Friday, July 7, 2017

Parshas Balak - The Letter S: Which Side Are You On?

~ Thoughts on the Parsha ~
Parshas Balak

The Letter S: Which Side Are You On?
By: Daniel Listhaus

וַיֹּאמֶר בִּלְעָם לָאָתוֹן כִּי הִתְעַלַּלְתְּ בִּי לוּ יֶשׁ חֶרֶב בְּיָדִי כִּי עַתָּה הֲרַגְתִּיךְ

“Billam said to the she-donkey, ‘Because you have mocked me! If there were a sword in my hand I would now have killed you!’”
-Balak 22:29

The Torah[1] relates that Balak, king of Moav, realized that B’nei Yisroel a small nation of slaves that recently escaped Egypt, not only managed to defeat the Emori, but even obliterate the giant guardians Sichon and Og who Moav.[2] This made Balak and all of Moav very worried and they went to seek counsel from the elders of Midian.

Rashi[3] points out that Moav seeking advice from Midian was not typical as the two nations hated each other. However, the circumstances were such that they found themselves hating a common enemy even more - the B’nei Yisroel, and they were willing to look the other way from their differences and join forces to solve the “Jewish problem” of their time. The reason they felt Midian would be the proper strategic partner was because they knew that Moshe rabbeinu had spent time in Midian and figured that perhaps Midian would know what Moshe’s secret to success was and, by extension, what his proverbial kryptonite might be. Indeed, Midian did know; they revealed that Moshe’s unique power was his mouth. When Moav heard this they said, “We too will come against B’nei Yisroel with a person whose power is in his mouth.” This led them to Billam ha’rasha who Balak hired for a large sum of money.[4]

The passukim go on to describe that Billam was accompanied by a number of men on the journey that would take them to the proper place for Billam to set up and curse B’nei Yisroel. However, their journey there was far from uneventful. Billam’s donkey came to a screeching halt when it saw a malach (angel) standing on the road right in front of it with sword drawn.[5] Rashi[6] describes that the malach said, “This rasha has put aside the tools of his craft, for the craft of the goyim of the world is the sword, and he comes against B’nei Yisroel with his mouth, which is the craft of B’nei Yisroel. I too shall come against him with his own craft.” However, Billam just hit his donkey and redirected her back to the road. The malach came again as a fence on either side and the donkey squeezed against the wall, pressing Billam’s leg against the wall; Billam continued to hit the donkey. The malach then came again and stood in a narrow path and there was no room for the donkey to go. Billam hit the donkey again with his staff.

The passuk[7] relates that Hashem then opened the mouth of the donkey and the donkey said, “What have I done to you that you struck me three times?” Billam replied, “Because you have mocked me! If there were a sword in my hand I would now have killed you.”

Rashi[8] (ibid) comments that this was a major embarrassment for Billam. The officers that were with him thought to themselves, “This is the person we are trusting to destroy a whole nation with his mouth and yet for his own donkey he needs a weapon?”

Although Rashi is unclear as to whether the officers verbalized this mockery, if these were only their thoughts, or if this was merely what Billam thought they were thinking, it is certainly a valid tease. Billam was hired to wipe out B’nei Yisroel yet his own donkey he would have threatened with a sword if it were available.

Let us take a moment though to think about the following. Why was it that Billam’s gut response to disciplining his animal was that he would have killed it with a sword? If Billam himself was someone whose expertise was utilizing his mouth as a weapon, why not threaten or actually curse the donkey with his mouth?

It must be that we see from here that Billam, as a goy, really held the same craft as all the other nations - that of the sword. This also helps us understand the Rashi mentioned earlier. The malach went to block Billam because, “This rasha has put aside the tools of his craft, for the craft of the goyim of the world is the sword, and he comes against B’nei Yisroel with his mouth, which is the craft of B’nei Yisroel. I too shall come against him with his own craft (i.e- the sword).”

Indeed, Billam’s weapon of choice was not just conceptually the sword, but practically as well. This is evident from the fact that his immediate response to the donkey was a threat by sword. 

However, with all this in perspective, how could we understand why then he did not have his sword with him? Why was he so confident in his mouth alone to fight against B’nei Yisroel that he was comfortable leaving his sword at home? Why not at least bring it as a backup plan?  He was coming to essentially do battle with B’nei Yisroel, why would he leave his choice weapon behind even if it was not the tool he selected to hopefully use for this purpose?

Perhaps we could learn from Billam ha’rasha what he and Midian really knew as a fact about the secret of B’nei Yisroel’s success.

As Jews, we are asked to balance hishtadlus and bitachon. However even after understanding the need for balance, there needs to be a fundamental realization as to the perspective and way we approach these concepts. Dovid ha’melech writes in Tehillim[9], “Some with chariots and others with horses, but we in the Name of Hashem our G-d call out.” Many people are under the impression that the order of operations in striking the balance between hishtadlus and bitachon is that first we choose or are put into a position where we strive to do something, we then daven to Hashem for help and success, and then, upon a successful result, we have a renewed faith in Hashem as we witnessed His siyata d’ishimaya. Let us take the following simple example. Imagine a student has a difficult math final coming up. Having been thrown into a situation where he has a test to take he decides he is going to try his hardest. At the same time, he davens to Hashem that Hashem help him study and be successful, and then after receiving his score he has renewed bitachon.

Although this is certainly a level, the truth is that the perspective should be exactly the opposite. The real order is that we start with bitachon. We begin with believing that Hashem is all powerful and it is He alone who created and orchestrates the world on a daily basis and does everything according to His overall master plan for our individual benefit, and therefore it is appropriate to daven only to Him.[10] After having bitachon, one follows forward by davening as we believe in Hashem and understand that He wants us to daven to Him. Tefillah is then followed by action which demonstrates that the person has full belief in Hashem’s ratzon to do what is best and is therefore able and willing to act upon it with confidence. In our student’s final exam case, the parallel example would be that the student anticipating taking the test stops to think that ultimately Hashem runs the world and decides how people’s circumstances will turn out. This strong belief sparks the individual to daven for his success from Hashem because he believes and understands that it is all within Hashem’s power and will. Following that, the student’s push to get out of bed, study, and ultimately take the exam should be fundamentally because he has the confidence that Hashem is there and that his tefillos will work on his behalf to the capacity that Hashem deems fit.

When we approach an enemy in battle wielding weapons and davening, the perspective is not that we are entering in war and davening that we are successful; rather, we begin with having full bitachon in Hashem and daven with kavana to overcome our enemies and then we are willing to enter in battle to bring about the result. Bitachon is not an enhancement to hishtadlus, it is the other way around! Proper hishtadlus is acting upon the bitachon.

This is something which Midian, and specifically Billam, understood fundamentally. Their battle with B’nei Yisroel could not be at the battlefield. If they would fight on the battlefield that would mean they had already lost. After all, B’nei Yisroel led by Moshe rabbeinu entering into battle would be an action already rooted in complete bitachon and tefillah; the battle itself would just be the finishing touches, the demonstration that they fully trusted in Hashem’s aid. Perhaps this is the reason Billam did not even bother bringing his sword with him. Billam, as Moshe rabbeinu’s evil counterpart, fully understand the power of bitachon as a source of koach ha’tefillah and understood that he had to interfere in such a way that Hashem would be angry enough at B’nei Yisroel that He would chas v’shalom cast us aside completely and look away from our bitachon and tefillah.

When we think of the relationship between thoughts, speech, and action it is quite complex. Optimally, one would understand who he or she is at one’s core and allow that to filter through and define the character of one’s speech and action. However, we know that the inverse relationship works as well. One who succumbs to negative actions, could easily find that translated over time into negative speech and a decay of his personal interior core. In the same vein, one who strives to practice meritorious actions will often find himself within the realm of “metoch shelo lishma bah lishma”, that even if the spark of the good action was not specifically due to the purest of intentions or beliefs, the mere continuation of good actions could lead to an ultimate positive change in one’s self, and further have an effect of continuing good actions but for the proper reasons, intentions, and based on good core values and beliefs.

May Hashem help us that we ourselves should be zoche to reach the level of B’nei Yisroel in the midbar and that our enemies recognize that when it comes to fighting B’nei Yisroel their craft is useless. Let us work from all ends of the spectrum, working on our bitachon, our tefillah, and our ma’asim (actions) to ultimately achieve that level where words beat sword.





[1] Bamidbar 22:2
[2] See Rashi ibid.
[3] Bamidbar 22:4
[4] Rashi Bamidbar 22:5
[5] Bamidbar 22:23
[6] Rashi ibid.
[7] Bamidbar 22:28
[8] Rashi ibid.
[9] Tehillim 20:8
[10] See Chovos Ha’leva’voas: Sha’ar Ha’bi’tachon

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