BS”D
PERFECTED PANS:
PARSHAT KORACH
Shira Smiles shiur
2020/5780
Adapted by Channie
Koplowitz Stein
Korach,
a prestigious member of the Tribe of Levi, surrounds himself with Nadav and
Avihu and 250 prominent men to challenge the authority of Moshe in appointing
himself and Aharon as leaders of Bnei Yisroel. After all, Korach claims, the
entire assembly is holy and God is within them. Why should you exalt yourselves
above the Congregation of God? Moshe ponders how to respond to the challenge.
He proclaims that in the morning [probably hoping they would do teshuvah and
retract. CKS], Hashem will prove whom He has chosen. Moshe suggests the
following test. Korach and his men should each take a fire pan, put fire on it
and place ketoret/incense in it, and Aharon will do the same. The
offering that Hashem accepts will prove whom He has chosen to serve Him. Just
as Moshe expected, Hashem chose only Aharon’s offering. Moshe then decreed an
unusual punishment for Korach: The earth would “open its mouth” and swallow up
Korach and all that belonged to him. After Korach’s punishment, a fire consumed
the assembled rebels to punish them as well.
Interestingly,
although these fire pans were used in rebellion to Hashem and Moshe, Hashem
commands that they be hammered out and used as a covering for the altar, for
they have are holy. Under the circumstances, how could they be holy? Rashi
writes that since they were made for sacred service to Hashem, albeit with
improper motivation, they were holy. Ramban, however, refutes this explanation.
After all, they were used by laymen to bring an alien, unsanctioned offering to
Hashem. Instead, Ramban suggests that the pans became holy because Moshe had
commanded Korach to bring them for Hashem, and they hoped that Hashem would
accept their incense offering. Therefore Hashem declared them holy, to
serve a reminder to Bnei Yisroel that only a kohein may serve up the
incense to Hashem.
The
following morning, Bnei Yisroel were angry at Moshe for having killed “the
people of Hashem.” Hashem started a plague to engulf the people. As usual,
Moshe interceded for Bnei Yisroel. Moshe instructed Aharon to quickly take the
pan with fire and incense and run among the people. This action immediately
stopped the plague.
The
Tosher Rebbe in Avodat Avodah raises two questions on this incident.
First, how could Moshe set up Korach and his assembly for assured failure in
this plan. Further, how could something that could remind Hashem of sins be
sanctified? Even on Yom Kippur the kohein gadol does not wear gold to
enter the Holy of Holies, lest it remind Hashem of the sin of the golden calf.
Perhaps
by probing the dual power of the ketoret we can begin to understand the
purpose in forming the fire pans into a covering for the altar that would act
as a reminder to Bnei Yisroel. While those who brought the unsanctioned ketoret
were killed, the ketoret also stopped the plague that began to engulf
the angry nation who complained about the death of the rebellious assembly,
writes Rabbi Asher Weiss. This message, that it is Hashem’s power, not the ketoret,
was one the people needed to remember.
The
power of the ketoret lies in its ability to fight the yetzer horo
face to face, writes Rabbi Pincus. The difference between an animal sacrificial
offering and the ketoret is the difference between life and death. When
one sacrifices an animal, he is shedding its blood, symbolically proclaiming
his own willingness to die for Hashem’s sake. With the incense offering, no
blood is shed. It is a loftier and more difficult ideal. It proclaims a
willingness to live for Hashem’s sake. It means we desire to live not just for
physical pleasure, for existence on a transient physical level, but to live an
elevated, spiritual life, a life of eternal joy.
Hashem
created us to enjoy life, and the greatest pleasure is to enjoy the radiance of
Hashem’s presence. Hashem provides us with so many gifts, gifts we generally
take for granted. Yes, we are certainly permitted and encouraged to enjoy the
pleasures Hashem has offered us in this world, but we are to recognize that
these are gifts from Hashem, and we are to elevate the physical to the
spiritual. We can admire the apple we are about to eat, but we elevate it by
reciting a brachah before we bite. We can provide a comfortable living space for
ourselves and our families, but we must also acknowledge its source and
dedicate some of the abundance Hashem has provided for us by sharing it with
those less fortunate.
The
highest sensual pleasure is achieved through the sense of smell. It elevates
the soul. There are no side effects to breathing a pleasant scent. The scent of
the incense perfumed all of Yerushalayim, sometimes even as far as Jericho
during the Temple period. Because of its spiritual connection, the yetzer
horo has no power over the ketoret. During the Temple period, a
lottery would be drawn each day to determine which kohein would offer the
incense. A kohein could receive this privilege only once. Whichever kohein
offered the incense was guaranteed to become rich, for the satan would
have no power to corrupt him. He would use his wealth in spiritual ways. We too
must learn that whatever we possess physically and materially are gifts from
Hakodosh Boruch Hu, and we are to enjoy them in their greatest potential by
elevating them to Hashem’s service.
Within
this context, Rebbetzin Smiles suggests that the beautiful flowers generally
decorating a wedding venue should be more than merely ornamental. They should
remind us of Har Sinai covered with flowers when we received the Torah, and
their scent should maintain a spiritual connection. On the other hand, Covid 19
has forced the scaling back of the physical and material aspects of smachot,
but not the scaling back of their spiritual aspect. Interestingly, one of the
symptoms of this plague is the loss of a sense of smell. Perhaps the lesson is
that we need to strengthen our spiritual connections.
Why
did Moshe choose offering the ketoret as the test for Korach and his
assembly? The Tosher Rebbe suggests that since the ketoret had the power
to thwart the yetzer horo, the people would recognize their egregious
error, would yearn to reconnect with Hashem, and do teshuvah. Unfortunately,
they were so immersed in their own ego that it tainted their offering, and left
left no room for their spiritual connection to Hashem.
Rabbi
Reiss in MeiroshTzurim presents the ideal example of someone acting with
the higher purpose of serving Hashem. Rochel Imeinu wanted desperately to marry
Yaakov Avinu, and plans had in fact already been put in place to ensure the
wedding. Although Rochel Imeinu deeply loved Yaakov, she also had a higher,
spiritual motivation in wanting to marry him. Rochel knew that Yaakov was
destined to father the Shivtei Kah/Tribes of Hashem. But Rochel also
understood that this mission could be accomplished through another woman. So
when her father substituted Leah in her place, Rochel sublimated her personal
desire to that of Hakodosh Boruch Hu; she revealed to Leah the signs she and
Yaakov had agreed upon as code to her identity under the marriage canopy. She
sublimated her desire to marry Yaakov to the greater mission of creating the
Nation of Israel. The righteous focus their attention on bringing satisfaction
to Hashem in every way, not necessarily through themselves. Korach was focused on
personally being the vehicle, on his own ego.
The
Lubavitcher Rebbe notes the difference between a mystic and a
philosopher. The philosopher is convinced that he exists [I think
therefore I am,” - Descartes], so he ponders the existence of God. The mystic,
on the other hand, is convinced of God’s existence, and focuses on his own
purpose in the grand scheme.
Korach
perverted the mystic’s attitude by introducing the arrogance of the
philosopher. This was the test of the ketoret, and this is why Moshe
commanded it be brought in brass pans rather than in the usual gold pans.
Throughout Tanach, brass represents strength, writes the Shem Mishmuel.
Literally, brass describes the strong walls of a city. Symbolically, it is used
to refer to strength of conviction, a willingness to stand up for one’s
principle despite the odds. This trait can be either positive or negative. It
can be the strength Yaakov needed to withstand the evils of Esau and Lavan, or
it can be the arrogance of King Yeshayahu in defying Hashem’s words delivered
through the Prophet Yirmiyahu.
This
strength of character was not intrinsically bad, continues the Shem
Mishmuel. Included in Korach’s actions was the desire to stand up to
principle. However, he misused this strength and defied Hashem’s choice.
Therefore Moshe was told to throw away the fire, the misplaced passion, but use
the brass of strength for the holiness still contained within the fire pans and
fashion the pans into a covering for the altar. Each aspect of Korach’s action
was treated according to its own merits of reward or punishment. As Rabbi
Zeichick writes, Hashem’s vision acts like zoom lens on a camera, picking up
every detail, every brush stroke. A positive does not negate a negative, and
each gets its appropriate response. Hashem rewarded the small element of leshem
shamayim/altruistic motivation while punishing the sin. Let us not fall
into the trap of sullying our own mitzvah performance with our personal,
egocentric motivations.
We
can see Hashem’s exercising this same principle of responding with reward or
punishment for each detail and element of one’s actions with Yerovam ben Nevat.
Yeravam had criticized King Solomon for building a palace for his Egyptian wife
along a route that Bnei Yisroel used when they came to Yerushalayim for the
Festivals. The palace land site forced Bnei Yisroel to take a longer,
circuitous route to Yerushalayim. For appropriately reproving the king, Yerovam
was rewarded by himself becoming king of the Ten Tribes when the kingdom was
split. However, because he reproved Solomon in public, Yerovam’s dynasty would
not be permanent. The good and the bad do not cancel each other out, but Hashem
responds to each separately. In this context, Rabbi Scheinberg notes that when
Hashem sees us sinning, He comes very close to us, hoping to find some good
embedded in our actions.
So
the fire pans had an element of sanctity. But the Talellei Orot notes
that their sanctity was actually reduced. While they had been used for the
actual incense offering, now they were only the cover upon which the pan with
the offering would be placed. Hashem Himself demoted the pans to give Bnei
Yisroel the message that Korach’s actions were indeed not holy. As the Tiv
Hatorah explains, when you sin, you need to create for yourself a reminder
not to do this again. When we ourselves remember, Hashem does not need to
remember.
Rav
S. R. Hirsch notes a different element of sanctity in the fire pans. They
served as testimony that Hashem chose Aharon to the priestly service. Since the
sanctity of the of the Sanctuary depends on this fact, the purpose of the fire
pans was achieved. As such, they remain a constant sign and a warning of this
truth to Bnei Yisroel. By their deaths, Korach and his assembly, who had tried
to undermine this truth actually further validated it, while the fire pans
themselves, the instrument of proof, became sanctified and served as a constant
reminder and sign of how the sanctity of the Sanctuary is to be maintained.
The
purpose of a sign, writes Rav Chaim Shmulevits is Sichot Mussar, is not
for Hashem to remember, but to awaken ourselves and to extract a lesson for
ourselves and create a positive response whenever we are confronted with this
reminder. Reminders are not just the shopping list, post it notes, or the string
around the finger. We have the ability to improve ourselves in the best Jewish
sense by creating mini reminders to help us both to act positively and refrain
from acting negatively, to refrain from sin and to do mitzvoth with the correct
motivation.