PARASHAT EKEV
MOSHEH'S SHIUR, PART II
by Yitzchak Etshalom
I
MOSHEH'S "SHIUR" CONTINUES...
As noted in the last two shiurim, Sefer D'varim is made up of three sections:
Chapters 1-11: Historical Recitation and Exhortation
Chapters 12-26: Laws
Chapters 27-33: Covenant and Blessing
In last week's shiur, we discussed the three lessons (and one significant
interruption) which comprise the bulk of Parashat Va'et'hanan and form the first
half of the "exhortative" component of Mosheh Rabbenu's speech. In that
presentation, I argued that those three lessons are an integrated and
"spiraling" educational experience, culminating in a description of the ideal
relationship with God.
As we will soon discover, the "shiur" (instruction) which commences near the
beginning of Parashat Va'et'hanan (D'varim 4:1) does not conclude with the
climactic statement "Sh'ma Yisra'el" which "headlines" the final lesson; indeed,
the shiur continues until the end of Parashat Ekev (11:21).
In order to understand the rest of Mosheh's "shiur", we will build on last
week's presentation. First, a brief recap is in order.
II
A BRIEF RECAP
In last week's discussion, I suggested that each new component of Mosheh's
"shiur" is marked by the introductory phrase "Sh'ma Yisra'el" (or "Yisra'el
Sh'ma").
This phrase, found (in inverted form) at 4:1, introduces the first lesson: The
nature of God and His incorporeality.
The same phrase, at 5:1, introduces the repetition of the Decalogue and,
significantly, the story behind Mosheh's assuming the role of lawgiver. These
two lessons are intertwined and somewhat interdependent, as each utilizes the
national experience at Sinai as the foundation for the lesson.
"Sh'ma Yisra'el" appears a final time (in Va'et'hanan), at 6:4, in introducing
our ideal relationship with God - "You shall love YHVH your God...".
In analyzing these three lessons, we noted the strange interruption (4:41-49) of
the narrative of Mosheh's designation of the three (not-yet-functional) cities
of refuge on the East Bank. I suggested that the basic lesson of the Arei
Miklat - that intent plays a critical role in the performance of Mitzvot -
was a valuable insight into the "inner workings" of the Torah. Mosheh, as the
consummate teacher, interrupted his lesson to demonstrate a law which
exemplifies the value of intent and attitude as vehicles for moral perfection.
Last week's discussion gave the impression that the "famous" "Sh'ma Yisra'el"
(6:4) was the beginning of the final lesson in Mosheh's "shiur". As we will see
further on, there are some more lessons that make up this "shiur"- and they take
us nearly to the end of Parashat Ekev.
III
THE STRUCTURE OF OUR PARASHA
Parashat Ekev is made up of four distinct sections:
- 7:12-8:20 - the "Ekev" section (another interruption between lessons)
- 9:1-10:11 - the fourth lesson
- 10:12-11:12 - the fifth lesson
- 11:13-21 is a summary of the lessons (this section, along with the
"epilogue" of our Parashah, 11:22-25 will not be addressed in this discussion.)
Although we will devote some space to the fourth and fifth lessons - including
an explanation of how these divisions are evidenced in the text - the focus of
this presentation will be on the "Ekev" interruption which begins our Parashah.
EVIDENCE FOR THE DIVISIONS
The division charted above could certainly be challenged - it does not break
down by chapters or by Parashiot (paragraphs) - what evidence is there for the
existence of this structure?
The easiest component to identify is the fourth lesson. Just as the first three
lessons (in Parashat Va'Et'hanan) began with "Sh'ma Yisra'el" (or "Yisra'el
Sh'ma"), so does the fourth lesson: "Sh'ma Yisra'el..."
The fifth (and final) lesson in this series is also relatively easy to identify.
Recall that the first lesson, beginning in D'varim 4:1, was introduced with the
phrase "V'Atah Yisra'el Sh'ma..." - "And now, Yisra'el, pay heed...". The
introductory phrase, "V'atah Yisra'el", is only found in two places in the Torah
- at the beginning of Chapter 4 in D'varim and at D'varim 10:12. Although the
word "Sh'ma" is missing (an omission which will be explained anon), this phrase
which is otherwise a hapax legomenon [unmatched phrase in the T'nakh] seems to
be a clear indicator of a new lesson being introduced.
III
LESSONS FOUR AND FIVE
Before demonstrating the rest of the "structure", a word about these two
lessons. It isn't merely the introductory phrases which indicate the beginning
of a new lesson and, therefore, a separate component in the Parashah. The
content and context of each section is independent in such a way as to be a
clearly marked-off unit. Let's examine them together:
The unit beginning with 9:1 is a rather long speech (40 verses, several of which
are extraordinary long) which is Mosheh's retelling of the sin of the Golden
Calf and its aftermath. Although it includes two tangential verses (10:8-9)
about the separation and sanctification of the Levi'im (marked off by the
introductory "Ba'eit Hahee", compare 10:8 with 10:1), this is a part and parcel
of the Golden Calf episode as it is the loyalty of the Levi'im which earned them
their holy status (see Sh'mot 32:26).
Why is this unit here; i.e. what is Mosheh's purpose in relating this heinous
crime within the context of this "shiur"?
In last week's shiur, I suggested that the entire purpose of Mosheh's shiur was
to act as "shadchan" (matchmaker) between the B'nei Yisra'el and HaKadosh Barukh
Hu. This is, quintessentially, the job of a Rebbi - to bring his students closer
to God. As such, Mosheh began with a lesson about the nature of the Divine,
using the Sinai experience to point out what their parents saw and what they did
not see (physical images etc.). The second lesson justified Mosheh's role as
lawgiver. The third lesson describes the ideal relationship between the people
and God (loving God etc.). Consider what's "missing" from the formula: If I am
interested in entering into a relationship with someone, be it a business
partnership, an educational endeavor or what have you, I need to know several
things. I must know as much as possible about the potential partner (lesson #1);
I'll need to know the medium of the relationship (lesson #2 - Torah [given via
Mosheh] is the medium of our relationship with God) and the ideal of that rel
ationship (lesson #3). There is, of course, one more piece to the puzzle: Who am
I? For me to successfully relate to another, I need to know something about my
own nature, tendencies, strengths and weaknesses etc.; this knowledge is as
critical (if not more so) than my knowledge about the potential partner.
Similarly, the people had been informed about God - but needed to be reminded
about how they had previously behaved in their relationship with God. Therefore,
Mosheh must incorporate the story of the Golden Calf into his "shiur" which is
aimed at bringing the B'nei Yisra'el into a full and complete relationship with
God.
The final lesson is also a clear and independent unit. Although the opening
formula lacks the familiar keyword "Sh'ma", there is good reason for that
omission. Unlike the first four lessons, in which Mosheh is instructing them
with information which is indispensable for the success of their national
mission, the final lesson turns that instruction on its head and puts the B'nei
Yisra'el in the "driver's seat". Now, instead of Mosheh telling them what they
must do, he is inviting them to move beyond that which is demanded and
commanded:
"And now, Yisra'el, what does YHVH your God ask of you, but to fear YHVH your
God, to walk in all His ways, and to love Him, and to serve YHVH your God with
all your heart and with all your soul, To keep the commandments of YHVH, and His
statutes, which I command you this day for your good?... Circumcise therefore
the foreskin of your heart, and be no more stiffnecked...You shall fear YHVH
your God; Him shall you serve, and to Him shall you hold fast, and swear by His
Name." (D'varim 10:12-20)
Until now, the B'nei Yisra'el were given prescriptions and proscriptions -
commands and limitations. Although there had been allusions to a greater
picture, that had never been laid out in such idealistic detail, nor presented
as a challenge in place of a command.
This fifth lesson is, indeed, a culmination of the "shiur", as it goes beyond
the ideal relationship outlined in the third lesson ("Sh'ma...v'Ahavta...").
More than the command to internalize our love for God completely ("...with all
of your heart..."), this final lesson invites us to rise above our base natures
("...circumcise the foreskin of your heart...") in terminology that is otherwise
reserved for eschatological visions (e.g. D'varim 30:6, Yehezqe'el 36:26).
Although this final lesson includes the three verses about the Land (11:10-12),
we will examine these from another perspective at the end of this presentation.
IV
THE "EKEV" INTERRUPTION
As noted above, the first part of our Parashah (7:12-8:20) is something of an
interruption - and it's identity as an independent and complete section is quite
easy to see.
As we have discussed in earlier shiurim, the Torah utilizes all sorts of
allusions, complicated structures and literary techniques to impart its
messages. It is fundamental to the methodology of our classical interpretive
tradition that uncommon words, especially when appearing in significant
locations within a given text, have been deliberately placed there by the Author
in order to catch our attention. This methodology is particularly helpful when
that uncommon word shows up in a seemingly unrelated context - it is often the
case that the Torah is creating an association between the two cases in order to
create an "information interface" between the two. In Halakhic exegesis, this
methodology is known as "Gezerah Shavah"; however, our Rabbis did not limit its
use to that discipline (see e.g. Beresheet Rabbah 44:14, Sh'mot Rabbah 9:7).
The second word (and key word) of our Parashah is an extremely rare one in the
Torah. The word Ekev, commonly translated as "on account of" or "since",
appears in only five locations in the Humash. Not only does our Parashah begin
with an uncommon word - but one of the other four occurences of that word comes
at 8:20 - "...Ekev lo Tish'm'un..." Taking into account the common style of
"bookending" which the Torah employs (see our discussion on Parashiot Matot
-Mas'ei) and the use of this all-too-rare word at both bookends, it is fairly
clear that 7:12-8:20 have the potential of being an independent and self
-contained unit.
As mentioned, this "structural analysis" only leaves us with a potentially
unified section; we have yet to prove that the content and theme fit that bill.
V
ANALYZING THE "EKEV" SECTION
Note that the Ekev section is broken up into three "open" paragraphs ("parashiot
p'tuhot" - you can see this if you follow with a Tanakh, such as Koren, which
breaks up paragraphs where there are "parashah" breaks):
7:12-26 - "v'Haya Ekev Tish'm'un..."
8:1-18 - "Kol haMitzvah..."
8:19-20 - "v'Haya Im Shakhoah Tishkah..."
The final mini-paragraph serves an obvious purpose. All of the blessings which
are promised in the first 33 verses of this section will be reversed if the
people do the opposite of the stated condition: "v'Haya Ekev Tish'm'un...". If
you obey the Mitzvot, God will grant you security in the Land, success in
conquest etc. The final two verses leave us without a "pareve" middle ground -
if we forget God and do not listen ("...Ekev LO Tish'm'un...") then we will be
destroyed.
What are we to make of the first two paragraphs, these 33 verses of condition
and blessing?
In order to understand the impact of the "Ekev message" - and the reason it is
divided into two separate parashiot - let's take a careful look at the two
sections.
Although both 7:12-26 and 8:1-18 promise us a successful entry into the Land and
no lack of material bounty if we obey God and remember His kindnesses, the focus
is slightly different in each section.
The first section begins with "v'Hayah Ekev Tish'm'un eit haMishpatim
ha'Eleh..." - "If you heed these Mishpatim...". However one chooses to
translate the various words for Law - "Eduyot", "Hukkim" etc., "Mishpatim"
almost certainly belong to the realm of civil law and social interaction (e.g.
Sh'mot 21:1).
Conversely, the second section declares its emphasis right away: "Kol
haMitzvah..." Although the word "Mitzvah" is usually considered a generic term
for all commandments, in the context of the first third of D'varim it seems to
take on a unique meaning: Those actions which reflect and enhance our close
relationship with God. (See, e.g. D'varim 6:1, 11:22 - see also 30:11)
In the first section, we are told to remember the Exodus - that is, the very
fact of our miraculous exit from Egypt.
In the second section, we are also told to remember the Exodus - but here,
again, the emphasis shifts. We are told to remember:
"Remember the long way that YHVH your God has led you these forty years in the
wilderness, in order to humble you, testing you to know what was in your heart,
whether or not you would keep his Mitzvot. He humbled you by letting you hunger,
then by feeding you with manna, with which neither you nor your ancestors were
acquainted, in order to make you understand that one does not live by bread
alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of YHVH. The clothes on your
back did not wear out and your feet did not swell these forty years...then do
not exalt yourself, forgetting YHVH your God, who brought you out of the land of
Egypt, out of the house of slavery, who led you through the great and terrible
wilderness, an arid wasteland with poisonous snakes and scorpions. He made water
flow for you from flint rock, and fed you in the wilderness with manna that your
ancestors did not know, to humble you and to test you, and in the end to do you
good." (8:2-16)
As opposed to the actual liberation that we are told to recall in the first
section, it is the fact of God sustaining us throughout the desert for forty
years which is the topic of remembrance in the second section.
Finally, note how the Land is described in each paragraph.
In the first section, the emphasis is on the conquerability of the Land:
"Moreover, YHVH your God will send the pestilence against them, until even the
survivors and the fugitives are destroyed. Have no dread of them, for YHVH your
God, who is present with you, is a great and awesome God. YHVH your God will
clear away these nations before you little by little; you will not be able to
make a quick end of them, otherwise the wild animals would become too numerous
for you. But YHVH your God will give them over to you, and throw them into
great panic, until they are destroyed. He will hand their kings over to you and
you shall blot out their name from under heaven; no one will be able to stand
against you, until you have destroyed them." (7:20-24)
Contradistinctively, the second paragraph ignores the military concerns
regarding the Land and instead describes its beauty and bounty:
"For YHVH your God is bringing you into a good land, a land with flowing streams,
with springs and underground waters welling up in valleys and hills, a land of
wheat and barley, of vines and fig trees and pomegranates, a land of olive trees
and honey, a land where you may eat bread without scarcity, where you will lack
nothing, a land whose stones are iron and from whose hills you may mine copper.
You shall eat your fill and bless YHVH your God for the good land that he has
given you." (8:7-10)
The three salient differences between these sections can be summed up in this
chart:
Section Laws The Land Remembrance
7:12-26 Mishpatim Conquerable Exodus
8:1-18 Mitzvot Beautiful, Sustaining 40 years in the desert
VI
THE AVRAHAM CONNECTION
As mentioned above, the keyword "Ekev" is extremely rare in the Torah.
Understanding the implications of its use here will help us make sense of the
entire Ekev section.
Besides the two occurences here and one (which will be discussed below) in
Bamidbar, the only two instances of "Ekev" in the Torah are found within the
Avraham narratives.
When Avraham demonstrates his complete devotion to God on Mount Moriah, he was
given the most complete blessing of his life:
The angel of YHVH called to Avraham a second time from heaven, and said, "By
Myself I have sworn, says YHVH: Because you have done this, and have not
withheld your son, your only son, I will indeed bless you, and I will make your
offspring as numerous as the stars of heaven and as the sand that is on the
seashore. And your offspring shall possess the gate of their enemies, and by
your offspring shall all the nations of the earth gain blessing for themselves,
because ("Ekev") you have obeyed My voice." (B'resheet 22:15-18)
Later on, when Yitzhak considers following in his father's footsteps and
descending to Egypt to escape the famine plaguing K'na'an, we are told:
Now there was a famine in the land, besides the former famine that had occurred
in the days of Avraham. And Yitzhak went to Gerar, to King Abimelech of the
Philistines. YHVH appeared to Yitzhak and said, "Do not go down to Egypt; settle
in the land that I shall show you. Reside in this land as an alien, and I will
be with you, and will bless you; for to you and to your descendants I will give
all these lands, and I will fulfill the oath that I swore to your father
Avraham. I will make your offspring as numerous as the stars of heaven, and will
give to your offspring all these lands; and all the nations of the earth shall
gain blessing for themselves through your offspring, because ("Ekev") Avraham
obeyed My voice and kept My charge, My commandments, My statutes, and My laws."
(B'resheet 26:1-5).
It must certainly be clear to all members of Mosheh Rabbenu's audience that this
rare word, opening and closing this section of his "shiur", is intended to
create an Avraham-assocation for us. But what is that association?
Given these two selections, we would assume that Avraham's greatness lay chiefly
in his total obedience to God and the spiritual heights he achieved. The scene
at the Akeda is nothing if not the quintessence of devotional worship.
We are, however, provided another perspective of Avraham's stature which gives
us a broader view of his greatness:
YHVH said, "Shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do, seeing that Abraham
shall become a great and mighty nation, and all the nations of the earth shall
be blessed in him? No, for I have chosen him, that he may charge his children
and his household after him to keep the way of YHVH by doing righteousness and
justice; so that YHVH may bring about for Abraham what he has promised him."
(B'resheet 18:17-19)
As much as Avraham is a devotional worshipper, he is (perhaps even more) a man
whose very soul speaks of righteousness, whose being is bound up with the
pursuit of justice. Witness his negotiations with God regarding the fate of the
evil cities of S'dom (ibid. 18:23-32).
The "Ekev" section in our Parashah is placed here to remind us of the dual
nature of Avraham's distinction: Lonely Man of Faith and Civic Man of Justice.
(Avraham's reputation is not only based on his success in both of these areas of
moral growth - but also his ability to synthesize them into one persona.)
Subsequent to teaching us about our ideal relationship with God (at the end of
Parashat Va'et'hanan) and prior to reminding us of our potential for infidelity
(9:1-10:11), Mosheh Rabbenu interjects a lesson which is grounded in our
awareness of our earliest roots and the spiritual and ethical heights which our
first Patriarch scaled.
Before addressing the dual messages of the "Ekev" section, we should briefly
examine the one remaining occurrence of "Ekev" in the Torah:
"...nevertheless, as I live, and as all the earth shall be filled with the glory
of YHVH, none of the people who have seen My glory and the signs that I did in
Egypt and in the wilderness, and yet have tested Me these ten times and have not
obeyed My voice, shall see the land that I swore to give to their ancestors;
none of those who despised Me shall see it. But My servant Kalev, because
("Ekev") he has a different spirit and has followed Me wholeheartedly, I will
bring into the land into which he went, and his descendants shall possess it."
(Bamidbar 14:21-24)
As we see throughout the story of the scouts, Kalev was willing to stand up to
their derogation of the Land and publicly face his ten blasphemous colleagues.
This is very much in the spirit of Avraham, who is called Avram ha'Ivri
(B'resheet 14:13). He is given that name specifically within the context of his
war against the four kings and our Rabbis explain the meaning as follows: The
entire world was one one side (Ever) of the river and he was on the other
side. (B'resheet Rabbah 42:8 - see also Yehoshua 24:2). In other words, it was
Avraham's willingness to stand up against anyone and everyone to defend and
promote monotheism and its attendant value system which earned him the title
Ivri.
This is exactly the spirit which moved Kalev to stand up to the ten detractors
of Eretz Yisra'e. The Torah uses the key word "Ekev" in his praise to link him
to the valor of Avraham. [Might there be a connection here with Kalev's visit
to Hevron and the Rabbinic tradition that he went to pray at Avraham's tomb?]
VII
MISHPATIM AND MITZVOT
We can now revisit our "Ekev" section and explain the two separate paragraphs
and their significant differences.
Perhaps the most telling distinction between "Mishpatim" and "Mitzvot" lies in
their very nature. Whereas a Mitzvah (in the context of this part of Sefer
D'varim) is an act which is part of a life-long process of spiritual development
and sensitivity, a Mishpat is purely utilitarian and designed to promote the
common weal.
It is abundantly clear why we must not steal, kill etc. and why we must pay
workers on time, return lost items and so on. The extent to which a society is
governed by these norms correlates closely to its material, social and spiritual
well-being.
On the other hand, a person who engages in diligent Torah study, prays with
great focus and generally observes those Mitzvot which fall under the rubric of
"Ahavat Hashem" (Love of God), finds that the development of that relationship
is a slow, arduous process. Each act of devotion is not an end in and of itself;
it is rather a building block towards a closer relationship with haKadosh
Barukh Hu.
In much the same spirit, we can distinguish between the two "remembrances" in
this section. The matter of the Exodus itself, although performed with great
wonders and portents, was essentially a utilitarian act. God desired to bring
the people out of slavery and into their own Land - and that is exactly what He
did.
Conversely, the Mahn (which is the object of remembrance in the second paragraph)
was not a purely pragmatic "gift". The manner in which the B'nei Yisra'el
were sustained throughout their desert sojourn was designed to enhance their
awareness of the Ribbono Shel Olam on an ongoing basis: "In order to teach you
that man does not live on bread alone, but that man may live on anything that
YHVH decrees." (D'varim 8:3)
Note that the first paragraph promises us that if we (1) Remember the Exodus and
(2) observe the Mishpatim, we will be successful in (3) Conquering the Land.
The focus here is purely pragrmatic, following the lead of Avraham's "social
-justice" agenda. (Keep in mind that it is within the context of war that
Avraham earns his title of Ivri).
In the second paragraph, we are told that if we (1a) Remember the Mahn and (2a)
observe the Mitzvot, we will (3) enjoy a beautiful and sustaining Land. Here,
the focus is on the personal development of a relationship, the ongoing process
of becoming more aware of God's role in our lives and the beauty and bounty of
His Land.
VIII
POSTSCRIPT
After completing his shiur, Mosheh adds three verses which describe the Land in
even more glowing terms than those found in the "Ekev" section:
"For the land, which you enter to possess, is not as the land of Egypt, from
where you came out, where you sowed your seed, and watered it with your foot, as
a garden of vegetables; But the land, which you are going over to possess, is a
land of hills and valleys, and drinks water from the rain of the skies; A land
which YHVH your God cares for; the eyes of YHVH your God are always upon it,
from the beginning of the year to the end of the year." (11:10-12)
Beyond the pragmatic promise of conquest, beyond even the aesthetic beauty and
bounty of the Land, we are given an even more powerful insight into the special
place which God has reserved for His people. All of these blessings, including
the development of an ideal relationship with God as outlined in Mosheh
Rabbenu's "shiur", are only possible in that Land which God always watches,
"from the beginning of the year to the end of the year."
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