Parashat Hukkat
Highest Standards
Because of his
position of leadership, Moses is judged extremely harshly when he sins.
By Rabbi Jordan D. Cohen
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Kolel: The
Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish Learning.
Overview
In parashat Hukkat, we find an overwhelming concern with
death. At the beginning we find the mysterious laws of the Red Heifer, a very
rare animal which is burnt in a special fire outside the camp. Its ashes are
then used to ritually purify those who have become impure due to contact with a
dead body.
The portion then jumps 38 years to the end of the
Israelite's wandering in the desert. We read the brief description of the death
of Miriam, the prophetess who was the older sister of Moses and Aaron, and then
an incident about the people's need for water. These two events are in fact
connected by the Rabbis, who notice that stories with Miriam are always
associated with water.
The people complain about thirst, and Moses is instructed by
God to speak to a rock, which will then produce water. Seemingly frustrated and
saddened by his sister's death, Moses strikes the rock instead of speaking to
it. Water does flow, but Moses is chastised by God for his lack of trust, and
he is told that he will not be allowed to lead the people into the Promised
Land.
We then read of Aaron's death, and the people's mourning for
him for thirty days. The portion ends describing a number of battles the
Israelites must fight as they travel through the wilderness.
In Focus
And Moses raised his hand and struck the rock twice with his
rod. Out came copious water, and the community and their beasts drank (Numbers
20:11).
Pshat
This is really one of the saddest passages in the Torah.
Moses, the long time leader of the Israelites and the greatest teacher and
prophet our tradition has ever known, loses control of himself, and is punished
in a particularly harsh way (from his point of view) by God.
The Israelites are camped at Kadesh, in the wilderness of
Zin, when Miriam, Moses's sister and one of the leaders of the people, suddenly
dies. The text then tells us immediately afterwards that the people are without
water (this is the basis for the strong tradition that teaches that it was
because of Miriam's merit that water was provided to the Israelites in the
wilderness).
The people start complaining profusely to Moses and Aaron,
who go to the Tent of Meeting to confer with God. God instructs them both to
take a rod and, in full view of the entire community, they are to order the
rock to give water. Moses and Aaron do as they are told, gathering the people
together, but then chastise the people, and demand, "shall WE get water
for you out of this rock?" Then, rather then speaking to the rock, Moses
hits it twice with the rod. As God promised, water flows from the rock, but
Moses and Aaron are taken to task by God for not doing exactly as God
instructed.
God declares their punishment: Because you did not trust Me enough to affirm My sanctity in the sight
of the Israelite people, therefore you shall not lead this congregation into
the land that I have given them. Neither Moses nor Aaron will be allowed to
enter into the Promised Land.
Drash
Commentators throughout history have struggled with this
passage, trying to come to terms with the severity of God's punishment of
Moses. After all, this is MOSES, the great leader of the people, the one who
stood up to Pharaoh and led the Israelites not only out of slavery in Egypt,
but then continued to lead them for 40 years, forming them into a people and
coping with their day to day gripes. After schlepping around with the
contentious people for 40 years, should Moses not at least be allowed to enter
into the land that has been promised to them for so long? Was he not a fully
human leader, surely subject to bouts of self-doubt and frustration?
And let us remember too that Moses was grieving--he had just
lost his big sister, the one who helped save his very life when he was an
infant. The loss of a close family member must have surely impaired his
functioning. What exactly then did Moses do to deserve such a severe
punishment? Should God not have shown more mercy to his most faithful servant?
Generally it is understood that Moses was punished for
disobeying God's instructions. God clearly instructed him to "speak"
to the rock, but instead he hit it, not just once, but twice. Rashi suggests
that God seemed to be dismayed that Moses robbed him of the opportunity to
impress the people with the miracle. More simply, Moses displayed a lack of
faith or compliance with God's command, something that was common among the
people.
But Moses was not just an average Israelite; he was the
leader of the people and therefore expected to set a higher example. As the Zohar (foundational Kabbalistic text)
teaches (ii, 47a), "The acts of the leader are the acts of the nation. If
the leader is just, the nation is just; if he is unjust, the nation too is
unjust and is punished for the sin of the leader."
Aaron, who witnessed the incident, is also held accountable.
If Moses had only hit the rock once, only he would have been punished for the
act. But since Moses hit the rock twice, Aaron is deemed culpable as well.
After seeing Moses hit the rock once, Aaron should have stopped him before
Moses hit the rock a second time.
According to Moses Maimonides, (also known as the Rambam), the main sin of Moses and Aaron
was in the language they used when they spoke to the people: "Listen you
rebels..." Surely, all the prophets (of which Moses is one) spoke to the
people with harsh language, and it was effective and deserved. But here it is
deemed inappropriate since the people only sought water, a basic human need.
There was no reason to speak to the people as Moses did, except for his own
needs. He compromised his own leadership, and therefore was punished by not be
allowed to lead the people into the Promised Land. He could only the lead the
people so far.
Moses's sin may not have been so great. If anyone else had
done the same, they surely would have been given a second chance. However, for
all the same reasons that we may feel that Moses should have received some
compassion, he was held to the highest accountability for his actions. As the
leader of the people, he was expected to be the paragon of faith and virtue.
We may understand that he was human, and grief, frustration,
weariness and stress can certainly add up to make us less then our best selves.
But in positions of high leadership, the tough decisions and constancy of
action are expected even during times of weakness. That's what separates a great
leader from a good leader. Moses was great leader, but had his moments of
weakness. For that, he was held accountable.
Davar Aher
Moses had spoken against God when Israel had wanted meat,
and had said to God, "If You would slaughter all the sheep and oxen in the
world, would it suffice?" To say that God could not provide enough meat,
is a greater sin than not speaking to the rock but hitting it instead. Why did
God not punish Moses then, and sentence him to death in the wilderness? Because
the sin of the rock was committed before all of Israel, and thus led to a
desecration of God's name. God will forgive all sins, but Chillul HaShem, the sin of desecrating the Divine Name, God will
not forgive. (Tz'enah Ur'enah).
Rabbi Jordan D.
Cohen is Associate Director of KOLEL - The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish
Learning, a dynamic, pluralistic, Jewish Adult Educational institute in
Toronto, Canada. Prior to his return to his hometown of Toronto, Rabbi
Cohen served as Rabbi of the United Jewish Congregation of Hong Kong, and
Associate Rabbi of the North Shore Temple Emanuel in Sydney, Australia.
Numerous communities throughout the United States, Canada, Israel, Australia,
New Zealand, Japan and China can attest to Rabbi Cohen's engaging teaching
style and innovative programs.