Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    PARASHAT BALAK: THE STORY OF BILAM AS A LESSON IN EMUNA

    Parashat Balak tells
    the famous story of the
    attempt made by Balak,
    the king of Moav, to
    annihilate Am Yisrael
    by hiring a gentile prophet, Bilam, to place a
    curse on them. G-d intervened and protected
    Beneh Yisrael by forcing Bilam to bless them,
    instead.
    The Gemara in Masechet Berachot (12b)
    makes a startling statement, telling us that
    the Rabbis considered including this section
    of the Torah as part of our daily Shema text.
    They thought that this story is so vitally
    important that it should be read each and
    every day, as one of the paragraphs of Shema.
    The only reason why they did not include it,
    the Gemara tells, is because it is quite lengthy,
    and would inconvenience people to have them
    recite it each day.
    The obvious question arises, why would
    this section have been selected for the daily
    Shema recitation? What is it about the story
    of Bilam that warranted its daily recitation as
    part of the text of Shema?
    Rav Pinchas Friedman (contemporary) finds
    the answer in the connection between Bilam
    and another evil man who sought to destroy

    our nation – Lavan, the uncle and father-in-
    law of Yaakov Avinu. As we read in Parashat

    Vayeseh (Bereshit 31:23-24), Lavan pursued
    Yaakov, and just before he caught up to him,
    G-d appeared to Lavan and warned him not to
    “speak with Yaakov good or bad” – implying
    that, like Bilam, Lavan sought to kill Yaakov
    and his family with speech, by placing a
    curse on them. The Arizal (Rav Yishak Luria,
    1534-1572) taught that Lavan was Bilam’s
    grandfather – and, moreover, that Lavan’s
    soul was reincarnated in Bilam. This explains
    several aspects of the story of Bilam, including
    the incident when an angel obstructed his path
    as he traveled, and the donkey veered to the
    side and crushed Bilam’s leg against the wall
    (22:25). Targum Yonatan Ben Uziel writes
    that this wall was the heap of stones prepared
    by Lavan and Yaakov as a symbol of the truce
    that they eventually made (Bereshit 31:46-
    53). They pledged that neither would cross
    this collection of stones to inflict harm upon
    the other. Bilam – a reincarnation of Lavan
    – violated this truce when he crossed these
    stones on his way to curse Beneh Yisrael, and
    so his leg was injured by these very stones.
    One of the points of connection between
    Lavan and Bilam is the fact that they both
    despised Beneh Yisrael, but ended up helping
    our nation. As much as Lavan despised
    Yaakov and everything he stood for, he ended
    up giving Yaakov four wives with whom he

    produced the twelve tribes. In
    essence, Lavan – who hated Am
    Yisrael – inadvertently built the
    foundations of the Jewish Nation.
    Bilam, too, set out to destroy
    Beneh Yisrael by cursing them, but
    G-d transformed these curses into
    beautiful blessings, some of which
    are used even to this day.
    We can now understand why the
    story of Bilam was deemed worthy
    of being included in the text of
    Shema, when we reaffirm our faith
    in G-d. Shema begins with the
    proclamation, “Hashem Elokenu
    Hashem Ehad” – that G-d is one,
    that He is the only fully independent
    power in the world. Nothing else in the world
    has any independent control or authority; the
    sun rises each morning only because G-d has
    it rise. The greatest – or at least one of the
    greatest – manifestations of G-d’s exclusive
    power is the way He manipulates the wicked
    to achieve the precise opposite of what they
    set out to accomplish. The story of Bilam
    shows us how even when an exceedingly
    powerful or talented enemy sets out to destroy
    Am Yisrael, he not only fails, but ends up
    making Am Yisrael better and stronger. This
    is why the Rabbis considered including this

    story as part of Shema – because it serves as
    a powerful lesson in Emuna, teaching us that
    nobody and nothing has any power besides
    G-d.
    Learning this story, then, should reinforce
    our faith in Hashem, and remind us that no
    matter what kind of problem we face, no
    matter what difficulties we struggle with,
    G-d, who exercises full, unlimited control
    over the world, can assist us. We never need
    to experience fear or anxiety, because, as the
    story of Bilam reminds us, G-d has the power
    to transform any situation – no matter how
    difficult – into a source of great blessing.