Parashat Hukkat
A Flawed Hero
Moses’ fatal flaw
is his inability to wean his people from their dependence on him.
By David Elcott
The following article
is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
The children of Israel are recalcitrant and undependable
lovers who reject their covenantal responsibilities for a piece of meat, a
golden calf, a sexy Moabite body. They are children, in fact, infantilized by
the slavery of their upbringing and unable to endure the incertitude and
ambiguities of freedom.
Against the spiritual immaturity of the Israelites stands
Moses. He has the voice of the prophet, confronting evil, yet remains humble.
He demands that they understand the Torah they are receiving, and refuses to
accept either God's or the people's demands that his status be elevated to that
of demigod. Yet the Torah is unequivocal--Moses is fatally flawed. He is a
wanderer, condemned to die in the desert, forbidden entry to Eretz Israel (the land of Israel) and
denied the honor of leading his people to the final homecoming.
The Israelites are addicted to miracles and martial law, to
appetite and apostasy. Moses is the benevolent leader who chides and dictates,
but cannot liberate his people to stand on their own feet, to be independent of
his will. The result is inevitable. The people rebel once again and, in
frustration and disappointment, Moses finally responds: "Listen, you
rebels, shall we get water for you out of this rock?" Moses hits the rock,
water pours out and the people temporarily quench their thirst.
God reacts immediately: "Because you did not trust Me
enough to affirm my sanctity in the eyes of the Israelite people, therefore you
shall not lead this congregation into the land." At the very moment Moses
needs to wean the Israelites from their dependence on him and turn them to God
and Torah, he credits himself for a quenching miracle.
He is a hero of mythic proportions who can calm an angry
God, yet chastise and redirect his people when they panic. He is the ideal
leader for the desert, the only one who can give direction and purpose to the
wanderings. But he is not the leader for the freedom of homecoming, the one to
build a covenantal community in Eretz Israel.