Torah Tidbits Issue 1374 - 13/06/20

Page 26

RABBI NACHMAN (NEIL) WINKLER PROBING BY Faculty, OU Israel Center THE PROPHETS l

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lthough we generally explain the connection between the haftarah and the weekly parasha, there is little reason to do so this week. The story of Yehoshua’s spies that we read in the haftarah is almost as familiar as the story of Moshe’s spies of whom we read in the parasha and the connection between the two is quite obvious. We have also discussed the contrast between the successful mission carried out by Yehoshua’s agents and the failed mission of Moshe’s agents. Nonetheless, each reading of the text seems to reveal new aspects of each story and, with that, new contrasts between them. Moshe’s spies were charged with the mission of touring the land and bringing back a report of the relative strengths of the enemy. The spies do travel through the land and they do bring back samples of the exceptional fruit found there-just as Moshe had directed them. However, rather than simply reporting the STRENGTHS of the enemies, these men went on to focus of the relative WEAKNESS of Israel. The spies of Yehoshua, however, were charged with the same mission: to scout the land and report back to Yehoshua of what they saw. But they did NOT fulfill that mission! The Rav, Rav Yosef Ber Soloveitchik, makes the point that the two spies spent their time hiding in the house of Rachav and then 26

TORAH TIDBITS / SHELACH 5780

hiding in the mountains before returning to camp. They had NO opportunity to scout the land and, therefore, could not report to Yehoshua anything regarding the people or the land! And so, they did NOT fulfill the mission given to them, “L’chu re’u et ha’aretz…”. The Rav, in his inimitable fashion, explained that, actually, the m’raglim of Yehoshua did accomplish their mission. The spies were tasked to find the vulnerable points in the enemy’s fortifications; they were assigned the task to find the WEAKNESSES of the ENEMY. And this they did in a simple phrase: “V’gam namogu kol yoshevei ha’aretz mipaneinu,” “the inhabitants of the land have ‘melted away’ because of us”. Rav Soloveitchik shared the deepest truth in the words of these spies. They told Yehoshua that the greatest weakness of the enemy is their low morale, their fear, their lack of spirit. An army who does not believe in itself, one that enters a war with the expectation of being defeated, can never win. As he put it: “No fortified wall and no giant can counter a person’s spirit!” And withut that spirit one is doomed to defeat. How interesting it is that Chazal identify one of Yehoshua’s spies as being Kalev, the very one who argued with Moshe’s spies and proclaimed: “Alo na’aleh v’yarashnu otah,” “We can surely go up and conquer


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Torah Tidbits Issue 1374 - 13/06/20 by Anglo Media - Issuu