Parashat Shlah
Scouting for Self-Confidence
The role of the
spies was to determine whether they and the Israelites had the confidence and
certainty of God’s love to enter the land of the covenant.
By Steve Greenberg
The following article
is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
Before entering the land of Canaan to conquer it, the people
want to investigate. Twelve tribal princes are chosen to spy out the land. It seems
like a reasonable request. It makes sense to send scouts ahead to prepare for
the conquest. The Israelites need to know which approach is best, where the
concentrations of people are, and which cities are well fortified. But is that
the intent here? A military action should be covert. It would require a couple
of good soldiers, not a contingent of twelve princes.
Something else is happening here. It is evident in Moses'
address to the spies. They are to report whether the land is good or bad, fat
or lean. These aren't a tactician's questions. These are questions one might
ask a real estate agent when viewing a property. This entourage is scouting the
land to see if it's beautiful enough, if it's safe enough.
It's not the land that is being tested here. It is the
people and their sense of adequacy. What the spies reveal has little to do with
the land and much to do with themselves. It comes across clearly when they
describe the inhabitants of the land: "We looked like grasshoppers to
ourselves, and so we must have looked to them" (Numbers 13:33). These princes
of Israel are presumably most self-possessed and confident of the lot, the
least affected by the degradations of Egyptian slavery. Yet even these leaders
fail to see themselves as more than insects. The power of self-hatred ingrained
in one's youth is not easily overcome.
Truly self-hating people assume that God hates them, too.
Moses later says that the people cried in their tents saying that God
"hates us... [God] brought us out of the land of Egypt, to hand us over to
the Amorites to wipe us out" (Deuteronomy 1:27). Only a people certain of
God's love, confident of their innate worthiness and strength, can enter the
land of the covenant.