Shalom Brothers & Sisters,
Every week I spend a couple hours each day studying the weeks Shabbat Torah portion. I am on many mailing lists of several wonderful Torah websites and often get many different understandings of the Parasha. I believe that it is important for a Jew to internalize the weeks Parasha and try to understand it on a new level, learning new details which we did not learn last year. Our sages teach that the Torah Parasha can be understood on several levels, a system called PaRDeS.
P - Pshat - The simple understanding
R - Remes - Hints
D - Drash - Derived and allegorical meaning
S - Sod - Mystical meaning
I have read the Torah daily for almost six years and learned new secrets each time. Chazal have taught us that in the merit of the study of Torah the world is sustained.
Pirkie Avot : Chapter 1, Mishna 2
Shimon HaTzaddik was from the remnants of the Great Assembly.
He used to say:
On three things the world stands.
On Torah,
On service [of God],
And on acts of human kindness.
http://www.chabad.org/kabbalah/article_cdo/aid/379488/jewish/12-Worlds-3-Pillars.htmThis weeks Parasha is Chukat. Chukat means law which was given from Hashem which cannot be rationally explained. This parasha is difficult to understand unless you immerse yourself in the questions which are posed by the author of the Torah, HaKadosh Baruch Hu.
The Parasha first starts with a difficult phrase, "This is the Chukat of the Torah" and it goes on to explain the Commandment to purify those who have come in contact with the dead {Tamei Meis} by taking a 3 year old Red Cow and slaughtering it, burn it on the altar, and take the ashes mixed with 'living water' and sprinkle the ashes on the impure person who had come in contact with a dead body. By having this sprinkled on them they will become purified.
There is a paradox in this miracle, that those who administered the ash/water mixture on the person would then become impure. The same waters which purified the previously impure individual would simultaneously make the pure impure.
The wisest man in the world, Shlomo HaMelech, himself was unable to grasp the secrets of the Para Aduma {Red Cow}.
http://www.learningtorah.org/DvarTorah/ViewDvarTorah.aspx?dtID=217
The Midrash (Kohelles Rabba 7:23) relates that King Solomon made a special effort to understand the reasons for para adumah (red heifer). In the end he concluded that the subject was still far from his understanding. Para adumah remained the classic example of a chok, a Divine Law whose purpose completely eludes us.
The Talmud (Sanhedrin 21b) explains that the reasons for the mitzvot were not revealed because in each case in which reasons were given, even Solomon, the wisest of all men, was led to err. The Torah prohibits a king from marrying an excess of wives lest they turn his heart away from God (Deut. 17:17). Solomon decided that the reason for the prohibition did not apply to him, and that he could therefore ignore it with impunity. At that moment, says the Midrash, the yud of the yarbeh - from which the prohibition is derived - prostrated itself before God and said, "Solomon is nullifying me! Today it is I, tomorrow another letter, until the entire Torah will be abrogated."
The Almighty responded, "A thousand like Solomon will be nullified, but one bit of you will never be nullified." In the end, Solomon himself admitted, "That which I thought I understood in the Torah was mere foolishness, for who can fathom or question the wisdom of the King?" (Shemot Rabba 6:1)
The Midrash is extremely difficult to understand. It seems to imply that Solomon's error lay in his understanding of the Torah. Yet it appears that his failure was due to misplaced confidence in his own powers, rather than misunderstanding the Torah.
Rashis comment on the very start of this Parasha is very interesting:
This is the statute of the Torah: Because Satan and the nations of the world taunt Israel, saying, “ What is this commandment, and what purpose does it have?” Therefore, the Torah uses the term “statute.” I have decreed it; You have no right to challenge it. — [Yoma 67b]
http://www.chabad.org/library/bible_cdo/aid/9947/showrashi/trueThis means that there are some things which Hashem commands from us and things which will happen to us which we cannot explain rationally. We must observe what Hashem is saying to us, to learn what we should do in the future. The world is a mostly rational place since there are laws which have been established. Science allows us to make observations and make predictions about what will happen in the future. But there is always an unknowable unknown.
There is much more mystery in this Parasha, and I apologize for writing such an long post, but I am very interested in this entire portion.
Right after the command of the Red Cow we learn that Miriam dies and the well which provided the Children of Israel dried up. We learn that the well was a miracle from Hashem in Miriams merit and when she departed this world, the well departed also.
Once again the Children of Israel act like Children {Pun intended}... Last week we read the story of Korach and his rebellion against Moses... How many people were swallowed up by the earth, or died in an incense death match, or suffered from the deadly plague? Why don't these wise Jews learn their lesson? Why do they always complain to Moses? Was it not enough that they were fed daily by Mahn which fell from heaven? Was it not enough that they were watered by a miraculous well which sprung from a rock? The men who joined Korachs rebellion were not ordinary rabble-rousers... They were the elders and men of reputation in the tribes, they should have been wiser...
Now this week, after the well dried up, the people start complaining to Moses... "Oy Vey! Why did you take us out of Egypt to die in the desert?" They complained, and complained, and then they complained some more.
Bamidbar - 20
3. The people quarreled with Moses, and they said, "If only we had died with the death of our brothers before the Lord.
4. Why have you brought the congregation of the Lord to this desert so that we and our livestock should die there?
5. Why have you taken us out of Egypt to bring us to this evil place; it is not a place for seeds, or for fig trees, grapevines, or pomegranate trees, and there is no water to drink.
6. Moses and Aaron moved away from the assembly to the entrance of the Tent of Meeting, and they fell on their faces. [Then] the glory of the Lord appeared to them.
The next thing is Hashem tells Moshe to take his staff and speak to a rock and bring water forth from it. What happens next is one of the most difficult things for me to understand. Moses, who is understandably irritated by the constant complaining of the Children of Israel, takes his staff and says "You Rebels! Will we draw water from this rock?" and he strikes the rock with the staff, two times. Water flows from the rock and the people can water themselves and their livestock...
But Hashem is very, very angry at Moses and Aaron. He tells them this,
'The Lord said to Moses and Aaron, "Since you did not have faith in Me to sanctify Me in the eyes of the children of Israel, therefore you shall not bring this assembly to the Land which I have given them."' This means that both Aaron and Moses will die in the desert and not enter the promised land.
And then Aaron dies:
Bamidbar 20
23. The Lord said to Moses and Aaron at Mount Hor, on the border of the land of Edom, saying,
24. "Aaron shall be gathered to his people, for he shall not come to the Land which I have given to the children of Israel, because you defied My word at the waters of dispute [Mei Meribah].
25. Take Aaron and Eleazar his son and ascend Mount Hor.
26. Strip Aaron of his garments and dress Eleazar his son with them. Then Aaron shall be gathered in [to his people] and die there.
It is very hard for me to understand why Hashem, who is known as the Master of Kindness and Mercy, Chessed V'Rachamim... Why did he not show this mercy and kindness to Moses who was, according to Hashem, the most humble servant Hashem could ask for. There must be more to the Cheshbon {Calculation/Accounting} than meets the eye.
And the Parasha has more mystery, including the story of the snakes biting the children of Israel.
6. The Lord sent against the people the venomous snakes, and they bit the people, and many people of Israel died.
7. The people came to Moses and said, "We have sinned, for we have spoken against the Lord and against you. Pray to the Lord that He remove the snakes from us." So Moses prayed on behalf of the people.
8. The Lord said to Moses, "Make yourself a serpent and put it on a pole, and let whoever is bitten look at it and live.
9. Moses made a copper snake and put it on a pole, and whenever a snake bit a man, he would gaze upon the copper snake and live.
As anyone can see there is much to consider when studying this portion. The sages teach that every word, alas even every letter, of the Torah has deep profound significance. There is a lot to learn based on which lessons appear next to other lessons. For instance the Halachas of Shabbat Melachos come from the fact that the command to cease creative work occurs right after the command to build the Mishkan was given, thus the sages were able to conclude which labors are forbidden on Shabbat. In this weeks Parasha one such question, why is the death of Miriam placed right after the command of the red cow? They say it is because we learn that the death of the righteous can act as an atonement for our misdeeds.
Rashis comment:
Miriam died there: Why is the passage relating Miriam’s death juxtaposed with the passage of the Red Cow? To teach you that just as sacrifices bring atonement, so the death of the righteous secure atonement. — [M.K. 28a].
So in conclusion I would like to elucidate on the lessons of Chukat... Mankind must seek to know as much as we can know in this world of physicality. Science and Knowledge are very powerful tools for mankind and must be understood in order to operate efficiently in Olam Hazeh. But a wise man knows that he does not know everything. We must accept the fact that there is something just beyond what we can comprehend, something on the horizon which we will never reach in our physical life. I am totally accepting that I don't know everything, as much as I know I realize that there are boundries. These boundries are here for our good, because everything Hashem does is for the Good.
I hope someone was able to learn something, or has questions to ask, about this parasha..
Shabbat Shalom,
muman613