In the Torah
portion of Haazinu, we come across a very interesting verse:
And Moses
came and spoke all the words of this song into the ears of the people he and
Hoshea the son of Nun. (Devarim 31:44)
There
appears to be an obvious contradiction/question within the verse itself: Who
actually spoke the words of the song? Was it Moshe or was it Moshe and
Yehoshuah together?
In order to
answer this question, it is important to look into the previous Torah portion, Vayelech,
which serves as an introduction to the song Haazinu itself. G-d's commandment
regarding the song was not just to Moshe, but to Moshe and Yehoshuah together (Devarim
31:16-30):
14. And the
Lord said to Moses, "Behold, your days are approaching [for you] to die.
Call Joshua and stand in the Tent of Meeting, and I will inspire him. So Moses
and Joshua went, and stood in the Tent of Meeting. (…)
19. And now,
write for yourselves (plural) this song, and teach it to the Children of
Israel. Place it into their mouths, in order that this song will be for Me as a
witness for the children of Israel.
Rashi - this song: [This refers to the passage
beginning with] הַאֲזִינוּ הַשָּׁמַיִם [until] וְכִפֶּר אַדְמָתוֹ עַמּוֹ (Deut.
32:1-43).
Yet, we see that
it was not Yehoshua who wrote down the song, but Moshe:
22. And Moses wrote this song on that day, and taught
it to the children of Israel.
23. And He [Rashi states that this refers to G-d] commanded Joshua the son of Nun, and said: "Be strong and courageous! For you shall bring the children of Israel to the land that I have sworn to them, and I will be with you."
24. And it was, when Moses finished writing the words of this Torah in a scroll, until their very completion,
23. And He [Rashi states that this refers to G-d] commanded Joshua the son of Nun, and said: "Be strong and courageous! For you shall bring the children of Israel to the land that I have sworn to them, and I will be with you."
24. And it was, when Moses finished writing the words of this Torah in a scroll, until their very completion,
Moshe, in
the conclusion to the Torah portion of Vayelech, further states:
28. Assemble
to me all the elders of your tribes and your officers, and I will speak these
words into their ears, and I will call upon the heaven and the earth as
witnesses against them.
29. For I
know that after my death, you will surely become corrupted, and deviate from
the way which I had commanded you. Consequently, the evil will befall you at
the end of days, because you did evil in the eyes of the Lord, to provoke Him
to anger through the work of your hands.
30. Then,
Moses spoke into the ears of the entire assembly of Israel the words of the
following song, until their completion.
We are left
with at least a couple more questions. If Moshe is still the leader and the one
that ultimately performs Hashem’s commandment, why is Yehoshuah included at all
in the commandment, as why does verse 31:44 imply that he was also the one that
spoke the song to the Jewish people? And if Yehoshuah is also the one commanded
to act, why doesn’t he do so?
Now let us
examine Rashi’s comments to our initial verse:
And Moses
came and spoke all the words of this song into the ears of the people he and
Hoshea the son of Nun. (Devarim 31:44)
He and Hoshea
the son of Nun: It was the Sabbath upon which there were two leaders, authority
was taken from one and given to the other. — [Sotah 13b]
Rashi continues:
Moses
appointed a meturgeman [literally, an interpreter, here a spokesman] for
Joshua, [to relay to the public what Joshua said,] so that Joshua could expound
[on the Torah] in Moses’ lifetime, so that Israel would not say [to Joshua],
“During your teacher’s lifetime you did not dare to raise your head!” - [Sifrei
31:1]
Rashi further
notes, still under the same verse:
And why does
Scripture here call him Hoshea [for his name had long since been changed to
Joshua (see Numb. 13:16)]. To imply [lit., to say] that Joshua did not become
haughty, for although he was given high status, he humbled himself as he was at
the beginning [when he was still called Hoshea]. — [Sifrei 32:44]
Even though
(as we mentioned in the last post)
there can only be one leader, Rashi states that for this "Sabbath"
there were actually two. The word Sabbath is particularly appropriate here,
because just as the Sabbath is the culmination of the previous week and the
foundation of the next, so too here, it was the culmination of Moshe's
leadership and the foundation of Yehoshua's.
Rashi does
nevertheless state that Moshe was the one that spoke the words of the song. It
appears that, out of awe and reverence for his teacher, Yehoshua could not
bring himself to act in any way that could make him comparable to Moshe.
Yehoshua’s reluctance is so strong, to the point that Hashem Himself, exclaims
(as cited above) ""Be strong and courageous! For you shall bring the
children of Israel to the land that I have sworn to them, and I will be with
you." (Devarim 31:23) Moshe therefore appointed someone to amplify
Yehoshua's words so that he could expound on the words of song and that all
could hear him, further empowering Yehoshua as the new leader.
It would seem
odd that Rashi comments that Moshe made Yehoshua speak in public in order to
counter those that would say, "During your teacher’s lifetime you did not
dare to raise your head!" After all, that is exactly what a person is
supposed to do when one is before his teacher! Not only that, we actually learn
this particular lesson from Joshua himself, who previously answered a single
question in front of Moses, ultimately causing him to remain childless. Here
however, the situation is quite different because Yehoshua is no longer only
the disciple of Moshe, but actually already the leader himself. For this brief moment,
Moshe and Yehoshua’s leadership eclipsed (literally, given that Moshe is
compared to the sun and Yehoshua to the moon).
Finally, Rashi
notes that despite this empowerment, Yehoshua humbled himself, just as he was
at the beginning of his tutelage. It is not just that Yehoshua had become the
leader and humbled himself, but that he was made to play a leadership role
while Moshe, the greatest prophet of all time, was still alive and well.
Despite the potential for Yehoshua, even if for a split second, to see himself
as higher than Moshe, he nevertheless saw himself simply as Hoshea, which was
his name before Moshe’s blessing, which changed his name to Yehoshua. Yehoshua knew
that he owed everything to Moshe: not only his name, but also the very essence
of who he had now become as the leader of the Jewish people.