ENGAGE YOUR BRAIN

I get these emails from the Chabad every day. I read them but, this one really struck me because of the question it asks "What was Balaam thinking?" How many times has someone we know, a family member or something we see on the news made us say "what the heck were they THINKING?" The answer is - they weren't thinking, they were reacting.

Hashem however is pro-acting. Hashem being thought itself and giving us the power of cognition hopes we do think. But so often we don't.

And to those friends of mine who tell me I think too much - I say thinking brings me closer to Hashem and to making the best choice for my children and those I care about.

Engage your brain.



THE SHOWDOWN
By Lazer Gurkow
---------------

They stood arrayed against each other; the best either nation had to offer. On one side stood Moses, who will be remembered as the greatest prophet of all time. On the other side was Balaam, the far-famed soothsayer, whose curses were regarded as all-powerful.

Both had access to the highest levels of divine truth. Both could transcend their human limitations and engage in divine discourse. Moses utilized his gift for prophecy and blessing, Balaam utilized his gift for destruction and damnation; seeking to manipulate divine will against the victims of his wrath. [1]

Moses led his people along a path destined by G-d, a path of sanctity and inspiration. Opposing him was Balaam, hoping to use his divine gift to obstruct this path. Balaam intended to apply his usual tactics; sorcery and soothsaying. But, in an ironic twist of faith, Balaam's words were used against his intentions by the very G-d he had hoped to
manipulate.

As the Torah tells it (Numbers 22:2-24:14), the people of Israel were encamped on the borders of Moab when Moses applied for permission to the Moabite king for his people to pass through. Rather than grant such license, Balak, king of Moab, commissioned Balaam to place a curse upon the Jews. Balaam embarked for Moab, hoping to use his venomous oratory.

But G-d pulled the curses from Balaam's mouth and implanted instead a beautiful ode to the Jews--an ode that ranks as the highest praise of Jewish people in all of the Torah.

The question is: what was Balaam thinking? How could he have hoped to manipulate G-d against G-d's own children? How could he hope to harness divine powers to counter-purpose with the divine?

The Divine Transcendence
We believe that G-d is intrinsically good and thus concerned with the good behavior and moral conduct of humanity; that he rewards good behavior and punishes bad.

This is certainly true on one level, but it cannot be true on all levels. G-d, we believe, transcends all limitations and is free of all constraints--even the constraints of moral principles. He is indefinable and cannot be confined to any set of rules. If he enunciates principles of morality, he does so by choice; absolutely free choice.

These principles cannot constrain G-d even after he chose to establish them. He was free to choose them when he did, and he continues to be free to reject them. Principles that constrain their subject must, by definition, precede their subject; an inconceivable notion when applied to G-d.

To us, the principles of morality are incontrovertible. Our conception of human life is governed by these principles. Murder will, to our minds, always be wrong and charity will always be right. This is because we were created in a world governed by these principles.
To G-d, who precedes the principles of morality, they are not ironclad. So long as G-d chooses to bind himself to them, the principles remain in place. Should he ever choose to disassociate from them, the principles would cease to exist. In other words, the principles that form the bedrock of society are not absolute; they are contingent upon divine choice.

(We have never known G-d to change his mind. We believe that G-d is, in fact, unchanging.. But this is not because his principles are absolute, but because he is absolute. In other words, G-d is not bound by his principles, his principles are bound by him.) [2]

Balaam's Attempt
There must exist on some level a dimension of divinity that is immune to the principles of right and wrong.; a level on which morality is not necessarily more appealing then immorality. A level on which the human experience simply doesn't matter. We can live or die, be honest or deceptive, kind or cruel: G-d wouldn't care. On that level G-d completely transcends the petty workings of our universe. [3]

Fortunately this dimension of divinity doesn't actively associate with the workings of creation. The divine dimension that does reach and govern our world is completely engaged. It is caring and imminent.

Nevertheless should it be possible for us to "access" that rarefied dimension, we would be able to secure divine consent for things that defy morality and thus sow chaos and destruction. [4] On the other hand, should this dimension be accessed for constructive purposes it might also be possible to draw immense, completely undeserved, blessing for humanity. At this level G-d doesn't discriminate between the deserving and undeserving. Both can be cursed and both can be blessed; it simply doesn't matter.

Choosing Jacob
Our sages taught that Moses was the only prophet able to relay G-d's words equivocally. All other prophets introduced their prophecy with the phrase, "So said G-d." Moses could say, "This is the word of G-d." This is because all other prophets were privy to the level of divine "speech," while Moses was able to access the realm of divine "thought." Hence, other prophets could, at best, listen to their prophecy and approximate its true meaning, while Moses could visualize his prophecy to discern its precise meaning. [5]

Moses was the only Jewish prophet to use the term, "this," but non Jews also had a prophet who could use that term--Balaam. [6] This demonstrates that Moses' ability to access the transcendent levels of divine thought was matched by that of Balaam. [7]

Balaam hoped to utilize his gift of prophecy to access the rarefied dimension of the divine that remains unmoved and unbound by his own rules, and thus manipulate the G-d of Israel against his own children. Here he was countered by Moses, who also had access to this rarefied level.

What was Moses' weapon at this cosmic showdown? A truth which runs even deeper than the "transcendent" divine reality which Balaam was reaching for. The prophet Malachi proclaims: "Behold, Esau is a brother to Jacob, yet I love Jacob and detest Esau." [8] The prophet does not speak here of biological brotherhood, for biological brotherhood itself is not sufficient reason to suppose that G-d might love Esau over Jacob.

Rather, prophet refers to a dimension of the divine reality in which Jacob and Esau are "brothers" because it is impervious to moral conduct and can possibly accept the immoral Esau over the moral Jacob. A dimension that views "Esau" and "Jacob," despite their differences as equals.

But even at this rarefied level, the prophet attests, "yet I love Jacob"--in this place, too, - G-d chooses Jacob.

This choice was revealed at Mount Sinai, when G-d expressed a choice of Israel that permeates the highest levels of his essence, even the rarefied dimension that hitherto remained impervious to Jacob in relation to Esau.

Balaam challenged Moses on the pre-Sinai system, hoping to turn G-d against his own children. Moses opposed him on the post-Sinai system, which actualized the truth that even on the most transcendent level Jacob would always be the favorite son. Not necessarily because his conduct is better, but because he is the chosen one. [9]

Footnotes:
1. According to the Talmud (Sanhedrin 105b), Balaam's gift was an uncanny ability to discern the moment of divine wrath. He would coincide his curse against his enemies with that unique moment when they were the object of G-d's displeasure, and thus G-d's against his victims.
2. In the words of the Midrash, "When the world was first created, G-d considered the deeds of the righteous and the deeds of the wicked, and we didn't know which he preferred. When we read that G-d saw the light and saw that it was good' (Genesis 1:4) we know that he preferred the deeds of the righteous." (Midrash Rabbah, Bereishit 2:5. For a deeper understanding see Midrash Tanchuma, Vayeshev 4).
3. Cf. Job 35:6-7: "If you have sinned what have you done against him? If your crimes accumulate what have you done to him? If you are righteous what have you given him and what can he possibly receive from your hand?"
4. See Sefer HaMaamarim 5704 (Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak of Lubavitch, 1880-1950) p. 91.
5. For a fuller explanation of the notion of "divine thought" see Sefer HaMaamarim 5701 p.133 and 145.
6. Numbers 23:1.
7. An insightful explanation is offered by Rabbi Chaim of Volozhin (1749-1821), cited by Torah Temimah (R. Baruch HaLevi Epstein, Pinsk, 1860-1941) on Deuteronomy 34:10. The eagle and the bat are both aware of
the precise moment the sun rises. The eagle knows it so he can rise and engage the new day. The bat knows it because it is his cue to go to sleep. The eagle enjoys the sunshine while the bat sleeps the day away. The bat prowls in the dark while the eagle sleeps peacefully through the night. Likewise, Moses and Balaam knew the precise moments of divine favor and wrath. Moses arose at that moment to pray for the world, Balaam would lay low at that moment. Balaam, like the bat, waited for the night and cursed his enemies at the moment of divine wrath. (See Footnote #2).
8. Malachi 1:3.
9. This essay is based on commentary of Kedushat Levi (Rabbi Levi Yitzhak of Berdichev, 1740-1810) to Numbers 22:4. See also the Lubavitcher Rebbe's Likutei Sichot, vol. XI, p. 5, and Sefer HaMaamarim Melukat, vol. IV, p. 266.


- Rabbi Lazer Gurkow is spiritual leader of congregation Beth Tefilah in London, Ontario. He has lectured extensively on a variety of Jewish topics, and his articles have appeared in many print and online publications. For more on Rabbi Gurkow and his wrtings, visit http://www.innerstream.ca/

ORIGINAL POST



PLEASE CLICK HERE TO JBLOG ME

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Standing By Your Sex-Hobbyist -Man; Because It's Your Fault Too?