Parshat Vayelech « Torah Weekly « Ohr Somayach

Torah Weekly

For the week ending 27 September 2025 / 5 Tishrei 5786

Parshat Vayelech

by Rabbi Yaakov Asher Sinclair - www.seasonsofthemoon.com
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PARSHA OVERVIEW

On this, the last day of his life, Moshe goes from tent to tent throughout the camp, bidding farewell to his beloved people, encouraging them to keep the faith. Moshe tells them that whether he is among them or not, G-d is with them, and will vanquish their enemies. Then he summons Yehoshua, and in front of all the people, exhorts him to be strong and courageous as the leader of the Jewish People. In this manner, he strengthens Yehoshua's status as the new leader. Moshe teaches them the mitzvah of Hakhel: That every seven years on the first day of the intermediate days of Succot, the entire nation, including small children, is to gather together at the Temple to hear the King read from the Book of Devarim. The sections that he reads deal with faithfulness to G-d, the covenant, and reward and punishment.

G-d tells Moshe that his end is near, and he should therefore summon Yehoshua to stand with him in the Mishkan, where G-d will teach Yehoshua. G-d then tells Moshe and Yehoshua that after entering the Land, the people will be unfaithful to Him, and begin to worship other gods. G-d will then completely hide his face, so that it will seem that the Jewish People are at the mercy of fate, and that they will be hunted by all. G-d instructs Moshe and Yehoshua to write down a song — Ha'azinu — which will serve as a witness against the Jewish People when they sin. Moshe records the song in writing and teaches it to Bnei Yisrael.

Moshe completes his transcription of the Torah, and instructs the Levi'im to place it to the side of the Aron (Holy Ark), so that no one will ever write a new Torah scroll that is different from the original — for there will always be a reference copy.

PARSHA INSIGHTS

A Little Bit of Moshe

“And Moshe went…” (31:1)

At the Sixth Zionist Congress at Basel on August 26, 1903, Theodore Herzl proposed an idea that Uganda should be a temporary refuge for Russian Jews. The Russian delegation stormed out of the conference chamber in fury. These delegates were by no means deeply religious individuals, but it was self-evident to them that this compromise might spell the end of a Jewish State in Palestine; instinctively they knew that the only place that the State of Israel could be established was in The Land of Israel.

At the beginning of Parshat Va’etchanan, G-d tells Moshe, “Ascend to the top of the cliff, and raise your eyes westward and northward, southward and eastward and see with your eyes, for you shall not cross this Jordan River.”

Imagine how Moshe felt as he stood on top of that cliff, gazing out over the land that he longed to enter. The Land of Israel stretched out in front of him like a map.

So close.

G-d knew how much Moshe wanted to go into Eretz Yisrael, so why did He “tantalize” him in this way?

Each of the Avot, the Patriarchs, is associated with a specific quality: Avraham with chesed, kindness; Yitzchak withgevurah, self-control; Yaakov withtiferes,beauty. The quality associated with Moshe is netzach, eternity.

Everything that Moshe did was forever.

It was for this reason that Hashem gave the Torah through Moshe—because the Torah is eternal. Had Moshe entered the Land of Israel with the Jewish people, their entry would have been an “eternal entry”, after such an entry, the Jewish people could never again leave the land; but Hashem knew that the Jewish people would have to be exiled because they would not be able to maintain the high spiritual standards that the Land demands.

If they couldn’t leave, and they couldn’t stay, they would be caught, as it were, in a spiritual vise, and they would face the danger of annihilation.

It was for this reason that Moshe could not enter Eretz Yisrael. But Hashem wasn’t tantalizing Moshe: that feeling of longing that Moshe had when he stood on that cliff gazing into the Land, that feeling entered the collective consciousness of the Jewish People for all time, so that even those delegates at the Zionist conference in Basle thousands of years later knew instinctively that only place that the State of Israel could be was in the Land of Israel.

“And Moshe went…”

The verse doesn’t tell us where Moshe went. The spiritual masters tell that Moshe ‘went’ into the heart of every Jew in every generation in every place. A little bit of Moshe Rabbeinu in the heart of every Jew longs for the Land.

Throughout our long, long night of exile, the Jewish people have never lost that same longing for Eretz Yisrael that Moshe felt when he stood on the top of the cliff and gazed upon the land that he was not to enter.

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