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From: office@etzion.org.il
To: yhe-intparsha@vbm-torah.org
Subject: INTPARSHA61 -38: Parashat Matot-Masei
YESHIVAT HAR ETZION
ISRAEL KOSCHITZKY VIRTUAL BEIT MIDRASH (VBM)
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INTRODUCTION TO PARASHAT HASHAVUA
PARASHAT MATOT MASEI
The Commandment to Settle the Land
By Rav Michael Hattin
Introduction
The double Parasha of Matot-Masei concludes the Book
of BeMidbar. The first section of Matot begins with a
detailed description of laws relating to vows, and then
continues with an account of the battle against Midian
and its aftermath. It concludes with the unexpected
request of the tribes of Reuven, Gad and half of Menashe
to remain east of the Jordan in order to settle the
recently conquered territory of the Amorite kings. The
parasha of Masei opens with a listing of the people's
journeys through the wilderness, and goes on to delineate
the territory of the Land of Israel. It then describes
the institution of Levitical cities, introduces the
legislation concerning the cities of refuge, and
concludes with an account of the daughters of Zelofchad
marrying within their own tribe. As in the last few
parashiyot, much of this lengthy double section's
attention pivots around the point of the people's
imminent entry into the Land.
The Vision of the Land
In many ways, it would not be an exaggeration to
suggest that the entire thrust of the Torah's trajectory
is directed towards the Land of Canaan. Recall that the
Patriarchal accounts began with God's sudden charge to
Avraham to leave his Mesopotamian birthplace and to
journey westwards to 'the land that I will show you.'
The backdrop against which the narratives of the Book of
Bereishit subsequently unfold is that land. The
protagonists, the founders of the people of Israel, live
their lives on its soil and, when forced to leave it,
longingly dream of their return.
The oppressiveness of exile and the promise of
redemption that colors much of the Book of Shemot is
again bound up with the concept of the land. God's oath
to redeem His people, His revelation to them of His law
at Sinai, and the providential care with which He guides
them as they take their first halting steps as a free,
conscious nation are in order to soon bring them to the
land, a 'land flowing with milk and honey.'
The people remain at Sinai for some time. There they learn the precious lessons of faith, of trust, and of attentiveness to a higher moral law and a more exalted calling. But the intent of their wilderness stay, described in the Book of VaYikra, is to prepare them for a new life as a sovereign nation in their own land. The Torah was never meant to be studied as a merely conceptual exercise, but rather to be experienced and lived out as a comprehensive and concrete reality.
Finally, with the Book of BeMidbar, the tangible
preparations necessary in order for the people to travel
towards the land and to enter it are undertaken. The
people are counted and organized and the journey begins.
Although terribly delayed by the episode of the Spies,
that initial goal remains fixed on the horizon, to be
attempted again some thirty-eight years later. As the
Book concludes, the people stand at the very gates of the
land, patiently encamped at the Plains of Moav and
awaiting the directive to go forwards.
The Book of Devarim, constituting Moshe's final
words of instruction, exhortation and encouragement,
expresses a striking series of admonitions and warnings
to the people. The Torah's general polemic against
idolatry is spelled out in this Book with unusual
forcefulness, as the blandishments of the Canaanites are
roundly and repeatedly condemned. At the same time, the
praise of the land, its beauty and fertility, are
frequently described. Again and again, Moshe's personal
and poignant desire to cross the Jordan is seamlessly
linked with his loftier vision of Israel's national
destiny that is soon to unfold.
The Commandment to Settle the Land
This week, we shall look at the Torah's command to settle the land, particularly as expressed in the eloquent words of the Ramban (13th century, Spain). It is indeed instructive to note that the Ramban himself, in a move highly unusual for his time and place, settled in Israel towards the end of his life, taking up residence in Jerusalem. After successfully defending his faith and his people at the celebrated dispute with the Dominican Friars held before King James of Aragon at Barcelona in 1263, Ramban was forced into exile from Spain and arrived in Israel in 1267. There he remained until his death in 1270.
"God spoke to Moshe at the Plains of Moav, at the
Jordan across from Yericho saying: 'Speak to Bnei
Yisrael and say to them: you are passing over the
Jordan and entering the land of Canaan. You shall
drive out the inhabitants of the land from before
you, and destroy all of their shrines. Demolish
their idolatrous images and obliterate their high
places of worship. Drive out the inhabitants of the
land and settle it, for I have given the land to you
to as an inheritance. Divide the land by lot
according to your families, so that the numerous
receive a larger portion and the few receive less.
It shall be theirs according to the lot, by their
tribes they shall inherit it. If you fail to drive
out the inhabitants of the land from before you,
then those that you allow to remain shall be as
thorns in your eyes and thistles in your sides, for
they shall pain you in the land upon which you shall
dwell. That which I contemplated to do to them, I
shall do to you instead.'" (BeMidbar 33:50-56).
The Peril of Succumbing to Idolatry
Although the above passage seems unduly harsh, its tone of wariness must be understood against the background of Canaanite culture. Israel was the ONLY nation of antiquity to espouse a vision of a Single, Absolute God Whose primary will was to guide humanity towards moral and ethical behavior. The conflict with the Canaanites was not a clash over territory, resources, or trade routes, but rather over values. The corrupt and corrosive effects of idolatry had to be extirpated in order for the nation of Israel to have any hope of fulfilling its more exalted mission in the world. Indeed, the Five Books of Moses were about the ongoing internal struggle of Israel to live by the word of God, and to embrace His commands. The remainder of the Tanakh, however, the flurry of books composed after the entry into the land, were almost without exception about the external struggle of the people to resist the siren call of idolatry, to reject the attractiveness of serving many gods who made no moral or ethical demands and who could be appeased by empty rituals and murderous rites. We moderns, living in a world that has largely abandoned polytheism and its moral equivocation, can scarcely imagine the national struggle waged by ancient Israel - often reluctantly and always alone! - against every other surrounding people.
The Torah's warning concerning the 'remaining'
inhabitants is a foreshadowing of what may transpire, for
the eyes blinded by thorns "cannot see nor understand, so
that you will be easily taught to follow their
abominations and to serve their gods.straying from Me."
(commentary of the Ramban, 33:53). God's admonition,
'that which I contemplated to do to them, I shall do to
you instead.,' is a veiled reference to exile, for if the
people of Israel fail to supplant Canaanite civwith a
more just and upright society, then their God-given
rights to the land will be forfeit, and their fate will
be no different than that of the inhabitants that they
are commanded to drive out. Again, this constitutes a
clear indication that Israel's deed to Canaan is not a
function of genetic superiority or of military dominance,
but is rather a conditional form of ownership that can
only be guaranteed by ongoing adherence to God's word.
The Commentary of the Ramban
Bearing the above in mind, we shall now turn to the
Ramban's comments concerning the Torah's injunction to
settle the land. "Drive out the inhabitants of the land
and settle it, for I have given the land to you to as an
inheritance": 'In my opinion, these words constitute a
positive commandment, for they are enjoined to dwell in
the land and to inherit it, for He has given it to them,
and they must not reject God's inheritance. If they
would instead go to conquer the land of Shinar or the
land of Assyria with intent to settle there, they would
abrogate God's command. The hyperbolic expressions of
our Sages concerning the mitzva to dwell in the Land of
Israel and not to leave it.are derived form here, for
this verse constitutes a positive command that the Torah
repeats elsewhere' (commentary to 33:53).
Here, the Ramban explains that the people of Israel
are commanded to dwell in their land and not to leave it,
for doing so would constitute an act of rejection.
Apparently, the directive to found a nation loyal to
God's laws involves more than simply being sovereign over
a particular territory. The Land of Israel itself is
necessary in order to accomplish the goal. Ramban uses
even more emphatic language in his critical remarks on Maimonide's 'Book of the Commandments,' where he attacks
the latter's failure to include the mitzva of settling
the Land in his tally of the 613 commands:
"The fourth (omission of the Rambam) is the command to inherit the land that God gave to our ancestors Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaacov, and not to allow it to be in the possession of another nation, nor to allow it to remain desolate.and it is a mitzva for all generations. Our Sages speak in astonishing tones concerning this commandment, for they say that 'whosoever leaves the land to dwell outside of it ought be regarded as one who worships idols' (Talmud Ketubot 110b).therefore, this is a positive commandment forever that obligates each individual, even during the time of Exile.the Sifre adds: 'when Rabbi Yehuda ben Betayra, Rabbi Matya ben Cheresh, Rabbi Chananya nephew of Rabbi Yehoshua and Rabbi Natan had to leave Eretz Yisrael, they journeyed as far as Palatia. They remembered Eretz Yisrael and began to cry, rending their garments. They recalled the verse 'you shall inherit it and dwell in it and observe the laws.' They concluded 'dwelling in Eretz Yisrael is equivalent to all of the other mitzvot!'" (Hasagot HaRamban, Mitzvat Asei 4).
As the Ramban suggests, dwelling in the land is, in
his view, a prerequisite for Bnei Yisrael being
successful in their task of nation building. Autonomy
over another land is insufficient. This implies that the
Torah is not only a comprehensive way of life that
ideally encompasses the national framework, in addition
to impacting upon the individual and the community. If
that were so, then there should be no objection to the
people of Israel exercising national rule over a
different land, and there instituting the Torah's
directives. Rather, the unique quality of the land, its
special spiritual status as a vertex in material space
imbued with the experience of the Divine, is that which
defines its centrality in the Torah's perspective.
The 'Holiness Code' of Sefer VaYikra
Support for the Ramban's thesis can be found in the Book of VaYikra, in the lengthy sections that call upon Israel to be holy and to refrain from immoral and immodest sexual practices. After an exhaustive list of forbidden relationships, the Torah concludes: "Do not become defiled (tiTaMU) by all these things, for the nations that I am driving out before you became defiled by them. The land became defiled, and I was cognizant of its iniquity, and the land vomited out its inhabitants. Therefore, you shall keep my decrees and laws and not perform any of these abominations for such did the people of the land before you and the land became defiled. Let not the land vomit you out should you defile it, as if vomited out the people before you." (VaYikra 18:24-28).
The recurring use of the root 'TaMAi' in this passage, always associated with some sort of spiritual infirmity, coupled with the bold metaphor of the land 'vomiting out' its inhabitants, highlights the unique spiritual characteristics of the land. Those who dwell in it, be they Canaanite or Israelite, must live up to its more stringent demands or else invite exile from it. The driving out of the Canaanites that the Torah invariably connects with the command to settle the land is thus recast as the natural consequence of their incorrigible corruption, rather than implying a harsh directive to expel indigenous peoples in order to repossess their land. With unparalleled boldness, the Torah announces in our Parasha that the fate of the Israelites, God's own, will too be a function of their conduct, and that the privilege of dwelling in the land can be withdrawn!
Ramban's Commentary on VaYikra
In a lengthy essay on the above verses, the Ramban
explores the unique attributes of the land, suggesting
that God exercises a more profound and intimate degree of
providence over its borders. Concluding his remarks, he
states that the 'people of Canaan were not the only ones
guilty of these crimes, for the passage explicitly
charges the Egyptians with similar conduct!
Nevertheless, the land of Egypt was not expected to vomit
out its people, nor any other land to expel its
inhabitants, for the matter is completely a function of
the exalted state and sanctity of Eretz Yisrael."
(commentary to VaYikra 18:25, end).
For the Ramban, dwelling in the land of Israel is a special privilege as well as a great responsibility. Securing its borders is a Divine command, but it is a command that must be associated with a commitment to live an exemplary national and individual life. The promise of redemption that has sustained us for so long is predicated upon a vision of a better world, a more just and moral society, and a sensitivity to God's presence. The land of Israel is the linchpin of this vision, the necessary environment for it to unfold, but is not an end unto itself. Physical redemption must be followed by spiritual redemption, or else it remains a hollow illusion.
Shabbat Shalom
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