The commandment to destroy Median was not one of revenge. It was to mete out justice for the evil that Median had meant to commit against the Torah and the Jewish people. That is why it was so harsh.
Now for a Quick Devar Torah.
One of the most difficult and controversial sections of this week’s parashah is the war against Midian. At first glance, it is deeply troubling. The Torah commands a harsh campaign against the Midianites, and after the battle Moses even rebukes the officers because the Midianite women had been spared. Modern readers naturally ask: How can this be the Torah? What is going on here?
To understand this passage, we first have to recognize that the Torah does not present this as a war of revenge. It is a war of justice.
A question immediately arises: if the sin at Baal Peor involved both Moab and Midian, why was Midian singled out?
The Sages point out an important distinction. Israel was about to pass through Moabite territory. The Moabites therefore had reason to fear the approaching Israelites, even if their response was wrong. Midian, however, had no such justification. The Israelites were not planning to enter Midianite territory. Midian chose to participate willingly in a campaign to corrupt and destroy Israel spiritually.
This also explains Moses’ anger after the battle. The Midianite women were not innocent bystanders. They had been active participants in the plot that led Israel into idolatry and immorality. Kozbi herself was a Midianite princess who willingly took part in that effort. The issue was not simply military victory—it was bringing justice to those who had deliberately sought Israel’s spiritual destruction.
History offers parallels. When the Magyar raiders swept into Europe during the ninth and tenth centuries, they lived by pillaging, looting, and terrorizing their neighbors. Their way of life came to an abrupt end after their crushing defeat at the Battle of Lechfeld in 955. Their military power was broken, and they abandoned a life of conquest to establish the settled Kingdom of Hungary. Sometimes history teaches that there are actions which simply cannot be tolerated indefinitely.
The Torah is teaching a similar lesson. Some forms of evil are so destructive that society must draw a firm line and say, “No further.”
But the parashah is also teaching the Jewish people something about themselves.
The greatest danger is not only the enemy on the outside. It is moral weakness on the inside. If a nation loses confidence in its purpose, if it begins to question whether its mission is worth defending, it becomes vulnerable to those who seek its destruction.
History repeatedly illustrates this principle. Before Germany invaded France in 1940, France possessed one of the largest and best-equipped armies in Europe. Yet military strength alone was not enough. A nation that loses confidence in itself becomes far easier to defeat than one that remains united around its purpose.
The same is true spiritually.
The Jewish people have a mission from God. We may disagree about politics, policies, or countless details of Jewish life, but we cannot lose sight of the fact that there is a mission. That shared purpose is what binds us together.
That was the real danger posed by Midian. Their goal was not merely to defeat Israel physically, but to undermine Israel’s moral and spiritual identity from within. Once a people loses its sense of purpose, everything else becomes vulnerable.
That is why the Torah presents the judgment against Midian with such severity. It is not celebrating violence. It is emphasizing the seriousness of a deliberate attempt to destroy a nation’s soul.
Something to think about.
