  |               
              |               
               |               
              |              Parshas Balak       Volume 25, No. 40  
 Sponsored by Dr. and Mrs. Irving Katz on the yahrzeit of his mother Sarah bat Yitzchak Hakohen Katz a”h  
 
Martin and Michelle Swartz in memory of Martin’s grandfather John Hofmann a”h   
 
Today’s Learning:  
Tanach: Tehilim 121-122  
Mishnah: Shabbat 14:3-4  
Daf Yomi (Bavli): Chullin 13  
Daf Yomi (Yerushalmi): Eruvin 56  
 
The most famous verse in our parashah is undoubtedly Bemidbar 24:5,  “How good are your tents, Yaakov, your dwelling places, Yisrael.” The  midrash states that the “dwelling places” referred to are the batei  knesset / shuls and batei midrash / study halls where Torah is studied.  Accordingly, writes R’ Yitzchak Elchanan Spektor z”l (1816-1896; rabbi  of Kovno, Lithuania), we can interpret our verse as follows: In what  merit will our tents be good, i.e., in what merit will we dwell in G-d’s  “tent” in Olam Ha’ba forever? In the merit of our dwelling places,  i.e., in the merit of the Torah we study in this world.  
 
R’ Spektor continues: Those who give financial support to Torah  study can reach the highest levels in the World-to-Come. This is alluded  to in Kohelet (7:12), “To sit in the shelter of wisdom is to sit in the  shelter of money.” They are one and the same.  
 
The next verse in our parashah states: “Stretching out like brooks,  like gardens alongside a river, like aloes Hashem planted, like cedars  near water.” This refers to the ability of a Torah scholar’s words to  spread quickly throughout the world like flowing water or like the scent  of aloes. Fortunate are the ones who study Torah and those who  facilitate that Torah study and the spread of Torah through their  financial means, observes R’ Spektor. (Ma’amar Al Ha’Torah reprinted in  Ma’ayan Yitzchak p.122)  
 
 
******** 
  
 
      “The angel of Hashem said to him, ‘Why did you strike your  donkey these three times? Behold! I went out to impede [you], for you  hastened on a road to oppose me . . .’ Bil’am said to the angel of  Hashem, ‘I have sinned, for I did not know that you were standing  opposite me on the road. And now, if it is evil in your eyes, I shall  return’.” (22:32, 34)  
 
R’ Yehuda He’chassid z”l (Germany; died 1217) asks: Why didn’t  Bil’am answer, “I struck the donkey because it pressed my leg against  the wall”? And, why did Bil’am say, “I have sinned, for I did not know  that you were standing opposite me on the road”? To the contrary, if he  didn’t know the angel was there then he did not sin!  
 
He explains: The Torah teaches that one is held responsible for what  he should have known, even if it was never explicitly commanded. We  read, for example (Bemidbar 31:14-15), “Moshe was angry with the  commanders of the army . . . Moshe said to them, ‘Did you let every  female [of Midian] live? Behold! -- they caused Bnei Yisrael, by the  word of Bil’am, to commit a betrayal against Hashem regarding the matter  of Peor; and the plague occurred in the assembly of Hashem.” Moshe had  never told the commanders that they should take the women as prisoners,  but he was angry with them because they should have known.  
 
Similarly, Bil’am should have known that G-d did not want him to go  to Moav. Thus, when Bil’am said, “I have sinned, for I did not know that  you were standing opposite me on the road,” he really meant, “for I did  not make it my business to know . . .” That is also why he did not make  excuses to the angel for hitting his (Bil’am’s) donkey; Bil’am knew  that he was in the wrong.  
 
R’ Yehuda He’chassid writes further: Our Sages instruct that a  person should be “arom b’yirah” (literally, “cunning in his fear [of  Heaven]”). This refers to using one’s intelligence to figure out G-d’s  Will even without being explicitly commanded. (Sefer Chassidim No.153)  
 
 
******** 
  
 
      “Balak slaughtered cattle and sheep and sent to Bil’am and to the officers who were with him.” (22:40)   
 
Who were these “officers”? The Torah mentions only that Bil’am traveled with two lads, not with officers!  
 
R’ Chaim Tirer z”l (better known as R’ Chaim of Czernowitz; died  1817) explains: The midrash relates that Bil’am was insulted that Balak  sent only one bull and one sheep for his dinner. Why? Aren’t one bull  and one sheep more than enough for three people (Bil’am and his two  attendants)?  
 
R’ Chaim answers that the officers were other people whom Balak sent  to eat with Bil’am. That was an insult to Bil’am, for proper hachnassat  orchim / hosting guests requires either that the host eat the first  meal with the guest or that the host personally attend to the guest. [R’  Chaim adds parenthetically that this is the meaning of the verse  (Bereishit 18:8), “He (Avraham) stood over them beneath the tree and  they ate.” Because Avraham “stood over them” and served them, it is as  if they all ate together.] By sending animals to Bil’am to eat with  Balak’s officers--but without Balak himself--Balak insulted Bil’am. Why  did Balak do this? Because, when Bil’am said (Bemidbar 22:38), “Whatever  word G-d puts into my mouth, that shall I speak!” Balak knew that  Bil’am would be of no help to him. (Be’er Mayim Chaim)  
 
 
******** 
  
 
      “Bil’am raised his eyes and saw Yisrael dwelling according to  its tribes, and the spirit of G-d was upon him. He declaimed his parable  and said, ‘. . . How good are your tents, Yaakov, your dwelling places,  Yisrael’.” (24:2, 5)   
 
Rashi z”l comments: “Dwelling according to its tribes”--He saw each  tribe dwelling by itself, not intermingled one with another, and he saw  that the entrances of their tents were not exactly facing each other so  that one could not peer into the other’s tent. “And the spirit of G-d  was upon him”--Then he made up his mind not to curse them.  
 
R’ David ben Shmuel Halevi z”l (1586-1667; known as the “Taz,” the  acronym of his Shulchan Aruch commentary, Turei Zahav) writes: The  Gemara (Bava Batra 60a) states, “One should not place his doorway facing  his neighbor’s doorway, for when Bil’am saw that Bnei Yisrael’s  doorways did not face each other, he declared that they were worthy of  having the spirit of G-d rest upon them.” The Tosafot explain that this  is learned from our verse, “The spirit of G-d was upon him.”  
 
This requires explanation, the Taz writes, for our verse says only  that the Shechinah rested on Bil’am. Where does it say that Bil’am  declared that Bnei Yisrael were worthy?  
 
He explains: How could Bil’am see Bnei Yisrael’s tents; weren’t they  hidden by the Ananei Ha’kavod / Clouds of Glory? The answer is that the  Ananei Ha’kavod had existed in Aharon’s merit and they disappeared when  he died [although they later returned in Moshe’s merit]. Bil’am’s words  in our verse were, in fact, a blessing to Bnei Yisrael or a prayer on  their behalf, as Rashi writes, “He made up his mind not to curse them.”  Bil’am prayed, “Although the Ananei Ha’kavod have departed from them,  let the Shechinah not depart from them.” How do we know that he prayed  thus? Because our verse says that the Shechinah rested upon Bil’am.  Surely Bil’am himself was unworthy of having the Shechinah rest upon  him! However, our Sages teach: “If one prays for his friend’s needs, and  he has the same needs, he will be answered first.” Bil’am and Bnei  Yisrael had the same need, i.e., that the Shechinah should not depart  from them, and Bil’am prayed that the Shechinah should not depart from   Bnei Yisrael; therefore, he was answered first, “and the spirit of G-d  was upon him.” [The fact that Bil’am’s prayer was deemed a meaningful  one demonstrates that Bnei Yisrael were in fact worthy of having the  Shechinah rest upon them. Why? Because their doors did not face each  other.] (Divrei David)  
 
 
********  
 
Pirkei Avot 
  
 
      “Whoever has these three traits is from the disciples of our  forefather Avraham; and whoever has three different traits is from the  disciples of the wicked Bil’am. Those who have a good eye, a humble  spirit, and a meek soul are disciples of our forefather Avraham. Those  who have an evil eye, an arrogant spirit, and a greedy soul are  disciples of the wicked Bil’am.” (5:22)   
 
At first glance, observes R’ Shlomo Kluger z”l (1784-1869; rabbi of  Brody, Galicia), this mishnah appears to contain unnecessary repetition,  as the first sentence does not appear to add to the message of the  mishnah. In fact, however, there is a difference between the first  sentence of the mishnah and the second. Indeed, the mishnah is referring  not to two groups of people, as would appear at first, but to four  groups.  
 
First the mishnah addresses those for whom good or bad traits are  inborn. Such individuals are “from the disciples” of Avraham and Bil’am,  respectively. While they clearly are descendants of those who went in  the ways of either Avraham or Bil’am, they cannot themselves be called  disciples themselves.  
 
Next, the mishnah refers to the actual disciples of Avraham and  Bil’am, respectively. The former are those who have toiled to acquire  the traits of “a good eye, a humble spirit, and a meek soul.” Likewise,  the latter are those who, through their own choices, have acquired the  traits of “an evil eye, an arrogant spirit, and a greedy soul.”  
 
R’ Kluger adds: Some versions of the mishnah actually state “from  the disciples” in both the first and second sentences. According to that  version, we can explain the seeming redundancy by stating that the  first sentence actually sums up the previous three mishnayot. Those  mishnayot extol the virtues of one who loves others selflessly, one who  does not engage in disputes, and one who toils for the benefit of the  many. Such a person, says the first sentence of our mishnah, is among  the disciples of Avraham (and the opposite type of person is among the  disciples of Bil’am). Then the mishnah lists three more traits which  determine whether a person can be counted among the disciples of Avraham  (or Bil’am). (Magen Avot)  |       |   
  
                            
         |                   
 
                    
The editors hope these brief 'snippets' will engender further study and discussion of Torah topics ('lehagdil Torah u'leha'adirah'), and your letters are appreciated. Web archives at Torah.org start with 5758 (1997) and may be retrieved from the Hamaayan page.   
Hamaayan needs your support! Please consider sponsoring Hamaayan in  honor of a happy occasion or in memory of a loved one. The low cost of  sponsorship is $36. Donations to HaMaayan are tax-deductible. |                   
 
  Questions or comments?  Email feedback@torah.org. 
 
Join the Jewish Learning Revolution! Torah.org: The Judaism Site brings this and a host of other classes to you every                 week. Visit http://torah.org or email learn@torah.org  to get your own free copy of this mailing.  
 
Permission is granted to redistribute, but please give  proper attribution and copyright to the author and Torah.org.                 Both the author and Torah.org reserve certain rights.  Email  copyrights@torah.org  for full information.  |          
  |                     
  | 
No comments:
Post a Comment