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Parashat Ekev
Iyunim - Weekly insights on the Parasha with commentaries
by Nehama Leibovitz, za"l
And thou shalt remember the long trek along which the Lord
thy God hath let thee those forty years in the wilderness, that He might
afflict thee, to put thee to the test to know what was in thy heart, whether
thou wouldst keep His commandments, or not and He afflicted thee, and
suffered thee to hunger, and fed thee with manna, which thou knewest not,
neither did thy fathers know...Who fed thee in the wilderness with manna,
which thy fathers knew not; that We might afflict thee, and put thee to
the test, to do thee good at thy latter end. (8, 2---3, 16)
Both in our sidra (above) and in Exodus (16) the manna is described
as a trial or test (nisayon) for Israel. Our commentators have remarked
on the unusual nature of this trial. Usually a test or trial is something
to be borne, an unpleasant experience or burdensome duty. Abravanel queries:
What test was implied in the provision of their daily bread
in the form of manna, with a double portion on the Sabbath eve. Surely
this was a great kindness, rather than a test?
Rashi explains this difficulty, in the first context where it appears,
in Exodus where the Almighty announced the sending of the manna:
"That I may put them to the test, whether they will walk in
My law or not" --- to see if they will heed the precepts connected herewith,
that they should not leave over, and not go out gathering on on the Sabbath.
The test was not then in the gift of the manna itself but in the instructions
accompanying it. The way the Israelites honored these instructions would
serve as a pointer to their loyalty to the Divine commands, to see "whether
they will walk in My law or not''. But by the same token, surely every
precept in the Torah can be termed a test or trial? We may detect, however,
in the wording of the text, that the trial had nothing to do with the
instructions governing the manna 'but with the actual enjoyment of the
Heavenly food. The life of luxury and ease they would enjoy in virtue
of the manna would constitute the greatest trial of all:
"That he might put thee to the rest"' if you will do )3is will,
when He grants you sustenance, without suffering. (Sforno)
In other words. would the Israelites continue to fear God and keep His
commandments In times of prosperity? But we may object to this explanation
on the grounds that the diet of manna in the wilderness is represented
as a burden. an affliction and not as an enjoyment. Nahmanides suggests
a more plausible explanation:
The situation in which the Israelites were placed regarding
the manna represented a great trial for them since they entered a desert
without food of any sort and with no way out. They were totally dependent
on the daily portion of manna which rained down and melted in the heat
of the sun. They hungered for it greatly, but bore all their suffering
in obedience to God who might have led them through an inhabited route.
He chose however to confront them with this trial in order to test their
eternal loyalty to Him...
In other words, Nahmanides maintained that the manna constituted a trial
for the Israelites owing to its unusual nature. Neither they nor their
fathers had known it. It was an unpopular, strange food which was not
given them in abundance and could not be stored. Each day was viewed with
apprehension by the hungry Israelites who waited expectantly for the manna
and were assailed by the doubt that it would not suffice. The author of
Ha-ketav Va-ha-kabalah clarifies the meaning of the term "trial'' used
in the Bible:
God who is all-knowing requires no proof. His trial is rather
to prove to the person himself the limits of his own capacities. "'That
I might put thee to the test" means that God will bring man into such
a situation which will be able to prove to man himself the extent of his
Faith and trust in Him.
The Biur suggests the following approach to our text:
By being placed in a position of absolute reliance on the Almighty
for their daily sustenance, they would become habituated to trust in Him
and their faith in God would become part and parcel of their nature.
If we understand the manna as symbolizing the dependence of man on His
Maker, the two references to the manna at the beginning and end of the
passage we first quoted, aptly suit the context, which speaks of the wonderful
natural wealth of the land they were going to possess:
For the Lord thy God bringeth thee into a good land a land
of brooks of waters, of fountains ... a land of wheat, barley... wherein
thou shalt eat bread without scarceness, a land whose stones are iron
and out of whose hills thou mayest mine copper... Beware lest thou forget
the Lord thy God. (8, 7—11)
We are accustomed to regarding this passage as the classic description
of the fertility and other wonderful qualities of the holy land. But we
must not ignore its other implication. The Torah sings the praises of
the land to emphasize too the moral dangers and pitfalls that such gifts
might bring with them.
Although the life of the Israelites in the promised land would no longer
be dependent on water being extracted from the rock or on manna dropping
from heaven.. nevertheless even the normal rainfall and all the natural
gifts of the land were similarly derived from the Creator and not in virtue
of their own power and might of their hand.
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