|
GPS - G-d's Positioning System
Working on the road A fellow stopped at a rural gas station
and, after filling his tank, he paid the bill and bought a soft drink. He stood
by his car to drink his cola and he watched a couple of men working along the
roadside. One man would dig a hole two or three feet deep and then move on. The
other man came along behind and filled in the hole. While one was digging a new
hole, the other was about 25 feet behind filling in the old. The men worked
right past the fellow with the soft drink and went on down the road. "I can't
stand this," said the man tossing the can in a trash container and heading down
the road toward the men.
"Hold it, hold it," he said to the men. "Can you tell me what's going on here
with this digging?"
"Well, we work for the county government," one of the men said.
"But one of you is digging a hole and the other is filling it up. You're not
accomplishing anything. Aren't you wasting the county's money?"
"You don't understand, mister," one of the men said, leaning on his shovel and
wiping his brow. "Normally there's three of us--me, Rodney and Mike. I dig the
hole, Rodney sticks in the tree and Mike here puts the dirt back."
"Yea," piped up Mike. "Now just because Rodney's sick, that don't mean we can't
work, does it?"
The Cloud
The Israelite journey in the desert, the Bible relates in this week's portion (Behaaloscha),
was not dependent on the fickle decision making of a leader, or on the stamina
of the people. Once the Tabernacle was completed, a cloud representing G-d's
Presence descended on it. For "whenever the cloud lifted from the Tent, the
Israelites would set out accordingly; and at the spot where the cloud settled,
there the Israelites would encamp (1)". The cloud, as it were, served as a GPS
-- G-d's Positioning System -- guiding the Israelites through their travels in
the desert.
"They thus camped at G-d's word and moved on at G-d's word," the Torah states.
And interestingly: the Bible repeats this phrase three times, almost
consecutively (2)!
This is strange. Why repeat the same exact words three times? The message is
clear the first time stated: The Jewish journey through the wilderness - their
movement as well as their sojourn - was determined by G-d.
Three Attitudes
The thrice repeated declaration of the same fact -- "They thus camped at G-d's
word and moved on at G-d's word" -- represents three states of consciousness
relating to G-d guiding the Israelite journey through the desert. Sure, the
Divine cloud may have determined their trek, but there existed three ways how to
relate to this truth.
The first time the Torah makes the declaration it is merely stating the fact:
The Jewish people moved at G-d's word and camped at G-d's word. Some of them may
have taken the hovering cloud for granted and not even attributed it to G-d.
Some may have attributed the transitions in their journey to other motives and
calculations. Yet their awareness - or lack of it - did not alter the truth: It
was the Divine GPS that guided them in the wilderness.
The second declaration informs us of a deeper consciousness that pervaded the
Jewish people at the time. In the words of medieval Spanish commentator Ramban
(1194-1270): "Even though they may have been exhausted (and wanted to stay
longer) or even if they were displeased with the place and wanted to proceed
further, they disregarded their own wishes and guided their movements by the
cloud." They were fully cognizant of the fact that they must subordinate their
preferences to the will of G-d dictating their journey.
The third declaration takes it to a new level. The Jewish people, the Torah is
telling us, did not have their own preferences. They did not care to camp out,
nor were they compelled to move on. Their exclusive desire was to serve as
conduits for the course G-d charted out for them, to embrace the destinations
the Almighty prepared for them. Their personal vision was seamlessly aligned
with G-d's vision for them (3).
Bubble Or Symphony?
This Israelite trek through the desert, guided by G-d's Presence, is a vivid
metaphor for our own journeys today, both as individual human beings and as part
of a people.
A cloud hovers above each of us guiding our individual and collective voyages in
life. The Baal Shem Tov (1698-1740), founder of the Chassidic movement,
taught that there is a GPS instilled in the soul of every creature, guiding it
through the winding pathways of life's wilderness.
Now, it is up to us to choose from among these three perspectives.
In the first state of consciousness, you are detached from the "bigger picture"
of your life. Your journey is still determined by G-d, but that truth eludes
you. It may be stated in the Book of Books but it does not permeate your own
mindset. In your imagination you are an isolated bubble in a vast and
meaningless universe; reality at its core is indifferent to your struggles and
triumphs.
In the second and higher state of consciousness, you become aware of an
unavoidable truth - that life presents us each with a particular set of
challenges and opportunities. Each of us has a mission for which our soul was
sent down on earth, so that every encounter and experience is an indispensable
component of a grand cosmic symphony that spans the entire universe. You are
aware of it and you surrender to it, often begrudgingly, subduing your own
dreams to G-d's.
In the third and deepest state of consciousness, you align your ambitions,
dreams and goals with those of G-d. You HotSync your personal Palm with the
cosmic Palm. You go beyond your narrow perception of where your life must take
you, and you allow the core of reality -- G-d -- to set the course.
Instead of resisting, escaping and ducking you embrace life, every moment of it,
with a bear hug. Each morning you awake and say: G-d! I'm ready to rock and
roll! Wherever You wish to go today, I'm in. You do the steering and I will
press the pedal for full speed. Bon voyage!
Sure, sometimes we'd prefer other routes and alternate destinations. G-d's GPS
leads us through strange highways; it often prefers dirt roads over paved ones.
Yes, some people use religion and G-d as an excuse for passivity, laziness, fear
and abuse. Will you spend the rest of your life combating reality? Is there even
an existence outside of reality? Judaism teaches that we ought to develop the
courage to hear the “small silent voice” guiding us through the wilderness to
the Promised Land.
~~~~~~~~~ Footnotes:
1) Numbers 9:17.
2) Ibid 9:18; 20;23.
3) See the commentary of Rabbi Chaim ben Atar (died in 1740 in Jerusalem), known
as the Or Hachaim to these verses. My thanks to Shmuel Levin for his editorial
assistance.
~~~~~~~~~
Thank you to Algemeiner.com for permission to share this wonderful article with
our Megillah readers.
www.algemeiner.com
|