I really enjoyed
David
Matthews’ reading of Korach that I told you about on Saturday.
David pointed out that when Korach and
company challenged the authority of Moses and Aaron, and a jealous God struck
out at the rebels, Aaron’s reaction was to bring healing and peace.
It would be way too simple to stop there, however.
Aaron’s response still leaves Moses and Aaron’s
authority intact, not dispersed or devolved to any of their followers.
And Korach’s folk have a good point when they
say (in the
Etz
Hayim translation):
You have gone too far! For all the community are holy, all of them,
and the Lord is in their midst. Why then
do you raise yourselves above the Lord’s congregation? (Numbers 16:3)
This is a point that
Moses should recognize. Only a few
chapters earlier, when Moses appoints seventy elders, two of them refuse to be
called, but then they are touched by the divine spirit despite themselves and
start prophesying from their own tents, Moses’ aide, Joshua, says, “My lord
Moses, restrain them!” But Moses wisely answers, “Are you wrought up on my
account? Would that all the Lord’s
people were prophets!” (Numbers 11:28-29).
Furthermore, back at Sinai, Moses, Aaron, and all Israel heard God
say, “And you will be to Me a kingdom
of priests and a holy nation.”
(Exodus 19:6)
It seems on the face of it that Korach and company are
reminding Moses and Aaron of a basic principle.
Their contribution should be accepted, not dismissed and punished.
Rabbi
Abraham Isaac Hacohen Kook, the 19
th-century teacher who was the
first Chief Rabbi of Palestine, goes even further: their contribution should be
celebrated.
As the notes to Numbers
17:2-3 in Etz Hayim point out:
The firepans used by the rebels to
offer incense have become sacred and are to be used as plating for the altar…Kook
taught that the holiness of the firepans symbolizes the necessary roled played
by skeptics and agnostics in keeping religion honest and healthy. Challenges to tradition, he taught, are
necessary because they stand as perpetual reminders of the danger that religion
can sink into corruption and complacency….
David’s interpretation celebrated nonviolent resistance but quickly
brushed by the fact that the rebels were really rebelling. Rav Kook looks rebellion squarely in the eye
and welcomes it. His interpretation is
part of the Judaism I love, which sees challenges to authority as part of our
tradition, and a sacred duty.
And yet, and still: the firepans that the rebels used
survive. The rebels themselves do
not. Is this as far as we can go in
questioning authority (not to mention sharing it?) I think not.
There’s more to think about here.