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Golden Calf still with us --- except it has multiplied

By Rabbi Berel Wein
http://www.jewishworldreview.com |
The narrative of the incident of Israel and the Golden Calf -- read this week publicly from the Torah -- is
so riveting and fascinating that we return to it year after year with
renewed and refreshed interest.
How did human beings that experienced godly
Revelation at Sinai revert to worshipping a Golden Calf just a few short
weeks later? What happened to the "the kingdom of priests and holy nation"
to cause this terrible reversal of course?
The great biblical commentators and, in fact, the Jewish people itself, in its deepest soul, have all
wrestled with the problem of understanding this unfathomable fall of Israel
and its consequences. And even though a full solution to this problem is not
present, at least not in this limited space, I think that there are a number
of insights that are apparent from this event, and that these insights are
pertinent and necessary to us, personally and nationally, today as well.
The Torah itself stresses that the absence of Moses from the Israelite encampment
for so many weeks after the Revelation at Sinai was a strong
contributing factor to the debacle of the Golden Calf. Jews, like all other
humans, need strong, courageous, sensitive, wise leadership. Every person
must, perforce, make difficult decisions for themselves. The world and
Jewish society especially, is not a dictatorship governed by infallible
people. But, at the same time, people require guidance, direction and vision
in their lives.
There must always be someone to point the way, to identify
the goals and to formulate plans and ideas. The Jewish people were still too
raw, too insecure, and too new to freedom to be able to be weaned from
Moses' continuing presence and leadership. Panicked, they searched for a
substitute Moses and reverted back to the idolatrous ways of the society of
Egypt where they had been raised. After forty years, the Jewish people would
be able to bear the permanent loss of Moses. But it would take many years of
Torah life and training for them to make it on their own with Joshua as
their new leader.
The absence of visionary leadership in many sections of today's Jewish world
is what has contributed to the plethora of Golden Calves that surround and
bedevil us. The Holocaust has crippled us in many ways. Visionary leadership
has been one of its worst casualties. The creation of the Golden Calf was
instigated by a group of people described by the Rabbis as "the eiruv rav"
(a great mixture of peoples.)
This section of the Jewish people was
comprised of members of many other nations in Egypt who escaped from their
bondage by attaching themselves to the Jewish people at the moment of the
Exodus from Egypt. These people became "fair-weather" Jews. During the
decades of Jewish wandering in the desert of Sinai, the "eiruv rav"
constantly agitated against Moses and against true Jewish interests. At
every opportunity, whenever problems and discomfort arose on the road to the
Land of Israel, they always raised the option of returning to Egypt, of
becoming pagans once more, of discarding the great Jewish dream in favor of
"watermelons and leeks and onions and cucumbers." Unfortunately, whether out
of malice or ignorance, the "eiruv rav" still is present amongst us today.
In a wholesale manner, Jews are abandoning Judaism and are being encouraged
to do so by others whose commitment to Judaism and Jewish survival is tepid,
at best. In the present society's permissive atmosphere that allows one to
construct the rules of one's own religion as one wishes, the "eiruv rav"
agitates for the destruction of tradition and the elimination of explicitly
stated Torah values and behavior. Is it any wonder, then, that the people yet dance
around the Golden Calf?
Lastly, I wish to point out that saving the Jewish
people from the clutches of the Golden Calf is not always pleasant and
joyful work. When Moses returns to the encampment of the Jews and sees for
himself the destruction -- both physical and moral -- that the creation of the
Golden Calf has wrought, he calls for action, even for civil war in order to
save the people. "Who is unto G-d, let him come unto me!" is his battle cry.
And the men of the tribe of Levi who rallied to his cause at that fateful
moment in Jewish history, slew thousands in order to save Israel from the
wrath of Godly destruction.
Moses remembers the loyalty of Levi to the cause
of Jewish survival in his final blessings to the people of Israel. "They
spared not even family in their loyalty to G-d's covenant," he exclaims.
Moses allows no compromise with the Golden Calf, for that will only lead the
people down the slippery slope of spiritual annihilation.
It is an insight
that we should ponder in our current society as well.
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JWR contributor Rabbi Berel Wein is one of Jewry's foremost historians and
founder of the Destiny Foundation.
He has authored over 650 tapes, books and videos which you can purchase at RabbiWein.com.
Comment by clicking here or calling 1-800-499-WEIN (9346).

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