Parashat Korah
The Morning After
Following the
deaths of Korah and his followers, Aaron stands between the Angel of Death and
the Israelites, protecting the Israelites from a plague.
By Rabbi Avi Weinstein
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The
Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
The morning after Korah, Dotan and Aviram's ill-fated
challenge to Moshe [Moses] and Aharon [Aaron], the whole of Israel blames the
two leaders for the death of the 250 leaders who sided with Korah.
Numbers 17:6-15
But all the Children of Israel grumbled on the morrow
against Moshe and against Aharon, saying: (It is) you (who) caused the death of
YHWH's [God's] people! Now it was, when the community assembled against Moshe
and against Aharon, that they turned toward the Tent of Appointment, and here:
the cloud had covered it, and the Glory of YHWH could be seen! Then Moshe and
Aharon came to the front of the Tent of Appointment. And YHWH spoke to Moshe,
saying: Move aside from the midst of this community, that I may finish them off
in an instant!
They flung themselves upon their faces. Moshe said to Aharon: Take (your) pan
and place upon it fire from the slaughter site, putting smoking incense
(there); go quickly to the community and effect appeasement for them, for the
fury is (still) going out from the presence of YHWH, the plague has begun!
Aharon took (it), as Moshe had spoken, and he ran to the midst of the assembly:
and here, the plague had begun among the people! So he put the smoking incense
(in it), and effected appeasement for the people: now he stood between the dead
and the living, and the plague was held back. Now those that died in the plague
were fourteen thousand and seven hundred, aside from those that died in the
matter of Korah. Aharon returned to Moshe, to the entrance of the Tent of
Appointment, and the plague was held back.
Your Torah Navigator
1. Why were the people upset with Moshe and Aharon when they
knew that God had swallowed them up?
2. How did Moshe know to tell Aharon that incense was needed
to effect an appeasement?
3. What does it mean that Aharon "stood" between
the dead and the living?
Rashi on the verse "now he (Aharon) stood between the dead and the
living:"
Aharon grabbed the Angel of Death and held him back against his will. The angel
said to him: Leave me to fulfill my mission. Aharon replied: Moshe ordered me
to detain you. The angel answered: I am a messenger of God and you are only a
messenger of Moshe. Aharon answered: Moshe never does anything on his own, all
his orders come from the Mighty One. If you don't believe me the Holy One and
Moshe are both at the Tent of Appointment right now. Come with me and ask them.
That is why the following verse says, "And Aharon returned to Moshe, to
the entrance of the Tent of Appointment and the plague was held back.”
A Word
Rabbi Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin, known by the acronym the
"Netziv," on his famous
super-commentary on Rashi and the Torah said that the people found the
slaughter of the 250 excessive. Moshe and Aharon could have limited the trial
to Korah, Dotan and Aviram, and once the earth had swallowed them up, the
others would have repented. The Netziv points out that Moshe and Aharon were
not the ultimate designers of the trial, but it was Moshe acting on the Divine
Spirit.
Rashi understands that when the verse says, "Now he stood between the dead
and the living," Aharon was literally standing between the Angel of Death
and those whom the angel wished to destroy. He holds the angel back with the
incense that protected Moshe from being swallowed up as Korah's minions were
destroyed. The angel wants Aharon to leave so he can finish his job, but Aharon
convinces the angel to return to the tent with him and the plague is stopped.
Just as lack of fear and belief in God's power brings destruction, so does
belief in God's instruments and reverence for God's might bring healing and
mercy. The people were not worthy, but Aharon, the worthy advocate, stopped
death in its tracks and brought yet another reprieve on a recalcitrant people.
Even after he had been compromised by the Golden Calf, Aharon is willing to
look death straight in the eye to save a community who would most probably not
return the favor.
Rabbi Avi Weinstein is Director of
Hillel’s Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning.
Provided by Hillel’s
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning, which creates innovative
educational resources based on Jewish texts and trains Hillel students,
professionals, and lay leaders to infuse Jewish content throughout their
activities. © 2002 Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.