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[personal profile] cellio
I'm reading torah this week. The parsha is Chukat, and I'm reading the part where the people demand water, God tells Moshe and Aharon to speak to a rock so that it will bring forth water, they hit it instead (and get water), and God says "ok, no entering Israel for you!".

We had an inconclusive discussion of this topic some months ago at our torah study. What was the real sin? These two have made other mistakes, but only this one is severe enough that God denies them entry into the land as punishment. In fact, Aharon dies soon after (in this parsha). It's not a good week for the family, actually -- Aharon dies, Moshe is told he'll die before they reach the land, and Miriam died at the beginning of the parsha (leading to the water problem).

So why was this particular action so damning? One possibility is that Moshe completely lost his temper in this episode; while people are allowed to have bad days, we hold our leaders to higher standards. Some of the traditional commentaries seem to agree with this view, but I'm not convinced. It wouldn't be the only time Moshe -- or a patriarch, for that matter -- lost his temper.

One idea that came up in our torah study (I don't know if it's supported in traditional commentaries) is that, essentially, if it wasn't this it would have been something elese. Moshe couldn't be allowed to lead the people into the land because he was already a powerful leader (the only prophet to see God face to face) and it was critically important for the people that someone else lead them into the land so they'd understand that others could. So it was a given that Moshe wouldn't lead them in, and we're dickering over the details. It's consistent with the results of the spies incident in Sh'lach L'cha where we're told that none of the current generation (save Caleb and Yehoshua) will enter the land; that presumably meant Moshe and Aharon too. But if that's the case, no act calling for punishment was necessary.

Some commentaries hold that the sin was Moshe and Aharon interfering with a miracle. If they had spoken to the rock as instructed and water had poured out, that clearly would have been a miracle in the eyes of the people. But instead, Moshe hit the rock and water came out; maybe he just got lucky and hit a spring. That might not look like a miracle, and the people needed a miracle. This idea has some appeal, but it still doesn't feel quite right to me. God doesn't need us to make miracles happen, so even if Moshe and Aharon didn't follow orders, God could have given the people a (different) miracle if so inclined.

So I'm still struggling a bit with the sin here, but I've got a couple more days before I need to talk about it. :-) Input is welcome, of course.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-07-07 02:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sue-n-julia.livejournal.com
The take my pastor gave us when I was a teen was that they were punished for defying God. And defiance was the worst sin they could commit.

S

(no subject)

Date: 2005-07-07 02:38 am (UTC)
geekosaur: spiral galaxy (galaxy)
From: [personal profile] geekosaur
IIRC quite a few commentaries take the tack that Moshe's and Aharon's fates had been sealed much earlier, and Hashem only informed them after their failure at Meribah. Most common is indeed that Aharon's fate was sealed for his part in the making of the Golden Calf. For Moshe, it seems like everyone's got a different idea of what early failure might have led to it, examining his every action with a microscope. I think one even claims it's because of his killing the Egyptian overseer at the beginning of Exodus.

Interestingly, the Plaut commentary seems to have the view that Moshe showed that he was past his prime when he complained to Hashem about how the people were too much for him to deal with in Sh'lach-L'cha, thereby making it necessary that someone younger and stronger lead the people into Canaan.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-07-09 12:19 am (UTC)
geekosaur: orange tabby with head canted 90 degrees, giving impression of "maybe it'll make more sense if I look at it this way?" (Default)
From: [personal profile] geekosaur
Rather a bit late at this point, but...
http://www.vbm-torah.org/friday.htm
(until they update it which will be Monday or Tuesday of next week)

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