A majority of the delegation that Moses sent to scout out the land came back with a bad report. Only Caleb and Joshua were positive. They stood by the truth and were proven right.
Good morning. Now for a quick div Torah. And one of the interesting things in this week’s parha, we have the majority of the spies or the delegation as I mentioned before that they give a bad report. But two of them disagree and they give a totally different report. They don’t say that the land is going it’s going to be easy to conquer the land. They don’t say that life in the land will be easy, but they say that we should trust in God. These two are Kellb and Joshua. And we know that Joshua was singled out before the mission by Moses who says his original name was Hosiach. And Moses changes his name to Yahosua. Yahosua or Joshua, you know, from Hosa, Hosea to Joshua. Uh, signaling that he’s going to have a much more important role to play as the story unfolds. Kellb is also with him and together they give a totally different report. They say yes the land is it’ll be hard and everything but the results will be great for us and we can do it because we we have God and remember this is a generation they saw the plagues in Egypt they saw the crossing of the sea of reeds they were there they were at Mount Si this is the generation that not only did they know about this they witnessed it. Uh and Joshua and Kellb uh are in that generation. They know yes, we can do it. What gave them the strength? Well, Kellb had two things in his favor. Number one, he was Moses’s brother-in-law. He was married to Miriam. and she being her his wife gave him a lot of strength to withstand bad advice. The other was when he went into the land of Israel, he separated himself from the other others in the delegation, he went to Hebron to the tomb of the patriarchs and the matriarchs in Hebron. So he wanted to get that spiritual oomph as it were for what he was about to do. Joshua of course was Joshua. He would become the leader of the Jewish people after Moses. And this is an important lesson also in leadership. Now there’s a thing that if you witness something and other people say well you really didn’t see it. After a while, you will deny that you saw it. It’s a sort of psychological thing that we have. They always want to get along. Joshua and Caleb don’t fall into that trap. And because of that, they are basically becoming leaders. A leader has to lead. He has to listen to the people, but he also has to let the people know when they are wrong, when the when it gets really hard. Uh that it’s not going to be easy, but we’re on the right track. uh much like if you look out through American history uh JFK at his inauguration mentioned about the United States going to the moon saying we’re not doing this because it is easy but because it is hard. You know a leader has to stand by his principles. He doesn’t stand by his principles. He’s not a leader. Uh and we see this throughout history. There are leaders who stood by their principles. And we Jews are people also who throughout our history have to stand by principle. There are a lot of things said about us which is which are blatantly untrue and we know them to be untrue. Now there are those who go along with what people are saying and will denounce Israel etc because they want to get along with all their friends. But there are those of us who we feel that if our friends are lying about us then they’re not really good friends. Remember that Abraham was called the Ephree the one who stood on the other side. He knew that adultery was wrong. He knew that ethical monotheism was the way to go. Even though the whole world told him he was wrong, he didn’t care. He knew that everybody in the world was wrong except him. And it turned out that in the end he was the one who was proven to be correct. But we have to be able to withstand bad advice and bad console. We have to stand up for our principles and for what is right. Something to think about.
