ולא ידעתי מה הטעם בזה שיאמר הקב"ה כי בשמרנו כל המצוות ועשותנו רצונו לא ימאס אותנו בגעול נפשו
Here the Torah is talking about a time when we are doing everything right and G-d is promising peace, prosperity, a Beis haMikdash –
doesn’t it go without saying that when that happens he
won’t be disgusted by our behavior?
The Ramban goes on to offer a mystical interpretation of the
pasuk, but other meforshim stick with Rashi’s reading and offer various
defenses against the Ramban’s question.
As I mentioned last post, the Netziv writes that even in the best of
times there will always be wrongdoers.
G-d is promising that he will overlook those individuals and not be
disgusted and repulsed by their behavior.
Others interpret the promise here as meaning that even when things turn bad, G-d will still not be disgusted. Ralbag reads the promise of
a Mikdash in the first half of the pasuk not as the trumpeting of a climactic
achievement, but rather as a consolation: when you do wrong, you will have a
Beis haMikdash to offer korbanos in and seek forgiveness. The latter half of the pasuk promising that
G-d will not grow disgusted despite our sins perfectly fits that context.
The Shem m’Shmuel makes an important psychological point. He understands “v’nasati mishkani b’sochichem”
as referring not to a physical building, but rather as a promise that G-d will
dwell within each of us. What happens
all too often when people “get religion” is that they divorce themselves from
life and from the world. People have
trouble integrating holiness with the mundane, and so it becomes
an either/or choice, or a life filled with mood swings. The Torah therefore adds, “v’lo tigal nafshi
eschem.” Becoming a “mihskan” doesn’t
mean becoming disgusted with everything else in life. It means integrating holiness into those
other aspects so that the whole is greater for it.
Throughout the torah we find hkbh punishs everyone even though it was do to a few
ReplyDeleteExamples might be, refidim, mara, the eigel, complaining; even about going back to mitzrayim, etc...
When there is an achdus factor, which causes the shefa to land, the individual sins do matter.
So hkbh is assuring us it wont m'akev and prevent it here.