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PARASHAT
HASHAVUA
PARASHAT
BAMIDBAR
The Leviim and
the Firstborn
By Rav Ezra
Bick
The opening parasha of Sefer
Bamidbar is famous for being mostly a series of censuses, some quite
detailed, of the entire Jewish people, of the individual tribes, of the Levites,
and of the firstborn. The usual
understanding of the divisions is that God likes to count the Jews (based on the
Rashi to the opening verse), the firstborn were meant to be the servants of the
mishkan and are here being switched with the Levites, because of their
respective roles in the sin of the golden calf, and the Levites are not included
in the general census because they are sanctified in place of the firstborn. I
would like to show that these assumptions are either wrong or at least
incomplete, and that is the theme of today's shiur.
Let us first sketch the different
sections of the censuses:
1. (1,1-46) God commands Moshe to count the
entire Jewish people, which he proceeds to do. Immediately after the total
("603,550"), The Torah adds the statement that "The Levites according to the
tribe of their fathers were not counted among them" (1,47).
2. (1,48-53) God commands Moshe not to count
the Levites among the Jews. He commands Moshe to appoint the Levites to take
care of the mishkan. This section concludes with a general statement that
the Jews fulfilled all of God's commands, as delivered to Moshe
(1,54)
3. (2,1-31) God commands Moshe to arrange
the tribes in a camp, divided into four, with the numbers of each tribe
repeated, and the sums of each subcamp, consisting of three tribes under a
leader, specified as well. This section is concluded with the total of the
entire Jewish people being given again, a repeated statement that the Levites
were not included, and a repeated statement that the Jews fulfilled all of God's
commands, as given to Moshe (2,32-34).
4. (3,1-4) "These are the descendants of
Moshe and Aharon…."
5. (3,5-10) God commands Moshe to assign
the tribe of Levi to Aharon, to serve him, and to guard the mishkan.
6. (3,11-13) God tells Moshe that He is
taking the Levites to Himself, in place of the firstborn.
7. (3,14-39) God commands a census of the
Levites, which includes a general listing of the specific jobs of each subgroup
of the Levites.
8. (3,40-43) God commands a census of the
firstborn, and a "taking" of the Levites in their place.
9. (3,44—51) God commands the switching of
the 22,273 firstborn with the 22,000 Levites, with the excess 273 to be redeemed
with five shekel a head, which is given to Aharon and his
sons.
The questions:
1. Why is the census described (in
great detail) twice (1 and 3)?
2. Why are the Levites not included in
the census, and only afterwards is Moshe commanded not to include them (1 and
2)?
3. Why are the Levites commanded to
care for the mishkan twice (2 and 5)?
4. Why are the Levites assigned to
Aharon, and only afterwards are they switched with the firstborn (5 and
6)?
5. Why are the descendants of Moshe
and Aharon listed separately; in fact, why are they listed at all
(4)?
The Ramban addresses the second
question by claiming that Moshe decided on his own not to count the Levites,
based on the fact that God had appointed the princes of each tribe by name and
commanded that they be in charge of the census for each tribe, but had not
designated anyone to lead the tribe of Levi. The absence of a designated
nasi for the tribe Levi lead Moshe to exclude them from the census. This
could be understood either as an inference by Moshe as to God's unexpressed
will, or simply as a technical difficulty – Moshe had no nasi of the
Levites to assist him, and therefore he simply did not perform the census for
them, even if he had understood that in principle they were to be included. I
prefer the latter version, which is apparently more or less what the Ramban
means when he writes that Moshe was "unsure what to do about the Leviim." In
other words, verse 1,47, "The Levites according to the tribe of their fathers
were not counted among them," records a matter of fact, which describes a puzzle
for Moshe, and also for us, the readers. The answer to the puzzle is given in
the next verse, when God commands Moshe not to count the
Levites.
This does not actually answer the
question, but merely raises it to a different level. Why did God not explicitly
command Moshe in the beginning to count all the Jews except for the Levites, who
were not to be counted? Why did He command Moshe to count "the entire
congregation of Israel" (1,2), omit the nasi of Levi, and only afterwards
explicitly exclude Levi from the census?
The answer, I think, is found in the
first Rashi of the parasha.
Because of His love for them, He
counts them all the time. When they left Egypt He counted them, and when they
died during the (incident of the golden) calf he counted them, in order to know
how many survived, and when He came to rest His presence on them, He counted
them.
A charming midrash, but is it
pshat? I would think not, as it is clear from the continuation of the
parasha that the census now was instrumental in establishing the
machane, the structured encampment of the Jews, each to his degel
and each to his machane. This was not simply a counting of love, but was
necessary in order to know how to place each tribe in the structure of the
machane. And while it is true that I cannot say exactly why it is
necessary to know the numbers in order to establish the machane – after
all, the four degalim (subcamps) were not equal in population size, it is
clear from the detailed counting both of individual tribes and the four
degalim in the context of the command to establish the machane
that the numbers were somehow a part of the mechanism of setting up the camp.
Apparently, the machane, which clearly represents a Divinely mandated
structure with great spiritual significance, includes a population census as
part of its fabric.
But, as we have seen, the numbers are
repeated twice, once in general, as the census was taken, and once again when
the numbers were applied to the construction of the machane. This is what
the midrash is building on. It is true that the particular and specific need for
a census is functional – in order to construct the machane. But the
opening command, which has no mention of the machane, and the repetition
of the numbers when the machane is actually being designed, indicate that
above and beyond the functional aspect of the census, there is an inherent
importance to it. Counting the individual Jews one by one is an expression of
God's love for them, and a demonstration of the inherent importance of each one
of them. This is indicated as well by the double expression used to define a
census. Literally translated – "Raise the heads of the entire congregation of
the children of Israel…. You shall count them." "Se'u et rosh" is an
idiomatic expression meaning "to count", but the literal meaning cannot be
ignored. It elevates the person to be counted in this way.
Hence, the opening parasha does
not explicitly exclude the Levites. Since the actual and practical purpose of
the census was for the machane yisrael, of which they are not part, they
are in fact not meant to be included, and Moshe correctly leaves them out. But
since the parasha is conveying the additional aspect of any census of the
Jewish people, the language expresses the general universal theme of the
importance of each individual Jew in the eyes of God, as He counts them from
time to time. Only after the census is complete does God apply the census for
its pragmatic purpose, setting up the machane, and then, at the same
time, He explicitly excludes the Levites from that aspect of the census.
However, that makes it necessary to explain why, since otherwise Moshe, or the
reader, might conclude that they are excluded from the census of love, of
individual importance as well, and therefore God, immediately after excluding
them from the census (lo tifkod, 2,49), charges them with their task
(hafked et haleviim, 2,50), to show that they too have individual
importance and a place in the overall scheme. They are not counted, at least not
yet, but they are appointed, and the two words are in fact based on the same
root – pekod.
How do we know that in principle the
census includes every individual Jew, even if someone is left out in the
functional side? The curious and unexplained reference to the children of Moshe
and Aharon (section 4, above) fills in the missing gap. In the end, the Levites
are counted, when a functional need arises for their number to be known, when
they are switched with the firstborn. But Moshe and Aharon are not included in
the Levites, even though they are technically members of the tribe. This is
clear, since the counted Levites are switched with the firstborn, and are given
to Aharon as Levites. Aharon is not given to himself, and does not serve as a
Levite but as a kohen, as is Moshe. In fact, in the parasha, there
is no indication that Aharon is a Levite, even as the Levites are given to him.
So, in the end, the census of "the entire congregation of the children of
Israel" will have some omissions. Since there is no functional reason to count
the kohanim, they will not be counted, but God's love of course
encompasses them as well. The parasha therefore does count them, even if
Moshe did not. "These are the children of Moshe and Aharon …", and the Torah
lists them each by name, thereby completing the missing part of "the entire
congregation of the children of Israel."
Like the other tribes, the Levites are
also granted a double attention. Once, right before the Jewish people are
assigned their place in the macheneh, the Torah first assigns them their
place in their own machane (2,48-54, section 2 above). This section
defines the Levites role in very general terms, and also states that they
will dwell (yachanu, the root of the word machane) around the
mishkan, even as the rest of the tribes will dwell (vechanu), each
person in his machane and by his degel. I think that definition of
the Levites here as servants of the mishkan is only in order to explain
why they are dwelling in their own machane around the mishkan,
which in turn is only to explain why they are not to be counted among the other
tribes, since the counting was functionally for the purpose of setting up
the general machane. But the Levites will be counted, and that is for
another purpose, the switch with the firstborn. Now I ask – why are the Levites
to be switched with firstborn? It is not in order to give them the credentials
to serve as Levites in the mishkan,
as this role is assigned to them before the switch is made, or
even mentioned. The Torah deliberately separates the designation of the Levites
as servants of the mishkan (section 2 above, in general terms as part of
their machane, but legally and formally in section 5 above), and the
switch with the firstborn (section 6 above). This is not only a literary
distinction into two different commands of God, and two different speeches of
God (vayidaber HaShem el Moshe leimor, 3,5, and again 3,11), but is
defined very differently, in fact, in terms that are nearly contradictory. When
the Levites are assigned their jobs as servants of the mishkan (3,5-10,
section 5), they are "given to Aharon and his sons." "Given, given, are they to
him" (3,9) . When God tells Moshe that the Levites are to be switched with the
firstborn, He says, "And now, I have taken the Levites unto Me, from among
Israel, in place of the firstborn of the Jews, and the Levites will be Mine"
(3,12). As servants of the mishkan, the Levites belong to Aharon, and
this is followed by another assignation, whereby the Levites belong to God. It
is the second designation that requires them to be switched with the firstborn,
who have had that status as belonging to God. "For the all the firstborn are
Mine, from the day that I smote all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, I have
sanctified all the firstborn of Israel, from man to animal, they are Mine, I am
HaShem" (3,13) .
It is commonly believed that the
firstborn were meant to have been priests. This is based on a statement of the
Mishna in Masekhet Zevachim. But aside from the fact that this is
nowhere indicated in the pshat of the Torah, the gemara (Zevachim
117b) divorces this totally from our parasha. If this status of the
firstborn did in fact exist, it was either limited to a one-time occurrence
during the giving of the Ten commandments at Har Sinai, or continued only
up until the building of the mishkan, where the status of Aharon and his sons is
clearly indicated and is an essential part of the construction of the mishkan (parashat Tetzave). At this point in the narrative, they no
longer have this status. In any event, what does that have to do with the status
of the Levites as Levites (and not as priests)? I think the verse in our context
makes this clear, when it states that the status of the firstborn which is being
transferred to the Levites applies also to the firstborn animals. Later on, when
the switch is performed, the Torah explicitly says that the animals of the
Levites are being switched with the firstborn animals of Israel (3,45). What
that actually means and what are its legal ramifications is a very good
question, which we shall not address here, but it clearly implies that we are
not dealing with a sacerdotal status of the firstborn as priests. Rather, the
Torah is sanctifying the Levites, taking them and dedicating them as belonging
to God. Serving in the mishkan is defined as being the servants of Aharon.
Serving the mishkan and belonging to God are two different
positions. They could have served the mishkan without this dedication (and then they
would not have counted in a census either), but God has chosen to make them His
property instead of the firstborn, sanctifying them. Ultimately (in parashat Behaalotekha), they will not enter actual service until
the sanctification of them is complete.
So, once
we have read through all of the parasha, the
Levites are both functional, and also designated, counted by God individually.
They have a special status, of love and chosenness, aside from the functional
placement within the machane, just as
we saw the double status of the Jewish people within the context of the census.
Four Jews – Moshe, Aharon, Elazar, and Itamar – have not seemingly received this
mark of love, of special status, since they have been left out of all the
censuses, so the Torah points out to us that they are also special, with
individual status – "these are the descendants of Moshe and Aharon…. the
anointed priests, who were consecrated to serve."
The
parasha, while
taking care of various pragmatic functional necessities of the Jews in the
desert, also goes out of its way to indicate that every Jew is the object of
"His love for them," as indicated by God's counting them, each one with his
particular role. There are in principle two countings. The first one is
functional and therefore divided for different groups according to the different
purposes. The second is personal and essential, addressed to "the entire
congregation of the children of Israel," and expressed generally in the first
section of the parasha for all
Jews. It is later extended to the Levites in their separate counting and
sanctification in place of the firstborn, and to the kohanim in their
mention individually in the course of the parasha.
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