Ethan Pressman: Bamidbar Being Grateful for What We Have
Ethan Pressman writes about the Haftarah for Machar Chodesh, which tells of Saul’s rabid jealousy of David. The power of jealousy can be deadly, as this author points out.
Ethan Pressman writes about the Haftarah for Machar Chodesh, which tells of Saul’s rabid jealousy of David. The power of jealousy can be deadly, as this author points out.
Rabbi Richman writes about the disconnect between the book of “Numbers” beginning with the census, which implies organization and communal protection, and the Hebrew name, “Bamidbar”, which implies chaos and disorder. By definition, the wilderness is untamed, yet it also reflects an intermediate place during a period of transformation.
Rabbi Sacks writes about the connection between the Sedra and the Haftarah. Bamidbar is read on the Shabbat preceding Shavuot, which acknowledges the giving of the Torah, the living connection between the people and God. In the Haftarah, Hosea writes of love, his love for his wife who betrayed him, and God’s love the Israel, who betrayed Him.