When Moshe Rabbenu comes down
from Har Sinai
When Moshe Rabbenu came down from Har Sinai, he found a very different scene
than the one he left forty days earlier. A segment of the Jewish Nation, in
rebellion against HASHEM, had formed a golden calf and was serving it. The
rest of the nation stood by and didn’t protest. In context, this was such an
egregious act that HASHEM threatened to destroy the entire nation.
Rashi explains that during the process of asking for forgiveness, Moshe
Rabbeinu said to HASHEM: “You caused this. You gave the Jewish people gold
and silver; they left Mitzraim with great riches. Isn’t it obvious that they
would come to sin?”
This Rashi seems difficult to understand when we focus on who these people
were and where this was taking place.
The Klal Yisroel was living in the desert. They neither worked for a living
nor had any use for money. All of their needs were taken care of. They ate
Mon that was delivered to their tents daily. They drank water from the Be’er,
the rock that followed them in their journeys. Their clothes were washed by
the Clouds of Glory, and their shoes never wore out. They didn’t need money
and couldn’t use it - how could it become their downfall?
The real danger of
wealth
The answer to this question is based on understanding why the Misilos
Yesharim calls wealth one of the great tests of man.
Materialism and self-indulgence are the risks of affluence, but an even
greater danger is that wealth can lead a person to view himself as different
than everyone else. “There are regular people, but I am different because I
am rich. The world is full of people, but I am in a different category. I am
a rich man.”
With this also comes a sense of self-sufficiency and arrogance. “I am a
wealthy man, so I don’t need anyone. I don’t need my children. I don’t need
my wife. In fact… I am so wealthy that I don’t really need HASHEM.”
The danger of wealth
is the sense of being a rich man
This seems to be the answer to this Rashi. Granted the Jewish people living
in the desert needed nothing and could do nothing with their money, but the
real risk of wealth is the sense of superiority that comes along with it. In
their minds, they were now rich. As rich men, they were significant,
important, too big to be dependent upon anyone, and this feeling was the
root cause of their rebellion against HASHEM.
Who were these people?
This concept becomes a tremendous chiddush when we take into account that
these individuals were on a higher level than any other generation of people
in the history of mankind. They had been slaves in Mitzraim and were freed.
They had lived through the entire process of the Maakos and splitting of the
Yam Suf. They watched as HASHEM showed total dominion over every facet of
nature.
But more than all of this, they had stood at the foot of Har Sinai when
HASHEM opened up the heavens and the earth and revealed the greatest secrets
of Creation. They had just seen and experienced HASHEM more clearly than did
the greatest Naviim, which tells us that they knew exactly why they were
created, and how passing and insignificant is a person’s station in this
world. And yet Moshe Rabbenu compared their being wealthy to such a
difficult test that it would be like putting the young man on the doorstep
of sin.
This is highly illustrative of the inner workings of the human. HASHEM
created deep within our hearts many needs and desires. One of these is the
need for honor and prestige. The drive for Kavod is one of the strongest
forces in man. Often we are unaware of its existence until a given situation
brings it to the fore.
While the Klal Yisroel were then living in the ultimate Kollel community,
money still had value to them -- not in what it could buy, but in its more
alluring sense, in the associated feeling of power and importance that it
brought. They were now rich people, and that sense is so dangerous that it
can destroy even the greatest of men. For that reason, Moshe said to HASHEM,
“You caused this. The gold and the silver that You gave them brought them to
sin.”
Living in our age
This concept has particular relevance in our day and age. Never in the
history of mankind have so many enjoyed such wealth, and on some level, all
of us have the opportunity of “one day being rich.”
As with many life situations, prosperity can be either a blessing or a
curse. If a person changes because he is now a rich man - he needs more, he
feels that he deserves only the best, and he won’t be satisfied with what
everyone else gets by with. That sense of superiority will turn him against
his Creator- and the very wealth that he acquired will be the source of his
ruin. For eternity, he will regret having been given that test—which he
failed.
However, if a person remains aware that he was granted wealth for a purpose
-- that he is not the owner of it, but rather its custodian, duly charged
with its proper use -- then he can use it as a tool to help him accomplish
his purpose in existence. His wealth will then be a true bracha that he
enjoys in this world, and for eternity he will enjoy that which he
accomplished with it.
For more on this topic please listen to Shmuz #36 - For the Love of Money –
(A Highly recommend Shmuz )
