Parashat Balak
Spirit Strength
Balak intuited an important truth about the Israelites: Their strength was
spiritual, not military.
By Rabbi Ismar Schorsch
Reprinted with permission of the Jewish
Theological Seminary.
After two impressive victories against the Canaanites of the
Negeb and the Amorites in Transjordan, the looming military might of Israel
throws the leaders of Moab into a panic. Only the land of the Moabites
separates Israel from the Jordan River and the conquest of Canaan. Balak ben
Zippor, King of Moab, knows that he is next.
In desperation, he takes recourse in an unconventional
pre-emptive measure. He summons Balaam son of Beor, a sorcerer from Mesopotamia
to curse Israel, making it susceptible to defeat on the battlefield. Though
Balaam comes, God frustrates the plan. Within the monotheistic framework of the
Torah, Balaam can utter only what God imparts to him. Hence he ends up in
rapturous praise of Israel, to the consternation of Balak.
In an imaginative midrash, the Rabbis expatiate on what
brought Balak to seize on this particular tactic. Awestruck by Moses, he
inquired of the Midianites, among whom Moses had once found refuge when fleeing
Pharoah's wrath, as to the man's strength. They responded that Moses' strength
resided in his mouth, that is, his prayers were able to move God to act in his
behalf. To neutralize that weapon, Balak turns to sorcery. Balaam's strength
also resides in his mouth. His curse will trump Moses' prayers. Without divine
assistance, Israel is eminently beatable (Rashi on 22:4).
As so often, the midrashic genre yields rich insight. Words
are weapons when they carry conviction. As long as the prayers of Israel embody
deep faith, a sense of chosenness and real dialogue, they have the capacity to
keep chaos at bay. With the information at hand, Balak intuited that the
ultimate source of Israel's dominance was spiritual and not military.
The training ground for that resilience of the spirit would
eventually become the synagogue, the sacred space that reverberates with the
spoken word. How appropriate, then, that the first words we intone upon
entering the synagogue in the morning are taken from Balaam's encomium:
"How fair are you tents, O Jacob, your dwellings, O Israel!" (24:5)
While in the Torah, these words express Balaam's astonishment at the expanse
and quality of Israel's encampment in the wilderness, in the siddur
[prayerbook] they give voice to our gratitude for the sustenance of the
synagogue. Throughout its Diaspora sojourn, Israel finds refuge in the
synagogue, where prayer and study spin a web of existential meaning. It is the
synagogue which generates the vocabulary that enables us to endure and prevail.
Yet, for all its importance, the ritual of the synagogue is
but a means to an end. In Judaism, behavior takes priority over belief. Faith
without deeds will not change the world. And this hierarchy of values the
Rabbis articulate in a startling comparison between the figures of Abraham and
Balaam.
"Whoever possesses these three qualities is numbered
among the disciples of our father Abraham, and those who possess the three
opposite qualities are found among the disciples of wicked Balaam: A generous
spirit, a humble soul and a modest appetite--such a one is a disciple of our
father Abraham. A grudging spirit, an arrogant soul and an insatiable
appetite--such a one is a disciple of wicked Balaam" (Or Hadash,
Reuven Hammer, 275-276).
At issue in these conflicting worldviews is clearly how we
live. For the Rabbis, Balaam personified a lifestyle that turns on the self.
The other is always secondary. In contrast, Abraham's virtues combine to
contract the ego. Compassion, humility and self-restraint not only privilege
the other but also devalue material possessions. Judaism strives for
self-control. Nobility of character requires a touch of ascetism.
In his commentary to this passage, Judah Goldin posits that
such virtue is not a function of biological descent, but persistent effort.
Jewishness is defined by what we do with our lives. Like Abraham, we can choose
to follow God's voice as refracted in the sacred texts of Judaism.
Incomparably, that same value scale is enunciated by the
eighth-century prophet Micah, whose words constitute our haftarah [prophetic
reading] for this week's parashah. The superficial link is his glancing
reference to Balak and Balaam. In a deeper vein, he espouses the primacy of
ethics over ritual. The goal of genuine religion is not to mollify God with
escalating numbers of sacrifices culminating in the offering of one's own
first-born child. On the contrary, what God has long demanded is "only to
do justice and to love goodness and to walk modestly with your God" (6:8).
Again, the thrust runs diametrically counter to our penchant
for self-absorption. The best way to infuse the world with holiness is by
harnessing the self. As long as ritual is tethered to that aspiration, it can
provide us with the discipline to move beyond ourselves.
Rabbi Ismar Schorsch is the chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary. More of Chancellor
Schorsch's commentaries can be found on JTS's Parashat Hashavua page.