Parashat V'zot Habrakha
More Than Meets
The Eye
Moses, a unique
prophet who spoke face to face with God, began his career hesitant and not
confident of his abilities. He serves
as a model of how we can transcend our personal limitations and fears.
By Rabbi Neal Sheindlin
The following article is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
These last two chapters of the Torah traditionally are read
in the synagogue not on Shabbat, but during the holiday of Simchat Torah, when
we celebrate both the completion of the year's cycle of Torah readings and the
beginning of a new cycle. Chapter 33 contains the poetic blessings Moses
conferred on the tribes of Israel before his death. Chapter 34 describes how
Moses climbed Mount Nebo and viewed the Land of Israel, the Promised Land he
never would enter, immediately before his death. The final verses of the Torah
praise Moses in these words:
Deuteronomy 34:10-12
10. Never again did there arise in Israel a prophet like
Moses--whom the Lord singled out, face to face,
11. for the various signs and portents that the Lord sent him to display in the
land of Egypt, against Pharaoh and all his courtiers and his whole country,
12. and for all the great might and awesome power that Moses displayed before
all Israel.
Your Torah Navigator
In what ways was Moses unique among Jewish leaders? Is
leadership success a matter of innate personal qualities, inborn charisma; or
does it result from skills that can be learned?
Midrash
A midrash says that the prophecy of Moses was qualitatively
different from that of all the other prophets of the Biblical era. All other
prophets perceived God as if they were looking through tinted glass; but Moses
perceived God as if through clear glass; or, in the metaphor of our portion,
"face to face."
A Word
By the time of his death at the age of 120, Moses is
acknowledged the greatest leader ever known to ancient Israel. Yet this is the
same Moses who, when God called him to lead Israel out of slavery, responded by
pleading, "O Lord, make someone else Your agent." [Exodus 4:13]
At the beginning of his career, Moses was hesitant and spoke
with a stammer. Years later, he had become a commanding, self-confident man. He
spoke truth to power when he confronted Pharaoh; he taught Israelite slaves how
to live independently, serving God through the discipline of the Torah; he even
stood up to God when God wanted to destroy the Israelites, and convinced God
otherwise. Truly, Moses became an individual whose like the world had never
seen and will never see again.
Life confronts each of us with unexpected challenges. Little did the shepherd
Moses imagine that to him would fall the roles of liberator and lawgiver. The
life of Moses demonstrates that we can rise beyond what we consider our
personal limitations. We can rise to meet the occasion.
As a new year begins, we face new challenges, both personally and as a nation.
As a nation, we pray for leaders with the wisdom to seek justice while
preserving freedom. As individuals, we hope to replicate the experience of
Moses, who found within himself the resources to accomplish what life required
him to do.
Prepared by Rabbi Neal
Sheindlin, Los Angeles Regional Educator, Hillel's She'arim-Gateways
Initiative.
Provided by Hillel's
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning, which creates innovative
educational resources based on Jewish texts and trains Hillel students,
professionals, and lay leaders to infuse Jewish content throughout their
activities. © 2002 Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.