Two Roads Diverged In the Wood of Jewish History
Two errors we have made in trying to bridge the old and the new
Dedicated by Eda and David Schottenstein
In honor of their children Ari and Nina
“Moses wrote their departures according to their journeys … and these were their journeys according to their departures.”
-- Numbers 33:2, this week’s Torah portion.
“While the reasonable man adapts himself to the world, the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.”
-- George Bernard Shaw
“By the time a man realizes that maybe his father was right, he usually has a son who thinks he's wrong,” Charles Wadsworth once said. The youth, fresh in spirit, creative in ideas, often seeks to chart a new path, to take the road never traveled by. There is something monotonous about traveling in the footsteps of your ancestors, and there is something intoxicating about developing a path you can call your own.
Two roads
It is my contention that at least from Chukas on, the Torah is highlighting the paradoxical and counter-intuitive nature of life. Here, however, the Torah is addressing the dialectical
principle built into the DNA of life. Departures become journeys and vice versa, forming the thesis, anti-thesis, and synthesis (which becomes the next point of departure.)
One could say that Halacha was instituted to bring order to an otherwise chaotic and anomalous universe. It resolves, based on a source document, the Torah, what would otherwise be a confusing journey in a wierd world of claim and counter-claim on one's attention and allegiance. It is meant to be fluid (hence the comparison to water) and malleable, and definitely is a child of the dialectical nature of disput-ation resolution. Without such a tool, indicating appropriate action, a person could be immobilized by not knowing what to do.
So, Halacha is about motion, journeying us to new temporary destinations, which then become the new points of departure.
briliant
Brilliant!
great
great essay
Thank You
Thanks so much again for a wonderful concept and great writing.
Thanks
I heard it all today live in youe class. Writing and the reading is always great but the LIVE presentation is far more. the power of the spoken word, that is something we always need to think about. Words are like bubbles that float in the air, light but with incredible hidden power. Written words can be deleted or changed but the spoken word, once given wings, that is a different matter.
Anyways I always joy your classes so Keep it Up and Thanks. Chana Sharfstein
another question
First I think that question 2 should really follow q3. Look at masie 5747 in the maamar kein sicha where the Rebbe asks a forth question: why does it even say that Moshe wrote it down? Didn’t he write the whole torah? If I recall correctly, the Rebbe says that how can we take the past along with us as we carve out the future, the challenges that we face are so strong? The Rebbe says that we have the koach from Moshe, the Vayichtov Moshe gives us the koach and ability to overcome the menius veikovim that we face.
thank u for the clear and motivating thought!
Being in the "dating parsha" and being someone passionate, G-d conscious, and growth-oriented, i dont quite fit any "labels"...over the past weekend I've been re-pondering how my ideals and goals might differ from people in both the black and white community and the modern orthodox (yes, i acknowledge a continuum)...and how i can go forward being aware of how jewish history has played out and maintain and open and warm stance to people who believe differently or don't care to understand other views or jewish history. This essay was EXACTLY what I needed. mamash. While I understand you are only an agent of Ha-shem, I would like to be makir tov to you, Rabbi Jacobson: thank you SO MUCH!!
Relevancy
This was a great article. The distinction between those focusing on journey in contrast to those focusing on departure is excellent.
Looking forward to...
I always look forward to reading your weekly essay. This is not meant to be taken as criticism but rather to express to you the desire to see NEW material.Nonetheless, your words are always meaningful.
Thanks
Two roads
Excellent!!! Thank you
stuck in a rut
Some yeshivas in the frum community seem to be stuck in the past. It's not working. The bochurim are not doing well in these places. Outwardly, they play the game. Inwardly, they feel so empty and are living for the Gass. It seems like this article really hit the nail on the button in supplying a solution to the yeshiva's ills. I hope and pray that the leadership takes a good hard look at this message and puts it into action.
Thank you so much Rabbi Jacobson for your insight. May you be blessed with all of your heart's desires.
great
WONDERFUL ARTICLE .
THANK YOU.
FRAN DANIELS





