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Chukkat/Balak -5780

(for our new and departing board members)

Numbers 19:1 – 25:9

Let’s talk about miracles.

When we think about miracles, we tend to think of God, but in Chukkat, it is Moses who performs the miracle.

Here is the story: Miriam (Moses’ sister) was a water diviner, and for close to forty years found water for the Israelites throughout their journey through the Wilderness. This week, the Torah records her death, and immediately the Israelites become thirsty and gather against Moses and Aaron to demand water. Moses turns to God, who directs Moses to speak to a rock in God’s name, in order for God to perform a miracle and cause water to flow out from the rock.

Moses, however, still grieving for his sister and deeply frustrated with the Israelite demands, does not follow the plan. Instead, he goes to the rock and then yells to the Israelites: “Listen you rebels! Shall we bring forth water for you from this rock?” [Num. 20:10] Moses then smacks the rock with his staff twice and enough water for all of Israel and their flocks came forth.

In the eyes of Israel, the miracle maker was Moses, not God. For that reason, Moses was not permitted to enter the Promised Land, lest Israel began to worship him instead of God. Yet, there is a larger story at play here. Rabbi Neil Schuman, quoting Professor Richard Elliot Friedman notes:

“This is an all-important step in a gradual shift in the balance of control of miraculous phenomena in the Bible. Adam, Noah, Abraham, and Isaac perform no miracles.” God brings about miracles in Egypt and by the Red Sea, but now Moses changes a miracle. “This shift will continue in the biblical books that follow the Torah, and it is one of the central developments of the Bible: Joshua will call for the sun to stand still in the skies. By calling for a miracle on his own, without direction from God, he goes even further than Moses. Later, Samson has powers implanted in him at birth, so that he is free to use them as he wishes all his life. Later still, Elijah and Elisha use miracles for a variety of personal purposes. It appears that, starting with Moses, God is entrusting humans with ever more responsibility and control of their destiny.”(1)

For the entirety of my rabbinate, I have considered Torah to be (at least in part) a description of God our parent and our early childhood as Israel. Babies need their parents for everything. As toddlers, we are still completely reliant on our parents, except we begin to walk on our own. As children we slowly take on more responsibility for ourselves until eventually, we have the maturity and the strength to enter adulthood, still with our parent’s help. So, in a sense, I see the forty years of wandering between Egypt and the Promised Land as the collective bar/bat mitzvah of the Jewish people. We are not done growing, but we are taking more and more responsibility for ourselves.

It is not that miracles disappear completely with the end of the Jewish Bible. Rabbi Schuman reminds us of Honi the Circle Maker who forced God to bring rain in the midst of a drought, and Rabbi Chanina ben Dosa – a miracle worker from the first generation of rabbis following the destruction of the Temple. He also speaks of other miraculous deeds recorded in Talmud, such as Rabbi Zeira using prayer to restore a life he had accidentally taken. Then there are the Chassidic traditions, which record miracles performed by their rebbes and saints.

Rather, Chukkat is the turning point. It is the moment the arc of our story begins to shift from outward reliance towards communal and self-reliance. God is still with us, the love of our parent never leaves us, but we are invested with the knowledge that we have agency, that through our acts we can change even that which seems unchangeable. And, more often than not, it does not require a miracle – but rather initiative and good leadership.

To our departing lay leaders: thank you for the strength, courage, compassion and love you have demonstrated through your leadership to our congregation and the Jewish people. To our incoming and continuing board members: you’ve got this. You are all blessings, you are all a little miraculous, and we are blessed because of you.


(1) Schuman, Neil, “The Miracle Worker,” online Torah commentary, date unknown, quoting Friedman, Richard Elliott. Commentary on the Torah (Kindle Locations 29017-29032). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.

  • Older Posts

    June 26, 2020

    Korach – 5780

    June 19, 2020

    Shelach Lecha – 5780

    June 11, 2020

    BeHa’alotecha – 5780

    June 5, 2020

    Naso – 5780

    May 31, 2020

    Shavuot – 5780

    May 21, 2020

    BeMidbar – 5780

    May 15, 2020

    Behar/B’Chukotai – 5780

    May 8, 2020

    Emor – 5780

    May 1, 2020

    Achare Mot/Kedoshim – 5780

    April 8, 2020

    A Passover Message

    April 3, 2020

    Tzav – 5780

    March 20, 2020

    VaYak’heil/Pekudei – 5780

    March 15, 2020

    Ki Tissa – 5780 (On the COVID-19 Virus Crisis)

    March 4, 2020

    Tetzaveh – 5780

    February 26, 2020

    Terumah – 5780

    February 19, 2020

    Mishpatim – 5780

    February 12, 2020

    Yitro – 5780

    February 5, 2020

    BeShalach – 5780

    January 23, 2020

    Va’Era – 5780

    January 15, 2020

    Shemot – 5780 (I am a Jew)

    January 8, 2020

    VaYechi – 5780

    January 2, 2020

    VaYigash – 5780

    December 26, 2019

    Miketz – 5780

    December 20, 2019

    VaYeshev – 5780

    December 12, 2019

    VaYishlach – 5780

    December 4, 2019

    VaYeitze – 5780

    November 26, 2019

    Toledot – 5780

    November 20, 2019

    Chayei Sarah – 5780

    November 13, 2019

    VaYeira – 5780

    October 24, 2019

    Bereshit – 5780

    October 11, 2019

    Erev Yom Kippur Sermon 5780 – How To Build a Community that will Beat the Odds

    October 2, 2019

    Rosh HaShanah I 5780 Sermon – Truth in Teshuvah

    September 12, 2019

    Ki Tetze – 5779

    September 5, 2019

    Shoftim – 5779

    August 29, 2019

    Re’eh – 5779

    August 23, 2019

    Ekev – 5779

    August 15, 2019

    Va’Etchanan – 5779

    August 9, 2019

    Devarim (Shabbat Hazon) – 5779

    August 1, 2019

    Mattot/Masei – 5779

    July 24, 2019

    Pinchas – 5779

    July 19, 2019

    Balak – 5779

    July 5, 2019

    Korach – 5779

    June 26, 2019

    Shelach Lecha – 5779

    June 13, 2019

    Naso – 5779

    June 5, 2019

    BaMidbar – 5779

    May 29, 2019

    B’Chukkotai – 5779

    May 23, 2019

    Behar – 5779

    May 1, 2019

    Kedoshim – 5779

    April 30, 2019

    B’nei Yisrael

    April 24, 2019

    Acharei Mot – 5779

    April 17, 2019

    Pesach I – 5779

    April 9, 2019

    Metzorah – 5779

    April 4, 2019

    Tazria – 5779

    March 29, 2019

    Shemini – 5779

    March 20, 2019

    Tzav – 5779

    March 12, 2019

    VaYikra – 5779

    March 6, 2019

    Pekudei – 5779

    February 28, 2019

    Vayak’heil – 5779

    February 19, 2019

    Ki Tissa – 5779

    February 13, 2019

    Tetzaveh – 5779

    February 6, 2019

    Terumah – 5779

    January 24, 2019

    Yitro – 5779

    January 17, 2019

    BeShalach – 5779

    January 9, 2019

    Bo – 5779

    January 6, 2019

    A Few Words About Israel

    January 2, 2019

    Vaera – 5779

    December 27, 2018

    Shemot – 5779

    December 19, 2018

    VaYechi – 5779

    December 11, 2018

    VaYigash – 5779

    December 5, 2018

    Miketz – 5779

    November 28, 2018

    VaYeishev – 5779

    November 21, 2018

    VaYishlach – 5779

    November 14, 2018

    VaYeitze – 5779

    November 8, 2018

    Toldot – 5779

    October 31, 2018

    Chayei Sara – 5779

    October 25, 2018

    VaYeira – 5779

    October 19, 2018

    Lech Lecha – 5779

    October 10, 2018

    Noach – 5779

    October 3, 2018

    Bereishit – 5779

Chukkat/Balak -5780

(for our new and departing board members)

Numbers 19:1 – 25:9

Let’s talk about miracles.

When we think about miracles, we tend to think of God, but in Chukkat, it is Moses who performs the miracle.

Here is the story: Miriam (Moses’ sister) was a water diviner, and for close to forty years found water for the Israelites throughout their journey through the Wilderness. This week, the Torah records her death, and immediately the Israelites become thirsty and gather against Moses and Aaron to demand water. Moses turns to God, who directs Moses to speak to a rock in God’s name, in order for God to perform a miracle and cause water to flow out from the rock.

Moses, however, still grieving for his sister and deeply frustrated with the Israelite demands, does not follow the plan. Instead, he goes to the rock and then yells to the Israelites: “Listen you rebels! Shall we bring forth water for you from this rock?” [Num. 20:10] Moses then smacks the rock with his staff twice and enough water for all of Israel and their flocks came forth.

In the eyes of Israel, the miracle maker was Moses, not God. For that reason, Moses was not permitted to enter the Promised Land, lest Israel began to worship him instead of God. Yet, there is a larger story at play here. Rabbi Neil Schuman, quoting Professor Richard Elliot Friedman notes:

“This is an all-important step in a gradual shift in the balance of control of miraculous phenomena in the Bible. Adam, Noah, Abraham, and Isaac perform no miracles.” God brings about miracles in Egypt and by the Red Sea, but now Moses changes a miracle. “This shift will continue in the biblical books that follow the Torah, and it is one of the central developments of the Bible: Joshua will call for the sun to stand still in the skies. By calling for a miracle on his own, without direction from God, he goes even further than Moses. Later, Samson has powers implanted in him at birth, so that he is free to use them as he wishes all his life. Later still, Elijah and Elisha use miracles for a variety of personal purposes. It appears that, starting with Moses, God is entrusting humans with ever more responsibility and control of their destiny.”(1)

For the entirety of my rabbinate, I have considered Torah to be (at least in part) a description of God our parent and our early childhood as Israel. Babies need their parents for everything. As toddlers, we are still completely reliant on our parents, except we begin to walk on our own. As children we slowly take on more responsibility for ourselves until eventually, we have the maturity and the strength to enter adulthood, still with our parent’s help. So, in a sense, I see the forty years of wandering between Egypt and the Promised Land as the collective bar/bat mitzvah of the Jewish people. We are not done growing, but we are taking more and more responsibility for ourselves.

It is not that miracles disappear completely with the end of the Jewish Bible. Rabbi Schuman reminds us of Honi the Circle Maker who forced God to bring rain in the midst of a drought, and Rabbi Chanina ben Dosa – a miracle worker from the first generation of rabbis following the destruction of the Temple. He also speaks of other miraculous deeds recorded in Talmud, such as Rabbi Zeira using prayer to restore a life he had accidentally taken. Then there are the Chassidic traditions, which record miracles performed by their rebbes and saints.

Rather, Chukkat is the turning point. It is the moment the arc of our story begins to shift from outward reliance towards communal and self-reliance. God is still with us, the love of our parent never leaves us, but we are invested with the knowledge that we have agency, that through our acts we can change even that which seems unchangeable. And, more often than not, it does not require a miracle – but rather initiative and good leadership.

To our departing lay leaders: thank you for the strength, courage, compassion and love you have demonstrated through your leadership to our congregation and the Jewish people. To our incoming and continuing board members: you’ve got this. You are all blessings, you are all a little miraculous, and we are blessed because of you.


(1) Schuman, Neil, “The Miracle Worker,” online Torah commentary, date unknown, quoting Friedman, Richard Elliott. Commentary on the Torah (Kindle Locations 29017-29032). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.

  • Older Posts

    June 26, 2020

    Korach – 5780

    June 19, 2020

    Shelach Lecha – 5780

    June 11, 2020

    BeHa’alotecha – 5780

    June 5, 2020

    Naso – 5780

    May 31, 2020

    Shavuot – 5780

    May 21, 2020

    BeMidbar – 5780

    May 15, 2020

    Behar/B’Chukotai – 5780

    May 8, 2020

    Emor – 5780

    May 1, 2020

    Achare Mot/Kedoshim – 5780

    April 8, 2020

    A Passover Message

    April 3, 2020

    Tzav – 5780

    March 20, 2020

    VaYak’heil/Pekudei – 5780

    March 15, 2020

    Ki Tissa – 5780 (On the COVID-19 Virus Crisis)

    March 4, 2020

    Tetzaveh – 5780

    February 26, 2020

    Terumah – 5780

    February 19, 2020

    Mishpatim – 5780

    February 12, 2020

    Yitro – 5780

    February 5, 2020

    BeShalach – 5780

    January 23, 2020

    Va’Era – 5780

    January 15, 2020

    Shemot – 5780 (I am a Jew)

    January 8, 2020

    VaYechi – 5780

    January 2, 2020

    VaYigash – 5780

    December 26, 2019

    Miketz – 5780

    December 20, 2019

    VaYeshev – 5780

    December 12, 2019

    VaYishlach – 5780

    December 4, 2019

    VaYeitze – 5780

    November 26, 2019

    Toledot – 5780

    November 20, 2019

    Chayei Sarah – 5780

    November 13, 2019

    VaYeira – 5780

    October 24, 2019

    Bereshit – 5780

    October 11, 2019

    Erev Yom Kippur Sermon 5780 – How To Build a Community that will Beat the Odds

    October 2, 2019

    Rosh HaShanah I 5780 Sermon – Truth in Teshuvah

    September 12, 2019

    Ki Tetze – 5779

    September 5, 2019

    Shoftim – 5779

    August 29, 2019

    Re’eh – 5779

    August 23, 2019

    Ekev – 5779

    August 15, 2019

    Va’Etchanan – 5779

    August 9, 2019

    Devarim (Shabbat Hazon) – 5779

    August 1, 2019

    Mattot/Masei – 5779

    July 24, 2019

    Pinchas – 5779

    July 19, 2019

    Balak – 5779

    July 5, 2019

    Korach – 5779

    June 26, 2019

    Shelach Lecha – 5779

    June 13, 2019

    Naso – 5779

    June 5, 2019

    BaMidbar – 5779

    May 29, 2019

    B’Chukkotai – 5779

    May 23, 2019

    Behar – 5779

    May 1, 2019

    Kedoshim – 5779

    April 30, 2019

    B’nei Yisrael

    April 24, 2019

    Acharei Mot – 5779

    April 17, 2019

    Pesach I – 5779

    April 9, 2019

    Metzorah – 5779

    April 4, 2019

    Tazria – 5779

    March 29, 2019

    Shemini – 5779

    March 20, 2019

    Tzav – 5779

    March 12, 2019

    VaYikra – 5779

    March 6, 2019

    Pekudei – 5779

    February 28, 2019

    Vayak’heil – 5779

    February 19, 2019

    Ki Tissa – 5779

    February 13, 2019

    Tetzaveh – 5779

    February 6, 2019

    Terumah – 5779

    January 24, 2019

    Yitro – 5779

    January 17, 2019

    BeShalach – 5779

    January 9, 2019

    Bo – 5779

    January 6, 2019

    A Few Words About Israel

    January 2, 2019

    Vaera – 5779

    December 27, 2018

    Shemot – 5779

    December 19, 2018

    VaYechi – 5779

    December 11, 2018

    VaYigash – 5779

    December 5, 2018

    Miketz – 5779

    November 28, 2018

    VaYeishev – 5779

    November 21, 2018

    VaYishlach – 5779

    November 14, 2018

    VaYeitze – 5779

    November 8, 2018

    Toldot – 5779

    October 31, 2018

    Chayei Sara – 5779

    October 25, 2018

    VaYeira – 5779

    October 19, 2018

    Lech Lecha – 5779

    October 10, 2018

    Noach – 5779

    October 3, 2018

    Bereishit – 5779

Chukkat/Balak -5780

(for our new and departing board members)

Numbers 19:1 – 25:9

Let’s talk about miracles.

When we think about miracles, we tend to think of God, but in Chukkat, it is Moses who performs the miracle.

Here is the story: Miriam (Moses’ sister) was a water diviner, and for close to forty years found water for the Israelites throughout their journey through the Wilderness. This week, the Torah records her death, and immediately the Israelites become thirsty and gather against Moses and Aaron to demand water. Moses turns to God, who directs Moses to speak to a rock in God’s name, in order for God to perform a miracle and cause water to flow out from the rock.

Moses, however, still grieving for his sister and deeply frustrated with the Israelite demands, does not follow the plan. Instead, he goes to the rock and then yells to the Israelites: “Listen you rebels! Shall we bring forth water for you from this rock?” [Num. 20:10] Moses then smacks the rock with his staff twice and enough water for all of Israel and their flocks came forth.

In the eyes of Israel, the miracle maker was Moses, not God. For that reason, Moses was not permitted to enter the Promised Land, lest Israel began to worship him instead of God. Yet, there is a larger story at play here. Rabbi Neil Schuman, quoting Professor Richard Elliot Friedman notes:

“This is an all-important step in a gradual shift in the balance of control of miraculous phenomena in the Bible. Adam, Noah, Abraham, and Isaac perform no miracles.” God brings about miracles in Egypt and by the Red Sea, but now Moses changes a miracle. “This shift will continue in the biblical books that follow the Torah, and it is one of the central developments of the Bible: Joshua will call for the sun to stand still in the skies. By calling for a miracle on his own, without direction from God, he goes even further than Moses. Later, Samson has powers implanted in him at birth, so that he is free to use them as he wishes all his life. Later still, Elijah and Elisha use miracles for a variety of personal purposes. It appears that, starting with Moses, God is entrusting humans with ever more responsibility and control of their destiny.”(1)

For the entirety of my rabbinate, I have considered Torah to be (at least in part) a description of God our parent and our early childhood as Israel. Babies need their parents for everything. As toddlers, we are still completely reliant on our parents, except we begin to walk on our own. As children we slowly take on more responsibility for ourselves until eventually, we have the maturity and the strength to enter adulthood, still with our parent’s help. So, in a sense, I see the forty years of wandering between Egypt and the Promised Land as the collective bar/bat mitzvah of the Jewish people. We are not done growing, but we are taking more and more responsibility for ourselves.

It is not that miracles disappear completely with the end of the Jewish Bible. Rabbi Schuman reminds us of Honi the Circle Maker who forced God to bring rain in the midst of a drought, and Rabbi Chanina ben Dosa – a miracle worker from the first generation of rabbis following the destruction of the Temple. He also speaks of other miraculous deeds recorded in Talmud, such as Rabbi Zeira using prayer to restore a life he had accidentally taken. Then there are the Chassidic traditions, which record miracles performed by their rebbes and saints.

Rather, Chukkat is the turning point. It is the moment the arc of our story begins to shift from outward reliance towards communal and self-reliance. God is still with us, the love of our parent never leaves us, but we are invested with the knowledge that we have agency, that through our acts we can change even that which seems unchangeable. And, more often than not, it does not require a miracle – but rather initiative and good leadership.

To our departing lay leaders: thank you for the strength, courage, compassion and love you have demonstrated through your leadership to our congregation and the Jewish people. To our incoming and continuing board members: you’ve got this. You are all blessings, you are all a little miraculous, and we are blessed because of you.


(1) Schuman, Neil, “The Miracle Worker,” online Torah commentary, date unknown, quoting Friedman, Richard Elliott. Commentary on the Torah (Kindle Locations 29017-29032). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.

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«‹ 8 9 10 11›»
  • Older Posts
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    June 19, 2020

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    Naso – 5780

    May 31, 2020

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    May 21, 2020

    BeMidbar – 5780

    May 15, 2020

    Behar/B’Chukotai – 5780

    May 8, 2020

    Emor – 5780

    May 1, 2020

    Achare Mot/Kedoshim – 5780

    April 8, 2020

    A Passover Message

    April 3, 2020

    Tzav – 5780

    March 20, 2020

    VaYak’heil/Pekudei – 5780

    March 15, 2020

    Ki Tissa – 5780 (On the COVID-19 Virus Crisis)

    March 4, 2020

    Tetzaveh – 5780

    February 26, 2020

    Terumah – 5780

    February 19, 2020

    Mishpatim – 5780

    February 12, 2020

    Yitro – 5780

    February 5, 2020

    BeShalach – 5780

    January 23, 2020

    Va’Era – 5780

    January 15, 2020

    Shemot – 5780 (I am a Jew)

    January 8, 2020

    VaYechi – 5780

    January 2, 2020

    VaYigash – 5780

    December 26, 2019

    Miketz – 5780

    December 20, 2019

    VaYeshev – 5780

    December 12, 2019

    VaYishlach – 5780

    December 4, 2019

    VaYeitze – 5780

    November 26, 2019

    Toledot – 5780

    November 20, 2019

    Chayei Sarah – 5780

    November 13, 2019

    VaYeira – 5780

    October 24, 2019

    Bereshit – 5780

    October 11, 2019

    Erev Yom Kippur Sermon 5780 – How To Build a Community that will Beat the Odds

    October 2, 2019

    Rosh HaShanah I 5780 Sermon – Truth in Teshuvah

    September 12, 2019

    Ki Tetze – 5779

    September 5, 2019

    Shoftim – 5779

    August 29, 2019

    Re’eh – 5779

    August 23, 2019

    Ekev – 5779

    August 15, 2019

    Va’Etchanan – 5779

    August 9, 2019

    Devarim (Shabbat Hazon) – 5779

    August 1, 2019

    Mattot/Masei – 5779

    July 24, 2019

    Pinchas – 5779

    July 19, 2019

    Balak – 5779

    July 5, 2019

    Korach – 5779

    June 26, 2019

    Shelach Lecha – 5779

    June 13, 2019

    Naso – 5779

    June 5, 2019

    BaMidbar – 5779

    May 29, 2019

    B’Chukkotai – 5779

    May 23, 2019

    Behar – 5779

    May 1, 2019

    Kedoshim – 5779

    April 30, 2019

    B’nei Yisrael

    April 24, 2019

    Acharei Mot – 5779

    April 17, 2019

    Pesach I – 5779

    April 9, 2019

    Metzorah – 5779

    April 4, 2019

    Tazria – 5779

    March 29, 2019

    Shemini – 5779

    March 20, 2019

    Tzav – 5779

    March 12, 2019

    VaYikra – 5779

    March 6, 2019

    Pekudei – 5779

    February 28, 2019

    Vayak’heil – 5779

    February 19, 2019

    Ki Tissa – 5779

    February 13, 2019

    Tetzaveh – 5779

    February 6, 2019

    Terumah – 5779

    January 24, 2019

    Yitro – 5779

    January 17, 2019

    BeShalach – 5779

    January 9, 2019

    Bo – 5779

    January 6, 2019

    A Few Words About Israel

    January 2, 2019

    Vaera – 5779

    December 27, 2018

    Shemot – 5779

    December 19, 2018

    VaYechi – 5779

    December 11, 2018

    VaYigash – 5779

    December 5, 2018

    Miketz – 5779

    November 28, 2018

    VaYeishev – 5779

    November 21, 2018

    VaYishlach – 5779

    November 14, 2018

    VaYeitze – 5779

    November 8, 2018

    Toldot – 5779

    October 31, 2018

    Chayei Sara – 5779

    October 25, 2018

    VaYeira – 5779

    October 19, 2018

    Lech Lecha – 5779

    October 10, 2018

    Noach – 5779

    October 3, 2018

    Bereishit – 5779

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