Friday, June 10, 2016

Parshas Bamidbar - E for Effort

~ Thoughts on the Parsha ~
Parshas Bamidbar


E for Effort
By: Daniel Listhaus

וַיְדַבֵּר ה' אֶל משֶׁה בְּמִדְבַּר סִינַי לֵאמֹר: פְּקֹד אֶת בְּנֵי לֵוִי לְבֵית אֲבֹתָם לְמִשְׁפְּחֹתָם כָּל זָכָר מִבֶּן חֹדֶשׁ וָמַעְלָה תִּפְקְדֵם: וַיִּפְקֹד אֹתָם משֶׁה עַל פִּי ה' כַּאֲשֶׁר צֻוָּה:

“Hashem spoke to Moshe in the Wilderness of Sinai saying, ‘Count the sons of Levi according to their fathers’ house, according to their families, every male from one month of age and up shall you count them.’ Moshe counted them according to the word of Hashem.”
 -Bamidbar 3:14-16

            After commanding Moshe to take a census of B’nei Yisroel,[1] Hashem commanded Moshe to separately take a count of the Levi’im. Unlike the rest of B’nei Yisroel who were counted only from age 20 and older, the Levi’im were counted from the age of one month old. From a logistics perspective this posed a slight difficulty. Instead of 20 year old men bringing their shekalim to Moshe to be counted, as was the case with the rest of B’nei Yisroel, Moshe had to go around to all the tents to get the count of all the infants in shevet Levi. Rashi[2] comments that when Moshe was commanded to count shevet Levi he responded, “How can I enter into all their tents to count the nursing infants?” The Gur Aryeh[3] explains that certainly Moshe was not complaining about the extra work that this particular counting would involve, but rather that Moshe was making a valid point with regards to modesty. After all, if Moshe himself had to be the one to go around and count the infant Levi’im who were nursing in their tents, how could Moshe enter? It would be a breach of modesty and privacy! Therefore, as Rashi continues to explain based on the Medrash, Hashem told Moshe, “You do that which is yours and I will do that which is Mine.” Moshe went around to each and every tent but did not enter. Hashem would then announce by each tent exactly how many babies were inside. Problem solved. Moshe was commanded to count the infants but could not enter the tents to do so, therefore the solution was for him to go around and stand outside each one and Hashem would tell him how many were inside. This is why the passuk (verse) ends by saying “Moshe counted them according to the word of Hashem”. Not merely that Moshe fulfilled the commandment of Hashem, which he certainly did, but that the only way he was able to accomplish it was literally “by the word of Hashem”. Moshe needed Hashem to count and tell him the numbers because doing so himself and entering the tents would be a lack of tzniyus.

            This Rashi is hard to understand. If Hashem was going to have to tell Moshe the number of babies in each tent anyway, why did Moshe have to go around in the first place? Granted when it came to counting the rest of B’nei Yisroel there was a special mitzvah for each member to bring a shekel to Moshe to be counted, in such a situation we could understand that Hashem commanded a mitzva to be done and that is how it had to be done. However with regards to the infant Levi’im, where they did not bring shekalim and Moshe was unable to go in and count himself what was the point of having Moshe go around to each tent just to have Hashem tell him the number of babies inside? If Moshe needed to completely rely on Hashem for this, why didn’t Hashem just tell Moshe the total numbers without making him go around to each and every tent?

            Perhaps we could learn from this Rashi a fundamental lesson when it comes to keeping the Torah and mitzvos of Hashem. As Jews we are commanded to fulfill a tremendous amount of commandments. Not just commandments which are one-time objectives, but cyclical ones as well – whether once mitzvos that are once in life time, every fifty years, seven years, yearly, monthly, weekly daily, multiple times a day, and even constantly, there is no question that mitzvos come in all shapes and sizes. We obviously know that those who think all we have to keep are the 10 commandments are ignorant beyond belief, and the same is true of those who believe that there is a simple list of 613 mitzvos. Yes, we have the Aseres Ha’dibros and taryag mitzvos, but those are only the skeletal structure of the mitzvos which infuse our daily living. Each and every mitzva has so many details, conditions and qualifications that the aggregate permutations and combinations are virtually countless. Every detail of every movement from the order of tying one’s shoes, cutting nails and washing one’s body, to the laws of berachos and intricate laws of kashrus; and from the perplexing laws of tummah and restrictive laws of shabbos and yom tov, to the many laws of business and money matters, every single activity we do throughout each moment of every day has a mitzvah associated with it with details and differences depending on each specific scenario. One would think it is impossible to be able to remember all of them, let alone live by them. Forget about being difficult, how is it even possible for a person to be able to live by so many rules without one’s head exploding with the number of things to remember? Yet, people do it and people love it. Where does this capacity of seemingly borderless capability come from?

            The answer is that it was given to us with the Torah.[4] Hashem did not just give us the Torah and wish us luck. Rather, with the Torah He gifted to B’nei Yisroel the power to be able to keep it if we put in our hishtadlus (effort). Indeed, to be able to live a complete, pure life as a Torah Jew is impossible unless two key ingredients are present: absolute effort and siyata d’shmaya. Our job is to put in everything we can and Hashem promises that he will help us by giving us the strength to go beyond our own capacity.
           
            This is the lesson that Rashi is teaching us. Hashem commanded Moshe to do something which was not possible for him to do on his own. However, Moshe was still expected to do as much as he could and from that point, siyata d’shimaya would kick in and help him complete the task.

            This is what Shavuos is all about. We already know that it is more than a commemoration of an event that took place in the past, because in reality it is a re-receiving of the Torah as we did on Har Sinai. However, it is even more than that. It is also a celebration of our changed selves who have the renewed ability to reach goals and keep the Torah and mitzvos to incredible degrees with the same siyata d’shimaya which accompanied mattan Torah, a present and a promise  for those who put in the requisite effort.

            May Hashem help us over this Shabbos and Yom Tov of Shavuos re-accept the Toras Hashem and help us recognize our borderless capacity which we receive along with it as long as are willing to put in the effort. As Hashem told Moshe, “You do your part, and I will do Mine.”




[1] Bamidbar 1:2
[2] Bamidbar 3:16
[3] Gur Aryeh Bamidbar 3:16. See also the mforshim on Medrash Bamidbar Rabbah on this passuk.
[4] See Sefer Matnas Chaim

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