Thursday, January 8, 2015

Parshas Shemos - Wake Up and Smell the Coffee

~ Thoughts on the Parsha ~
Parshas Shemos


Stop and Smell the Coffee
By: Daniel Listhaus

וּמשֶׁה הָיָה רֹעֶה אֶת צֹאן יִתְרוֹ חֹתְנוֹ כֹּהֵן מִדְיָן וַיִּנְהַג אֶת הַצֹּאן אַחַר הַמִּדְבָּר וַיָּבֹא אֶל הַר הָאֱלֹקים חֹרֵבָה

“Moshe was grazing the sheep of Yisro, his father-in-law, the minister of Midyan; he guided the sheep far into the wilderness, and he arrived at the Mountain of G-d, toward Choreiv.”
-Shemos 3:1

            After running away from Mitzrayim, Moshe found his way to Midyan and married one of Yisro’s daughters. The Torah[1] relates that one day, while Moshe was shepherding Yisro’s sheep, he arrived at Har Ha’Elokim and witnessed a burning bush which miraculously was not being consumed by the fire. Rashi[2] comments that the passuk (verse) goes out of its way to describe that Moshe would guide the sheep far into the wilderness before allowing them to graze, in order to publicize Moshe’s great care and respect of others’ property. Moshe wanted to make sure that he stayed far from any sort of theft. Therefore, he travelled with the flocks of sheep great distance in order to ensure that the sheep would not graze in the fields of others.

            Although Rashi explains the reason for the details in the latter part of the passuk, the Kli Yakar[3] is further bothered by the wordiness and amount of “unnecessary” detail in the first part of the passuk. Why does the passuk have to tell us that Moshe was grazing Yisro’s sheep? The Kli Yakar explains based on the following. The mishna[4] lists groups of people who are ineligible to be witnesses or judges. The gemara[5] however notes that although shepherds were not originally included on that list, when the Rabbis later observed that shepherds were intentionally sending their sheep to graze in others’ fields, they added herders to the list of those who cannot testify or judge. The Rabbis however were only concerned about those who herded their own sheep. Those who shepherded the sheep of others, though, did not fall into this category because there is a concept of ein adom chotei v’lo lo – a person would not sin in a situation where there is nothing to be gained by doing so. A person may be willing to steal in order to protect his own flocks, but would not do so in order to help someone else unless there would be a level of personal benefit to be gained. The reward would just not justify the risk. Therefore, explains the Kli Yakar, the passuk here does not merely state that Moshe was herding sheep, but rather specifies that they were his father-in-law’s flock and elaborates that he made sure to graze them far away from private property. These details were added in order to remove any thought that might come to mind of chas v’shalom associating Moshe with theft because of his job title.

            The obvious difficulty with this, as the Kli Yakar himself raises, is that instead of the Torah writing that Moshe was a shepherd and then having to give all the details to prevent any cause of accusation that Moshe conducted business unethically like others in his field[6], the Torah could have easily left out the detail that Moshe was a shepherd in the first place. Why did the torah feel the need to mention that Moshe was a shepherd and then have to go into detail that Moshe did not tend to his own sheep, but rather Yisro’s and that he would take them far away to graze? The Torah could have skipped the passuk altogether and found another way to segue into the episode of Moshe finding the burning bush?

            The Kli Yakar answers that the Torah very much wanted to include the information that Moshe was a shepherd because being a shepherd is associated with nevuah (prophecy). So many nevi’im – in fact even the avos and shevatim themselves – were all shepherds. This is not a coincidence but rather logical for the following reason. Unlike most jobs, being a shepherd allows one to have time to oneself admiring Hashem’s world. Reaching a level of being a proper receptacle for nevuah requires an inner peace with oneself as well as a deep appreciation of Hashem’s involvement in the world. Such an experience could only be achieved by taking a step out of busy life and taking a moment to catch one’s breath, introspect, and take inventory of where one is holding himself as well as appreciating Hashem’s beautiful and intricate world. This is why the passuk went out of its way to mention that Moshe was a shepherd, despite the fact that writing it required a careful clarification and the addition of a qualifying description accompanying it in the passuk.

            If being a shepherd was a “perquisite” to becoming a navi then, in order to escape the “busy” world of ancient Egypt and its surrounding cities, imagine what it would take to achieve a level of hisbodedus today. In the age where instant coffee takes too long to make, speed is indeed everything. There is no time to dial, we must speed-dial; no time to read, so we speed-read; no time to walk so we speed-walk. People play speed-chess, and do speed-yoga; activities which used to exemplify deliberation and concentration are now just space fillers – things which get checked off on a daily routine as a means of preoccupying ourselves during breaks between tasks.

 Everything we do has to be fast and quick, but not because there is always something else to do. Rather, this attention deficit disorder of task jumping and moving from one activity to the next is an expression of our minds looking for something to preoccupy ourselves with because anything is better than the alternative – being left with nothing but ourselves. When there is nothing to do people become jittery because they are uncomfortable with themselves and must fill the void by either listening to music, mindlessly pulling out a smart-phone to pass the time, or engage in extreme doing extreme activities, until our next task comes to us and we could relax that there is a new item to attend to.

The secret to becoming a navi, however, lies in doing exactly the opposite. A navi is someone who is comfortable with himself and could sit in silence and have nothing but his own mind and Hashem’s world to occupy himself with. He does not need to be kept distracted nor requires preoccupation to stay mentally stable, rather he is able to introspect and evaluate himself with an inner peace and quiet.

This is why the torah felt it necessary to write that Moshe was a shepherd. He was someone who was able to achieve a level of nevuah through hisbodedus – being able to just sit, think, reflect, and observe the world around him. Moshe had no need for distractions and no need to keep busy. This is how he was able to build a perfect relationship with himself and how he was able to achieve a level of becoming a navi.

May Hashem help guide us through our beyond-busy world and assist us as we take one step at a time to slowly get to know ourselves better through hisbodedus, personal reflection and evaluation, inner peace, and a deep appreciation for Hashem’s world around us.



[1] Shemos 3:1-2
[2] Rashi ibid.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Sanhedrin 24b
[5] Sanhedrin 25b
[6] Pun intended 

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