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Read the Shiur
Beshalach (All rights reserved to Keren Yishai)
Parashat Bshalach The blessing of hazan and the test of the
Manna Rav M. Elon In our parasha, Parashat Bshalach, we will study the Man (Manna) through the one
and only mitzvah that appears in our parasha the mitzva of: One may not leave his designated place on the seventh day. (Shemot 16:29) The Rishonim (earlier Rabbinic authorities) disputed the nature of this mitzvah. The
Ramban establishes that this commandment forbids the transfer of articles from one
rshut (domain) to another rshut on Shabbat ie. The prohibition of
carrying on Shabbat. The Rambam and other Rishonim, however, understand that
this is in fact the commandment regarding Tchumin the prohibition of leaving
the Tchum (boundary) on Shabbat. (One may not leave a radius of two-thousand cubits
of his city on Shabbat.) Either way, as we mentioned above, it is important to emphasize that this mitzvah was
commanded in direct relationship to the Man, yet not in the context of the laws of
Shabbat. In other words, Am Yisrael is commanded not to gather the Man on the
seventh day, while on the sixth day they will receive a double portion of Man. As the
verse states: See that God gas given you the Shabbat, and therefore He gave you bread for two
days on the sixth day; every person must remain where he is, one may not leave his
designated place on the seventh day. (ibid.) We will focus our discussion on the Man, and also on the meaning of the command
every person must remain where he is. Let us first recall the context of this first incidence of the Man. This section appears after the splitting of the Yam Suf (Sea of Reeds) and after the
great song of praise sung by Moshe and Am Yisrael to God. After Am Yisrael
reaches Mara and Eilim, the verses tell us: They traveled from Eilim, and the entire community of Yisrael came to the
Sin Desert, between Eilim and Sinai. It was the fifteenth of the second month after they
had left Egypt. There in the desert the entire community of Yisrael complained
against Moshe and Aharon. Bnei Yisrael said to them: If only we had died by
Gods hand in the Land of Egypt! There at least we could sit by the pot of meat and
eat bread until satiation. But you had to bring us out to this desert, to kill the entire
community by starvation. (Shemot 16:1-3) The verses tells us that after Yisrael arrived at Eilim, on the fifteenth of
Iyar, a month after having left Egypt, and three weeks after the splitting of Yam Suf,
they began to complain against God as they remembered the pot of meat that
they had while in Egypt. The very mention of the date of this complaint is very difficult for Am
Yisrael are so soon after all the events that occurred to them! Certainly they
remember the slavery and bondage of Egypt how then, do they remember Egypt with
longing? Is it possible that Am Yisrael has already forgotten the inhuman slavery
that they experienced while in Egypt? There are some of the commentators who tried to explain this difficult by saying that
the final year of slavery in Egypt was not that difficult or demanding of the Jews. During
this year the Egyptians experienced plague after plague, and as a result they were more
lenient with the Yisrael. However the claim against this solution is that even if this is true, Bnei
Yisrael were still enslaved to the Egyptians, and therefore recalling Egypt with
such yearning is still perplexing. And even though we are unfortunately used to
Yisraels various complaints, this one is simply far out of proportion. And
even for such complaints, as ludicrous as they are, they too have limits. Not only is the complaint that Yisrael lodge against God surprising, but
Gods reaction to this situation is no less startling. After this severe complaint,
which seems to be a denial of all the good that God has bestowed upon the nation, we would
expect and attack of Divine rage. Yet instead, Bnei Yisrael are informed as to a
new, miraculous, occurrence. God said to Moshe: I will make bread rain down to you from the sky. The
people will go out and gather a daily quota in order that I will test them to see whether
they keep My law or not. (Shemot 16:4) We must ask How is bestowing Man an educational solution is to their complaint
that denies the good that God has done for then? Also the conclusion of the verse, in order that I will test them to see whether
they keep My law or not, tells that the Man in fact comes to deal with a deeper
problem than simply their complaints about food. The Man comes to deal with the true
problem that lies in their longing for the meat pots of Egypt, for the verse emphasizes
that the purpose of the Man is, in order that I will test them to see whether they
keep My law or not. What then is the underlying problem that the Man comes to
address? The verse immediately following these verses we have mentioned simply adds to our
perplexity: And it will be on the sixth day that they will have to prepare what they bring
home; it will be twice as much as the gather every other day. (Shemot 16:5) It is unclear why immediately after the announcement of the Man the Torah moves on to
discuss the intricacies of Shabbat, prior to which the Man will appear in a double
portion. The verses then continue to describe the Man: God spoke to Moshe saying: I have heard the complaints of Bnei
Yisrael. Speak to them and say, In the afternoon you will eat meat, and in the
morning you will have your fill of bread. You will then know that I am God your
Lord. That evening a flock of quail came and covered the camp. Then in the
morning there was a layer of dew around the camp. When the layer of dew evaporated there
were little grains all over the surface of the desert. It looked like fine frost on the
ground. And Bnei Yisrael say this, and they asked one another Man hu?
(What is it?) for they had no idea what it was. Moshe said to them: This is
the bread that God is giving you to eat. (Shemot 16:11-15) The name of the Man is rather fascinating the Torah tells us that it is called
Man for Bnei Yisrael had no idea what it was. And indeed, Rashi explains
that the meaning of the words Man hu is in fact Ma hu, (What is
it.) The Rashbam, however, claims that the word Man is not of Hebrew origin,
similar to the words Ygar Sahaduta, (Bereshit 31:47.) He thus explains
that words Man hu are in fact from the language of the Arabs (some form of
Arabic it would seem) meaning This bread. Either way, there is no specific name by which the Man was labeled, this certainly
being the case according to Rashis explanation that the Man was thus called after
Bnei Yisrael did not know what it was and astonished, asked: What is it?
We will reconsider this point later. Later, the verses repeat the description of Gods command not to go out and
collect the Man on Shabbat, for on the sixth day a double portion of Man will descend.
Then the seventh day arrives, together with its challenge to remain in their houses and
not to go out to gather. Yet a portion of the nation do not withstand the test, and they
go out to gather: And it was on the seventh day that some people went out to gather, but they found
nothing. (Shemot 16:27) Immediately following this we witness Gods reaction: God said to Moshe: How long will you refuse to keep My commandments and My
Torah? (ibid. v.28) At first glance it seems unclear as to why this act draws such a severe reaction of
How long will you refuse to keep My commandments and My Torah? The
act of attempting to gather Man on Shabbat seems to be a minor transgression. The Torah then continues, bringing the commandment with which we opened our discussion
today: See that God gas given you the Shabbat, and therefore He gave you bread for two
days on the sixth day; every person must remain where he is, one may not leave his
designated place on the seventh day. (ibid. v.29) The verses then continue until the words of Moshe who describes the Divine imperative
to preserve some Man for the coming generations. Moshe said: This is what God has commanded: Fill an omer
measure of it (the Man) as a keepsake for your descendants. They will then see the food
that I fed you in the desert when I brought you out of Egypt. Moshe said to
Aharon: Take a jar and fill it with an omer of Man, and place it before God as a
keepsake for your descendants. As God commanded Moshe, Aharon placed it before the
(Ark of) Testimony as a keepsake. (ibid. v.32,33) We thus see that a portion of the very first Man to descend to Am Yisrael was
placed in a jar and preserved for eternity in the Mishkan (Tabernacle.) We may question
this act, for Bnei Yisrael ate the Man for the full forty-year period that they were
in the desert, as the verse indicates: And Bnei Yisrael ate the Man for forty years until they came to inhabited
territory. They ate the Man until they came to the edge of the land of Canaan. (ibid. v.35) Why then must the Man be preserved now for a keepsake and commemorative article? We
would expect that when the Man was to cease descending from the heavens that then we would
set aside a portion for the future. Why now, at the very beginning of the Mans
appearance? In addition, after Am Yisrael reaches settled territory, Canaan, we
never meet the jar of Man again. Therefore, it would seem that the main aim of this jar of Man, set aside in
commemoration, was to be fulfilled while Yisrael was still in the desert! Why is
this so? Before we deal with this issue of the Man, let us first examine the Birkat
haMazon (Blessing after Meals), which is the only blessing with an absolute
obligation rooted in the Torah. We will see the connection between this bracha
(blessing) and the Man. Birkat haMazon, as we all know, is comprised of four brachot: Birkat
hazan, (the bracha of He who sustains), Birkat haaretz
(the bracha of the land which concludes with the bracha for the
land and the food,) Birkat bone yerushalayim (the bracha of He who
builds Jerusalem which begins Have mercy and concludes with the
bracha of He who builds Jerusalem), and finally birkat haTov
umeitiv (the bracha of He who is good and bestows good). The Gemara in Masechet Brachot describes the circumstances of the institution of
each bracha of Birkat haMazon. The Gemara states: Rav Nachman said: Moshe instituted Birkat hazan for Yisrael
when the Man descended for them; Yehoshua instituted Birkat haaretz when they
entered Eretz Yisrael; David and Shlomo instituted (Birkat) bone
yerushalayim: David instituted (Have mercy) on Yisrael Your nation and on
Jerusalem Your city, and Shlomo instituted and on Your great and
sanctified house. Hatov umeitiv was instituted in Yavne as a result of
the dead of Beitar as Rav Matna said: On the day that they permitted the dead
of Beitar to be buried, they instituted (the bracha of) hatov umeitiv in
Yavne: hatov that the corpses did not decay, and
hameitiv - that they were permitted to be buried. (Brachot 48b) Birkat hazan, then, was instituted by Moshe Rabenu after the Man descended. This
is a very important point that we will address in detail. First let us examine the source
for Birkat haMazon as recorded in the Torah in Sefer Dvarim. There we see the
commandment as to Birkat haMazon in direct connection to Eretz Yisrael. Let us study the verses that precede the commandment of Birkat haMazon. At first
the verses deal with the travels of Am Yisrael through the desert: Faithfully observe the entire commandment that I command you today, that you may
live, and multiply, and arrive at and possess the land which God swore to your fathers.
And you must remember the entire way that God your Lord led you through the desert for
forty years, in order to afflict you, to test you (in order) to know that which is in your
heart whether you will observe His commandments or not. (Devarim 8:1,2) At that point the Torah begins describing the Man: And he afflicted you, and let you hunger, and he fed you the Man which you did
not know of and which your fathers did not know of, in order to inform you that it is not
by bread alone that man lives, but by everything that emanates from the mouth of God does
man live. (ibid. v. 3) The verses then continue describing the special care that God took with His nation as
they traveled through the desert. Then the verses make a transition to the description of
Eretz Yisrael and the Divine Promise of the lands inheritance to Am
Yisrael. For God your Lord is brining you to a good land, a land with streams of water, of
springs and underground water coming forth in valley and mountain; a land of wheat,
barley, grape, fig, and pomegranate; a land of oil-olives and honey (of dates); a land
where you will eat bread without poverty you will lack nothing there, a land whose
stones are iron, and from whose mountains you will mine copper. (ibid. v. 7-9) Then, after this long description of the Land of Israel do we find the verse that
indicates the obligation of the recital of Birkat haMazon: You will eat and you will be satiated, and you will bless God your Lord for the
good land that He gave you. (ibid. v. 10) However it is specifically the entry into Eretz Yisrael that may lead to many
difficulties and crises. As the verses describe: Take care lest you forget God, your Lord, by not observing His commandments, His
laws, and His decrees, which I command you today, lest you eat and be satiated, and you
build good houses and settle, and your cattle and sheep and goats increase, and you
increase silver and gold for yourselves, and everything that you have will increase
and your heart will become haughty and you will forget God, your Lord, Who took you out of
Egypt out of the house of bondage. (ibid. v. 11-14) For then we must recall the miracles that God affected with us in the desert: Who leads you through the great and awesome desert of snake, fiery
serpent, and scorpion, and thirst where there was no water Who brings forth water
for you from the rock of flint; Who feeds you Man in the desert , which your fathers did
not know, in order to afflict you and in order to test you, to do good for you in your
end. (ibid. v. 15,16) Now, when we do not recall these events, when we do not harbor the memory of the Man,
then the following thought steals into our hearts: And you may say in your heart, My strength and the might of my hand made me
all this wealth! (ibid. v. 17) Rather we must always recall: Then you shall remember God, your Lord, that it was He Who gave you strength to
gain wealth, in order to establish His covenant that he swore to your forefathers, as this
day. (ibid. v. 18) Thus we are able to learn a number of ideas: Firstly, the commandment of Birkat haMazon was given in direct connection to
Eretz Yisrael. The proof to this is the order of the verses that we have just seen:
after the verses describe Eretz Yisrael, the land to which God is leading us, the
land flowing with milk and honey, the Torah transmits the obligation: You will eat
and you will be satiated, and you will bless God your Lord. And how shall we bless
Him? What is the content of this blessing? It must be for the good land that He gave
you. This indicates that the praise and thanksgiving that this blessing must contain
pertain to Eretz Yisrael. From the above verses we also see that the purpose of the Man was in order to
afflict you, to test you once again we see that the Man holds within it a
hidden test. This reminds us of the verse in out parasha where God tells Moshe: Behold! I shall rain down food from the heaven for you, let the people go out and
gather each days portion on its day, so that I can test them, whether they will
follow My teaching or not. (Shemot 16:4) Once again we will ask, what is the test of the Man? After our long introduction we can now examine the issues properly what the
nature of the Man is, how the Man is connected to Birkat haMazon, and more
specifically we will examine the bracha of Who sustains the entire
world, (Birkat Hazan), which Moshe instituted as a result of the Man. One of the key points we must make note of, is that in truth Birkat Hazan is not
really an integral part of Birkat haMazon. For as we have noted, Birkat
haMazons purpose is to give praise for the good land that He gave
you. This fact is duly expressed in the second bracha of Birkat haMazon: Node lecha A-donai E-loheinu
- We will gave thanks to
you, God, our Lord, for the precious, good land
What, then, is the meaning of Birkat Hazan? The answer is clear. Moshe instituted Birkat Hazan as a result of the Man in
order that when Am Yisrael will reach Eretz Yisrael, they will continually
remember the Man. The significance and memory of the Man, that it was He Who gave
you strength to gain wealth, will always accompany them. For there is the danger
that after the conquest of Eretz Yisrael, and the building of Jerusalem and the
Temple, that they will believe that: My strength and the might of my hand made me
all this wealth! Therefore, prior to thanking God for Eretz Yisrael and the Temple, and in fact to
the contrary prior to properly paying tribute for these, we are required to hold
the memory of the Man at the forefronts of our minds. The memory of the bread that would
descend daily in the desert, the bread that God commanded us not to leave any of it until
the next day. Through the Man we thus fully comprehended that God is He Who sustains and
nourishes the entire world though His goodness, with grace, kindness, and mercy. Incidentally, the fact that Birkat Hazan is the only independent bracha
among the brachot of Birkat haMazon has Halachik basis. For example, when
three people ate and they forget to make a zimun, (the invitation recited when
three or more men eat together,) yet one already began to recite Birkat haMazon,
then he may complete Birkat Hazan and then answer the zimun. Te reason for this is
that Birkat Hazan is an introductory bracha to the Birkat Hamazon
proper, the essence of which is to be a bracha for Eretz Yisrael. (This
concept appears in Rashi in the Gemara in Masechet Brachot, where he writes that
Birkat Hazan is in fact part of the zimun.) Returning to our main topic, the purpose of the Man was to educate man, and implant in
his heart the verity of his true dependence on the Creator alone, and on nothing else
whether it be himself or another individual. Let us now consider the questions we opened with. We asked how it was that one month after the exodus from Egypt, after the tremendous
miracles, Bnei Yisrael complains to God, fondly recalling pot of meat in
Egypt. We also questioned Gods reaction, Who seems to have understandingly accepted this
complaint. We asked that with the memory of the exodus from Egypt and the splitting of Yam
Suf fresh in their minds, we would have expected, and justified, and severe, harsh Divine
reaction. The key to our questions is lodged in understanding the concept of the pot of
meat and thus in the appreciation of Am Yisraels longing for
Egypt. What then, is this pot of meat? It seems that modern Hebrew has distorted this expression. Its true meaning can be
understood against the background of Bnei Yisraels slavery in Egypt. In those difficult times, a period when eighty-percent of our nation was annihilated in
the Egyptian house of bondage, he who wanted to survive had to be a good slave. What is a good slave? A good slave doesnt question, he bears no thoughts of
freedom, and his entire aim is to merit a morsel of food at the end of his day, so that he
and his family may eat, and live another day in slavery. Slowly, slowly, it was in this
manner that Pharaoh gained control of the Jews hearts and souls. They became enslaved to
the food that they required in order to survive, the were enslaved to that pot of
meat, to that existential dependence on Egypt. As soon as the first thoughts of freedom surface, when Moshe and Aharon begin to demand
that Pharaoh set the nation free, Pharaohs takes a simple course of action he
increases the work-quota of the Jews, as the verse states: Let the work be heavier
upon the men
(Shemot 5:9.) In this manner Pharaoh increases the Jews
daily concern for existence, making it more severe and thus more enslaving. Then the taskmasters go out to the Jews, telling them: Complete your work, the
daily quota, (ibid. v. 13.) This expression the daily quota is the same
expression said in reference to the Man in our parasha, (Shemot 16:4,) however the
significance is completely to the contrary, (as we will see shortly.) Yet this terrifying system of enslavement, that enslaves through the pressure and
threat of the persons very existence, may also seem positive in a certain light
for it is a system wherein the individuals place is highly defined. The
individual knows what he must do in order to survive, he understands who and what hold the
keys to his life. Yet all this is good as long as the individual cooperates with the
system, for then he survives. However if he is unwilling to play his part, then he meets
his end. The underlying claim of the mention of the pot of meat is that
Yisrael does not know what to do with the freedom that they have been granted. They
do not know how to function in a system that does not hold the pot of meat
above their heads in the horizon. For despite the fact that the structure around the
pot of meat is an enslaving, lowly framework; it is well-defined and
clear-cut. Therefore God does not become enraged with Yisrael their claim is
understandable if one considers the Egyptian culture in which they developed, and
certainly considering the fact that they have only now just been removed from that entire
system. Yet here God causes the Man to descend from the heavens, to be gathered in a
daily quota, (ibid.) thereby uprooting the subjugation to the decayed
Egyptian system, clearly indicating to Yisrael who in fact is their provider and
sustainer. Yisrael are forbidden to keep any Man from one day to the next, but rather to
gather the Man anew every day. They are forced to educate themselves that they are not
ruled over or controlled by a human, but solely by God. This is exactly the significance of Gods words: In order that I will test them to see whether they keep My law or not. (Shemot 16:4) That is to say that gathering a daily quota of Man, and then not leaving any for the
following day is an act of complete faith in God, faith that only He sustains the entire
world by His grace, benevolence, and mercy. This is the way to be liberated from the
enslavement unto the Egyptian pot of meat. This idea is expressed in the following commentary that appears in the Mechilta, on the
verse a daily quota. A daily quota Rabi Elazar haModai says:
(This was) in order that a person would not collect today for tomorrow, as the verse
states: a daily quota; He who created today created its
livelihood. And in the Mechilta of Rabi Shimon bar Yochai there is an additional emphasis
regarding this idea of the daily quota that specifically this daily
dependency illustrates the intimate relationship between God and His children
contrary to a king who simply hands his sons all that he will need for the coming year,
and then no longer wants to see his son. The test of the Man is the test of a man who must go to sleep with no provisions for
the coming day, but despite this he believes that God will supply his every need the
following day. Yet if one leaves even a small quantity of Man for the next day then it becomes
full of worms. Those worms are not an external punishment, but are rather the natural
result of the persons attitude to the Man. For if he goes to the extent of
preserving some food for the next day, he indicates that he relies on nature more than on
God he sees the Man as a natural foodstuff, and not the miraculous bread that it
is. Accordingly his Man will obey natures law that bread which remains overnight in
the desert rots and decays. From here we will understand why the jar of Man was required specifically for the
period of Bnei Yisraels travel in the desert. The miracle of the Man will
continue for forty years, and there is the concern that Yisrael will cease to
consider the Man as a miracle, and may rather think of it as part of nature. Therefore
Yisrael are commanded with the start of the appearance of the Man, already then, to
place some in a jar, in order to remember that this bread is all miracle and not natural.
Therefore it is named Man, What, for there if no natural
definition of this supernatural object. Moshe instituted the Birkat Hazan which acts as an introduction to the Birkat
haMazon proper, for there is the concern that when dealing with the great concepts
of Eretz Yisrael, Yerushalayim, and the Temple we tend to forget that the
bread we eat is also miraculous. We forget that even the small, constant
aspects of life also hold within in them the miraculous the miracles that hide
within nature. We mentioned above that there were two other commandments relating to the Man: to
collect a double portion on Friday, and to refrain from collecting on Shabbat. These
illustrate the concept we raised, for Shabbat teaches one that all his gains and successes
are in fact from God. Therefore refraining from collecting Man on Shabbat is in order to
educate one to overcome the challenge that even if there is Man in the field this
is of no importance for on this day he is commanded to rest. In conclusion, let us deal with a custom practiced on the Shabbat, Shabbat Shira, which
completes the idea we have been dealing with. There is a custom on Shabbat Shira to feed
birds. (Despite the fact that some of the Halachik authorities dispute this custom, for on
Shabbat one may only feed his own, personal animals, in any event this custom is still
practiced.) This custom is described as follows: It is the custom of Yisrael to give food to the birds on Shabbat Shira: It
is customary to give the birds some of the wheat dish cooked for this Shabbat. The Pnei
Moshe (Bshalach) brings a beautiful reason for this custom: To indicate that
if Yisrael (who are compared to a bird) will have respite from their dealings and
will busy themselves with Torah and mitzvot God will provide them their foodstuffs
without (them having) any toil or labor, and the Man will descend from above, just as the
birds find their food in this manner. According to this reason that if Yisrael will busy themselves with Torah and
mitzvot and will believe that the Master of the Universe will provide for them
God will provide them their foodstuffs without (them having) any toil or
labor. Once again we see that ones livelihood is conferred upon him by God. Another reason for the custom is: Another well known reason is since the birds ate of the Man that on Shabbat Datan
and Aviram scattered where the Man had previously fallen in order to refute the words of
Moshe Rabbenu that And on the seventh day, Shabbat, it (Man) will not be
there, (Shemot 16:26.) (Shaar bat Rabim - R Eliezer of Mikoliev, in the name of the Visionary of
Lublin.) This second reason is based on a Midrash that it was Datan and Aviram who scattered
some Man in the field on Shabbat in order to refute Moshes words, yet then the birds
came and ate all that Man, reminding us that everything is from God. It is interesting that it was also Datan and Aviram who went out on Shabbat to gather
the Man the very people who scattered the Man went out to collect it. He who does
not believe in and attempts to refute the belief in Gods Providence falls prey of
his own warped beliefs. But the Man and Shabbat educate him that even those things that seem natural, that very
food that sustains man, are all miracles, bestowed upon us by the Creator of the world.
This is mans essential virtue the ability not only to recognize Gods
hand in great nature-defying events, but the capability to see and experience God in those
occurrences that appear to be the most natural and earthly. Translated by Sholem Hurwitz. Copyright Keren Yishai/Rav M. Elon
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