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The Set Table - Naso 5766
Chayyei Yeshua
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This week's edition of The Set Table: A Young Messianic Shabbat Table Guide contains: 

QUESTIONS AND COMMENTARY ON PARASHAT NASO'
CHAYYEI YESHUA - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading

SUMMARY OF QUESTIONS

QUESTIONS AND COMMENTARY ON PARASHAT NASO'

1. How does the Nazirite in Numbers 6 differ from the Suspected Adulteress in Numbers 5? How are the two figures interrelated?

Deborah

Numbers 5 begins by commanding a state of holiness in the camp of Israel: men and women who are unclean are to be exiled outside its borders. God says to Moses: "You shall put out both male and female; you shall put them outside the camp, that they may not defile their camps in the midst of which I dwell" (Numbers 5:3). All those who are impure: the ones with skin diseases, the ones with a discharge and the ones defiled by a dead body, are to be placed outside the boundaries of where God's chosen people live, and where God dwells among them. The sins of the unclean almost always have the opportunity to be removed; through ritual washings, waiting periods, through restitution and sacrificial offerings. The unclean could then be restored to their community and into the presence of God.

But what about the woman whose husband has become jealous; suspicious that she has gone astray, removing herself from under his protection and his authority? Is there any restoration back into the community for her? Or is her fate one like a leper never healed - to stand on the outskirts of her former home forever looking in?

The woman is told to come before the priest at the tent of meeting and to offer a sacrifice devoid of oil and frankincense. Unlike the usual more elaborate offerings, hers lacks joy. It bemoans her possible guilt and the pain of her husband; for the sacrifice is brought by her husband: "He shall bring the offering required for her, one-tenth of an ephah of barley meal; he shall pour no oil on it and put no frankincense on it because it is a grain offering of jealousy, an offering of remembering, for bringing iniquity to remembrance" (Numbers 5:15). There is to be no sweet aroma that rises into the heavens.

The priest then takes the woman from her husband and she is brought before God. Once her hair has been shamefully and mournfully uncovered, the priest removes earth from the sanctuary floor and places it in holy water from the laver. The offering is placed in her hands while the priest holds the water in his: "The bitter water, it is called, that brings a curse" (Numbers 5:24).

The priest charges her to accept an oath upon herself. If she is innocent she can go free. Beginning with this assumption, the priest says: "If no man has lain with you and if you have not gone astray to uncleanness while under your husband's authority, be free from this bitter water that brings a curse" (Numbers 5:19); but if guilty the priest says to her: "The Lord make you a curse and an oath among your people when the Lord makes your thigh waste and your belly swell. And this water that brings a curse shall go into your stomach and make your abdomen swell and your thigh waste away" (5:21-22). God causes the woman to become that oath among her people. She becomes the living curse within the chosen people. And the woman must say the double "Amen, Amen" - affirming the consequences of either her guilt or innocence.

The curse is then written on a scroll (with God's name) and scraped into the water, which the priest makes her drink. She drinks the water out of a ceramic vessel (also used for purification of skin diseases), not the one made of the usual gold. The magical element of drinking a potion has been transferred onto the God of Israel whose supreme authority and omniscience will judge her sin that no witness has seen. Not a human, not an angel, not one of the gods, but the Lord of Israel will see into her soul. She tastes the unpleasant earth in her mouth reminding her of the possible guilt of her actions. If she is guilty, the plague will come upon her, one inducing infertility, or perhaps, abortion if she has become pregnant from the secret adultery she has committed. The suspected adulteress is unique among biblical characters - hers is the only case in biblical law where the outcome of a hidden sin depends on a miracle; on God's intervention. If she is innocent, she will be free to bear children.

This suspected wife, now holding her unadorned offering in her palms, standing before God in a shameful situation, with her hair uncovered, seeking divine judgment, offers a reverse picture to the person described in the following chapter: the holy Nazirite, who at the end of his or her period of separation, also stands before the priest, palms out, with an elaborate offering: its recipe consists of a boiled shoulder of a ram, one loaf of unleavened bread, a thin cake, and a shorn head. The woman of the jealous husband is compelled by law to swear her oath for divine evaluation, while the Nazirite under no compulsion, chooses to set him or herself apart for divine blessing. The Nazirite voluntarily vows to sanctify him or herself for a limited time to God (Numbers 6:2).

The exact reason for making this vow is unknown. The biblical passage does not explicitly tell us why someone might choose this kind of ascetic life temporarily. The verbal form of Nazarite, lehazzir (its root nazar), means to restrict. Interestingly, the word for vow - neder, is a variant of the root nazar. Neder: to vow, implies devotion, commitment, pledge - all the positive aspects of the Nazirite, whereas, nazar means to restrict, abstain, self-deny. The Nazirite becomes a combination of one committed and devoted to self-denial and restrictions for the purpose of sanctification to God.

Solomon Astruc, in the 14th c., in Midreshei Hattora, he says the sin is not in becoming or ceasing to be a Nazirite, but what precedes the Nazirite vow - the previous inability to discipline desire. This may remind us of the woman who precedes the Nazirite in the scriptures - the woman suspected of adultery who might not have restrained her delights, her pleasures in a man other than her husband. Could the Nazirite vow, following promptly after the adulteress be a gracious offer necessary for the person, like the adulterous woman, to restrict herself and vow abstinence and be restored to holiness through the vow? Or could these two paradigms be juxtaposed to relay the general solution for humans when tempted? Could this Nazirite vow be thus a necessary but extreme medicine for spiritual ills as determined by Astruc? Perhaps also, this is an opportunity for the suspected adulteress to experience the notion of a voluntary vow for the purpose of holiness (whether it offers complete restoration or not): It grants her the chance for the exact opposite of her oath of compulsion by the priest for her suspected sin.

 

2. In Parashat Naso' we hear of God's command to the priests to offer a blessing over the people (Numbers 6:22-27). In these verses, the verb for blessing (barakh) appears first with reference to the priests and then with reference to God. What does the character of the priestly benediction teach us about the types of blessing? What spiritual lesson can we learn?

Jonathan

In the midst of Parashat Naso', God commands Aaron and his descendents to offer the following blessing over the people of Israel.

            May the LORD bless you and keep you.

            May the LORD deal kindly and graciously with you.

            May the LORD bestow favor upon you and grant you peace.

            Numbers 6:24-26

In verse 23, Israel is to offer the blessing. In verse 24, God is supposed to bestow the blessing. Who bestows the blessing? Israel or God? In seeking to offer an answer to this question, the 15th century Spanish commentator, Abarbanel offers an insightful statement about the types of blessing:

"Blessing" is a homonym referring both to the good emanating from God to his creatures, as in "And the LORD blessed Abraham with all" (Genesis 24) and the blessing proceeding from humans to God above in the sense of praise, as in "And David blessed the LORD (1 Chronicles 29). Then there is the blessing given by one person to another which is neither to be compared to the abundance of grace emanating from God nor to the praise proceeding from his creatures, but rather constitutes a supplication by the author calling on God to bless the person concerned. Into this category falls the priestly blessing . . .  They merely invoke the divine blessing on Israel.

            Nehama Leibowitz, Studies in Numbers, 63.

Here Abarbanel follows Rashbam and others in arguing that the priests invoked divine blessing upon Israel. They are the agents of divine blessing. Abarbanel's comments, however, provide us with an interesting perspective on the nature of blessing.  For Abarbanel, blessing operates in three ways. First, God's bestows blessings on creation. Second, humanity blesses God through praise. Third, humans invoke God's blessing on others.

We participate, thus, in blessing in three ways: as receivers, bestowers, and invokers. Thinking about blessing in these three ways reminds us that we cannot spend our life only playing one or two of these roles. The importance of this can be seen in Kefa's comments in his first epistle where he exhorts his readers to "repay evil [or] . . . insult . . . with blessing because to this you were called so that you might inherit a blessing" (1 Peter 3:9). Throughout our life we will be called to act in each of these three ways - sometimes receiving blessing, other times blessing God, and other times invoking God's blessing on others. This is life as a member of God's people.



 
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