We rely on God’s protection, but we have to remember that first we have to prepare for the worse. Without God’s protection, we would have been destroyed long ago.
This week’s Torah portion reminds us of something very important, especially in a time when we think so much about the situation in Israel. We may ask: if we are the chosen people, why do so many difficult things happen to us?
The answer is that being chosen was never a promise of an easy life. God did not choose us so that everything would be handed to us on a silver platter. He chose us so that we would strive to become better. And striving to become better is never easy. In fact, growth usually comes through challenge, struggle, and responsibility.
If life were always simple, we would become lazy. We would stop pushing ourselves. We would stop asking the hard questions. In many ways, that is one of the lessons of the Talmud. The Talmud is filled with discussions not because people are perfect, but because they are not. Its pages are full of questions like: what happens when people are supposed to do one thing and instead do another? How do we respond? How do we correct? How do we return to the right path? The Torah teaches us to deal with real human beings, not imaginary perfect ones.
We see this idea in the wilderness as well. After the splitting of the Sea, one might think the Jewish people would simply move forward in total faith and peace. But that is not what happens. There is complaining at Refidim, anxiety over water, and immediately afterward comes the attack of Amalek. The message is clear: if you want a good life, you have to work for it. If you fall into complaint and weakness, the world does not stand still. Real enemies appear, and real tests come.
At the same time, the Torah teaches that while we must act, prepare, and defend ourselves, ultimately our protection comes from God. At the Seder next week we will say that in every generation there are those who rise up against us to destroy us, but the Holy One, blessed be He, saves us from their hand. That does not mean we sit back and do nothing. It means that after we do what is required, we remember that the final outcome is in God’s hands.
There is a striking example from World War II. When Rommel was advancing through North Africa and threatening Egypt, the Jews in the Land of Israel feared that the Germans might reach them. Plans were made for what to do if that happened. Yet the Chief Rabbi reassured people that the Germans would not make it. At the same time, Jewish volunteers in the Pioneer Corps were helping the British army by laying pipelines in the desert. To test the pipes for leaks, they ran salt water through them. When Rommel advanced suddenly, the British retreated so quickly that the system was not switched back to fresh water. German soldiers, desperate for water in the desert heat, drank the salt water and became violently ill. An army cannot fight effectively under those conditions. In that sense, one can see both human effort and divine providence working together.
That is the lesson. We do what we must do. We prepare, we build, we defend, we pray. But in the end, we know that God is the One who watches over Israel.
Something to think about.
