Parashat Balak 5770
The Profound Word
Howard S. Joseph
Balaam: The Outside Consultant
Israel marches on towards its destination of the Promised Land. Fierce and successful battles end the last parashah. Two mighty ancient kings are defeated, Sihon and Og. Israel seems to have entered the world of natural law with a flourish. Understandably, other nations are nervous.
This is the setting in which our parashah opens:
Balak the son of Zippor saw all that Israel had done to the Amorites. Moab became alarmed because of the people, for they were numerous, and Moab dreaded the children of Israel. Moab said to the elders of Midian, “Now this assembly will eat up everything around us, as the ox eats up the greens of the field. Balak the son of Zippor was king of Moab at that time. [Nu 22:2-4]
Balak’s solution is to hire a ‘consultant’:
He sent messengers to Balaam the son of Beor, to Pethor, which is by the river of the land of his people, to call for him, saying, “A people has come out of Egypt, and behold, they hide the view of the earth [for they are so numerous], and they are settled near me. So now, please come and curse this people for me, for they are too powerful for me. Perhaps I will be able to wage war against them and drive them out of the land, for I know that whomever you bless is blessed and whomever you curse is cursed.” [5-6]
Messengers are sent to ancient Babylon to bring Balaam for the task. The parashah becomes a lengthy dialogue between Balak and his messengers on one side and Balaam on the other. Some of the most beautiful Biblical poetry is a result, some of which entered into the daily Jewish prayerbook and other parts that were considered for inclusion but were considered too lengthy. These poems are filled with praise for the history and virtues of Israel. Balaam was indeed a true prophet of God. Yet, rabbinic tradition remembered him as Balaam the wicked, harasha. Later in the Book of Bemidbar he is killed by Israel in a very difficult battle.
What is the significance of this tale? Why is it included in the Torah? Why is Balaam considered evil despite saying so many nice things about us? These questions have generated numerous discussions over the centuries Neziv’s comments are varied, numerous and lengthy as well. We will look at a few of his concerns.
The profound theme of this story is the march of Israel through history as God’s people. This journey encounters various forces of opposition because of the very nature of Israel’s mission to change and enhance the cultures and civilizations of the world. This in turn inspires numerous plans by these forces to curtail and limit Israel’s effectiveness or even destroy Israel completely in a final genocidal fury.
Balaam is not an ordinary opponent but a true prophet, with Mesopotamian origins like Israel, who readily and easily communicates with God. He knows that he cannot depart from the word of God to win the acclaim of his patron. He thus represents the most noble of the opponents and is not just an ordinary thug. He knows he cannot ultimately stop Israel’s mission but he tries to cause some damage. It is possible that greed plays a role in this endeavor.
Neziv sees Balaam as representing the seven Canaanite nations inhabiting the land. We know from various passages in Leviticus that they have now come to the end of their term of settlement in God’s eyes because of their abominable behavior. None of these nations as well as the Moabites and Emorites are deemed natives of their lands but conquerors and settlers. The Land of Israel as a Holy Land will not tolerate these abominations indefinitely.
Yet Balaam is sympathetic to their plights. He asks Balak to begin the process with the construction of seven altars:
Balaam said to Balak, “Build me seven altars here, and prepare for me seven bulls and seven rams. [23:1]
Neziv comments:
[Seven is] for the seven nations that Israel is coming to remove.
Neziv now contrasts Balaam’s need for seven altars, the pagan way of worship, with Israel’s unified form of worship:
The congregation of Israel is exclusively attached to the Providence of God. Therefore, their community offerings are on one sole altar. We saw this earlier [in the Mekhiltah commentary to Lev. 9:6] This is the thing the Lord has commanded; do it, and the glory of the Lord will appear to you: Remove that evil inclination from your hearts and become one in faith and worship to serve before God. Just as God is unique in the universe so too your worship should be unique before God, as it is written, You shall circumcise the foreskin of your heart…. [Deut. 10:16] Why so? For the God who says ‘I am the Lord your God’ is described further as the verses continue: For the Lord, your God, is God of gods and the Lord of the lords,…[17] If you do this [remove the evil inclination], then ‘the glory of the Lord will appear to you.’
However, among the other nations, each goes in the name of its god. Nevertheless, they are all rooted in their life force in God, the Cause of all Causes. For even the powers of impurity have no other source than in the source of holiness.
The idea of the unity of God requires that all be rooted in God. There cannot be other powers or gods. So, even impurity and evil is rooted somehow in the good. It cannot have any separate existence.
Neziv cites a Midrash Rabbah text [Bemidbar, 19:1] to support this idea:
Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? Is it not One? (Job 14:4). For example, Abraham out of Terah; Hezekiah out of Ahaz; Josiah out of Amon; Mordecai out of Shimei; Israel out of the idolaters; the future world out of this world. Who did this? Who commanded this? Who decreed this? Was it not the world’s Only One?
This means that from the fact that Abraham came from Terah and the like we see proof that God is the singular One of the world and not like those who believe there are two [ultimate] powers in the universe.[i.e., the facts of a varied universe of good and evil does not mean two ultimate powers but one who can bring change about from evil to good -hsj]
There is only one power but the influence affects each nation through its own independent intermediaries. That is why Balaam made seven altars. He believed that this is truly an honor to God in that He leads His world through many intermediaries. This is similar to the generation of Enosh as Maimonides explains the beginnings of idolatry.
Neziv is referring to Maimonides Code, Laws of Idolatry [1:1, in which he describes the origins of idolatrous worship:
During the times of Enosh, mankind made a great mistake, and the wise men of that generation gave thoughtless counsel. Enosh himself was one of those who erred.
Their mistake was as follows: They said God created stars and spheres with which to control the world. He placed them on high and treated them with honor, making them servants who minister before Him. Accordingly, it is fitting to praise and glorify them and to treat them with honor. [They perceived] this to be the will of God, blessed be He, that they magnify and honor those whom He magnified and honored, just as a king desires that the servants who stand before him be honored. Indeed, doing so is an expression of honor to the king.
After conceiving of this notion, they began to construct temples to the stars and offer sacrifices to them. They would praise and glorify them with words, and prostrate themselves before them, because by doing so, they would – according to their false conception – be fulfilling the will of God.
This was the essence of the worship of false gods, and this was the rationale of those who worshiped them.
Neziv now concludes analyzing Balaam’s thoughts:
If God were to accept Balaam’s thinking in this manner [that there is no direct individual Providence but only through intermediaries] it would then be easy to curse Israel which could not then harm Moab in any way.
Balaam represents the old pagan culture that must eventually be transformed. He will finally realize that he cannot really deter Israel’s mission. On verse 29 Neziv adds:
The matter of all these sacrifices is that Balaam realized that it was improbable that God would allow cursing Israel, for his prophecy began that the nature of creation is dependent upon Providence according to the Torah. This can only be accomplished through Israel His unique nation, and the initial purpose of creation cannot be changed. I wrote this on verse 19: God is not a man that He should lie, nor is He a mortal that He should relent. Would He say and not do, speak and not fulfill?
On verse 19 he says:
Israel became the unique nation to lead His world through the Torah and the commandments. This is their greatness. Balaam says that this cannot be changed. For since the beginning of creation God wished to place His Presence on earth. However, the time had not yet arrived to give the Torah. Therefore, this period of time [until Sinai] was called the 2000 years of chaos [in A.Z. 9A]. These are as the the early childhood years during which the father cannot lead his home according to the child until he grows and matures and conducts himself according to individual Providence and then the father can lead the home according to the behavior of the child. So was the world in chaos until Abraham arrived and and began the process of Torah study. He and his household became entirely under individual Providence. Later on Israel received the Torah at Sinai. God’s Providential will in creating heaven and earth was then complete in that the conduct of the world should follow that of Israel.
So Neziv is building for us a philosophy of Biblical history. It begins with the imposition of order [din] on the primeval chaos. There is then a chaotic childhood period in which humanity strays into idolatry. At Sinai was not only a wedding, it now seems, but maybe what is now called a Bar or Bat Mitzvah: the coming of age, maturity and responsibility.
But Sinai provokes something else. Opposition, and even hatred. Maybe Balaam was eventually convinced otherwise but there were others to take up the challenge of halting Israel’s mission.
Chaos places an important role in this story. For his first attempt against Israel Balaam rose early in the morning [22:41]:
In the morning Balak took Balaam and led him up to Bamoth Baal, and from there he saw part of the people
Neziv comments:
During the first three hours of the day when he tried to catch the momentary anger of God expressed each day….He could have destroyed us with his wicked eye except for the fact God pitied us and did not get angry [those days]…. God had to change nature during that time for He had implanted this moment of anger into the creation.
What is this all about?
In 23:8, Balaam says to Balak:
How can I curse whom God has not cursed, and how can I invoke wrath if the Lord has not been angered?
Rashi comments based on a group of Talmudic discussions:
I myself am powerless, except that I can determine the precise moment when God becomes angry, and He has not become angry all these days since I have come to you. This is the meaning of the statement, ‘O my people, remember now what he [Balak king of Moab] planned and what Balaam answered him may you recognize the righteous deeds of the Lord (Mic. 6:5).
In other words, it was a special act of kindness of God towards us that the daily moment of anger was canceled. Balaam could not find the opportunity to curse Israel. But what is this daily moment of anger all about?
Here is one of the texts upon which the above comment of Rashi is based [Ber. 7a]:
Is anger then a mood of the Blessed Holy One?? Yes. For it has been taught [AZ 4a]: God has anger every day.[Ps. 7:12] And how long does this anger last? One moment. And how long is one moment? One fifty-eight thousand eight hundred and eighty-eighth part of an hour. And no creature has ever been able to fix precisely this moment except the wicked Balaam, of whom it is written: He knows the knowledge of the Most High. Now, he did not even know the mind of his animal; how then could he know the mind of the Most High? The meaning is, therefore, only that he knew how to fix precisely this moment in which the Blessed Holy One is angry. And this is just what the prophet said to Israel: O my people, remember now what Balak king of Moab devised, and what Balaam the son of Beor answered him . . . that you may know the righteous acts of the Lord. What means ‘That you may know the righteous acts of the Lord?’? R. Eleazar says: The Blessed Holy One, said to Israel: See now, how many righteous acts I performed for you in not being angry in the days of the wicked Balaam. For had I been angry, not one remnant would have been left of [the enemies] of Israel. And this too is the meaning of what Balaam said to Balak: How can I curse whom God has not cursed, and how can I invoke wrath if the Lord has not been angered? This teaches us that He was not angry all these days. And how long does His anger last? One moment. And how long is one moment? R. Abin (some say R. Abina) says: As long as it takes to say Rega. And how do you know that He is angry one moment? For it is said: For His anger is but for a moment [rega], His favor is for a lifetime. [Ps. 30:6] . And when is He angry? Abaye says: In [one moment of] those first three hours of the day, when the comb of the rooster is white and it stands on one foot.
There is a very brief moment every day in which creation is shaky. What does this mean?
We must turn to Kabbalah, the Jewish mystical tradition, to guide us on this question. My teacher, a great-great-grandson of Neziv, Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, on the basis of Kabbalist notions, wrote the following:
“When God created the world, He provided an opportunity for the work of His hands – man – to participate in His creation. The Creator, as it were, impaired reality in order that mortal man could repair its flaws and perfect it…. When God engraved and carved out the world, He did not entirely eradicate the chaos and the void, the deep, the darkness, from the domain of His creation. Rather, He separated the complete, perfect existence from the forces of negation, confusion and turmoil and set up cosmic boundaries, eternal laws to keep them apart…. However, the forces of relative nothingness at times exceed their bounds. They wish to burst forth out of the chains of obedience that the Almighty imposed upon them and seek to plunge the earth back into chaos and the void…. this relative “nothingness” is plotting evil, the deep is devising iniquity, and the chaos and void lie in wait in the dark alleyways of reality and seek to … profane the lustrous image of creation.” (Halakhic Man, p. 101-105)
The question of chaos thus leads us to the nature of God’s plan for the world, the unfolding of human history and Israel’s role in the drama. It is the background of the whole mission of Abraham and Sarah beginning with their call out of ancient Ur to go to ‘the land that I will show you.’ They understand the God who addresses them to be the Creator of heaven and earth, the God who in the process of creation tried to bring order out of chaos. They understand their mission as part of an ancient struggle, part of the very process of creation: God’s attempt to bring orderly creation out of chaos leaves residual forces of chaos present in the world. In fact, the Bible’s early stories point to these traces which continually erupt through human weakness or folly threatening the whole enterprise of creation with failure. Humanity repeatedly starts over again; promising beginnings yield disappointing results. The divine expectations for the world remain unfulfilled. Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel, the violent generation of Noah that brought the flood, the Tower of Babel, all are instances of this failure, reflecting the human tendency towards selfishness that allows chaos to enter our lives in what we call evil.
What can be done to move out of the cycle of failures into a new mode of existence? In what way can the divine plan begin to advance? Must creation fail? Apparently, human beings, although created in the image of God, cannot on their own find the right way to live, the ‘way of the Lord.’ Time for some new initiative against the forces of chaos. Patience too. It will not happen in a day.
With the engagement of Abraham and Sarah in covenant the divine plan began to focus on the family that would become a nation and the promised land in which the plan would begin its actualization. This is the first, the ‘reishit’, the tithe of creation that will belong to God until others will join as well.
At Sinai the cause of the divine plan took a momentous leap forward laying claim to one people, Israel, who had now been committed to its fulfillment. However, the forces of chaos, now on the run, did not disappear.
The task was not without its dangers. The potential would always exist for head-on clashes between the covenanted people and the forces of chaos. These forces eventually become associated with a particular nation as well: Amalek. (The Zohar considers Amalek to be the ‘offspring of chaos.’) Balaam, the pagan prophet and sorcerer, commissioned to halt our ancestors’ march from Egypt to Israel, calls Amalek ‘reishit goyim,’ the first of the nations. The forces of chaos have their hopes pinned on Amalek as their champion.
Amalek has as its purpose the blocking of Israel’s march through history to its special destiny of being a kingdom of priests and a holy nation, to promote the ways of kindness in the world. It attacks Israel on route to Sinai where it will receive its special commission to introduce holiness into the world. Amalek is the supreme antagonist of Israel’s mission for it is ‘lo yareh elohim,’ opposed to any morality which will restrict its actions. Amalek would like to be free to pursue any action it deems necessary without regard for issues of holiness, justice or morality. Amalek is, thus, the ultimate resistor to the mission of Israel to be a light to the nations. Amalek wants the world to remain bereft of that light. It resists God’s plan for the world. Amalek usually makes totally irrational accusations against Israel and tries to arouse the world to join in its hatred. The accusations tend to delegitimate our existence for they portray us as depraved, immoral, unreliable and unworthy of respect by anyone interested in decency. Amalek portrays itself as the champion of justice and right, masking its own contempt for human values.
The Sages believed that hatred was a phenomenon that would necessarily accompany us on our adventurous mission through history to be permanently defeated only at the Messianic end. Even Joshua’s initial victory against Amalek was incomplete. Foreshadowing the historic struggle the Torah says that Joshua weakened – vayahalosh – Amalek, but did not destroy them.
The Sages further traced the persistence of anti-Jewish hatred to the foundation of the covenant itself at Mt. Sinai when the Torah teachings and commandments were given. They expressed their view through a play on words, this time through the homo-phonic nature of two apparently unrelated words: Sinai, the mountain at which the great revelation took place, and sinah, hatred. In fact, they said, the name Sinai was given to the place “because from there hatred went forth into the world.” Thus, two great phenomena emanated from Sinai: the great mission Israel accepted as a people in covenant with God to help execute God’s plan for the world and the great hatred that wishes to block the actualization of the plan.
The champion of chaos, Amalek, attempted to block the establishment of the Sinai Covenant. Amalek emerges again after the destruction of the Temple and exile, before Israel can regroup, renew the covenant upon an even more resolute basis and find its way. This moment became enshrined in the Purim holiday when Haman, the Amalekite descendant, confronts a weak and demoralized people who should be an easy target for him. As his ancestors attacked the weak trailing behind the camp, so too would he strike and kill ‘all the Jews in all the provinces of King Ahasuerus,’ in effect, all the Jews of the world.
This is the never-ending story in which we are all important players. Balaam is caught right in the middle of it. Only a moment of chaos could earn him success. It was denied him. He wished to champion the victory of chaos over order. He chose the wrong horse. Despite his elegant and inspiring poetry he is remembered as Balaam the wicked.
Among the many lessons of this story is the importance of our choices. We can choose to support the forces of chaos and destruction for whatever short term gain we might imagine. Or we can choose the divine mandate to join the forces of creation and order, sometimes at great sacrifice, to promote the long-term well being of the world around us.
Sometimes we too may sense that daily moment of chaos that threatens to upset the order we have constructed in our lives. It may come from challenges to our health, our families, our communities, our economic welfare and even to a peaceful order in the world. At that time, unlike Balaam, we must rise to those challenges and keep the forces of chaos at bay.
Shabbat Shalom
Hayyim Shemuel Yosef
Tammuz 14 5750
June 26, 2010
A weekly parashah essay based on the writings of Rabbi Naphtali Zvi Yehudah Berlin, the Neziv, in Ha’amek Davar [HD] and Harhev Davar [HRD]. Please feel free to distribute this material for educational purposes. All rights reserved.
