Numbers Cycle Five Mattot/Massey
by
Chava
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Mattot/Massey
This week’s Torah portion (Mattot/Massey) brings us to the
end of Numbers but not without some difficult questions. A very real challenge
is posed in Mattot. And I want to deal with it head on because I think we need
to as a people.
Before I replay the grizzly scene I want to review
quickly, who are we anyway? Who are we today? What is the natural process of
our analysis when we look at Torah? What has been engrained in our heads from
childbirth?
Well, needless to say, we are a fast moving progressive
society bringing forth one technological advancement after another. We live in
a capitalist survival-of-the-fittest environment. There’s war, poverty, and
street violence. There’s beauty, great art, and for many of us, great love.
Many decisions therefore are based on how we can protect our love in a harsh
and unwelcoming place. Like animals in the forest, we try to be aware of each
detail, sound, every physical hurdle. Often, this world does not encourage imagination.
Look away or dream for a second, and you are vulnerable to danger. And I don’t
mean emotional. I mean physical. So, many of us for good reason are determined
and programmed to see this reality…and therefore Torah…with a vision of only the literal. There’s a belief that
if we deal with it and it alone, we will therefore be more adept at dealing
with not only our present existence but with our heightened one as well; with
God. We grope for a way to apologize for
our prophets and priests, embarrassed before the rest of the world,
uncomfortable, unable to come to some moral/ethical conclusion. Finally, we distance
ourselves spiritually.
This is my word this week however: We don’t have to do that.
Judaism is a rabbinic culture, not biblical. In other words
we learn from our teachers and transmit those teachings and those before. We
build our closeness to God on the shoulders of sages. If we deal with Torah
directly we have the humility to weave in the brilliant light of Rabbi Akiba
for example or Rabbi Johanon Ben Zakkai. It isn’t that we aren’t holy enough to
go straight to Torah. It’s just that we are defined not only by these bodies
here and now but by who we once were. As my rabbinic teachers emphasize, there
isn’t any comprehension of Torah or of God without honoring our
ancestors.
And if we look at the history of our ancestors and their
analysis of Torah, there is only one notable instance of literal interpretation.
It came about after a powerful collection of teachings by our midrashic
rabbis…teachings based on metaphor and fantasy…teachings that move beyond the
letters of Torah. This literal movement happened around the time of Rashi (in the
11th century) who, by the
way, might be noted for his significant
rational analysis, but has never been
crowned as a literal commentator. This movement came about before the mystical
interpretation, the kabbalah, the Zohar, but not before the Bahir, the writing
that contained the seeds of the Zohar. It was the Karaite movement of the
twelfth century, a following highly influenced by the Islamic rational analysis
of the day, and though there are certainly Karaites now, they do
not dominate Jewish thought by any means.
So, when God tells Moses to fight against the Midianites and
when Moses actually gets angry that his soldiers do not kill the women and
children, we can read it literally if we so choose. We can fight for the complete annihilation of
the Palestinians, woman and children included. We can demand a scorched earth
policy for our neighbors; bring in the United States government. Or, we can
attack the scene ourselves by going after Moses. After all, we have to
understand that he’s human and humans make mistakes. That interpretation would
be just as literal. Whether we apologize for it, excuse it or support it, if we
are responding to the literal facts we are emphasizing the literal at the
expense of the spiritual.
This makes me think of a short story by Langston Hughes.
It’s called Salvation. In it, we have
the narration of a mature man recounting the day (in his childhood) when he was
saved or not saved at his Baptist Church. This is what happens. For weeks his aunt tells him he will
soon be seeing Jesus. Then the big day comes and all the 13 year olds collect
on the bench and the preacher starts calling to them to come and admit to
having seen the savior. The description is filled with vivid imagery and
movement. You really feel for this child. Finally, after all the other children
have approached the preacher, Langston is the only one left. He has not
honestly seen Jesus. But everyone is
surrounding him and chanting. Everyone
is waiting for him. Compassionately, they call to him. Please come, they call.
Please come and see Jesus. So he doesn’t see Jesus but he goes up anyway and
claims to have seen Him to make everyone happy. That night he cries.
A short analysis here. Langston believes that the only way
to see Jesus is literally. When he does
get up and walks to the preacher therefore it is a literal lie. And in
supporting the lie he instigates it. He therefore feels farther from his
spiritual core than ever. Belief, Hughes is saying, is spiritual more than
literal.
As Jews therefore we have a choice. We are also, like Langston, sitting on that
same bench. We can be saved and believe it is our responsibility as Jews to know Torah only
literally. In this way, when we know the literal facts and deal with the
literal facts we can believe we will then be closer to God. And in this way we
can (like Langston) be closer to our community because (as we know and as I’ve
explained) most of us depend on the literal in real life. Or, we can decide to
see Torah in our minds rather than with our eyes, with our hearts rather than
with our brains, with our souls rather than with our skin. We can see Torah spiritually.
I could end this teaching here but I want to continue. That’s
because my favorite line in Torah deals with how we can transform our vision from
skin-vision to soul-vision.
And it’s in Mattot, line 31:23-24. Anything that can get
purified by fire, we read, must be purified by fire and sprinkled with water.
And anything that can’t be purified with fire, must be purified with
water. The reference is spoils of war.
However, we are all, metaphorically spoils of war. We all have our inner
battles, our outer battles and we all have somehow survived. So then, how do we
purify ourselves so that our vision as well can be cleansed? So that we can see
from the soul and not from a self defensive (and literal) position?
By fire if we can. The fiery chariot of mysticism. The fire
of Torah. The fire of prayer. The fire of yoga (for those of us who dare).
There’s the fire of fasting. The fire of love. The fire of sex if there is
love. There’s the fire of the most heightened mind states. There’s the fire of a long run, of hours of
meditation, of thirst. Water can help soothe
the speed and is often necessary to calm our immediate reaction to such fast
transformation. I have (personally) made the mistake of bringing too much fire
into my life and/or not enough water. In any case, the fire of these actions
helps to peel off our layers so that we can see beyond the literal truth into
something deeper.
Now, getting back to the killing of the Midianites, what if
I said that Torah is not even about story or even characters but movements of
energy? What if I quoted the mystical book the Bahir and emphasized that the
forefront of Torah is not the practical but rather the unseen interconnections
between all living beings? In this case, the Midianite tragedy in symbolic terms becomes an act of the
utmost loving-kindness. Here our prophet is going through absolute physical
pain…the pain of symbolic killing on
the earth-plane…in order to unblock the symbolic
inter-connections, to let the love flow.
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1 comments:
I take issue with your statement "how we can protect our love in a harsh and unwelcoming place."
You make the claim that this "place" is harsh and unwelcoming without providing a proper case for it.
You give broad reference to "war, poverty, and street violence" - but this alone hardly justifies your claim.
Take war - this is a very welcoming event - one is drawn into it, can't control the impulse, must fulfill the urge to become stronger, more powerful, more potent.
And poverty is definitely not harsh- it presents an opportunity for the divine observation of charity. Poverty is a window into the soul of those whom God wants us to help the most.
Street violence is the opposite of harsh. There can be a subtle finesse to its occurrence- a musical rhythm to footsteps of the chase, a sudden realization of humanity and the instantaneous grasp for survival against the gun or knife.
All of these things have their own beauty, their own order, that are lost if we simply dismiss them as harsh and unwelcoming.
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