Parshas Behaaloscha
A Taste of Heaven
It didn’t cost anything. They didn’t have to work for it. They didn’t even
have to go anywhere to pick it up. For the entire forty years the Jewish
people spent in the desert, they did not have to worry about where their
next meal was coming from. It fell from the heavens in the form of manna.
When they stepped out of their tents in the morning, there it was,
covering the fields like a shimmering crystalline blanket on a bed of
moist dew.
And what a food it was! King David called it “the bread of angels.” Our
Sages tell us it provided perfect nutrition, every last molecule being
absorbed into the body, with no wastes whatsoever. Our Sages also tell us
that this wonderful manna contained the tastes of all the foods.
It seems the Jewish people enjoyed an ideal situation in the desert. They
were free to pursue intellectual and spiritual goals without being
distracted by such mundane concerns as making a living. What more could a
person ask for? And yet, in this week’s Torah reading we find a
significant group of people complaining to Moses about the food situation.
What in the world was bothering these people? What could be more desirable
than a superbly nutritious food that could duplicate the tastes of just
about every delicious food in existence?
Perhaps we can find the answer in the well known Midrashic analogy which
compares the Torah to water. Why water? Surely there are more delicious
and exciting drinks than plain water. Why wasn’t the Torah compared to
fine wines or other richly flavored beverages?
The commentators explain that while many beverages provide pleasure for
the palate, water is the penultimate thirst quencher. When a person is
thirsty, nothing compares to a drink of cool, crystal clear water. At the
moment those refreshing waters cascade down his throat, there is no
beverage in the world is more delicious and flavorful. But when a person
is not thirsty, when he only wants to drink to stimulate his taste buds,
water is quite a bland, unexciting beverage. The same holds true for the
Torah. If a person is not seeking spiritual awareness and growth, he will
not find the Torah especially appealing. But when he is thirsty, when he
yearns to expand his spiritual horizons and discover the divine truths of
the universe, there is nothing more exhilarating and fulfilling than the
Torah, the divine water of creation.
In this light, we gain new insight into the manna. This “bread of the
angels” was more than just a simple physical food. It was a piece of
heaven, sparks of spirituality captured and transformed into a physical
form, but spiritual in its essence nonetheless. Those who sought
spirituality, who were attuned to the spiritual pulse of the universe,
were able to connect with this angelic food and experience the most
exhilarating and fulfilling tastes imaginable. But those focused
completely on the physical world could not relate to the singular nature
of the manna; they were completely oblivious to the taste of heaven it
delivered. To them, the manna was a bland and boring substitute for a good
piece of steak.
A scholar brought a friend to a discourse delivered by a great sage. The
sage spoke for only fifteen minutes, during which his audience listened in
absolute silence. Afterwards, the two friends compared notes about what
they had heard.
“I never heard a more fascinating talk in my entire life,” said the
scholar.
“Really?” said his friend. “I didn’t find it fascinating at all. In fact,
I found it boring and dull. All he spoke about was water carriers, wagon
drivers and broken down horses.”
The scholar looked at his friend in amazement. “My dear friend,” he
said, “you missed the entire point. Everything was an analogy to the
deepest mysteries of the universe. He opened up a mystical world which was
incredibly fascinating. But if all you heard was a story about a wagon
driver and his troubles, it must have been very boring indeed.”
In our own lives, we encounter numerous occasions which can provide a
fascinating experience or a boring one, depending on our point of view.
Every mitzvah we do, every act of kindness holds the potential for such
ambivalence. If we are focused completely on the physical, we may find
these activities tedious. But if we thirst for spirituality, if we yearn
to connect with Hashem, each mitzvah, each good deed we do becomes a
transcendent experience which is incredibly exciting and fulfilling. Each
one provides us with another taste of heaven.
Text Copyright © 2008 by Rabbi Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
Rabbi Reich is on the faculty of the Ohr Somayach Tanenbaum Education Center.