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The Israel
Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Parshat HaShavua Yeshivat Har
Etzion
This parasha series is
dedicated in memory of Michael Jotkowitz, z"l.
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PARASHAT
VAYELEKH
Dedicated in
honor of the birth of David Chai Persoff, sister to Emuna. May his parents Avi
and Shira, and the entire Persoff-Tepperman family, be zocheh to raise him
le-Torah, le-chuppa u-le-maasim tovim!
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Dedicated in memory of my mother Gertrude Deutsch
Schreiber on the occasion of her 22nd Yarzheit - Dedicated by her
daughter Nechi Shudofsky, grandchidren and great grandchildren
The
Juxtaposition of Parashot in Vayelekh,
and
Their Significance
by
Rav Nathaniel Helfgot
The gemara, in masekhet Berakhot 21b, teaches: "Even though we do not
seek explanations for the juxtaposition (semikhut) of themes throughout the
Torah, we do so in the Mishneh Torah (Sefer Devarim)." While the gemara is referring to the
sphere of halakha, it would seem that the same principle applies to the
narrative portions of the Sefer.
Therefore, we need to pay close attention to the order of the parashot in
Sefer Devarim in general, and the order of the parashot and juxtaposition of
verses in each separate parasha.
The aim of this article will be to examine the order of the parashot in
Parashat Vayelekh and to understand their significance.
The constituent
parashot of this sidra are:
1. Chapter
31:1-6. Moshe's speech before Israel - "I can no longer go out and
enter...."
2. Verses
7-13.
a. Moshe's command to Yehoshua, "Be strong..."
(7-8)
b. The writing of "this Torah" and its transmission to the tribe of Levi
(9)
c. The mitzva of 'hakhel' (10-13).
3. Verses
14-30.
a. God's words to Moshe, informing him of what will take place after
his death (14-18)
b. The writing of the 'song,' its purpose, and Moshe's commands to
Yehoshua and the Levi'im (19-27).
c. Moshe warns the elders against corruption, and the recitation of
the 'song' before Bnei Yisrael (28-30).
Several questions arise from this structural breakdown: What is the
significance of this mixture of subjects?
Why does the parasha of 'hakhel' suddenly appear in the middle of our
sidra, and not together with other commandments which are listed in other sidrot
in Sefer Devarim? What is the
function of the tribe of Levi and its significance?
In order to properly answer these questions it would seem appropriate to
examine in depth the significance of the seemingly peculiar mitzva of
hakhel. The peculiarity of this
mitzva becomes apparent in light of several questions which it
poses:
1. Why are the
chosen texts read specifically once in seven years?
2. What is the
reason for the king himself being the one who reads them?
3. What is so
unique about the parashot to be read, as indicated in masekhet
Sota?
4. Why does the
issue of hakhel appear for the very first time only at the end of Sefer Devarim,
with no mention of it in previous Books?
This question assumes particularly critical importance in light of the
fact that Bible critics use this as 'proof' that Sefer Devarim was written, as
it were, by a different author and at a different time.
5. Why must
even small children, who are not able to understand what is happening,
nevertheless be brought to participate in this occasion?
These are just some of the many questions which have bothered early and
later commentators alike.
The answer to these questions lies in an idea suggested by many
commentators, according to which the mitzva of hakhel is not so much a matter of
public Torah study as it is an attempt to recreate and relive the experience of
Har Sinai. From time to time, Am
Yisrael is required to 'return' to this historical experience in order to
understand and remember that the Torah and the mitzvot are "our whole essence
and our crowning glory" (Sefer Ha-chinukh). This involves not a cognitive
understanding of the parashot but rather an experience of hearing God's word, of
reliving the full power of that experience.
This idea is borne out by the parallel which exists between parashat
hakhel and the Sinaitic experience:
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Parashat
Hakhel
"GATHER
THE PEOPLE... in order that they may hear and in order that they MAY
LEARN, and they WILL FEAR the Lord your God all the days you live on the
land...." |
Har Sinai
(parashat Va-etchanan)
"The day
on which you stood... at Chorev, when God told me, 'GATHER THE PEOPLE and
I shall make them hear My words, that THEY SHALL LEARN TO FEAR Me all
their days which they live on the land, AND THEY SHALL TEACH THEIR
CHILDREN." |
In addition, the Sinaitic experience is also referred to as "the day of
hakhel" (see, for example, Devarim 9:10 and ibid. 8:14).
This helps us to answer the questions we posed above. The mitzva is to read these specific
parashot, because they are parashot of awakening and remembrance of hearing
God's words at Sinai. It is equally
understandable that this mitzva was given only when the nation was about to
enter the land, and not earlier, in the wilderness of Sinai, when the experience
of receiving the Torah was still fresh in their memory. Likewise, the person commanded to read
the selected portions is the king, who is filling in for Moshe Rabbeinu - who
was a king (see Rambam, Hilkhot Beit Ha-Bechira 6:11). And since the purpose of the ceremony is
to awaken and strengthen the people, it is not necessary that it be held
often. It is more effective as a
special ceremony held once every seven years. As the Rambam writes, "And converts who
are not familiar (with the portions read at hakhel) must prepare their hearts
and listen with awe and fear and trepidation LIKE THE DAY THE TORAH WAS GIVEN AT
SINAI. Even great Sages, who know
the entire Torah, are obligated to listen with exceedingly great
concentration. And someone who is
not able to hear must concentrate in his heart on the intention of the reading,
for the Torah commanded this only in order to strengthen our religious
consciousness, and each should see himself as though he is being commanded at
that moment, hearing the words from God Himself, for the king is the agent to
make God's words heard." (Hilkhot Chagiga 3:6).
Once we perceive this parallel between parashat hakhel and Har Sinai, we
realize that the entire sidra is built around the model of the events that took
place at Har Sinai and their consequences.
In other words: the sidra of Vayelekh is parallel and similar to that of
Ki Tisa from the point of view of both content and
language.
Parashat Vayelekh opens with a description of Moshe, who is about to die,
and God informing him that after his death the nation will turn aside and
worship idols, with parashat hakhel appearing in between. The parallel to the Sinai experience is
clear: there, too, the nation believed that Moshe had died - "This man Moshe, we
do not know what has become of him" (Shemot 33:1), and as emphasized by the
Midrash (Yalkut Shim'oni), "'And the nation saw that Moshe was tarrying' - At
the end of 40 days Satan came and turned the world upside down. He said to them, 'Moshe your teacher has
died,' and he showed them an image of his deathbed in a cloud. It was in response to this that they
said, 'for this man Moshe, we do not know what has become of
him.'"
The nation, convinced that Moshe was dead, turned and made an idol in the
image of a calf, "a god which will WALK BEFORE THEM." Correspondingly, Moshe warns in parashat
Vayelekh, "For the Lord your God - He is the One who WALKS BEFORE YOU..."
(31:6).
The linguistic
parallel between the parashot is clear from a comparison of the
pesukim:
|
Ki
Tisa
"And they
GOT UP to jest...Go, descend, for your nation has become CORRUPT. They
have TURNED quickly from the path which I commanded them... Lest you make
a covenant with the inhabitants of the land, and turn after their
gods |
Vayelekh
"And this
nation will GET UP and turn away. I know that after my death you will
surely BECOME CORRUPT and WILL TURN from the path. After the foreign gods
of the land. |
Likewise we find Yehoshua serving as a link and parallel between the two
sidrot. In Vayelekh we read of the
transferal of authority from Moshe to Yehoshua and the latter's transformation
into a leader, while in Ki Tisa we see the special connection between Moshe and
Yehoshua. Until Ki Tisa, Yehoshua
is presented as the military leader of the war against Amalek; at this point he
appears as the disciple of the leader.
Yehoshua is the first to greet Moshe as he descends from the mountain,
and it appears that he, in fact, waited for Moshe throughout the forty days at
the very limits of the border which marked the extent to which he was permitted
to approach. Then, after Moshe
isolates himself outside of the camp, we are told: "Yehoshua ben-Nun - the lad
did not move from inside the tent."
The Torah is actually showing us, then, in parashat Ki Tisa, why Yehoshua
is chosen later on, in Vayelekh, to replace Moshe. Yehoshua, the loyal and committed
disciple, represents the natural extension of his great teacher. Rashi points
out that although Moshe tells the nation "After my death you shall surely become
corrupt...," we know that throughout Yehoshua's period of leadership this did
not take place - "indicating that a person considers his close disciple as part
of his very own self;" as long as Yehoshua lived, Moshe considered it as an
extension of his own lifetime. In
parashat Vayelekh, Yehoshua reaps the produce of the seeds that were sown in Ki
Tisa.
A third parallel issue in these two sidrot concerns the function and
status of the Levi'im. In Vayelekh,
Moshe gives the Torah to the tribe of Levi. The Sefer Torah is laid down in front of
the ark of God's covenant, which is carried by the Levi'im, and just as the
Levi'im are in charge of carrying the ark, they are now given responsibility for
bearing the Book which includes the covenant as well as the warnings as to the
consequences of its violation. This
function is an extension of their function in Ki Tisa. Following the sin of the golden calf,
the tribe of Levi rally to Moshe's call to preserve the covenant and to punish
the sinners. Moshe sees this as a
valuable learning experience in their training as servants of God: "And Moshe
said, Lift your hands today to God..." (Shemot 32:29). It was at this point that the tribe of
Levi assumed the task of preserving and reinforcing God's covenant and
leadership of the nation.
An additional parallel arises from the description of the punishment in
Vayelekh as compared to the events which transpire in Ki Tisa. In Ki Tisa, God's anger burns against
the nation:: "...And now leave Me, that My anger burn against them and they will
be consumed." As the punishment
progresses, God withdraws from the ohel mo'ed to outside of the camp, and He
says, "For I shall not go up among you."
Correspondingly, we find in our parasha, "And My anger will burn against
him on that day, and I shall desert them and I shall hide My face from them, and
they shall be open to consumption...
And I shall surely hide... for they have turned to other gods."
(31:17-18)
We may also see the writing of the 'song' as a parallel to the events of
parashat Ki Tisa. Following the sin
of the golden calf, God commands Moshe, "Carve yourself two stone tablets," and
subsequently there is a sort of second giving of the Torah, including the
immanence of the Shekhina and the making of a new covenant. "Behold, I am making a covenant; before
the entire nation I shall perform wonders." Correspondingly, in our parasha Moshe is
commanded to write the 'song' - a Sefer Torah written by human hand, which is to
serve in the future as a witness, warning Bnei Yisrael, in order that they will
fulfill the covenant after their entry into the land.
The above leads us to conclude that the Torah is presenting the future
trials and tribulations of Am Yisrael, in light of the lessons learned from the
past. Am Yisrael is commanded to
relive the great experience of matan Torah in order to preserve the national
character and to remain loyal to its principles. However, past experience has proven that
awesome experiences - even that of Har Sinai - are not sufficient to guarantee
that the covenant will be kept, and therefore the Torah ensures this in another
fashion - through a second receiving of the Torah, in a personal and private
way: the writing of the song and its study. Alongside the magnificent experiences
which come along from time to time, there is modest, private, daily
activity.
Another
Example: Eliyahu at Har Carmel
A parallel sequence of events is to be found in another place in Tanakh:
In Melakhim I 18 we read of the conflict between Eliyahu and the priests of
Ba'al at Har Carmel. The Pesikta
Rabbati, quoted in the Yalkut Shim'oni (Melakhim 209), points out the parallels
between Eliyahu and Moshe as follows:
"When the verse
states, 'By means of a prophet God brought Israel out of Egypt, and by
means of a prophet He watched over them,' the 'prophet who brought them out'
refers to Moshe and the 'prophet who watched over them' refers to Eliyahu, of
blessed memory. There were two
prophets of Israel who came from the tribe of Levi; Moshe was the first and
Eliyahu is the last, and both served as messengers of the Divine in order to
bring about Israel's redemption - Moshe redeemed them from Egypt while Eliyahu
is destined to redeem them in the future... Moshe and Eliyahu are similar in
every respect; Moshe was a prophet and so was Eliyahu, Moshe is called a 'man of
God' and so was Eliyahu, Moshe went up to heaven... In reference to Moshe, the Torah says,
'and God passed over his face,' while in reference to Eliyahu we read, 'Behold
God is passing over;' in reference to Moshe it says 'and he heard the voice,'
and in reference to Eliyahu it says 'Behold the voice came to him;' Moshe
gathered the nation of Israel in front of Har Sinai and Eliyahu gathered them at
Har Carmel; Moshe destroyed idolatry... and Eliyahu destroyed idolatry. Moshe was zealous... and Eliyahu was
zealous; Moshe was buried in a cave... and Eliyahu was buried in a cave...
concerning Moshe it is written, 'And he came to the mountain of God' and concerning Eliyahu ... Moshe
spent forty days and forty nights, and similarly
Eliyahu...."
This midrash sheds light on the parallel between the experience of Har
Sinai and that of Har Carmel. In
addition to those corresponding aspects mentioned in the midrash, there are
still more: Eliyahu builds an altar out of twelve stones, corresponding to the
number of the tribes, and correspondingly we read of Moshe that he "built an
altar beneath the mountain with twelve stones for the twelve tribes of
Israel" (Shemot 24:4). Moreover, we read "And Eliyahu
approached and he said...," as well as (concerning Moshe) "and who approaches
the cloud" (Shemot 20:18). Eliyahu
announces that the purpose of the gathering at Har Carmel is that "it will be
known today that You are God in Israel ... and the nation will know
that you are the Lord" (Melakhim I 18:36-7), while concerning Har Sinai we
learn, "You were shown that you may know that God is the Lord" (Devarim
4:35). Likewise, just as Moshe
commands the tribe of Levi to slay the worshippers of the golden calf by the
sword, Eliyahu commands Bnei Yisrael to slay the priests of
Ba'al.
One would expect that after such a lofty experience as the climactic
encounter at Har Carmel, the spiritual state of the nation would be on an
up-swing, but reading the events of the next chapter, which take place soon
after, as we read: "And Achav told Izevel of all that Eliyahu had done and how
he had slain all the priests by the sword," we find that Eliyahu continues to
suffer persecution and that the position of Achav and Izevel has not changed at
all. Moreover, Eliyahu says, "I
have been zealous for God, Lord of Hosts, for they have left Your covenant...
and I have remained alone." Just a
few days previously the entire nation declared, "God is the Lord," and now
Eliyahu finds himself alone; the nation has returned to its ways and has
abandoned the covenant. The
seemingly awesome experience has been forgotten and has disappeared. It would seem that this phenomenon is
emphasized even more strongly with the seeming exhibition of the prophet's
death. Izevel seeks to murder
Eliyahu, and he himself asks to die - "and he wished of his soul to
die."
In the midst of this degeneration God is revealed to Eliyahu at Har
Sinai, and He tells him, "Not by God's spirit... and not by God's thunder... and
not by God's fire...." What is the
meaning of this message? The Malbim
explains, "God told him.... Let
them not raise a great storm or make a great noise or ignite a great fire, as
Eliyahu did when he was zealous for the Lord of Hosts and he stopped up the
heavens and slew the priests of Ba'al.
For God will send his prophets to come to them with a small voice, to
draw the nation towards them in ways of love... and soft
words."
Not by Divine fire and not by awesome, lofty events but rather by the
daily toil of encouraging preservation of the covenant. God's revelation in the world cannot
rely only on outstanding and unique phenomena; it is revealed through the still,
small voice.
At the conclusion of God's words, which come as a response to Eliyahu's
contention, "I was zealous for God...," we read: "And Yehu ben Nimshi shall you
anoint as king over Israel, and Elisha ben Shefat from
Evel Mechola shall you anoint as prophet in your place." Eliyahu is commanded to effect a
changeover in leadership. Just like
Moshe, earlier on, Eliyahu is commanded to appoint the prophet who will take his
place. And at the conclusion of the
chapter, after he transfers his cloak to Elisha, we read: "And he (Elisha) got
up and went after Eliyahu and he served him." Just as Yehoshua served Moshe, Elisha is
likewise chosen because of his service to Eliyahu.
The appointment of new leadership turns out to be a continuation of the
principle of "not by God's thunder."
Reliance on the charisma of the leader is no better than relying on
one-time impressive events. What
will happen when the charismatic leader dies - will everyone then be left to do
as he sees fit? The day-to-day
reality shows that the great leader is not the point; that "Yiftach in his
generation was like Shmuel in his generation." The permanent work continues and is not
dependent on special, outstanding leadership. Continuity relies on continuing
conscientiousness, regardless of the situation.
Great and impressive events are nevertheless important from time to time
for the sake of preserving the visionary aspect and infusing new energy; as a
sort of injection of support, reinforcing the national consciousness of being a
"kingdom of priests and a holy nation."
Therefore, we are given the mitzva of hakhel, to take place once every
seven years. This, however, is not
sufficient, as we learn from both Har Sinai and Har Carmel. Therefore, there must be daily
encouragement to preserve the covenant; there must be permanent spiritual
leadership which bridges the generations and maintains stability in order that
the nation of Israel will always be the flock of
their Shepherd.
(Originally
appeared in Hebrew, in Alon Shevut Le-Bogrim 4 , Tishrei 5755. Translated by Kaeren
Fish)
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