Parashat D’varim
Words Of
Admonition
Moses, finally, at
the end of his life, able to transition from a man of action to a man of words,
rebukes the Israelites, who are receptive to his criticisms.
By Rabbi Jordan D. Cohen
The following article is reprinted with permission from Kolel: The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish
Learning.
Overview
Parashat D'varim begins with Moses recounting the history of
the Exodus, from the giving of the second set of tablets at Sinai through to
the incident of the 12 spies. Moses highlights his own role as leader, and
blames the people for the fact that he has been prohibited from entering the
Land. Special attention is also paid to the promise of the Land. Moses notes
the establishment of the Sanhedrin and the Judicial system.
Moses then jumps ahead and reviews some of the final battles
that have been fought, including the battles with Sichon and Og and the
acquisition of land to the east of the Jordan (in which they were standing). At
the end of this portion, Joshua, who will assume the role of leadership after
Moses, is assured that, just as God led Israel to victory in the wilderness, so
too God will lead Israel in battle when they cross into the Land.
In Focus
These are the words that Moses addressed to all Israel on
the other side of the Jordan.... (Deuteronomy 1:1).
Pshat
It is from this opening line that the Book of Deuteronomy
takes its Hebrew name, D'varim, meaning "words." And that is
what Deuteronomy essentially is: Moses' words. While most of the other books of
the Torah since Exodus are expressed in God's words, spoken through Moses,
Deuteronomy is Moses' discourse, reiterating God's teachings and exhorting the
People of Israel to follow God's commands. The Rabbinic name for this book is Mishneh
HaTorah--the "second law" (not to be confused with Maimonides's
code of law called the Mishnah Torah), since almost everything in
Deuteronomy has been stated before, albeit in a different context.
It is also notable in this opening passage that Moses spoke
to all Israel. The entire people who made it to the border of the
Promised land gather to listen to the words of their leader. As Rashi notes, if
some of the people were absent, they might have been able to deny that Moses
had said all that he said. By gathering the entire people together, all heard the
same words at the same time, and all had the opportunity on the spot to reply
if they so wished.
Drash
Our sages and commentators had much to say about this
seemingly simple line of text. To follow on Rashi's comment above, Simchah
Bunem of Prszysucha, a Chassidic sage quoted in Rabbi Lawrence Kushner and
Rabbi Kerry Olitzky's modern commentary, Sparks Beneath the Surface,
taught that each word that Moses uttered was spoken to all Israel. In fact, Rav
Bunem emphasized that Moses spoke to each person according to his or her
character and age, and according to his or her level of understanding and
perception.
In contemporary terms, this indicates incredible educational
insight. Moshe Rabbenu--Moses, the greatest teacher our people has
known--understood that each person learned in his or her own distinct way, and
spoke so that all could understand. This is not an easy feat even for the most
skilled teacher, but it is critical if you want everyone to understand.
There is, however, some irony in Moses' development into
such an inspiring teacher and speaker. These opening words of Deuteronomy serve
to emphasize that fact. Lest we forget, forty years earlier Moses was a man
with little skill in speech. As a young shepherd, commanded by God out of the
burning bush to confront Pharaoh and lead his people out of slavery, Moses
responded by saying, "I am not a man of words" (Exodus 4:10). But now
Moses has become a master of words, speaking eloquently and sufficiently to
fill an entire book and inspire an entire people.
Rabbi Pinchas Peli (z"l) noted that, had Moses
been a man of words when he first assumed the mission of freeing the Israelites
from Egypt, he might have become, as so often happens, a "captive of his
own eloquence." He might have spent the rest of his life making fiery
speeches about the importance of freedom, rather then leading the people to
discover it for themselves. What was needed at the time, Peli concedes, was a
man of action, not of words.
It was only years later, with many years of experience
behind him, that Moses becomes a man of words. His time to speak comes at the
end, when he knows that his days of leadership are coming to an end, when he
has brought the people as far as they can go at that point, and there is little
left that he can do for them. So he uses the little time he has left to share
with them his thoughts and feelings and ideas--his words.
And what were these "words" he decided to share at
this time? Or, as one midrash (Yalkut, Devarim 788) asks, "Are these the
only words which Moses spoke?" And then the midrash provides the answer:
"These words are in a special category. These were words of
admonition." Our tradition suggests that Moses' words, which he spoke to
all the people at the beginning of Devarim, were words of rebuke. Rashi writes
that Moses, "is enumerating all the places where they provoked God to
anger."
The midrash goes on to say that Moses chided no one until
shortly before their death. He wanted to make sure that they would not get into
the habit of repeating rebukes, for that would evoke a negative reaction
(Yalkut, Devarim 800). Now, just before his own death, Moses takes the
opportunity to rebuke the entire community. It is said in Proverbs (28:23),
"He that rebukes another shall in the end find more favour." As a
credit to his skills as a preacher, we are told that the people were fully and
unanimously receptive to Moses' criticisms (Sifrei, Devarim 1:1).
No one likes to hear criticism or be taken to task for our
own shortcomings. But it is important for our own growth and development on
occasion to hear from those we love and respect (and who love and respect us)
when we may have strayed from the path to our best selves. As the leader of the
people, Moses had to earn their love and respect before he could admonish them.
As Rabbi Peli concludes, "Moses realizes that only a
leader who had risked his own life and brought much good to his people has the
right to rebuke them for their shortcomings. He must have wanted to say these
"words" earlier, but he waited for the right moment. That is why the
biblical narrative puts so much emphasis on the place and time of Moses'
speech."
Davar Aher
There are those unbelievers who claim that the Torah was
meant to be observed only in the wilderness far away from the settlements of
other groups and nations or in the Holy Land, where Jews dwelt among their own,
and where no one would interfere with their customs. They insist that when the
Jews dwell among other nations, when they live in the midst of another culture
and civilization, they must not keep aloof from their neighbours by clinging to
the observance of the Torah and its commandments.
It was to refute this argument that Moses explained the Law
to the Children of Israel in all the seventy languages of the world before they
entered the Promised Land. He wanted to impress upon his people that they were
duty-bound to observe the Torah regardless of what lands they might dwell in,
because the Torah was valid for all time and for all countries and was not
subject to change (Ketav Sofer).
Rabbi Jordan D. Cohen is Associate Director of
KOLEL - The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish Learning, a dynamic, pluralistic,
Jewish Adult Educational institute in Toronto, Canada. Prior to his
return to his hometown of Toronto, Rabbi Cohen served as Rabbi of the United
Jewish Congregation of Hong Kong, and Associate Rabbi of the North Shore Temple
Emanuel in Sydney, Australia. Numerous communities throughout the United
States, Canada, Israel, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and China can attest to
Rabbi Cohen's engaging teaching style and innovative programs.