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


    SHLACH: DANCE TO THE BEAT OF CREATIVITY WHY WERE THE SPIES CONDEMNED FOR REPORTING THE FACTS?

    The difficult we
    do immediately;
    the impossible
    takes a little
    longer.
    — General
    Montgomery

    The Hole in the Roof
    A rabbi stands before his congregation
    and reports to them that a massive hole
    has been found in the roof of the shul.
    “Now I have good news and bad news for
    you,” the Rabbi continues. “The good
    news is that we have the money to repair
    it; the bad news is that the money is in
    your pockets.”
    Twelve Jews on a Mission
    This week’s parsha, Shlach, tells the story
    of 12 men who were dispatched by Moshe
    from the desert to go and survey the Land
    of Canaan and its inhabitants. The
    purpose of their journey was to prepare
    the Jewish people for the subsequent
    conquest and settlement of the Land.
    Upon discharging the spies on their

    mission, Moshe presented them with a
    list of questions they needed to answer.
    “See the Land,” Moshe said to them.
    “How is it? And the nations that dwell in
    it—are they strong or weak? Are they few
    or numerous? And how is the land in
    which they dwell—is it good or bad? And
    how are the cities in which they dwell—
    are they open or are they fortified?”
    When the twelve spies returned from
    their 40-day tour of Israel they presented
    to the people a report of their findings.
    “We arrived at the Land to which you
    sent us,” the spies said, “and indeed it
    flows with milk and honey and this is its
    fruit. But the people that dwell in the land
    are powerful, the cities are greatly
    fortified and we also saw the offspring of
    the giants. We cannot ascend to that
    people for it is too strong for us,”
    they proclaimed.
    The report demoralized the Jewish nation
    and drained it of the motivation to enter
    the Land. As a result, the spies died, and
    much of the generation died in the desert,
    never making it into the Promised Land.
    Only 39 years later, in the year 1276

    B.C.E., did the children
    and grandchildren of this
    generation cross the
    borders and settle in the
    Promised Land.
    Kill the Messenger?
    One of the many questions
    raised by biblical
    commentators concerns
    the reason for the spies
    being condemned to
    punishment. Moshe gave
    them a detailed list of questions about the
    Land; he instructed them to make their
    own observations as to what will await
    the people upon their arrival.
    This is exactly what the spies did. They
    came back with an answer to all of
    Moshe’s questions and reported what
    they perceived to be the reality. If Moshe
    expected them to cover up their
    observations — that the Land was
    inhabited by mighty men and its cities
    were greatly fortified — he should have
    never sent them in the first place!
    Why were the men faulted for relating
    what they had seen? Is this not a case of
    “kill the messenger?”
    Introducing Paralysis
    The answer is that if the spies had
    merely related to Moshe and to the
    people the reality of the situation as
    they saw it, everything would have
    been fine. But they did more than that.
    They used the difficulties they observed
    as an excuse to capitulate in the face of
    fear.
    Had the spies returned and said, “Hey
    guys, we have seen a mighty people
    and well-protected cities in the Land,
    so now we need to devise an effective
    strategy of how to go about our
    challenging mission,” they would have
    fulfilled their task flawlessly. The
    moment they responded to the obstacles
    by saying “We cannot do it anymore,”
    they swayed an entire people to
    abandon their G-d-given destiny.
    The spies are condemned for
    substituting the legitimate and
    important question “How will we do
    it?” with the despairing and helpless
    conclusion, “We can never do it!”
    Conquering Your Darkness
    Each of us has a domain in our life that
    needs to be conquered, a terrain that
    needs to be transformed into a “holy

    land.” Some of us need to confront trauma,
    fear, insecurity, temptation, addiction, or
    shame. We must confront challenges
    within our psyches, our marriages, and
    our families. Since the challenges that lay
    in recovery’s path are at times frightening,
    we are naturally tempted to believe that
    we are incapable of overcoming our
    darkness and we surrender to the
    obstacles.
    The feeling is understandable, but if you
    surrender to it, it will rob you of the
    opportunity to liberate your life and
    arrive at your personal “Promised
    Land.” The option of resignation compels
    you to remain stuck in a barren desert
    made up of the stuff of shame and despair.
    The question ought not to be, “Can I do
    it?” Because that’s the question coming
    from my inner sense of incompetence.
    G-d conceived you in love, and the day
    you were born is the day He declared that
    the world is incomplete without you. As
    the saying goes, sometimes when you
    find yourself in a dark place you think
    you’ve been buried, but you’ve actually
    been planted. The resources to repair the
    “hole in our personal roof” are present. I
    am empowered to leave my wilderness
    and discover my light, joy, and
    wholeness. G-d has sent me into each of
    my life’s journeys with the power to bring
    light into my darkness and discover
    my own inner infinity, as a Divine
    ambassador of love, light, healing, and
    hope.
    The story of the spies is our personal
    story. My trauma tells me, “I can’t,” and I
    have all the emotional evidence and data
    to support my conclusions. But with lots
    of empathy and faith in my inner Divine
    self, I can discover a deeper untarnished,
    unfearful core that has the power to say: I
    can, and I will; now let me figure out
    how. I want to dance to the beat of
    creativity and connection, not despair to
    the beat of survival and loneliness.