Spymaster Lessons
What can we learn from the story of the meraglim?
The children suggested that we understand 1. from their punishment the severity of the sin of lashon harah, 2. the value of Eretz Yisroel, for denigrating something so valuable is especially offensive, and 3. how important it is that we take example of others’ experience: the meraglim did not learn from Miriam’s suffering.
I suggest another lesson; Hashem had told Moshe to send the meraglim. However, this was not a directive that originated with Him, rather Hashem conceded Moshe’s request. The Ibn Ezra notes that Hashem may explicitly authorize certain things, yet be against them. He allows doing them, but does not want them done. Such was the case here.
In life, as a person wishes to go, he is generally led. Success cannot help determine whether it was the right thing for him to do. He might have merely been led along the path he has chosen himself. This is a great lesson.
How can we calculate if we are doing what we want, or what Hashem wants?
Rav Dessler suggested this exercise: Consider what you wish to do, and consider the alternative. Even when you think yourself in the right, you may agree that the other way is also correct. Perhaps it seems even more upright, although your way is okay too. That is your red flag; If the other way seems right too, chances are that it is truly the correct one, and that you are wrong…
To rephrase: your biases justify wrong. But they often don’t need to vilify what is right. Use that as a hint to help get past your biases and determine the correct path.
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Friends Defend Friends
The Torah records that Hashem told Moshe to send spies. ‘And Moshe sent them according to the words of Hashem…’
The plain reading is that Hashem asked them to send spies and Moshe complied. However in Dvarim the Torah says the opposite: Moshe announced to all that they had arrived at the portals of Eretz Yisroel, and told them; ‘Go ahead and enter’. The Jews then ‘approached me all together and demanded of me that they send spies… and the idea was good in my eyes and I sent 12 men…’ In other words, it was their idea, not Hashem’s at all!
The obvious resolution to this contradiction is that the pasuk here in Shlach was written by Hashem, while the pasuk in Dvarim was written by Moshe. (Gemara Meggilla) Hashem knew it was not His fault, but although the Jews were wholly to blame, He accepted the blame on Himself. So He neglected to mention that the command to send spies was not unsolicited, rather it was pressed by the people. The truth, however, was what Moshe said: ‘You Jews are responsible for this debacle’.
This is how true friends act. They tend to take the blame for each other, and accept responsibility even when they can evade it. This is how we need to act too.
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Respect In Disapproval
The Torah names the men sent to scout out Eretz Yisroel. Do we gain knowing their names?
There are three ways of dealing with good people who sin;
A. Deny the sin. Claim it never happened, or that we don’t believe it and so on,
B. Disavow; if he did that, he is now a non-entity, invisible and unmentionable,
C. Consider that he has his good points, but has slipped. This might disqualify him from his current role, or he might continue but need to rectify the situation.
The Torah names them to tell us that these were important people, each a personage in his own right. Sadly, they slipped up and died as a result. But they were still important people in the Torah’s eyes.
We need to know this nowadays; to err is Human. Good people slip too. And they still command our respect, even as we disapprove their actions. We live in a time of “Zero Tolerance”. But that slogan is palpably false. Were it your own brother under judgement, would you still go black-and-white, or would you say “Michael has his good parts and his bad parts”?
Another thought: The saga of the meraglim is our story, our history. We prefer not discussing wicked men, but we do so when the story pertains to us and our history. We need to know our history; the good, ugly and bad. It is our makeup and our essence, built of our experience. Knowing our history is knowing ourselves. Not everything can or ought to be sanitized…
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Initiating Conversation
‘Motzei dibas ha’arretz’ is the Toreh epithet for the Spies. Rashi explains the term ‘Motzai Dibah’ to mean ‘those initiating talk, either good or bad’.
The spies sinned not merely by what they actually said. They had sparked bad conversations. People all over the camp began talking, debating the merits and demerits of Eretz Yisroel, questioning the wisdom of going there. Sowing of uncertainty and distrust was many times more effective than anything they had said.
It goes both ways: sparking Lashon Hara discussions is bad, but let’s try to initiate discussions of Mitzvos! Initiating a worthwhile conversation carries great merit, far more than anything one can say himself.
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Bias Of The Familiar
Confronted by the frightening report about Canaan, the Jews’ reacted: ‘It would have been better had we died in Egypt or in this desert. Why is Hashem bringing us to Canaan to be killed, our wives and children taken captive?’ And they said ‘Let’s appoint a new leader, and return to Egypt’
Why didn’t they try a third possibility: neither Canaan nor Egypt? Was there no unclaimed areas left in the world? Why would it be better for them to die in Egypt, where their wives and children were likewise captives, indeed, actively enslaved?
Objectively speaking, almost any option beat returning to Egypt. However they knew Egypt. They knew how to survive there, although barely survive is all they did. It was the known unpleasant versus the scary unknown. The known always trumps the unknown.
The lesson for us is to second-guess our decisions; are they from rational preference, or is our automatic bias towards the known influencing us?
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Being A Skeptic
The Meraglim returned with large claims. They said they had seen giants to whom a human being was small as a grasshopper. What is the relationship between a human and a grasshopper? An average man is five foot ten, and a grasshopper averages two inches. So I’d say 1:35 is a safe estimate. So it follows that these giants were (according to scale) more than two hundred feet tall, the size of a thirteen story building.
What then did they eat, these people? The Meraglim had the fruit in their arms, one carrying a pomegranate, another figs and the rest dragging the huge cluster of grapes. They were huge, to be sure, as were the general population in Canaan, as it says: ‘and all the people we saw there were people of great measure’. But they were not food for 200-foot Nephilim. One of those guys could finish off a herd of cows for breakfast! For lunch he could eat out a vineyard and for supper an orchard. How long could that last?
Were there people there really of such gigantic size, or were the Meraglim making up stories in order to frighten the people? There were giants, sure, maybe even twenty or fifty feet tall. But as big as the Meraglim claimed?! The Jews, seeing the actual size of those fruits, ought to have challenged the Meraglim. They ought to have taken a step back and seen the Meraglim were working them, manipulating the crowd to stir up panic. They ought to have rejected their testimony.
So this is also part of the lesson: Don’t lose your head. Ever. Separate the half-truths from the lies. Keep a healthy skepticism, even when no one else is!
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Beware Empty Threats, or Empty Threats May Be Fuller Than They Appear…
A. Hashem told Moshe to tell the Jews “Indeed, As you have spoken, will it be done to you; you will die here in this desert!” What? They requested that!?
Rashi comments that earlier they had said “Would that we die here in this desert and not be killed by the giants, our wives and children taken captive!” They said those words never intending them to be fulfilled. Those words were now thrown back to their faces.
As you have spoken…
B. “and your children, that you said will be captured as booty, instead they will capture the land…” I.e. exactly the opposite will occur; rather than being captured, they will capture their enemies.
Why are they different – why are they given to eat their words before but here their words are thrown in their face? The parents’ deserved punishment, but not the kids. So both were treated in accordance with their words, one as they said them, the other by doing the opposite. Both however, are linked to what they said. Words do make a difference!!
Our words carry meaning and consequences – often unintended and un-wished for. The gemarah tells how Pinchas, brother of the sage Shmuel, was sitting shivah for his son. When Shmuel came to comfort him he noticed how long Pinchas’ fingernails were and asked him why wasn’t he cutting them. Pinchas answered “Were your son were to die, would you cut your nails?!” Next week Shmuel’s son died. When Pinchas came to comfort Shmuel, Shmuel bitterly threw fingernails at him ‘Don’t you know that the lips have the power over life and death? Murderer!! You killed my son!!’
The gemarah brings a (rather strange!) source for it; Hashem told Avraham to sacrifice his son on the Mizbeach. Yet Yitzchak lived: we are his children. Why did Yitzchok survive? Because Avraham said to his servants ‘Wait here and we will return to you’ That ‘we’ – a mere slip of the tongue – yet returned Yitzchak safe and sound.
For good as well as bad; the tongue reigns supreme. Be wary of its power. Never say ‘I’ll never get out of this mess!’ ‘You will always fail at this!’ and so on. The saying so may well cause it to be. Beware!
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Why Spy?
Why did Moshe send spies after being promised the good land? Did he second-guess Hashem?
Someone can give directions to the store: ‘Go a mile and then turn right at the intersection, then keep going till you notice the store on your left”. The instructions are accurate and useful, practical.
Another way of giving instructions is to share the experience: “As you travel down the road you will see the trees ending and the city begin, then you will hit a busy intersection. Watch out for the incoming traffic, and turn right. When you smell the cookies look to your left; you will notice the store with Mr Shmerling sitting on his chair in front”.
This second version has shared the experience, not just the directions. When you get guidance like that, you know what to expect with no surprises, and therefore feel safe.
The Jews wanted a guided tour, a description what Eretz Yisroel was going to be like. What is the experience of living in Israel? (This was pre-YouTube, remember?) So they sent people to find out if the people lived in big groups or were spread out? Were the cities walled or open? Were there trees or fields? They were not testing Hashem, rather they wanted the experience mapped out. (In marketing, its often a good idea to do this. It makes it easy for people to order when they know what to expect.)
But instead, the Meraglim became caught up in the moment and instead of giving a virtual tour, they relayed their opinion of the feasibility of taking the Land. That wasn’t their mandate, not at all! What a tragedy!!
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Take Thy Medicine, Bro!
The Jews were sentenced to die in the desert when they rebelled at hearing the spies’ report. The Ibn Ezra suggests this was all predestined – they were simply unready to enter Eretz Yisrael and certainly needed the formative 40 years in the desert. However Hashem is Just and Perfect, and could not simply declare that they must stay in the desert. That would not be justified. The Jews held claim to Eretz Yisroel and would never acquiesce to delaying forty years.
So Hashem found the justification. It involved sin and failure, and heartbreak and punishment, but it was necessary, because there was no other way the people would simply say Yes…
The moral of the story, it would seem to me, is this: Surrender to his will, relinquish your personal claims, and embrace His plans instead of your own. Spare Him the need to find justification. Why go through pain and loss, when you can just eat the medicine and get over it…?
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I Spy # .007
Were the spies undercover, posing as cigar salesmen? The Torah tells that the area they took the grapes from was called by the locals “Nachal Eshkol”, on account of the cluster the Jews took from there. Many meforshim explain that the Emori called it so on account of the strange behavior the Jews exhibited – taking a cluster of grapes as a souvenir – why take something so plain and normal (to them!) as a souvenir?!
So it seems that all the locals knew that they were Jews, and that they were loitering around, with no apparent business other than site-seeing. In old times people did not site-see, and this behavior could mean only one thing; spying.
So why did they afford the spies safe-passage? The answer is that they were so confident in their power, that they considered the Jews no threat. That in of itself displayed the might and fearlessness of the indigenous nations whose lands we were out to capture!
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How To Spy In 24 Hours
In the haftora we have a strange twist in a spy story. While in our parsha twelve spies were sent and they took forty days to browse the entire land, here only two went and they came back the same night, essentially, after having conversed five minutes with one person – Rachav! What gives?
The answer is that the spies in the haftorah were not going to peruse the city. They were there in preparation for war, and therefor needed to know only one thing; how will the defenders respond to attack? Are they going to fight to the last man, or are they despondent and hopeless? What is their mood? No need for many spies or a long trip to get an answer to that.
So while the two stories seem similar, they indeed were utterly different. Moshe’s spies were on safari to scope out the land, Yeshua’s were planning attack.
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Help Wanted: 12 Spies
How did Moshe choose his spies? From a perusal of their names they seem not to be the Nesi’im, who anyhow would be probably too busy to take off for forty days and explore. (Rashi does explain that these were Nesi’im) Did he put up a sign in the mikveh “Men wanted for hazardous journey. Low wages, savage natives and high chance of being tortured to death. Safe return doubtful. Honour and recognition in event of success”? Were there many volunteers?
(See Rashbam in the beginning of sedra)
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The Punishment Of Good Men
Why were Yehoshua and Calev made to wait forty years before entering the land? On the original plan, they would have entered now in their prime, with many years to enjoy it. Instead, they were granted entering it as old men, so that they could merely watch their children build it. Moreover, the plain reading of the Torah is that at first Hashem wanted to destroy everyone, including Yehoshua and Calev, and renew the nation from Moshe alone. Why must these men die?!
Perhaps this does not constitute punishment. The only claim to Canaan belonged to the Jewish people as a whole, and until they were ready to enter, neither Yehoshua nor Calev could dream of getting in. They as individuals were never promised the land.
However there may be more to it. Had Yehoshua and Calev turned around and stomped home in protest as soon as they learnt the wicked intention of the other spies, perhaps they could have preempted the entire fiasco. They did not do so, which allowed the wicked spies to steal the show. These two deserved what happened to them because they did not back out. The moral of the story to us is, if something is going badly, get out, and fast. Procrastinating can be criminal!
P.s. I certainly do not presume to judge Yehoshua and Calev. I am merely reading the map.
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Tears Of Repair
When the Jews cried on that night they received the spies’ message, they were told; “you have cried in vain, but I shall yet provide you with what to cry about, the destruction if the Bais Hamikdash… Was this revenge?
Rabbi Dishon shlit”a suggested that it was not. Rather, tears in vain are not empty. Indeed, they hold great power. The tears of so many Jews crying in outrage at having been cheated and fooled into following Moshe out to nowhere, effected a rift, a distance between them and Hashem. This rift needed to be closed and remedied. Crying for the Beis hamikdash is crying for closeness to Hashem; “Return us, Hashem, and we will come back, renew our days as in old times!” This repairs the break, for those tears draw us back to Hashem, together again.
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Fruity Weirdness
The spies showed the Jews the fruits of the land. Why was that necessary? Rashi explains that they wanted to begin with the truth, so that their lies be better accepted.
We suggested that in order to convince the need that conquering Israel was indeed unfeasible, they needed to show them something that was outside of their paradigm entirely. Saying that the people of Canaan were very strong would not do, for the Jews knew that Hashem was yet stronger. What they needed was to illustrate that these were strange people, monsters even. This was foreign to them, and they could not readily imagine the path that Hashem would use to help them. They could not envision it, and therefore faltered in their trust. The challenge here is to develop a trust that is independent of realities in the field.
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Taking Challah
The Chinuch writes that bread that had challah taken from it has spiritual vitamins that ordinary bread lacks. One grows in his spirituality by eating holy bread. This is an interesting idea, of course, and suggests that we try to eat from bread that Challah was taken from, rather than cheerios, for example, which do not have Challah taken from them. Also, that we ought to bake the amount that will allow for challah each time!
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Thoughts Of Mon
The gemarah suggests that one could change the taste of Mon to anything one thought of. Suppose a man thought of meat, was it rare or well done? How hot was it? Did it make him fat and give him a bellyache? Did he get heart disease from eating too much meat? Could he think the thoughts that turned Mon into meat in Shabbos, since he was thereby processing the food?