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Kee
Tisah - 5760-2000
"The 'Vengeful' G-d'"
Rabbi
Ephraim Buchwald
In
the parasha, Parashat Kee Tisah, we read of the infamous
episode of the Golden Calf.
In preparation for the Revelation, Moses had gone up to
Mount Sinai for forty days and forty nights to study Torah
with the Almighty. But, because of a miscalculation regarding
the date of Moses' return, the People of Israel thought
that Moses had abandoned them, and demanded that Aaron
produce a new leader. Aaron tried to delay them, but eventually
the Golden Calf is created. The crazed people cry out
to the Golden Calf (Exodus 32:4) "Ay'leh Eh'lo'hecha
Yis'rael," This is your G-d, O' Israel, that brought
you out of the land of Egypt!
G-d is furious at the people's actions, tells Moses to
descend from the mountain, saying that the people that
he (Moses) has brought up from Egypt have become corrupt.
G-d, in anger, denounces the people, saying in Exodus
32:9, "Rah'iti et ha'am ha'zeh, v'hinei am k'shey oref
hu," I have seen this people and behold, they are
a stiff-necked people. And now Moses, says G-d, desist
from Me, let My anger flare against them, and I will annihilate
them, and shall make of you (Moses) a great nation.
Moses
pleads to G-d that the destruction of Israel will be seen
by the other nations as G-d's lack of omnipotence. G-
d, so to speak, reconsiders, and Moses comes down the
mountain with the two tablets of testimony in his hands.
When Moses sees the people dancing around the Gold Calf,
his own anger flares. He throws the tablets from his hands
and shatters them at the foot of the mountain (Exodus
32:19).
Moses
then calls out: (Exodus 32:26) Whosoever is for G-d join
me. All the Levites gather around him, and wreak vengeance
on those who had led the rebellion of the Golden Calf.
Three thousand men of Israel fall that day at the hands
of the Levites. Moses pleads to G-d on behalf of the Jewish
people, but G-d strikes the people with a plague.
Moses
spends the next forty days praying that G-d restore Israel
to its previous state of eminence. The second set of tablets
are delivered to the Jewish people. G-d reveals His thirteen
attributes of mercy, and so the story ends.
Although
we have not yet completed the reading of the Book of Exodus
(the second of the Five Books of Moses), one could already
get the impression that the G-d of Israel is a vengeful
G-d. This is the G-d who destroys the world by means of
a Flood; the G-d who asks Abraham to sacrifice his son;
the G-d who enslaves the Jewish people in Egypt; the G-d
who kills Nadav and Avihu, Aaron's sons, on the greatest
day of Aaron's life, at the investiture of the Mishkan,
the Tabernacle; the G-d who swallows up Korach and 250
of his men as the earth opens; the G-d who decrees that
the Jewish people will never be allowed to enter the Land
of Israel because of the sin of the spies; the G-d who
says to Moses that he will never enter the Land of Israel
because he hit the rock, rather than speak to the rock.
The seemingly unending anger and acts of retribution are
perhaps why the nations of the world refer to the G-d
of the Hebrew Scriptures, the so-called "Old Testament"
G-d, as the G-d of Vengeance, while the G-d of the Christian
Bible is often called the god of love or the god of mercy.
The
Torah in Leviticus 19:18 clearly forbids vengeance. "Lo
tikom, v'lo titor et b'nei ameh'cha," You shall not
wreak vengeance nor bear a grudge toward the people of
your nation. The Talmud, in Yoma 23a, defines vengeance,
citing the following example: If one farmer asks to borrow
a hoe from a second farmer and is refused, that first
farmer is not permitted to refuse the use of a spade to
the farmer who was unkind to him. In Leviticus 19, however,
the Torah goes further. Do not bare a grudge, explains
the Talmud--one is not even permitted to say to that farmer
who was unkind yesterday: "I'm not like you, I'm not a
low-life. Here, take my spade and use it in good health!"
And yet, our G-d seems to be a vengeful and grudge-bearing
G-d. How could that be?
Of
course, there is a profound difference between people
being unnecessarily vengeful, and a G-d who demands accountability.
One cannot equate a valid and deserving punishment meted
out to a wicked person, with vengeance against an arrogant
or mean neighbor.
As
the story of the Golden Calf concludes, a second set of
tablets are carved out. In Exodus 34:4, Moses rises early
in the morning and ascends Mount Sinai. G-d descends in
a cloud and stands with Moses. Moses calls out the name
of G-d as G-d proclaims: "Hashem, Hashem, G-d,
G-d, Compassionate and Gracious, Slow to Anger and Abundant
in Kindness and Truth, Preserver of Kindness for Thousands
of Generations, Forgiver of Iniquity, Willful Sin, and
Error, and Who Cleanses but does not Cleanse Completely,
recalling the iniquity of parents upon the children and
grandchildren to the third and fourth generation." These
so- called 13 attributes of G-d's mercy represent the
ultimate level of forgiveness. By invoking the 13 attributes,
G-d gives the Jewish people a second chance.
Let's
look at this again! There is an inconsistency, a blatant
inconsistency in the thirteen attributes!! Exodus 34:7
reads "V'nakay lo y'nakeh, po'hkead avon avot,"
the verse tells us that G-d does not entirely cleanse.
In fact, He recalls the iniquity of the parents on the
children and the grandchildren to the third and fourth
generations!
The
brother of the Chazon Ish, Rav Avraham Yishayahu Karelitz,
the great Jewish sage who led the religious community
in Israel in the 1940s and 1950s, was asked a question:
If we are supposed to cling to G-d, "V'da'vakta b'id'ra'chav,"
if we are supposed to imitate G-d, then perhaps we, humans,
should be vengeful, since we see that the last of G-d's
13 attributes of mercy is vengeance and not cleansing
completely? He answered: If a human being's act of vengeance
is preceded by 12 qualities of mercy, then perhaps that
person is truly entitled to be vengeful as well.
In
real life there is vengeance that is entirely legitimate.
In fact, sometimes legitimate vengeance is not cruel at
all, but may actually be a reflection of mercy. There
comes a time when people in authority need to say, "Enough
is enough!" G-d also says: "Enough is enough, this cannot
continue, this must stop!" And by stopping the undesirable
actions, we perform an act of mercy not vengeance. Stopping
a cruel and wicked person certainly is an act of mercy
for the victims. It may even be an act of mercy for the
cruel and wicked person himself.
Let's
face it, Judaism's goals are radically different from
the conventional world. Judaism sees the world differently
and values the world differently. Our G-d, the G-d of
the Hebrews, is surely a G-d of love, but also a G-d of
accountability. In the Jewish religion, one doesn't just
walk away from one's misdeed. People are held accountable,
responsible, and expected to mend their ways when they
err; and if they don't, there's a price to be paid by
us all for improper actions.
Yes,
our G-d holds us to a strict account, but by holding us
to a strict account, He performs for us an act of mercy.
As a result, we become better, stronger, more knowledgeable
and even more merciful people, especially when we ultimately
see the toll that sinfulness exacts on us.
Yes,
as the brother of the Chazon Ish said: If vengeance is
preceded by 12 qualities of mercy, then perhaps vengeance
is indeed justified!
May
You Be Blessed.
Originally
aired 2/26
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