The reason that the delegation that Moses sent to the Land of Israel misrepresented the Land was that they were afraid they would have to put the mitzvot into action.
Now for a quick devar Torah.
One of the interesting things about the delegation Moshe sends in this week’s parsha is that nowhere are they actually called spies. The Torah never uses the Hebrew word meraglim—spies. Instead, they are sent to tour the land, to see it, to observe it, and to report back. Their mission was not to become intelligence agents or political analysts. They were supposed to be observers.
But when they return, they make themselves into spies. They begin interpreting, drawing conclusions, and ultimately presenting a report colored by their own fears.
One of the most puzzling statements in their report is that Israel is “a land that consumes its inhabitants.” What does that mean?
They were saying that this was not an easy place to live. There were wars. There were challenges. You had to work hard to make a living. It was not the comfortable existence they had known in the wilderness.
Remember who these men were. We know their names and their tribes because they were the leaders of their tribes. They realized something important: once the Jewish people entered the Land of Israel, their positions were no longer guaranteed. In the wilderness, they occupied places of honor and influence.
And life in the wilderness was unique. Imagine studying Torah directly from Moshe Rabbeinu. Aaron was there as well. This had to be the greatest yeshiva in history. Every day was devoted to learning, spiritual growth, and direct exposure to Torah leadership.
But entering the land meant something different. Now people would have to farm, build homes, conduct business, serve in the army, and create a functioning society. Torah would no longer remain in the classroom. It would have to be applied to real life.
That is what frightened them.
They worried that once people had to deal with everyday realities, they might discover that some leaders were not quite as impressive as they appeared in the protected environment of the wilderness. The spies saw the challenges and concluded that a Torah life in the real world would be impossible.
But they completely missed the point.
The entire purpose of the wilderness was preparation. The Jewish people were not meant to remain in the desert forever, sitting and learning all day. They were learning so they could enter the land and apply what they had learned.
God did not take us out of Egypt merely to make us free. He took us out so that we could become a nation that would be a light unto the nations.
That is why He placed us in the Land of Israel, at the crossroads of the ancient world. Israel sits at the meeting point of Asia, Africa, and Europe. Important trade routes passed through it. Armies marched through it. Ideas traveled through it. Yes, there would be struggles and wars because it was valuable real estate. But that was precisely the point.
God wanted the Jewish people to demonstrate what a Torah society could look like in the real world.
If the goal had been isolation, God could have left us in the wilderness. Or He could have placed us somewhere far from the centers of civilization. But that was never the mission.
A number of years ago, a yeshiva student wrote to the Lubavitcher Rebbe explaining that he needed to remain in yeshiva because otherwise he would have to serve in what he called “the Zionist army.”
The Rebbe’s response was direct. He began by saying, “The last time I checked, it was called the Israel Defense Forces, not the Zionist Army.”
Then he made a deeper point. He asked the student: Who do you think your job is to influence? If you remain inside the yeshiva all the time, your influence is limited. But if you serve alongside other Jews, they will see how you behave, how you pray, how you treat people, and how you live according to Torah values. Your example can inspire others.
The spies failed to understand this principle.
If you want to influence the world, you must be in the world. You have to show that it is possible to conduct business honestly, build a family according to Torah values, treat people with dignity, and live an ethical life while participating fully in society.
When others see that, they begin to realize that Torah is not an obstacle to life. It is a guide for life.
That was the mission the spies were supposed to see. Instead, they saw only the difficulties.
Something to think about.
