Moses takes responsibility for the sin of the Golden Calf. Why? Because he is the leader and he realized that if he had been a better leader it would not have happened.
Leadership Means Responsibility (Ki Tisa)
This week’s parsha, Ki Tisa, contains the tragic episode of the Golden Calf. While Moses is on Mount Sinai, the people panic and build the calf. When Moses returns, God tells him that the nation deserves destruction.
But Moses refuses.
He says to God:
“If You destroy them, erase me from Your book.” (Exodus 32:32)
This is an extraordinary statement. Moses had nothing to do with the sin of the Golden Calf. He wasn’t even present. Yet he takes responsibility for the people.
Why?
Because that is what leadership means.
A true leader does not say, “It wasn’t my fault.” A true leader says, “I am responsible.”
We see this idea throughout history. After the 1973 Yom Kippur War, the Agranat Commission investigated the failures that allowed the surprise attack. The commission largely cleared Prime Minister Golda Meir of direct blame, stating that based on the intelligence she had at the time she acted properly.
Yet she resigned anyway.
Why? Because she was the leader. And leadership means responsibility.
The same idea appears in the famous sign on President Harry Truman’s desk:
“The Buck Stops Here.”
A leader cannot pass the blame.
The Torah is teaching us something fundamental: freedom and responsibility go together. When we have authority, we must accept accountability.
This applies not only to national leaders but to all of us.
- A parent is responsible for the behavior of their children.
- A community leader is responsible for the conduct of the group.
- Even in a synagogue, if something goes wrong, the rabbi or the gabbai is called — not everyone else.
Because leadership means responsibility.
Moses understood this better than anyone. Even though the sin was not his, he stood before God and said: If they fall, I fall with them.
That is the Torah’s model of leadership — not power, but responsibility.
And it reminds us that whenever we take on a role of leadership, even in small ways, we must be careful how we lead — because responsibility comes with the position.
Something to think about.
