Chukat
But
the Lord said to Moses and Aaron, “Because you did not trust Me
enough to affirm My sanctity in the sight of the Israelite people, therefore
you shall not lead this congregation into the land that I have given them.”
His
whole sin lay in erring on the side of anger and deviating from the mean of
patience…that a man of his stature should give vent to anger in front of the
whole community of
Maimonides
(12th Century)
Moses
made the fatal mistake of saying, “Shall we bring you forth water,” instead of
saying “Shall God bring you forth water,” as in all the other miracles where
the authorship of God is always explicitly stressed. The people might have been misled into
thinking that Moses and Aaron had extracted the water for them, by their own
skill. Thus they failed to “sanctify Me in the midst of the children of
Nachmanides
(14th Century)
In light
of all the foregoing, one could not deny that Moses, even if only for a
fleeting moment, must have doubted the ultimate success of his own Divine
mission and the possibility of ultimately winning the entire nation for the
accomplishment of its vocation on earth…Now the grave of the leaders beside
those of all the others who had had to die in the wilderness will bear eternal
witness to the justice of God’s sovereignty, upon whose scale even the
slightest error or men close to Him…weights as heavily as the most heinous
crime of ordinary mortals. Precisely by
making even Moses and Aaron expendable for further progress in the
accomplishment of His purposes on earth…even men like Moses and Aaron are not
indispensable…
Samson
Raphael Hirsch (19th Century)
The
decision that he should step aside for a new leader was not a punishment, but
rather the acknowledgment of a fact.
Moses had “lost his touch.”…It all happened after the death of Miriam. This personal loss was a terrible blow to
Moses. It was only then he must have
realized how dependent he was on his beg sister, the one who when he was still
a baby had stood with a heavy heart on the river-bank, to make sure that her
little brother would not drown…In his dealings with the people and the world,
the support of his close family circle…they had been a natural trio – Miriam,
Aaron and Moses.
Pinchas Peli (20th
Century)
True Tzaddikim do not promote themselves. On the contrary, they often take great pains
to conceal their virtues and charitable deeds.
It is not uncommon that we become aware of their true greatness and
nobility of spirit only after they are no longer with us…In this way the
positive impact of the righteous as inspiring role models increases after their
death…In short, the death of Tzaddikim inspires us to imitate their personal
conduct – if possible, in our own actions, and if not, by ensuring that there
will be others who will fill this spiritual void.
Abraham
Isaac Kook (20th Century)
Moses
our teacher committed one sin, but our commentators have heaped on him thirteen
and more, each one of them having invented a fresh one…I have therefore
hitherto refrained from going into this problem for fear I might attribute a
new sin to Moses.
S. D.
Luzzatto (19th Century)