Parashat V'zot Habrakha
The Divine Kiss
Despite God's
refusal to allow Moses to enter the land of Israel, God gives Moses a gentle
death and a loving burial.
By Rabbi Jonathan Stein
The following article is reprinted with permission from The Union of American Hebrew Congregations. For a free e-mail subscription to the UAHC's
weekly Torah commentary, please
click here.
V'zot Habrakha, the concluding parashah of the Torah, is
centered around the death of Moshe Rabbenu, Moses our Teacher.
Generations of Bible readers have wondered about the stated reason why Moses
was prohibited from entering the Promised Land.
The sin for which he is so punished, which occurred in
Numbers 20:10-11 (for striking rather than speaking to a rock in order to bring
forth water for the people), seems insignificant in comparison to his
accomplishments and his obedience to God. Moses could have been taught the
point that all people die just as well if he had been allowed to lead the
people over the river and then had been allowed to die in the land of Canaan.
The Midrash discusses both this issue and Moses' humanity in
its commentary on Moses' resistance to God's decree. According to the Midrash,
Moses begs God for favor and forgiveness for his sins. He tells God that he has
been held to a higher standard and prays 515 times for a reversal of the
decree. Moses pleads with God to make him into an animal and let him at least
touch the land, but God refuses. God then relents a little and allows Moses to
view the Promised Land. Other midrashim also contain the same general theme.
In contrast to the image of Moses begging to be turned into
an animal, the Midrash grants Moses a beautiful death. At the end, God leans
down from the heavens and ends Moses' life with a soft, gentle kiss. This is
derived from Deuteronomy 34:5, where it is written, "So Moses, the servant
of the Eternal, died there, in the land of Moab, at the command of the
Eternal." The Hebrew reads, al pi Adonai, "by the mouth of the
Eternal." Hence the legend about God kissing Moses at his moment of death.
According to the Midrash, God wept after Moses died, as did
the heavens and the earth. Deuteronomy 34:6 tells us that "God buried him
in the valley in the land of Moab, near Beth-peor; and no one knows his burial
place to this day."
Moses deserved the honor of having God perform his burial
because, the Midrash says, during the Exodus from Egypt, when everyone else was
looking for gold and silver, Moses was looking for the coffin of Joseph. And
when Moses found it, he carried it on his own shoulders. Thus Moses helped to
fulfill the oath made to Joseph in Genesis 50:25: "So Joseph made the sons
of Israel swear, saying, 'When God has taken notice of you, you shall carry my
bones from here.'" The honor and respect that Moses paid to Joseph's last
wish to be buried with his ancestors are rewarded when God buries Moses, a
singular divine act.
Thus we find that even though the decree of death cannot be
overruled, God displays great compassion and empathy for the greatest prophet
that ever arose in Israel, "whom the Eternal singled out, face to
face." (Deut. 34:10) Would that each of us be granted the same gentle and
loving death.
As we end this year's annual Torah reading cycle and
complete our reading of Devarim, the fifth and final book of the Torah, we say Chazak,
chazak ve'nitchazek! "Be strong, be strong, and let us be
strengthened!"
Jonathan Stein is
senior rabbi at Congregation Beth Israel, San Diego, California.
The Union of American Hebrew
Congregations is the central body of Reform Judaism in North America,
uniting 1.5 million Reform Jews in more than 900 synagogues. UAHC services include camps, music and book
publishing, outreach to unaffiliated and intermarried Jews, educational
programs, and the Religious Action Center in
Washington, DC.