~ Something to Think About ~
פרשת כי תשא
Parsha Stumpers
By: Daniel Listhaus
1.
(30:12) Why must B'nei Yisroel be only counted
indirectly by using an object?
2.
(30:13) When the Torah uses an expression of “zeh”
(“this”), it means Hashem showed something to Moshe. What was so complicated
about the shekel that Moshe needed a prop to visualize it?
3.
(30:18) Why is the kiyur listed in this week's parsha
and not in Terumah or Tetzaveh with the
other keilim in the mishkan?
4.
(30:19) Why was it necessary for the Kohanim to be
mekadeish their feet with the kiyur?
5.
(31:3-4) Once the Torah already tells us that Betzalel
had ruach Elokim, why was it necessary that he have wisdom, understanding, and
knowledge? Furthermore, Rashi explains that “da'as” (knowledge) refers to ruach
hakodesh. What is the difference between ruach Elokim, which is mentioned
explicitly in the passuk, and ruach hakodesh which is hinted to in “da'as”?
6.
(31:18) The passuk and Rashi tell us that Moshe
learned the Torah from Hashem Himself, and yet right after he he finished he
needed to review it. How could this be? If Hashem, surely the best teacher, was
teaching Moshe, certainly the best student, why would it be necessary to
already start review immediately after completing?
7.
(32:13) Rashi brings from the gemara Berachos that after
Hashem threatened to wipe out klal yisroel and restart with Moshe's family
alone, that Moshe argued back that “If a chair with three legs cannot stand,
then certainly a chair with one leg cannot stand...” The three legs Moshe was
referring to were: Avraham, Yitzchak, and Yaakov...
1.
Moshe came from them as well obviously so whatever
zechusim they had to offer would not cease if Hashem would continue B'nei
Yisroel with Moshe's family alone. So what was Moshe's argument?
2.
Even if Moshe was arguing that their zechusim would be
no longer, still from the fact that Hashem was offering must be that the key
qualities in Avraham, Yitzchak, and Yaakov were all in Moshe as well. So what
was Moshe's response of being a one-legged chair? That may be true, but perhaps
he was a three-in-one with a massive leg just as able to hold up the table.
8.
(32:15) Why is it important that The Torah tells us
here about this specific attribute of the luchos?
9.
(32:18) Moshe says to Yehoshua that he does not hear
the sound of shouting of might nor the sound of shouting of weakness, rather a
distressing sound. The word “a'nos” used to say “distressing” is also part of
the first two expressions “kol a'nos gevurah” and “kol a'nos chalusha”. Why did
Moshe not just simply say “kol gevurah” and “kol chalusha”?
10.
(32:19) When Moshe threw down the luchos, Rashi
describes that Moshe thought to himself, if for transgressing on karbon pesach
where it says that you can't feed it to a stranger, and that is only one
commandment, so certainly the whole torah I cannot give to klal yisroel who are
now “strangers” for having sinned with the cheit ha'eigel! What was this kal
v'chomer exactly?
11.
(32:34) Rashi tells us that in every bad thing that
comes to the world there contains an element of the cheit ha'eigel in it. Why
is this 'fair' that we are punished for something done at Har Sinai? Hashem
says he does not punish children for their fathers, providing they do not
follow in his bad ways?
12.
(33:4, 33:6) The passuk at first says that each man did not put on his crown, and then
one passuk later says that Hashem told Moshe to tell klal yisroel to take off
their crowns. Which crowns were being referred to? And how could we resolve
this contradiction?
13.
(33:11) Rashi, all the way at the end explains in the
passuk that Hashem said to Moshe, “ I am angry at Yisroel and you are angry at
Yisroel, who will draw them near to repent....?” Why not answer simply: No one.
If they were both furious with klal yisroel, who cares what will ultimately
happen to them?
14.
(34:6) Why is Hashem's rachamim (mercy) necessary
before a person sins?
15.
(34:27) Why are we forbidden to write down Torah
she'ba'al peh? And why do we in fact have it written down?
16.
Where is there a hint in this week's parsha as to what
to do if one is lost in the desert and does not know which day is
shabbos?
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