Parshas MATTOS AND MASEI
MOTIVATIONAL TECHNIQUE
Rabbi Pinchas Avruch
Following the Midianite incitement of the children of Israel to immorality
(at the end of Parshas Balak), G-d praised Pinchas for his zealous response
and called upon Moshe and the Jewish nation to avenge this disgrace to His
name by destroying the Midianite nation in battle (early in Parshas
Pinchas). Early in this week's parsha, "Moshe sent them - a thousand from
each tribe for the legion - them and Pinchas the son of Elazar the Kohen
(priest) to the legion, and the sacred vessels and the trumpets for sounding
in his hand. They massed against Midian, as G-d had commanded Moshe, and
they killed every male." (Bamidbar/Numbers 31:6-7) Usually the Kohen Gadol
(High Priest) accompanied the nation into battle. Why was his son, Pinchas,
sent in his stead?
Rashi offers a number of different rationales. The one who started the
mitzvah (Divinely instructed act) of killing the Midianites - which Pinchas
did when he killed Cozbi - should complete it. Furthermore, he was avenging
the Midianites who sold his maternal forbearer Yosef (Joseph) to the
Egyptians (Beraishis/Genesis 37:36).
Kli Yakar (Rabbi Shlomo Ephraim Lunshitz; c.1550-1619; Rosh Yeshiva/Dean in
Lemberg and Rabbi in Prague; a leader of Polish Jewry) explains Rashi's
answers. Indeed, Pinchas did not avenge the sale of Yosef, per se, as the
Midianites were simply completing their part of a Divine mission, fulfilling
the first stage of G-d's promise to Avraham that his children would be
slaves in a foreign land but would later leave with great wealth
(Beraishis/Genesis 15:13-14). But their mission was only to sell Yosef; they
chose to sell him to Egypt, the most morally deviant culture in the world at
that time. Their recent incitement of the Jewish people to immorality was a
replay of history; the Midianites followed the depraved example of their
grandparents in misleading the Jews to immoral behavior. Thus, Moshe was
confident that Pinchas would have no mercy in completing the Divine charge,
because Pinchas had a perspective on Midian that others did not.
Furthermore, continues Kli Yakar, because Pinchas initiated and was invested
in the mitzvah of crushing the Midianites - although he did not appreciate
at the moment he performed the first act that there would be a
"continuation" - he developed a strength of heart that facilitated the
completion. The Torah has a maxim "mitzvah goreres mitzvah", one mitzvah
spawns another mitzvah - that one mitzvah occasion capitalized upon
generates a sensitivity, a "G-d consciousness", that engenders exploiting
new mitzvah opportunities. If this rule applies to two unrelated mitzvos,
how much more logical is it that starting a mitzvah creates a resolve that
encourages one to finish it, even if that completion was not an option from
the start.
The Torah cautions us, regarding the production of Passover matzos, "And you
shall guard the matzos," (Shemos/Exodus 12:17) that fantastic care must be
exercised to insure they do not become chometz, that speed and alacrity are
essential to make sure they are fully baked and completed before they have
the chance to leaven, which would render them useless. Mechilta derives
homiletically, "And you shall guard the MITZVOS": that any mitzvah which
comes to you must not be allowed to become "chometz". Moshe realized that
this mission of battling Midian required speed and alacrity to make sure
none of the elements of the mitzvah became "chometz", rendering the entire
mitzvah useless. He picked the man with a unique resolve and motivation -
and each of us, in our unique situations, have our own "special
motivations" - who, with his perspective on the Midianite perversion and the
special sensitivity borne in having started the battle, would make sure the
job was done and done right!
Have a good Shabbos!
Please forward your questions for Rabbi Avruch to
RabbiAvruch@MilwaukeeKollel.org
We extend our warmest Mazel Tov to Kol HaKollel contributor, Rabbi Shlomo
Jarcaig, and his wife, Ahuva, on the birth this week of a baby boy!
Copyright © 2002 by Rabbi Pinchas Avruch and Project Genesis, Inc.
Kol HaKollel is a publication of the Milwaukee Kollel Center for Jewish
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