Exodus 30:11-34:35 – 1 Kings 18:1-39 – Luke 9:1-17
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Ki Tissa
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Parashat Ki Tissa
1. This week's parasha
tells us that after Moses' encounters with God in the Tent of Meeting, his
attendant would not stir from the Tent (Exodus 33:11). Translations of this
verse normally render the name of Moses' attendant as Joshua son of Nun. The
Hebrew for "son" here is bin not the
normal ben. Why is bin used instead of the more common ben?
Rabbi Jonathan
Kaplan
Normally in the Torah, when you have the phrase "son
of," you expect to find the form of the noun for "son" ben. Here in our verse, Exodus 33:11, you find instead bin. This is indeed the form of the noun
you find when pronouns are attached to the word as in the Aqeda when the angel speaks with Abraham after his near sacrifice
of Isaac. There he commends Abraham, "Because you have done this and have not
withheld your son (binkha), your
favored one" (Genesis 22:16).
Historians of Hebrew Grammar, on basis of comparison with other Semitic
languages, tell us that bin in Exodus 33:11 is actually the older pronunciation
of the word, and not the one current when the Masoretes were providing vowel
points for the text in the 10th century C.E. In preserving the pronunciation bin-Nun, they were thus preserving an
older pronunciation of Joshua's name.
Nachmanides (13th century C.E. Spanish commentator)
understands the phrase bin-Nun not as a name telling Joshua's lineage but as a
nickname, binun, which comes from the
same root as the word for "understanding" bina.
Joshua is thus "Joshua the understanding one." Nachmanides does not derive his
understanding of Joshua's name simply from his vast understanding of the Hebrew
language. Standing behind it is an understanding of Joshua as a leader who had
cultivated the values of chokhma
("wisdom") and bina ("understanding")
through his relationship with Moses. These were the values that would enable
him to take Moses' place as leader of the Jewish people. After Moses' death,
the Torah describes him in just such terms.
. . . The period of wailing and mourning for Moses came to an
end. Now Joshua bin-Nun was filled
with the spirit of chokhma because
Moses had laid his hands upon him; and the Israelites heeded him just as the
LORD commanded Moses.
Deuteronomy 34:8-9
What enabled Joshua to reach a place where he
exhibited the important leadership traits of understanding and wisdom? First,
Joshua was mentored by a person who himself exhibited these traits, Moses.
Their mentoring relationship lasted well over 40 years and enabled Joshua to be
able to lead the people. There is an important practical lesson here: one
should seek out mentors who exhibit the traits one seeks to exhibit in one's
character. Just as Moses possessed wisdom and understanding, so also Joshua
came to exhibit those traits. Second, Joshua's character was also shaped by his
encounter with God. As our verse tells us, Joshua "would not stir from the
Tent." Joshua sought to remain in the place of God's presence and thus sought
to orientate his life around the service of God in the world. Not only through
his relationship with Moses but also through his encounter with God were the
values of chokma and bina cultivated in his life.
Yeshua also exhibited the same type of zeal for
mentoring and the presence of God in his youth. In the besora of Luke we hear the following story,
Now every year his parents went to Jerusalem
for the festival of the Passover. And when he was twelve years old, they went
up as usual for the festival. When the festival was ended and they started to
return, the boy Yeshua stayed behind and his parents did not know it. . . .
When they did not find him, they returned to Jerusalem
to search for him. After three days they
found him in the temple, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and
asking them questions. And all who heard him were amazed at his understanding and his answers. . . . And
Yeshua increased in wisdom and in
years and in divine and human favor.
Luke 2:41-43, 45-46, 52
Like Joshua, Yeshua sought never to stir from the
place of God's presence and thus grew in both understanding and wisdom, the
traits of the leader of Israel.
2. Why did Moses destroy the first set of tablets?
Rabbi Jonathan Kaplan
When Moses comes down from meeting with God, he
comes up the Israelites in the midst of their devotion to the golden calf. Our parasha recounts Moses' response to
their idolatry, "When Moses approached the camp, he saw the calf and the
dancing, and he became enraged. He threw down the tablets and broke them at the
base of the mountain" (Exodus 32:19). What is striking about our passage is
that the Torah does not tell us here what motivated Moses' rage. Exodus Rabba, the late haggadic
commentary on Exodus offers three possible motivations for Moses' actions.
Exodus Rabba,
first, offers an interpretation that speaks to a greater moral lesson in Moses'
actions; Moses wanted to teach Israel
not to believe a report of evil action until one has seen it in person:
You find that when the blessed Holy One said to Moses, "Go,
descend, for your people have acted sinfully" (Exodus 32:7), Moses was still
grasping the tablets in his hand, and refused to believe that Israel
had sinned. He said, "If I do not see it, I will not believe it." As it says,
"As soon as he approached the camp, etc." (Exodus 32:19). He did not break them
until he had seen with his own eyes. . . . Moses intended to teach Israel
appropriate moral behavior. Although a person may hear something from the most
trustworthy source, it is forbidden to receive the testimony or act on it until
one has seen with his own eyes.
Next, Exodus
Rabba suggests that Moses broke the tablets so that Israel,
not having received the tablets from God, would not be obligated by them or
their attendant punishments.
A parable of a prince who took for himself a wife and wrote
for her a marriage contract which he gave to the bride's agents [the text is
unclear to me here]. After some time, an evil report circulated about her. What
did the agent do? He tore up the marriage document, saying, "It would be better
for her to be judged as an unmarried woman than as one married." Thus Moses
did. He said, "If I do not break the tablets, Israel
will be unable to endure, as it says, ‘He that sacrifices to gods, God will
destroy' (Exodus 22:19)." For this
reason, he broke them saying to the blessed Holy One, "They do not know what
was written therein."
Finally, Exodus
Rabba suggests that Moses committed a transgression by breaking the tablets
and, thus, identified himself with Israel's
sinful behavior. Moses was such a righteous person that God would not destroy
either him or sinful Israel.
"I looked and I beheld and you had sinned against the LORD
your God." When he saw that they would not endure, he stood with them and broke
the tablets, saying to the blessed Holy One, "They have sinned and I have sinned
for I broke the tablets. If you forgive them, forgive me also. As it says, ‘If
you will forgive their sin,' thus forgive mine; ‘and if you do not' forgive
them do not forgive me either, but ‘blot me out of your book which you have
written' (Exodus 32:32).
Thus, tradition sees Moses modeling the values of
deep concern for Israel's
future and appropriate moral behavior. What other lessons can we learn from
Moses' breaking the first set of Tablets?

Joshua Brumbach
Luke 9:1-17 - Doing . . . and Dwelling
in the Presence of God
Chassidic thought has much to say about the concept
of devequt - of cleaving to God.
Within and through this closeness to God, one draws so close to the Divine
Presence that one is enabled to do miracles and move in signs and wonders. This
becomes possible as one's reality becomes so intertwined with the spiritual
reality, and in understanding our intimate relationship with the God of Israel.
The Jewish thinker Abraham Joshua Heschel once wrote that, "The present is the
presence of God." Nothing exists apart from God. As such, the more time we
spend in God's presence, the more we will reflect God and God's attributes.
This is related to both our weekly Torah portion, Ki Tissa, as well as to the besora portion from Luke 9. One of the
primary themes of the last few Torah portions is the construction of the Mishkan - the Tabernacle. The manifest
presence of God is called the Shekhina,
from the Hebrew root meaning "to dwell." There is actually a relationship
between the Mishkan and the Shekhina as both words are from the same
root, relating to the "dwelling" of God's presence. The lesson we learn about
all the intricate details described concerning the construction of the
Tabernacle is that God cares about detail. When we are faithful to those
details, and create a place for God's presence to dwell, then God comes and
dwells in and through us. The Divine Presence literally dwells among us!
How does this relate to our portion from the besora?
As we spend time in the presence of God, Yeshua is revealed in our very
midst, and dwells (literally tabernacles) among us. Through cleaving and
clinging to more of God in our lives, we become empowered to do the things
Yeshua did. In Luke 9:1-17 Yeshua sent out the twelve emissaries to proclaim
the Kingdom of God,
to heal, and move in signs and wonders.
It is not enough just to be a Judaism focused on
Torah. We must also be a Judaism focused
on the living Torah - Yeshua, and the power of God's Torah to affect the world
around us. As followers of Yeshua we must also be focused on devequt - of clinging to, and dwelling
in the presence of God. For the more we dwell in the presence of God, the more
God will move through each of us.
May each of us come to dwell more fully in God's
presence, and may each of us, like the twelve emissaries of Yeshua, experience
God's power to proclaim the Kingdom, heal the sick, and see many lives set
free!
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- PARASHAT VAYAQHEL
Exodus 35:1-38:20
1 Kings 7:40-50
Luke 9:18-36
UPCOMING YACHAD NETWORK EVENTS
PLEASE NOTE THAT
DUE TO LOGISTICS ISSUES WE HAVE MOVED THE FOLLOWING EVENTS FROM NEW YORK CITY TO BEVERLY HILLS, CA
4th Annual Young Leaders Shabbaton
Beverly
Hills, CA ● June 6-7, 2008
7th Annual Young Messianic Jewish
Scholars Conference
Beverly
Hills, CA ● June 4-6, 2008
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