Parashat Va'et'hanan
The Dutiful Student
Moses as a model of one who seeks greater
understanding
By Rabbi Marc Wolf
Reprinted with permission of the Jewish Theological Seminary.
Reenacting an historical moment through liturgy and deed is
a forte of Judaism. Our calendar year overflows with holidays and observances
that transport us to our former days and inspire us to reenter the narrative
and relive salient moments of history. This week in particular, observing the 9th
of Av, we read of the destruction of the Temple and continue the mourning of
our ancestors for the calamities that befell them.
While it is possible to read this narrative as a preventive
measure to ensure that we, too, do not fall victims to George Santayana's
dictum condemning us to either learn from our history or repeat it, I believe
that Judaism's message is a blessing, not a curse. It is a blessing for us to
be able to relive life's difficult moments--and the reason why can be gleaned
from Moses' behavior and our parasha this week.
Isaiah Horowitz, commenting on this week's parashah,
Va'et'hanan, asserts that throughout the parshiyot of D'varim, we are
constantly encouraged to learn and relearn the mitzvot of the Torah. The common
name of Deuteronomy itself, the Mishneh Torah, means a second retelling
of what came before in the previous four books. Each subject of the Torah is
rehashed within the pages of Deuteronomy, according to Horowitz, and each is a
call to action to study the passages to our fullest comprehension. For
inspiration, Horowitz patterns Moses as the quintessential student, constantly
questioning the pedagogical message of God.
By citing and expanding on a midrash from Yalkut Shemoni
[a Bible commentary compiled in the 13th century], Horowitz enumerates the four
times that Moses, as the student of God, did not fully comprehend God's message
and requested clarification of God's objectives. The first of these occurs
after Moses' divine election as prophet for the people at the burning bush. He
faithfully transmits God's message to Pharaoh and the midrash states that Moses
is surprised by Pharaoh's reaction. If God had meant to redeem the people, how
could there be a negative response from Pharaoh? Should they not be redeemed
immediately? Here, Moses questions the direction from God-- seeking to understand
fully what God's underlying intentions are.
The same questioning occurs when Miriam is stricken with
leprosy and again when Moses is told to appoint Joshua as his successor. Each
time, the result of his interaction with God is not as Moses expects, instead,
the midrash has him re-approaching God for clarification of his prophecy. Moses
plays the dutiful student, seeking to understand a difficult lesson.
His final questioning of God occurs within this week's
parashah. Moses beseeches God and recounts his request: "And I pleaded
with the Lord at that time saying, O Lord God, you have begun to show your
servant your greatness, and your mighty hand; for what God is there in heaven
or in earth, that can do according to your works, and according to your might?
I beg of you, let me go over, and see the good land that is beyond the Jordan,
that goodly mountain region, and Lebanon" (Deuteronomy 3:23-25).
Questioning God's ban prohibiting him from entering the
land, Moses appeals to God to cancel the decree and allow him to enter. His
plea to God is compared by Horowitz to asking that an oath be nullified. Moses
focuses intently on canceling God's oath preventing him from re-entering the
land. In this, Moses is seeking to understand the ban, in its essence (Horowitz,
Shnei Luhot ha'Brit, p. 107 Sharei Tzion ed.).
In his continual tendency to question and seek clarification
and meaning, Moses provides us with a paradigm for a student's responsibility.
His goal is to relearn his prophecy until he fully understands its
comprehensive message. In each situation, Horowitz explains that Moses is not
challenging God's message, but seeking to understand what he may have missed in
the first telling.
As well it is with our calendar of holidays and observances.
The historical message of each observance and holiday is clear, but our reasons
for perpetuating them sometimes are not. Specifically, with Tisha b'Av, finding
contemporary relevance in this day of mourning in an era in which the Jewish
state has been re-established, can be particularly challenging. During the days
of the Second Temple, as well, challenges were made to indefinitely postpone
the fast of Tisha B'Av.
To guarantee relevance, we have defined this day on the
calendar as the day on which numerous tragedies occurred. But our forte in
Judaism is that of seeing relevance, not only through history, but also, as is
evident in the example of Moses, through our own learning and relearning.
Each cycle of our calendar year is a call for us to refine
and relearn our understanding of our holidays and observances. In Horowitz's
conclusion, he states that this pattern of relearning is what eventually leads
to actualizing the verse, "You who held fast to the Lord your God are
alive each and every one of you this day" (Deuteronomy 4:4). Holding fast
to our Judaism is not a passive observance but an active engagement--not simply
passing through the calendar, but connecting to it and relearning our historic
salient moments until we achieve the level of understanding inspired by Moses.
Rabbi Marc Wolf is Director of
Community Development at the Jewish Theological Seminary. More
commentaries from the Jewish Theological Seminary can be found on JTS's Parashat
HaShavua page.