigantic" evil husks could be
accomplished only by Moses, King of Israel: "And there was a king in Yeshurun, when the heads of the people gathered, the tribes
of Israel
together" (Deut. 33:5).
"All
that HaShem your God did to these two kings, so HaShem will do to all the
kingdoms to which you are passing over. Do not fear them, for HaShem your G-d, He will
fight for you!" (Deut. 3:21-2).
May we see the
restoration of Israel and
the rebuilding of the Temple
quickly in our times!
Shabbat Shalom!!!
Avraham
Yehoshua Greenbaum