Parashat Balak
No Rest(s) for the Wicked
Unlike Jewish
prophets, Balaam was merely a mouthpiece for the word of God, not an active
participant engaged in transmitting God’s message to humanity.
By Rabbi Laurence Edwards
The following article
is reprinted with permission from The Union of
American Hebrew Congregations. For
a free e-mail subscription to the UAHC’s weekly Torah commentary, please click here.
According to the Rabbis, Balaam was one of seven
non-Israelite prophets. (One list also includes Balaam's father, as well as Job
and the four friends who came to "comfort" him. Another list includes
Adam and Noah.) God does not speak only to Israel, but the Rabbis detect
important differences in the way God speaks to Israelite prophets. R. Hama the
son of R. Hanina said, "To the prophets of the world, the Holy One appears
with half-speech only; but to the prophets of Israel, with complete speech,
clear speech, affectionate speech."
We should like the prophecy of Balaam, as related in this
week's Torah portion, Parashat Balak,
because there is no reproof in it, only praise of Israel. How rarely do we find
that in the words of Israelite prophets! And indeed, Balaam's words are the
first to be recited when we enter a synagogue: "How fair are your tents, O
Jacob,/Your dwellings, O Israel!" (Numbers 24:5) But something is missing.
If you look in a Torah scroll, you will see many breaks in
the text, some at the end of a line (p'tuhah)
and some in the middle of a line (s'tumah).
There is a long tradition preserving these spaces, and scribes follow this
tradition carefully. Just as the silence of rests is an important part of
music, so, too, breaks in the Torah text (the absence of words) can be important
clues to its interpretation. But Balaam's prophecy contains no such spaces.
The Chofetz Chayim (Rabbi Israel Meir Kagan, 1838-1933) asks
why there are no breaks in this parashah
as it is written in the Torah scroll. From Balak's initial alarm and commissioning
of Balaam to curse Israel to the very end of Balaam's prophecy (Numbers
22:2-24:25), there is only solid text.
True, Balaam was a prophet, and his prophecy was inspired
from above: "I can utter only the word that God puts into my mouth."
(Numbers 22:38) But why should this section look so different from others in
the Torah? The Chofetz Chayim answers his own question, based on several
midrashic sources, in the following way: The various breaks in Moses' prophecy
(i.e., the rest of the Torah) are indications that God gives Moses (and other
Israelite prophets) breathing room to process what they are receiving. They are
not to act simply as mouthpieces, as empty vessels through which divine speech
flows. Rather, the prophet must understand the prophecy and be changed by it.
Moses and the other prophets of Israel participate in
prophecy: Their words of God are refracted through human thought and
experience. Moses at times even argues with God, following the precedent set by
Abraham and establishing a pattern that will be followed later by Habakkuk and
others. We can view breaks in the text as opportunities for reflection--both
theirs and ours.
But Balaam is allowed no breaks for reflection, nor is he
changed by his words. How much broader is the vision of the prophets of Israel!
What many of us would consider their core message is articulated by Micah in
this week's haftarah: "It has
been told to you, O man, what is good, And what Adonai requires of you: Only to do justice, and to love goodness,
and to walk humbly with your God." (Micah 6:8)
According to the Rabbis, the era of prophecy ended long ago.
(The last prophet was Malachi, after the return of the exiles from Babylonia.)
But the effect of prophecy continues whenever we encounter the text anew and
whenever we engage it and are changed by it.
For Further Reading:
"Prophecy and the Holy Spirit" in The Book of Legends (Sefer Ha-Aggadah),
edited by H. N. Bialik and Y. H. Ravnitzky, translated by William Braude
(Schocken Books), 472-481.
Rabbi Laurence Edwards
is the associate national director for Interreligious Affairs of the American
Jewish Committee in Chicago. For the
past three years he has been the rabbi of Congregation B’nai Abraham in Beloit,
WI.
The Union of American Hebrew Congregations is the
central body of Reform Judaism in North America, uniting 1.5 million Reform
Jews in more than 900 synagogues. UAHC
services include camps, music and book publishing, outreach to unaffiliated and
intermarried Jews, educational programs, and the Religious
Action Center in Washington, DC.