Parshas Korach: Overcoming and Elevating, a Lesson for Humans
Here is a question on Parshas Korach…
The story of Korach begins like this: “Korach son of Yitzhar
son of Kehat son of Levi took himself aside, together with Dathan and Aviram
sons of Eli’av, and On son of Pelet, descendants of Reuben. They confronted Moshe
together with 250 men from the Israelites, including the princes of the
community, summoned for the meeting, and other men of repute. They assembled
against Moshe and Aaron. They said to them, ‘You take too much upon yourselves,
for the entire community—all of them—are holy, and God is in their midst. Why
do you raise yourselves above God’s assembly?’” (Bamidbar 16:1-3)
Two hundred and fifty men…That’s not Korach and a few
neighbors on the block. That’s not a spontaneous reaction. That’s planning.
That’s setting about and shmoozing to encourage and enflame. So why doesn’t the
Torah relay Korach’s actions of creating this small mob? Then again, one could
also ask: Why doesn’t the Torah straight out say what the Midrash tells us, that
Korach was jealous, that he wanted to be elevated the way his cousins (Moshe
and Aaron) were?
Obviously, these are rhetorical questions because the Torah
is full of narratives whose motivations are obscure. Just look at how
ambiguously Yaakov’s interactions with Esav are described. But let’s explore
one idea… We know from the end actions that Korach was full of negative
feelings about the choice of leaders. We know, from the Midrash, that his
discontent was stirred and enhanced by his wife. We know, from the first pasuk,
that he joined himself with Dasan and Aviram, who were already marked as
malcontents. He didn’t, one can assume, speak only to the 250 people who agreed
with him; we can assume that there were people he talked to who disagreed … He
was probably walking around fuming from within for several days before he steps
forth into the parsha.
So what? Well, one thing about the Torah is that, in so many
ways, it affirms being human. It recognizes that we have negative feelings and
it gives room for them. He’s not punished for the before. The question is what
do we do with those feelings. Do we find a way to understand the situation from
a new angle, find a way to fix a problem, find away to take on a new role and
perspective, or do we, ya know, lead a rebellion.
The very suddenness of Korach’s rebellion has allusion to its
insipient nature. We know Korach was sneaking around because there is no
statement of a grumbling started among the people of Israel. There is just
Korach and Dasan and Aviram bringing 250 men to confront Moshe and Aaron. All
his work was kept in the dark recesses so as not to draw attention. If it feels
secretive, it probably isn’t wholesome.
Now, you may ask an obvious question. How is one to know if
their complaint is legitimate? We see in history that sometimes change is
necessary, and that undercurrent gatherings like Korach’s are powerful forces
of change. … the fact is that Korach’s choice of bringing a group with
complaint to Moshe could be seen as him making a legitimate move.
The turnkey phrase is the last line of the third verse “Why do you raise yourselves above God’s
assembly?” Korach wasn’t asking why Moshe and Aaron merited their positions; he
is asking why they raised themselves above. He is revealing a lack of bitachon
that Hashem runs the world even in minutia, that Hashem structured Klal Yisrael
this way. He is making it personal – raise yourselves up, indeed!
And perhaps we should address the other side of that coin of
humanity, which is Moshe’s initial reaction because, really, if you think about
it, it is an incredibly strange reaction. He fell on his face before them and
called on Hashem to judge the truth.
The most normal reaction would anger… despair… both normal. And
really, probably most normal… incredulity. Moshe had every reason to turn
around and laugh at what they said, or to sarcastically question their sanity.
Moshe would have every right to have gone off on a mad tirade about taking too
much upon himself when he faced down Pharoah or led the nation through the sea
or was the one who went up to Har Sinai when all the rest of Bnei Yisrael were
too afraid. Instead, Moshe took everything that they said to heart, and he took
them seriously.
Perhaps you are right now thinking that Moshe DID get mad.
You’re right.. but only later, only after Dasan and Aviram blatantly and rudely
refuse to meet with him and, instead, accused him of bad leadership and even
verbally spit at him in Pasuk 16:14 by saying “Even if you gouge out the eyes
of those men, we will not go up.” Only then does he get angry.
But after the group first comes to him, Moshe really stops and
worries and asks Hashem to make a judgement, because unlike their accusations,
Moshe assumes that there is a possibility of truth to their accusation.
This piece is going to wind down ineloquently… there are
lots of lessons one can take from the Parsha of Korach, but perhaps one of the
most important one is that in ourselves and in others, we must recognize (as
Hashem does throughout the Torah) how utterly human each of us is. You may have
feelings of jealousy; you’re human. You may have moments of insecurity; you’re
human. When those feelings and moments come, accept your humanity but look to
Hashem for guidance, cling to the Torah for a way to overcome and elevate.
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