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Among the questions about the land of Canaan that Moshe commanded the
twelve spies to investigate was "does it have trees or not?" and then added
"you should take from the fruit of the land." Rashi cites a midrash
explaining that this question was not literally about trees, but rather
whether there were upright people in the land whose merit might protect the
inhabitants. The Satmar Rav (quoted in Talelei Orot) asks a question on the
Midrash: How were the spies to determine if there were upright individuals
in the land? We all know that there are plenty of phonies around and
sometimes the person with the most pious exterior is disguising a rotten
core.
The Rav explains that "you should take from the fruit of the land" was
Moshe's advice on how to investigate the true character of the Canaanites.
Look at their "fruit," their children and their students. A person can
easily fool the casual observer, but children and students are acutely
sensitive to hypocrisy. If there were truly upright and righteous people
among the Canaanites, the spies would find upright and righteous children
and students; but if there was no proper "fruit" to be found, then the
"trees" were absent as well. May we merit to have the sincerity and
integrity to be "trees" that produce the proper fruit.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"No parent can child-proof the world. A parent’s job is to world-proof the
child."
This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and please share this Dvar from Dan Lifshitz...
_______________________________________________
Among the questions about the land of Canaan that Moshe commanded the
twelve spies to investigate was "does it have trees or not?" and then added
"you should take from the fruit of the land." Rashi cites a midrash
explaining that this question was not literally about trees, but rather
whether there were upright people in the land whose merit might protect the
inhabitants. The Satmar Rav (quoted in Talelei Orot) asks a question on the
Midrash: How were the spies to determine if there were upright individuals
in the land? We all know that there are plenty of phonies around and
sometimes the person with the most pious exterior is disguising a rotten
core.
The Rav explains that "you should take from the fruit of the land" was
Moshe's advice on how to investigate the true character of the Canaanites.
Look at their "fruit," their children and their students. A person can
easily fool the casual observer, but children and students are acutely
sensitive to hypocrisy. If there were truly upright and righteous people
among the Canaanites, the spies would find upright and righteous children
and students; but if there was no proper "fruit" to be found, then the
"trees" were absent as well. May we merit to have the sincerity and
integrity to be "trees" that produce the proper fruit.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"No parent can child-proof the world. A parent’s job is to world-proof the
child."