Parshat Korach
Korach took…and
so did Datan and Abiran… They rose up before Moshe…When these had
assembled themselves against Moshe and Aharon, they
said to them: “You take
too much upon yourselves, for the entire community, they
are all holy and God is in their midst.
Why do you lift yourselves up above the community of God?
16:1 - 3
Scripture does not state
here: And Korach ‘quarreled,’ or
‘spoke,’ or ‘commanded,’ but it says, ‘and he took.’ What did he take? (the Midrash states)
He did not take anything; rather, it was his heart that took (control of )
him…Ibn Ezra wrote…’he took men,’ But it
is my opinion there is no need for these interpretations…because the word
‘taking’…is an expression of taking action to do that deed.
Ramban (13th Century)
Moses heard, or rather, he
understood the aim and the motivation of the claims and accusations made
against him. It was a denial of the
Divine character of his mission, motivated not by an erroneous notion that would
have responded to correction, but by self-seeking jealousy which, under the
pretense of representing the public interest, seeks only the satisfaction of
its own selfish ambitions.
Samson
Raphael Hirsch (19th Century)
In this week which opens with the
celebration of American independence, need we be reminded that the cornerstone
of the American democratic system is ‘that all men are created equal?. In claiming that
the entire community is holy, Korach is echoing God’s command, enunciated most
memorably at the opening of the Kedoshim portion,
“Moses, speak to the whole Israelite community and say to them: You shall be holy for I, the Lord your God
am holy.”…Ignoring the egalitarian argument which has aroused our sympathies,
Moses reminds the group that, as Levites, they too benefit from this
hierarchical system. While Korach’s
argument has cleverly avoided god’s vote in the selesction
of leadership, Moses does not.
Ann Lapidus Lerner (Contemporary)
The history of our ancestors’
journey recounted in the book of Numbers might be described as a series of forgettings. The
children of
Rabbi Mark
Levine (Contemporary)
Note that they do not say :’All the congregation is holy’ as a unit, but ‘All the
congregation are holy.’ Every one of them, each one taken,
individually. The assertion of
individual selfish ambitions outweighs their group feeling as a ‘kingdom of
priests and a holy nation.’ They
interpreted the mission of holiness, the role of ‘chosen people’ with which
they had been charged by god, in a sense of conferring on them superiority and
privilege, rather than as constituting a call to shoulder extra duties and
responsibilities.
Nechama Leibowitz (Contemporary)
If we look at the verb ‘took’ in
its most literal sense…we find that this one word, the verb without an object,
is the most succinct way to declare that Korah was
essentially a ‘taker,’ using his exclusive lineage to justify his taking…True
he will shortly laud the nation’s potential for holiness, but Korah cares less for the issues than the benefits to be
derived from them. For him, issues are
secondary, the argument a pretext.
Korach needs an issue – any issue- to justify his jealousy
Shlomo
Riskin (Contemporary)
Every controversy that is pursued
in a heavenly cause, is destined to be perpetuated:
and that which is not pursued in a heavenly cause is not destined to be
perpetuated. Which can be considered a
controversy pursued in a heavenly cause?
This is the controversy of Hillel and Shammai. And that not
pursued in a heavenly cause? This is the
controversy of Korach and his congregation.
Pirkei
Avot 5:17