 Aliya-by-Aliya Sedra Summary
for Parshat Balak
[Numbers] are the Chinuch's mitzva count
KOHEN - First Aliya - 11
p'sukim (22:2-12)
Balak was a weaker king than some of his neighbors in the
region. The defeat of the others instilled fear in Balak's
heart, and he realized that waging a conventional war against Israel would be futile. His
plan (following research of the matter) was to enlist Bil'am to curse the People of
Israel. To this end, Balak sends a delegation to Bil'am in Midyan. Bil'am invites the
envoys to spend the night so that he (Bil'am) can be spoken to by G-d. G-d does
"appear" to Bil'am and asks him who these people are. Bil'am tells G-d and He
warns Bil'am not to go with the delegation, nor to curse the People, because "they
are blessed".
[sdt] How come Balak, a sworn enemy of Israel, rates having a sedra named after him?
Commentaries suggest that Balak was an "honest enemy" of Israel. His antagonism
was based on his fear of Israel; his intentions and actions were clear-cut. We have been
plagued by many enemies throughout history who have hidden behind a smile, mask of
friendship, or a handshake only to try to stab us in the back. Dear uncle/grandfather
Lavan, is perhaps the prime model of the "sneaky" enemy. Balak's straight-
forward hatred is
something we can appreciate.
[sdt] Commentaries point out that Moav and Midyan were
bitter enemies. Nonetheless, they put their differences
aside and united to fight against Israel. This shows the
power of anti-Semitism in this world. But it also must teach us another lesson. That we
too must be prepared to set aside that which divides the Jewish People into fragments, so
that we can fight our common enemy with greater strength. This is not to suggest that we
must ignore, overlook, or forgive these differ ences. But we have to know when we should
put our religious-secular battles "on hold", in order to be united against the
enemies of the Jewish People. We must work together - Ashkenazim & S'faradim, National
Religious and Haredi, left and right, religious and secular, to strengthen our position
against those who would take parts of Eretz Yisrael from us, divide our capital, endanger
our lives.
LEVI - Second Aliya - 8 p'sukim (22:13-20)
In the morning, Bil'am (reluctantly) dispatches Balak's
messengers with his refusal. Balak sends a larger and more prestigious delegation to
Bil'am, with offers of great
honor and wealth if Bil'am would only agree to Balak's
request. Bil'am again refuses, but does invite the new
delegation to spend the night. This time G-d permits Bil'am
to accompany the Moabites, but warns him not to do anything other than what G-d tells him.
(Commentaries draw from this the notion: "In the direction a person is inclined,
there he is lead" - the proverbial "rope with which to hang
himself".)
[sdt] Why was Bil'am to be punished for going with Balak's
delegation, when G-d permitted him to go? Certainly, a
person is held account able for violations of G-d's prohibi
tions, but are we also responsible for things which are not
specifically prohibited, although it is reasonable to assume that G-d does not want us to
do them? The answer is YES. This is one of the concepts we actually derive from the
episode of Bil'am. The Torah gives us a very good idea of what HaShem wants of us. Many
sins are spelled out very
clearly - in fact, there is a notion of "one will not be punished unless expressly
warned"; yet we are warned that G-d will be angry, so to speak, if we do things that
we (should) know are contrary to His wishes. This is something that exists in human
relationships too. Parents, for example, expect children to behave a certain way, even
without being specifically told. We are not pro grammed robots; we are human beings with
the ability to reason.
In the straight reading of the Chumash, it seems that Bil'am is truly a man of G-d who
only wants to do what G-d wants him to do. Tradi- tion describes him differently, as one
who knows that he is totally in G-d's control but tries to fight it at every step of the
way. What a blow to Bil'am's ego to be thought of so highly among people, yet to know that
G-d calls every shot.
SHLISHI - Third Aliya - 18 p'sukim (22:21-38)
Bil'am arises in the morning, saddles his donkey (by
himself), and goes with the Moav officers. (The implication
in the verse is that Bil'am went with a great deal of
enthusiasm to "hopefully" curse the People of Israel.
Contrast this with Avraham's enthusiasm re the Akeida.) G-d is "angry" with
Bil'am for going (even though He permitted it) and sends an angel in an attempt to
dissuade him from continuing. The Torah recounts that on three separate occasions -
symbolically, in increasingly nar rower
passages - the donkey sees the angel blocking the way, but
Bil'am does not. Bil'am strikes the donkey each time, until
G-d gives the power of speech to the donkey, who admonishes Bil'am for his deeds. Then G-d
permits Bil'am to see the angel and Bil'am acknowledges his sin. He offers to return, but
the angel allows him to proceed, with the warning not to say anything
"unauthorized". (It is mentioned in Pirkei Avot, that the "mouth of the
donkey" was one of 10 special items that were created in the instant before G-d
rested from further creation on Shabbat.)
Balak goes out to greet Bil'am, who tells Balak that he is
powerless to act on his own and must say only what G-d
"puts in his mouth". (This is the significance of the "mouth of the
donkey" - viz. that it is G-d Who grants the gift of speech; one should not be
arrogant about his usual ability to speak well, think lofty thoughts, or perceive
spiritual concepts.)
The favored weapon of the nations of the world is the sword. The "weapon" of the
Jewish People is "the power of speech" (prayer, divrei Torah, etc.). Bil'am
arrogantly lays "his weapon" aside and attempted to harm the People of
Israel with their (our) own weapon. G-d, so to speak, went
against Bil'am with his abandoned weapon - the angel's
drawn sword. And ultimately, the Torah tells us, Bil'am fell by the sword. - Rashi
R'VI'I - Fourth Aliya - 15 p'sukim (22:39-23:12)
Balak makes sacrifices on the occasion, and Bil'am orders 7 altars to be built for special
offerings. (All that is done is highly significant - e.g. the Torah records that our 3
Patriarchs offered 7 korbanot at various times. Bil'am hoped to "neutralize" the
effect of those sacrifices in G-
d's eyes by offering 7 sacrifices of his own.) After meditation, Bil'am "speaks"
about the People of Israel. He
does not curse them, but rather beautifully describes the
uniqueness of Israel. Balak is upset, but Bil'am reminds
him that he (Bil'am) can only transmit that which G-d wants
him to.
Bil'am spoke of Israel as a nation that dwells apart from
other nations. The word in the verse (23:9), HEN (spelled
HEY-NUN), meaning "it is" or "they are" (a nation apart...), contains
a hint towards this idea of being distinct and apart from others. The letters of the
Alef-bet can be paired to produce round number pairs as follows: ALEF & TET total 10,
BET & CHET, GIMMEL & ZAYIN, etc. The only letter without a partner is HEY. YUD
& TZADI total 100, KAF & PEY total 100, LAMED & AYIN, etc. The unpaired letter
in this sequence is NUN. HEY-NUN represents the "apartness" of Israel - HEN AM
L'VADAD YISHKON - we are unique among the nations of the world, and we must preserve that
uniqueness by remaining true to Torah, faithful to HaShem, and distinct from the other
nations.
CHAMISHI - Fifth Aliya - 14 p'sukim (23:13-26)
Balak takes Bil'am to a different vantage point, in the hopes that he will be able to
curse the People this time. Once again, seven altars are built and sacrifices offered.
Once again, Bil'am meditates and then utters magnificent descriptions of the Nation of
Israel. Balak says his piece
and Bil'am again explains his restrictions. (Difficult for
someone who is considered the epitome of arrogance.)
Rashi says that Balak chose Rosh HaPisga as a place from
where Bil'am might succeed in cursing the people, because
he foresaw that Moshe would die there. Rashi makes the
point that Balak knew this about the place but Bil'am did not.
SHISHI - Sixth Aliya - 17 p'sukim (23:27-24:13)
Balak suggests yet a different vantage point from which to
observe Israel; maybe G-d will permit them to be cursed.
Bil'am again asks for 7 altars to be built, and a bull and a ram to be offered on each.
This time, Bil'am does not meditate in his usual manner, expecting similar results,
namely that blessings will emerge from him - and he really
wants to curse Israel.
Balak takes Bil'am to Rosh HaP'or. Having seen in a vision
that Israel will soon fall at P'or, Balak mistakingly assumes that the cursing from there
would be successful (Rashi).
Targum Onkeles indicates that Bil'am was "reminding" G-d of the Golden Calf, so
that He would allow the People to be
cursed. However, when he saw the multitude encamped in such a special manner, he was
endowed with "Ruach HaKodesh" and he blessed the People of Israel a third time.
Balak had "had enough", spoke harshly to Bil'am, and "sent him
packing".
SH'VI'I - Seventh Aliya - 21 p'sukim (24:14-25:9)
Before Bil'am takes leave of Balak, Bil'am prophesies about the other nations in the
region. Bil'am's final advice, his attempts to curse the People having failed, is to
entice
the People to idolatry and immoral behavior which will turn
G-d Himself against them. This plan works, as 24,000 perish in a plague following the
orgiastic worship of Baal Pe'or. Only the bold action of Pinchas b. Elazar b. Aharon
HaKohen in defending G-d's honor, stops the devastating plague.
[sdt] This final lesson of the sedra must be learned well
by us today. What Balak and Bil'am discovered is that if
Israel is in G-d's favor, it will be invincible from outside attack. No nation can succeed
against Israel, when we are "on good terms" with G- d. If we, however, incur
G-d's anger, by being unfaithful to Him, by disregarding Torah and mitzvot, then we are
extremely vulnerable to our enemies. And they might not even have to actually fight
against us - we can, G-d forbid, destroy ourselves. This was true more than 3000 years
ago; it is no less true today.
One a certain level, Parshat Balak is extremely simple and
straightforward, with an extremely powerful message -
because of that simplicity. For 95 p'sukim, we feel the
protection of G-d as Balak and Bil'am fail time and again
in what almost looks like a comical farce. The Gemara says
that Bil'am was in some ways superior to Moshe Rabeinu,
that when he was around, G-d was extra vigilant in
protecting us. For those 95 p'sukim, we beam with pride at
the grudging admiration of a unique nation as expressed by
Bil'am. And then comes the last 9 p'sukim of the sedra.
Bil'am went back home. So did Balak. No danger anymore.
WHAM! We did it to our selves. G-d protected us from Bil'am by giving him his words. By
not letting him speak on his own. And then we turned around and betrayed G-d. Only
24,000 fatalities, because of the bold action of Pinchas. The sedra is shouting its
message to us. All we have to do
is listen to it.
Last 3 p'sukim are reread for Maftir.
Haftara - 17 p'sukim - Micha 5:6-6:8
Micha's prophecies include the state- of-affairs that finds
Israel dispersed among the nations of the world, the
promise of the end of war and restoration of Israel to its
Land, and the "settling of accounts" between G-d and the
other nations, and G-d and Israel. This portion contains a
reference to the advice of Balak and Bil'am's response to
it - thus the appropriate choice of this portion as the haftara for Parshat Balak. Note
the "credit" to Balak for the advice that caused the failing of Israel as
opposed to the implication from the Torah that it was Bil'am's idea. Interesting note: The
prophet refers to the leaders of the
People of the Exodus as Moshe, Aharon, and MIRIAM.
The haftara ends with the famous encapsulation of our
responsibilities to G-d: "What does G-d demand of us, ONLY to behave justly, love
chesed, and walk modestly (humbly) before G-d." This is the formula for the greatest
protection we can have from the Balaks and Bil'ams of the
world.
G'matriya - Rabbi Yaakov Auerbach
z"l
In the final pasuk of Micha, the prophet indicates
three
"demands" of G-d: ASOT MISHPAT (the carrying out of
justice), AHAVAT CHESSED (the love of acts of kindness), and HATZNEI'A LECHET...
(modesty).
Each "demand" has a numeric partner, as follows:
ASOT MISHPAT = 70+300+6+400 (776) + 40+300+80+9 (429) = 1205.
EILEH HAMITZVOT ASHER TZIVA HASHEM (these are the mitzvot that G-d commanded) = 1+30+5
(36) + 5+40+90+6+400 (541) + 1+300+200 (501) + 90+6+5 (101) + 26 = 1205.
AHAVAT CHESSED = 1+5+2+400 (408) + 8+60+4 (72) = 480.
OLAM CHESSED YIBANEH (the world is built upon a foundation of kindness). In the account of
Creation there are 480 words.
V'HATZNEI'A... (follow the words by numbers) = 6+5+90+50+70 (221) + 30+20+400 (450) +
70+40 (110) + 26 + 1+30+5+10+20 (66) = 847.
As a result of reaching this level, says Rabbi Auerbach
z"l, one achieves U'MATZA CHEN V'SECHEL TOV B'EINEI ELOKIM V'ADAM (Mishlei 3:4) -
"And finding grace and good understanding in G-d's eyes and those of man."
6+40+90+1 (137) + 8+50 (58) +6+300+20+30 (356) + 9+6+2 (17) + 2+70+10+50+10 (142) +
1+30+5+10+40 (86) + 6+1+4+40 (51) = 847.
The beauty of the Auerbach G'matriyas is that they involve
actual verses and not forced, sometimes clumsy wording in order to make the numbers work.
Interesting side discovery
HAMITZVOT = 5+40+90+6+400 = 541.
YISRAEL = 10+300+200+1+30 = 541.
[The Balak Homepage]
[The Torah Tidbits Homepage][How to use TORAH tidbits]
[About The OU/NCSY Israel Center][About Torah tidbits]
|