MATOS-MAS'EI
by Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
Torah
Haftara: Jeremiah 2:4-2:28, 3:4 (Optional: 4:1-2 may replace or supplement
3:4).
Scroll
down the page for map of Ezekiel's vision of the Final Settlement of Israel
On this and the following Shabbos
we complete our annual study of the book of BAMIDBAR (Numbers) by reading its
two lengthy closing parshiyos, MATOS and MAS'EY,
together. This year (which was a leap year) each of the parshiyos
is read on its own Shabbos, but in most years these
two parshiyos are read on one Shabbos
to ensure that we begin reading the book of DEVARIM (Deuteronomy), with its
central theme of TESHUVAH -- coming home to G-d -- on the last Shabbos prior to the fast of 9th Av commemorating the
destruction of the Holy Temple.
As
discussed in earlier commentaries, Genesis is the "head" of the
Torah, Exodus the "arms" (the "outstretched arm" of
redemption), Leviticus the "heart", Numbers the "legs"
(journeying through the wilderness to reach the Land) and Deuteronomy the
"mouth", trumpeting forth: "Hear O Israel!" Coming at the
end of the book of Numbers, these two parshiyos show
us the Children of Israel at the end of their journeying in the wilderness,
assembled in the plains of
* * *
PARSHAS MATOS
The uniqueness
of the prophecy of Moses is seen in the opening words of parshas MATOS
introducing the laws of vows. "And Moses spoke to the heads of the tribes
of the Children of Israel saying, THIS is the word that G-d has
commanded." (Numbers 30:2). There are various
levels of prophecy, which may come through "a clear glass" or through
a "dim glass". The latter is the case in countless verses in the
prophetic literature where the prophet says "KO -- So said HaShem",
indicating that the words of the prophecy are LIKE -- resemble -- the actual
Truth, yet they are merely similar, an evocation of something that in itself is
actually much higher. Moses himself also prophesied using the comparative
expression KO, as in Exodus 11:4. However, as Rashi points out (in his comment
on Numbers 30:2), unique among all the prophets, Moses also used the expression
ZEH HADAVAR -- "THIS is the word", the actual word of G-d. For Moses
revealed the very P'NIMIUT, the "inner essence" of G-d, like no other
prophet.
* * *
WORDS AND COMMITMENTS
An
important theme in Parshas MATOS is the care with which we must use words and
language because of their very great power -- language is the "glass"
that may either reflect or obscure the truth. "When a man wants to make a
vow to HaShem or to swear an oath placing a prohibition upon himself,
he must not profane his word. He must do according to all that comes forth from
his mouth." (Numbers 30:3).
We live
in an age when streams of verbiage flow forth at us in such quantities from all
directions -- billboards, papers, magazines, TV, radio, Internet and on and on
-- that we can easily become almost completely desensitized to words, their
meaning and importance. We take it for granted that politicians make promises
and undertakings which they have no intention of keeping; that
"experts" shoot forth with torrents of instant comment which are as
enduring as rotten fruit; that commercial advertising has turned the
destruction of language into an art-form; that the media are filled with every
kind of irreverence and unholiness.
As a
medicine against this desensitization, the Torah asks us to think hard about
the words we bring forth from our own mouths, and particularly the personal commitments
we make. While we often focus on language as the means of communication with
each other, with ourselves and with G-d, the concept of the vow is one where we
use our G-d-given gift of speech to elevate ourselves spiritually. One might
take a vow to dedicate something of worth to the
Because
of the extreme seriousness of an oath or vow to G-d, the Torah Codes advise us
not to take actual oaths or vows unless we are thoroughly conversant with the
intricacies of their laws. Much of the discussion in the relevant Talmudic
tractates of Nedarim, Nazir
and Shavuos is bound up with careful analyses of the
meanings and implications of different kinds of phraseology. The larger part of
the section on vows in our parshah is taken up with special laws that apply to
vows made by an unmarried, betrothed or married woman, which may be nullified
by her father and/or husband. This is because vows she may make even with the
best intentions could cause complications in her domestic life that might
affect others (e.g. if she were to vow to abstain from certain foods or not to
use cosmetics, etc.). Her freedom is circumscribed by her responsibilities to
others, and the Torah gives her father and/or husband
the last word on whether to uphold her vows. Indeed we should not make vows or
commitments that can affect others detrimentally. The point is not to deter us
from making commitments, but rather to impress upon us the care with which we
should go about making them and the seriousness with which we must uphold them.
* * *
THE WAR AGAINST MIDIAN
It is
significant that the final war fought by the Children of Israel prior to their
entry into the land was the war for sexual morality -- to rectify the
degradation of the sin of BAAL PE'OR as described at the end of parshas BALAK.
The crafty Bilaam knew that sexual sin is the undoing
of the holiness of
The
warriors return from this war with war booty, which is documented in detail in
our Parshah. When we overcome the war against immorality, we can reclaim the
lost booty -- the energy that was degraded to the level of the animal, and
which can now be elevated and used in pursuit of the holy. However, what
Our
parshah is thus an important source for the laws of purification of vessels of
metal, wood or other materials that had previously been in the possession of
and used by non-Israelites (Numbers 31:21-4). "Every thing (literally,
word) that can come into fire you must pass through the fire and it will be
pure, but it must be purified with the waters of NIDAH, whileall
that cannot come into fire you must pass through the water." From this are
derived the laws of kashering utensils that have
absorbed forbidden substances, and the laws of immersing vessels in a kosher mikveh. Rabbi Nachman of Breslov (Likutey Moharan I:4) points to the esoteric meaning of these laws, which
teach how to repent for our sins. If we sinfully took our holy powers and
energies and burned them up in the fires of animal lust, we must take
"what came into fire" and "pass it through the fire". We
must repent by confessing our sins with words of fire, burning them up with
holy intensity, the fire of our passion to now rectify and elevate our
energies. And so too, the pure waters of the Torah, the mikveh,
purify the vessel, the body.
* * *
THE SONS OF REUVEN AND GAD'S CONDITION
Following
the war with Midian, the account of the request of
the tribes of Reuven and Gad to take their share of the Land in the conquered
territories EAST of the River Jordan and Moses' response is written Torah proof
of the Children of Israel's possession of these territories in the true
"final settlement".
Were
the Sons of Reuven and Gad really more interested in pasture-lands for their
cattle than having a share in the Promised Land? The Aramaic Targum of Onkelos reveals what is concealed beneath the Torah verse
detailing the locations east of the
Even
so, Moses scolded the Sons of Reuven and Gad for wanting to stay out of the
Land, suggesting that they were like the Spies whose perverted use of language
led the hearts of the Israelites astray. Coming after the laws of purified
language -- vows and oaths -- at the beginning of our parshah, Moses' binding
of the Sons of Reuven and Gad with a detailed set of conditions is another
lesson in the precision with which we must use language. We have to make
commitments, and we have to keep them. We must take care with the way we
formulate our commitments, and care to carry them out.
The
Sons of Reuven and Gad were committed to supporting their brother Israelites in
conquering the Land. This should serve as a model for those who reside outside
the Land, whose share in the Land is strengthened by giving support to those
who live in it and fight the war there every day.
Parshas
MATOS concludes with a detailed account of the territories given by Moses to
the tribes of Reuven, Gad and half of Menasheh east
of the River Jordan. These include all of the mountain and valley areas from
north of the River Arnon, which flows into Yam HaMelach (the "Dead"
Sea) up to Chavot Yair, which are the lands south
east of the Kinneret (Sea of Galilee).
* * *
PARSHAS MAS'EY
Already
in MATOS when Moses castigated the Sons of Reuven and Gad with being like the
Ten Spies, the theme of Moses' reproof enters the Torah, and it continues in
MAS'EY and in the book of Deuteronomy. After the events of the forty years
wandering, which we have studied in Exodus, Leviticus and Numbers, the time has
come to begin to review the lessons and reduce them to their essentials.
MAS'EY
begins with a review of the forty years wandering. On the surface, the list of
encampments and journeyings seems prosaic. However,
the second Targum on the Torah, that of Rabbi Yonasan
ben Uziel, disciple of Hillel,
fills in much of the moral significance of the different staging posts in those
difficult years, showing that the list itself is a form of reproof. It teaches
us that there are times when we must look back, review and draw conclusions and
lessons from the past. This is particularly necessary when we stand on the
brink of new challenges, as in the case of the Children of Israel, who stood
poised to conquer the Land.
Included
in the account of the wanderings is a reference to the death of Aaron the High
Priest, specifying the date of his ascent to the mountain to die -- the first
day of the fifth month, which is the month of Av, which we bless this Shabbos and which this year (5763) begins on Wednesday July
30. This is a reminder to us that the present year is beginning to draw to a
close, with only two months to go before the Day of Judgment, the New Year (27
September). As we proceed in the period of Repentance (the Three Weeks,
followed by Elul and Tishri) we should take time to review our lives and
reflect on where we are trying to go. This way we will be prepared for the
challenges of the coming year -- the Conquest of the Land.
* * *
THE BOUNDARIES OF THE LAND AND ITS CONQUEST
Parshas
MAS'EY provides the detailed topography of the boundaries of the
The
Boundaries of the Land are given as a COMMANDMENT (Numbers 34:2). While nobody
doubts that the true
|
The final settlement of |
Of
course the Land will only become
* * *
THE LEVITICAL CITIES AND THE CITIES OF REFUGE
Since
the Levites did not have a share in the Land, they were given forty-two cities
of their own up and down the Land together with all the necessary surrounding
areas. The Levitical Cities indicate the distinctive
nature of the
The Torah's
abhorrence for killing and murder iexpressed in the
portion that gives the laws of unintentional manslaughter and deliberate murder
(Numbers 35:9ff). Not only has our world become desensitized to language, as
discussed above. It has also been desensitized to the evil of killing and
murder, which are openly celebrated be terrorists as "religious
acts", while the TV and movies provide an endless diet of violence to the
population.
The
spilling of blood is a crime against the Land, and the holiness of the
"And
you shall not pollute the Land in which you dwell that I dwell in its midst,
for I am HaSheM dwelling among the Children of
Israel" (Numbers 35:34). Speedily in our days.
Amen.
Shabbat
Shalom!!!
Avraham
Yehoshua Greenbaum

