Hebräische Bibel
Hebräische Bibel

Chasidut zu Jeschijahu 24:78

Kedushat Levi

Numbers 33,2. “Moses made a written record of their ‎departures and their journeys, and these are their journeys ‎according to their departures.”
We need to ‎understand why our verse first describes the journey of the ‎Israelites chronologically, i.e. mentioning their departures before ‎their journeys, whereas as soon as the report switches to the past ‎tense, it lists the journeys before mentioning their departures, ‎מוצאיהם‎?‎
The reader is presumed to know that every journey, i.e. every ‎separate departure and encampment, occurred at the command ‎of G’d, [as the Israelites did not have a map to travel by. ‎Ed.] We have also pointed out previously that the ‎purpose of this journey through inhospitable territory had been, ‎amongst others, to identify “sparks” of “fallen” holiness along the ‎way and by associating with it to assist these “sparks” to be ‎elevated spiritually and be reunited with their sacred origins. This ‎was also the reason why the Israelites remained stationary in one ‎location sometimes for only a day and night, and on occasion as ‎long as for 19 years (Kadesh) at a time. It all had to do with ‎locating and disgorging from its collective mouth (compare ‎Jeremiah 51,44) the spiritually foul material absorbed through ‎having made contact with idolatrous concepts absorbed by these ‎‎“fallen” sparks of original holy origin. These “fallen” sparks that ‎had originally been part of the garment of the Shechinah, ‎had absorbed varying degrees of pollution before found by the ‎Israelites.‎
When Joshua sent out two spies to Jericho, (Joshua 2,2) the ‎word describing their task was: ‎לחפור את כל הארץ‎, “to spy out the ‎whole country,” [in the words of the King of Jericho, as ‎opposed of the word describing their task used by Joshua, ‎Ed.].
We need to examine the word ‎לחפור‎ for a ‎moment, [a word also used by the Jewish people when ‎they demanded to send spies to the land of Canaan, ‎‎(Deuteronomy 1,22).Ed.]
However, we must remember that by far the greatest part of ‎the land of Israel was conquered successfully due to the ‎observance of G’d’s commandments in the Torah by the Israelites ‎and their performing deeds of loving kindness for their fellow ‎Jews. These deeds were performed in the locations that required ‎conquest. In other words, the vast majority of the Israelites were ‎engaged in serving their Creator from the loftiest motives. They ‎were equally concerned with being models in their relations to ‎other Jews. By doing so, and being observed to do so by the ‎gentiles surrounding them, they succeeded in enabling the ‎‎“sparks,” (creatures who had “fallen” from their moral/ethical ‎lofty heights) to become rehabilitated. As soon as the Israelites ‎had performed these deeds, the soil of the Holy Land was bound ‎to respond to such a people and allowed itself to be conquered by ‎them. The land would cooperate willingly with the demand made ‎upon it by the new conquerors. Anyone receiving “handouts” is ‎in a state of “shame” vis a vis the donor. This is what is meant by ‎the expression ‎לחפור‎, i.e. to qualify as someone ashamed, just as ‎the moon and sun (symbols worshipped by the pagans) are ‎viewed by Isaiah 24,23 as ashamed at having been defeated by the ‎Creator.‎
When viewing the 42 journeys required by the Israelites in ‎their trek from Egypt to the Holy Land, we find among other way ‎stations the expression: ‎ויחנו בחרדה,ויחנו במתקה, ויחנו בהר ששפר‎, ‎the names of these places reflecting that the Israelites had had ‎reason to be afraid of unpleasant occurrences when they ‎encamped there, or the reverse. [Reference to ‎חרדה‎ is the ‎former, trembling, fear, and ‎הר שפר‎, a mountain known for its ‎beauty, reminiscent of the emanation ‎תפארת‎ and ‎מתקה‎ ‎‎“sweetness,” i.e. the opposite of fear. Ed.] When the ‎Israelites arrived at places that inspired fear they worshipped G’d ‎as He wished to be worshipped, exalting His highest attributes, ‎whereas when they encamped in locations promising material ‎benefits, they worshipped Him by invoking other attributes. The ‎names of the various locations reflect how in each location, ‎according to the level of the “sparks” of fallen former angels, the ‎Israelites reacted with the appropriate attribute in order to help ‎these “fallen” creatures to rehabilitate themselves and regain ‎their original holy status. When Moses once speaks of ‎מוצאיהם ‏למסעיהם‎ and another time of ‎מסעיהם למוצאיהם‎, he merely alludes ‎to the fact that seeing that each move was at the command of ‎Hashem, ‎על פי ה'‏‎ , that the task of assisting in the rehabilitation of ‎the “fallen,” different approaches had to be used in accordance ‎with the spiritual state they found these “fallen” one time angels ‎in.‎
[This editor finds it remarkable that our author views ‎the journeys of the Israelites, especially those after the debacle ‎with the spies, when the Israelites themselves had to rehabilitate ‎themselves spiritually through the younger generation, as ‎inspiring other “fallen” creatures to do the same. The Torah ‎alluding to this at the conclusion of its narrative is most ‎appropriate. Ed.].
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Kedushat Levi

Numbers 26,33. “and Tzlofchod, son of Chefer, did not ‎have any sons, but only daughters.”
Serving the Lord truly entails doing so strongly, actively and ‎with love, i.e. love and awe, so that as a result the Creator ‎experiences satisfaction from His creatures. If one serves the Lord ‎only because of fear of punishment it is equivalent to serving the ‎Lord from a feeling of shame. This is reflected in the name ‎צלפחד‎ ‎when broken up as ‎צל פחד‎ “a shadow of fear.” The name of his ‎father, i.e. ‎חפר‎ is reminiscent of Isaiah 24,23 ‎וחפרה לבנה ובושה ‏החמה‎ ,”and the moon shall be ashamed and the sun shall be ‎abashed.” This is hinted at by the words ‎כי אם בנות‎, “only female ‎offspring.”‎
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Flames of Faith

In the Jewish tradition, the number seven is associated with music. According to the Pirkei de-Rabbi Eliezer, there are seven major bodies of water, and the seventh is the Kinneres (Sea of Galilee), which lies east of Tiberias, Israel. The word Kinneres comes from the word kinor, “harp,” for it is a lake shaped like a harp that leads all the other lakes in song to God.469“All the bodies of water sing to God. This is the meaning of the phrase in our prayers: illu finu malei shirah ka-yam u-lishoneinu rinnah ka-hamon gallav, ‘Were our mouths filled with song like the ocean, and our tongues with praise like the multitudes of waves.’ Apparently, the ocean and its waves are viewed by Jewish thought as a great song to God, and we are saying that we too should sing like them. The Kinneres Lake is the cantor leading all the waves and oceans in their musical chant” (Tzion Ve-Arehah pg. 90). The Midrash states further that there are seven major land- masses: the six continents and the Land of Israel. The Land of Israel is the land of song. When Jacob told his sons to take some of the produce of the land, he said, Kechu mi-zimras ha-aretz, which can be translated, “Take some of the song of the land” (Gen. 43:11).470When Messiah will arrive, we will hear the songs that the stones and pebbles of Israel are singing. Then we will merit the fulfillment of the verse, Mi-kenaf ha-aretz zemiros shamanu, “From the edges of the land we heard songs” (Tzion Ve-Arehah pg. 50, quoting Isa. 24:16).
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