~ Something to Think About ~
פרשת במדבר
Parsha Stumpers
By: Daniel Listhaus
- Rashi (1:2) writes that the way Moshe counted B'nei
Yisroel was through collecting a half-shekel per person. Why did he
have count them like this?
- The passuk tells us that the people had to
establish their genealogy according to their families. Rashi explains
that they each brought documents of lineage and witnesses of their birth
in order to precisely trace each one's ancestry. Why was this necessary?
Why not just believe them in the first place?
- What is the significance of a flag?
- (5:1) Rashi notes that the passuk refers to
Elazar and Isamar as the children of Aharon and Moshe – Aharon because he
was their biological father, and Moshe because he was their rebbe.
However, in the following passuk (3:2) it repeats and only calls them the
sons of Aharon.
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Why should being someone's rebbe make one considered his
father?
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Why is the passuk switching in the next passuk to just
call them the sons of Aharon?
- (3:16) When it came to counting shevet Levi,
Rashi (2:16) comments that Moshe did not know what to do. He said, “How
can I enter the tents to know the number of their nursing infants?” Hashem
replied, “You go outside the tent and I will let you know the number of
who is in which tent.”
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If Hashem was going to tell him through a bas-kol how
many were in each tent, why did Moshe have to go up to the tents to begin with?
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Why did this only first become an issue when it came to
counting shevet Levi?
- When it came to counting B'nei Yisroel, the Torah
tells us that only those that were at least 20 years old were counted
whereas at the end of the parsha when it came to counting shevet Kehas,
they were counted starting at 30. Rashi in each place comments based on
the words the Torah uses to describe the specific ages that we learn from
here that the age of going out to war is 20, and the age of strength is
30. What is the significance of this and why were they counted based on
these two different scales?
- Why do we eat dairy on Shavuos?
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