|
|
|
|
|
Parshat
Beshalach: Fire
and Cloud
What
must it have been like to look up and see the daily spectacle of a
pillar[1]
of cloud, or a pillar of fire floating above you? This phenomenon of
the pillar of cloud and the pillar of fire are introduced to us by
the opening pesukim of the parsha. We wonder as
to exactly how they worked. A description of any precision and their
exact function eludes us. Did these clouds lead the Israelite nation
throughout the 40 years in the desert or were they limited to a
particular period of the Exodus? Did they simply serve a role of
signalling the direction of travel or did the clouds serve a
different function? Why were these tools of cloud and fire in
particular, used?
SOURCES
FOR CHAVRUTA STUDY 1.
We begin with basic Torah sources (Additional use of mepharshim is
recommended): ·
Shemot 13:21-22 ·
14:19-20, 24 ·
33:9-10 ·
40:34-38 ·
Bamidbar 9:15-23; 10:11,34 ·
Bamidbar 14:14 -
For each of these mekorot,
ask yourselves what function the pillar of cloud/fire serves? -
If the function in one text is different to a previous source, then
what do you make of the "leap" between one text and the
other? 2.
God's presence and the cloud Shemot
16:10; 19:16,18; 24:15-18; 40:34-5 THE
SHIUR SECTION: Our
first impression of the pillars of cloud and fire is that they
functioned as a Godly "guidance system". Bnei Yisrael
travelled following the cloud or fire up ahead with full security
that they were journeying in the correct direction. For B'nei
Yisrael, a group of untrained desert travellers this navigation tool
would have been an essential commodity. "When
Pharaoh sent the nation forth, God did not lead them by way of the
land of the Philistines although it was nearer, for God said, 'The
people may have a change of heart when the see war and return to
Egypt.' So God lead the people roundabout....The Lord went before
them in a pillar of cloud by day, to guide them along the way, and a
pillar of fire by night, to give them light, that they might travel
day and night. The pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by
night did not depart from before the people." (13:14-22) The
text begins by talking about God's leadership: "He did not lead
them by way of the Philistines ... God lead the people
roundabout." But, what means did God employ through which to
lead the nation? How were the Israelites to know the route upon
which God was leading them? The very next verses give the answer to
these questions. The pillar of cloud and fire showed the people the
correct route: God's planned "roundabout" hike through the
desert. Ibn
Ezra wonders why a pillar of fire is necessary for night time. After
all, did the Israelites travel by night? He answers in the
affirmative, proving his point from the pesukim
themselves: "
... A PILLAR OF FIRE BY NIGHT, TO GIVE THEM LIGHT, THAT THEY MIGHT
TRAVEL DAY AND NIGHT: for the camp was large and they could travel
only in short stages. Because of this, they would travel a little by
day and a little by night" So
the pillars of cloud and fire served as "tour guides" to
the nation. This is one way of looking at it. However
we can take this line of understanding to a higher level by
investigating the theological implications of this special guidance
system. After all, the text does talk about the cloud or fire being
representative of God's personal attention: "The Lord went
before them in a pillar of cloud" If these clouds symbolise
God's leadership of the nation throughout their wilderness trek,
then we might agree with the simple but ever so deep comment of Rav
Yoseph Bekhor Shor: "
The Lord Went Before Them In A Pillar Of Cloud: THEIR KING BEFORE
THEM, GOD IN THE LEAD!" He
continues - wondering why God needed to be revealed via a cloud: "
A PILLAR OF CLOUD: Because God's presence is never fully
revealed.." The
suggestive imagery of the Bekhor Shor is vivid in its message and
boldly anthropomorphic. The Israelite nation are marching to their
freedom, away from the slavery of Egypt, with their leader - God
Himself - at their helm. It is precisely through the medium of the
pillar of cloud/fire that it is evident God is their leader. God is
much more than a tour guide. He is their leader in the fullest sense
of the word. We cannot but recall those famous verses that we recite
regularly in Hallel: "When
Israel went forth from Egypt ... The
sea saw them and fled, Jordan
ran backward, Mountains
skipped like rams, Hills
like sheep. What
alarmed you, O sea, that you fled, Jordan,
that you ran backward, Mountains,
that you skipped like rams, Hills,
like sheep? Tremble,
O earth! Before the presence of the Lord, Before
the presence of the God of Jacob, Who
turned the rock into a pool of water, The
flinty rock into a fountain." (Psalm 114) In
these lines, the event of our Exodus from Egypt is perceived not in
human-national terms but rather as heralding the arrival of God
Himself. Israel is marching out of Egypt, but really God is marching
ahead of them. Nature trembles at the approach of God. The
ceremonial procession of Bnei Yisrael is, in fact, the triumphant
march of God. God is leading the people out of Egypt in a most
tangible manner. (We shall return to this approach later in the
shiur.) APPROACH
No. 2 : PROTECTION This
Psalm quite naturally brings us to a new dimension in the
functioning of the cloud (and fire). Here we shall begin to dwell
upon the protective function of the fire/cloud. As the story of the
Exodus continues, we read of how the Israelites were pursued to the
edge of the sea with, it would seem, no way out. At this desperate
moment.... "... The pillar of cloud shifted from in front of them and took up a place behind them and it came between the camp of Egypt and the camp of Israel. Thus, there was the cloud with the darkness and it lit up the night so that no one could come near to each other all night.... At the morning watch, the Lord looked down upon the Egyptian army from a pillar of fire and cloud and threw the Egyptian army into panic." (14:19-20 and v. 24) The
precise details of this incident are too vague to decipher in full[2].
However, a few points would seem to be worth stressing. Here the
pillars of cloud/fire would seem to have taken on a new protective
role. They act as a shield between the Israelites and the Egyptians
holding the armies back and preventing them from engaging in
warfare. The following morning it would appear that God, in the
guise of the cloud/fire adopts a more active role, sending the
entire Egyptian army into panic[3].
So the clouds are not exclusively positioned at the front of the
camp, in leadership position - functioning solely in the driver’s
seat. The fire/cloud have the capability to move to the rear of the
camp, with the purpose of ensuring its protection. God's presence
that - from this text - would seem to be contained within the cloud,
has the capability of protecting Israel from danger. This
notion, of clouds serving in a protective capacity, is taken a stage
further by the Midrash: "There
were seven clouds: Four of them to each side/direction (of the
Israelites), one was above them and another below their feet. A
further cloud would pass in front of them levelling the valleys and
flattening the mountains." (Mekhilta Beshalach 1) This
Midrash expands the theme of protection in two ways. First, the
protecting cloud concept is not limited to a particular historical
moment at the Red Sea. Rather, the protection is seen as ongoing and
constant throughout the wilderness years. The second way in which
the Midrash expands the concepts of the pesukim
here is on the number of clouds. The notion of a single pillar of
cloud is expanded here to an entire collection[4]
of seven
protective clouds - the Annanei
Hakavod - which surround the Jewish people on all sides. Indeed
according to one view in the Gemara (Sukka 11b), our Sukkot are
reminiscent of these seven Godly clouds of protection. THE
FIRE & CLOUD HYBRID :THE DIVINE PRESENCE We have not yet discussed the unusual hybrid of cloud and fire. Is it just a visibility thing; that a cloud is more visible by day, and a fire has a greater nighttime effect? Or is there something more essential than that? What is the secret behind this curious cloud/fire combination? We
find combinations of cloud and fire in a number of places in Torah: "On
the third day ... there was thunder, lightning and a dense CLOUD
upon the mountain... and all the people in the camp trembled ...
Mount Sinai was all in smoke, for the Lord had come down upon it
with FIRE ... and the whole mountain trembled" (19:16-18) "When
Moses had ascended the mountain, the CLOUD covered the mountain. The
presence of the Lord abode on Mount Sinai and the CLOUD hid it for
six days. On the seventh day He called to Moses from the midst of
the CLOUD. Now the presence of the Lord appeared in the sight of the
Israelites as a consuming FIRE on the top of the mountain."
(24:15-18) At
the dedication of the Mishkan: "
When Moses had finished the work, the CLOUD covered the tent of
meeting and the presence of the Lord filled the Tabernacle. Moses
could not enter the Tent of meeting, because the CLOUD had settled
upon it and the presence of the Lord filled the Tabernacle. ...For
over the Tabernacle, a CLOUD of the Lord rested by day, and FIRE
would appear in it at night, in the view of all the house of Israel
..." (40:33-37) These
are all situations, moments in which God's presence is at its most
developed, at full intensity. Whether at Mt. Sinai awaiting God’s
presence, His direct revelation; whether at the dedication ceremony
of the Mishkan; in these situations, God's presence is manifest in
an almost tangible manner. (In all cases, it is in the sight of the Israelites/in the
view of all of Israel.) In these occurrences, God transmits His
presence with a concentration that generates an almost palpable
feeling of divine energy. The divine presence manifests itself in
each case, in the form of cloud and fire. Cloud and fire are a
visual sign of the presence of God. This
is not new. Be it in the burning bush (3:2), or in the ceremony of
the Brit Bein Habetarim[5]
, God appears to man in the form of fire. Likewise, many Biblical
episodes portray the presence of a cloud a an indicator to an
unusual intensity of God's presence[6].
One
particularly powerful passage is found in Parshat Shelach Lecha.
There, Moses is arguing for the fate of the B'nei Yisrael. He refers
to the pillar of cloud-fire and would seem to indicate that the
awareness of this divine "chaperone" was known throughout
the region. Moses argues: "Now
they (Egypt) have heard that You, O Lord, are in the midst of this
people; that, in plain sight, You O Lord, and your cloud are seen standing over them; with
a pillar of cloud you go before them by day, and in a pillar of fire
by night…" (Bamidbar 14:14) This
phenomenon is so evident to all the nations around that Moses can
use this fact in order to pressure God to forgive his nation. SO we
see the degree to which God's presence and the pillar of cloud-fire
are synonymous. TO
SUMMARISE Thus
far, we have discussed three dimensions of the fire-cloud
phenomenon: ·
As a way of leading B’nei Yisrael through the desert. ·
Protection ·
Divine Presence Interestingly
the Ibn Ezra (15:22) views these distinct dimensions in something of
a progression: "These
clouds ... were with Israel only until the crossing of the (Red)
Sea, and in my opinion, they stopped after this. For after Pharaoh
and his army had drowned, there was no need to travel at night!
Hence the Torah deliberately states 'And they Moses lead the
Israelites from the Red Sea' (15:22) - by the word of God. This was
the state of things...until Mt. Sinai where they made the Tabernacle
upon which the cloud rested... Were the cloud accompanying Israel
all the way through the desert of Sinai, why would the text need to
state, 'Behold I come to you in a thick cloud' (19:9)?" (Peirush
Katzar 13:22) Later
Ibn Ezra[7]
elaborates upon this theory: "After
the crossing of the Red Sea, they had no fear, and they had no need
to travel at night… Moses lead them by order of God…After the
Mishkan was constructed, God descended upon it with a pillar of
cloud; as it states (Shemot 40:38) 'At night fire was upon it'; 'and
when the cloud travelled, the Israelites travelled." (40:36)
…The two "pillars" alternated above the Mishkan." (Peirush
HaAroch 15:21) What
Ibn Ezra is telling us is this. ·
From
Egypt to the Yam Suf,
the pillars lead the nation. ·
At
the Yam Suf,
the pillars protected the nation. Then
the pillars went away until the construction of the Mishkan. ·
Once
the Mishkan was constructed,
the pillars returned as a visible sign of God's presence. One
difference between the situations was the positioning of the
pillars: ·
In "leading" role, the pillars are in the FRONT of
the camp. ·
In "protection" role, the pillars are at the BACK
of the camp. ·
Once the Mishkan is built, the pillars remain over the
Mishkan in the CENTRE of the camp. In
evaluating this approach of Ibn Ezra, one must examine the pesukim
in Shemot and Bamidbar to verify the location and function of the
clouds within the camp. Do they support the Ibn Ezra's theory? IN
CONCLUSION We
have not yet managed to probe the two substances that are used to
generate the tangible feeling of God's presence. Why are fire and
cloud the appropriate media? We
might suggest that both cloud and fire are apt symbols of the
spiritual. They both seem to have an ethereal quality to them; a
spiritual dimension that lies somewhere beyond the physical. Untamed
by gravity, seemingly lacking material substance, they float in the
air, suspended, somewhere between heaven and earth. We might add
something about their function, their nature. Clouds have the
life-giving power of rain but also the power to devastate and
destroy. Fire too, has this dichotomy. It has life-giving energy,
but also the potential to destroy in an indiscriminate and savage
manner. Do
these symbols take us back to Bereshit with the primal elements of
(light) fire and dark? Is the cloud reminiscent of the primordial
"mist that rose from the earth and watered the face of the
ground?" (Bereshit 2:6) Rav
Lichtenstein[8] once suggested a different theory. Light is the symbol
of order, rationalism, the comprehendible. Cloud is indicative of
mystery, transcendence, that which eludes us. He proposed that it is
this dichotomy that is suggested in the dual symbols of God's
presence. On the one hand, God can be reached via the intellect. God
can be perceived, approached, understood. Like light, His presence
illuminates. But, there is another dimension to the presence of the
Divine. The mystery, the unfathomable, the irrational, the distance;
these are all primary aspects of our relationship with the ineffable
God. We cannot understand God. In certain ways, God is clouded from
us. At
times God is revealed; at others he is hidden. The dialectic of the
cloud and the fire is the dialectic of our relationship with the
presence of God. Shabbat
Shalom.
[1]
We traditionally talk about the "pillar" of cloud
because of the Hebrew: Amud. But it is quite possible that the
pillar rested in a horizontal fashion, indicating the direction
of travel or something similar. It is quite difficult to
visualise this miraculous phenomenon.
[2]
A
close reading of these pesukim will not a blurring of the
boundaries between cloud and fire: "there was the cloud
with the darkness and it lit up the night" / " the
Lord looked down ... from a pillar of fire and cloud". See
Rashi who has his own ways of solving the overlap between cloud
and fire, light and dark. Later in the shiur, we will suggest a
model in which cloud and fire co-exist.
[3]
See Rashi here who suggests that the fire acted in a more
pro-active role, heating the sand and thereby neutralising the
horses. Additionally, the fire burned the wheels of Pharaoh's
chariots. Check the strange ordering of the pesukim here and you
will see that Rashi's approach is certainly feasible according
to p'shat.
[4]
Rabbi Yehuda's opinion in the Mekhilta is that there were 13
clouds!
[5]
Here, we have a "smoking furnace and a torch of fire".
Maybe this too is the hybrid of cloud and fire. (Bereshit 15:17)
[6]
See Shemot 33:9, Bamidbar 12:3, 17:10-15. In addition there is a
very clear passage in our Parshat Hashavua which gives a clear
demonstration of God's presence within the cloud: "Moses
and Aaron said to all the Israelites: 'By evening you shall know
that God brought you out from the Land of Egypt, and in the
morning you shall behold the presence of God because he has
heard your complaints' ….Then Moses said to Aaron: 'Say to the
entire community of B'nei Yisrael: Draw near to God for he has
heard your complaints. And as Aaron spoke to the whole Israelite
community, they turned towards the wilderness, and there, in a
cloud, appeared the presence of God." (16:8-10) Maybe we can also add certain Midrashic statements: Of a cloud tied to Sarah's tent, and a cloud tied to Har Hamoriah at the Akeyda. See Rashi Bereshit 22:4; 24:67.
[7]
This
particular section in the Ibn Ezra is particularly fascinating
because the Ibn Ezra launches into his doubts as to the
Midrashic tradition of the seven "annanei Hakavod" and
relates this further to the historical origins of Chag HaSukkot.
Look it up!
[8]
I found this in an article from the VBM entitled "The
Symbolism of the Menorah and the Incense." It is a Sicha
for Chanukka by Rav Lichtenstein from 5760.
|
|||
|
|
|||||||