Shabbat Shalom! In this week’s Torah
portion, we see the continuation of Moses’s final address to the People of
Israel, and in this portion, we see some of Moses’s frustration really coming
out. Moses relays God’s message that the people will be successful in their conquest
of the Holy Land, and then continues on to berate the people for how ungrateful
and unfaithful they have been. Moses, in his role as the voice of God, wishes
to remind the people of how close to destruction they have been countless times
throughout the last forty years and that they have survived because of God’s
protection and often because of Moses’s intercession when God wanted to destroy
the Chosen People as is promised of their foes.
On some level, the promises of
destruction of the people living in the land of Canaan is extremely disturbing,
and even the reminders of close-calls the People of Israel have already
survived is a bit unsettling, if we take for granted that Moses really is
speaking entirely on behalf of God. The Torah certainly shows us God and Moses
often speaking to one another “face-to-face” and we do see the God being quick
to anger at the folly of the Am Yisrael, but this parasha, and the vast
majority of Deuteronomy is Moses speaking and recapping all that he has learned
and experienced these past 40 years. If we understand these words as coming
from Moses, the mortal old man, the context is more comprehensible (which is
not necessarily to say more condonable). Some of the conversations Moses has had
with God may now be muddled in his memory, combined with other, similar
memories, obscured by time and trauma, and now as he stands on the precipice of
his death, faced with these ungrateful, unfaithful people who will be allowed
into the Promised Land that he has led them to but will not get to enter, he
gives his speech with some measure of anger, frustration, and perhaps some self-righteous
egotism to make up for the credit due him that God and the people deny to him.
That is an incredibly human response to the situation, and allows for a more
sympathetic reading for our modern sensibilities.
Toward the end of the Parasha, Moses
says, “And now, O Israel, what does the LORD your God demand of you? Only this:
to revere the LORD your God, to walk only in His paths, to love Him, and to
serve the LORD your God with all your heart and soul,” (10:12). The wording
here recalled to mind the words of the prophet Micah, “He has told you, O man,
what is good, And what the LORD requires of you: Only to do justice And to love
goodness, And to walk modestly with your God,” (6:8) but the lack of mention to
do justice or how to interact with the world kindly was jarring to me, especially
given the rest of the parasha that is so full of harsh words about God’s
willingness to destroy.
However, considering the timeline, we can look at Micah’s words as
a continuation, a more detailed reiteration of his teacher Moses’s words. As medieval
Italian commentator Sforno says on this verse in Deuteronomy, “ ‘And Now Israel’
- seeing that this is the situation as of now, it is up to you to try and
repair the damage caused by your iniquities from here on in. First and
foremost, try and be clear about what it is that the Lord asks of you, expects
of you; ‘What does Your God demand of you’ - God does not ask these things
because God is in need of them, seeing the whole earth and all of the celestial
regions are all belonging to the Divine. ‘Only this: to revere’ - you can do
this by simply realizing God’s greatness.”
To walk in the Divine pathway is to pursue justice, to love a
higher power is to accept the humility of our humanness and the fact that some
things in life are unexplainable and unfair, but to serve the Spirit of the
Universe is to embrace that difficult reality and still work to make the world
better so that a future generation won’t still be struggling with the sorrows,
oppressions, or mistakes of the past. May we all allow ourselves some moments
of frustration when we know our work is going underappreciated, and then, may
we all go on doing the work anyway, to uplift the Holy One of Blessing by
bettering the world left to us, even for those among us we feel may not always
deserve it. Amen and Shabbat Shalom.
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