פרשת שלח לך תשי"ד - המרגלים
א. המרגלים
"שְׁלַח לְךָ אֲנָשִׁים וְיָתֻרוּ אֶת אֶרֶץ כְּנַעַן אֲשֶׁר אֲנִי נֹתֵן לִבְנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל אִישׁ אֶחָד אִישׁ אֶחָד לְמַטֵּה אֲבֹתָיו תִּשְׁלָחוּ כֹּל נָשִׂיא בָהֶם"
’Send thou men, that they may spy out the land of Canaan, which I give unto the children of Israel; of every tribe of their fathers shall ye send a man, every one a prince among them.’
ד"ה שלח לך: (אחרי הביאו את דברי רש"י מדברי אגדה) ויש כאן לשאול: אם כן משה עצמו חטא כענין שנאמר (דברים א' כ"ג) "וייטב בעיני הדבר", ולמה אמר להם בענין הארץ "הטובה היא אם רעה" אחר שנאמר לו מתחילה שהיא טובה ורחבה?! ועוד: מה עשו המרגלים? כי משה אמר להם "וראיתם את הארץ מה היא ואת העם היושב עליה החזק הוא הרפה המעט הוא אם רב", ואמר להם בערים "הבמחנים אם במבצרים", ועל כל פנים היו צריכים להשיבו על מה שציוה אותם. ומה פשעם ומה חטאתם כשאמרו לו "אפס כי עז העם והערים בצורות גדולות" – וכי על מנת שיעידו לו שקר שלח אותם?! ואל תחשוב כי היה פשעם באמרם "ארץ אוכלת יושביה" בלבד, כי טרם שיאמרו להם (לישראל) כן (כבר) היה מריבת כלב עמהם. וכן כתוב (דברים א' כ"ח) "אנה אנחנו עולים! אחינו המסו את לבבנו לאמור: עם וגדול ורם ממנו...". וכאן כתוב (במדבר י"ד ג') "לנפל בחרב, נשינו וטפנו יהיו לבז". והנה משה רבנו (עצמו) אמר לבניהם כדברים האלה והפליג להם בחוזק העם ובמבצר עריהם וכח הענקים יתר מאד מאד ממה שאמרו המרגלים לאבותם, כדכתיב (דברים ט' א'): "שמע ישראל! אתה עובר היום את הירדן לבוא לרשת גויים גדולים ועצומים ממך, ערים גדולות ובצורות בשמים, עם גדול ורם בני ענקים, אשר אתה ידעת ואתה שמעת מי יתיצב לפני בני ענק". ואם היה פשע המרגלים וחטאתם בזה, למה יניא (משה) את לב בניהם כהניא המרגלים את לב אבותם?! ועוד: מה טעם למשה רבנו בשליחות הזאת? אם הארץ טובה והעם רפה – הרי טוב, ואם רעה או שהעם חזק – סבור הוא שיחזירם למצרים?!
'''Send for you men''' — ''According to your own judgment. I do not command you; if you wish, send. – Because Israel came up and said: "Let us send up men before us," as it is stated (Deut. 1:22) "And you approached me, all of you" etc. Moses, however, consulted the ''Shekhina.'' He [Hashem] said: I told them [the Land] was good, as it is stated (Ex. 3:17): "I shall bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt to a good land." By their life! I shall give them room for error with the matter of the spies, in order that they may not inherit it.'' – The words of Rashi, from an ''aggadah.'' Now we should ask: If so, Moses himself sinned in this matter, as it is stated (Deut. 1:23): "And I approved of the matter." And why did he say to them about the Land: "Is it good or bad?" (v. 19), since he has been told beforehand that it is good and wide-stretched? Furthermore, what did the spies do [bad]? For Moses told them (v. 18): "And look at the Land, how is it, and at the people that dwell upon it: Is it strong or weak? Is it few-numbered or many-numbered?" And he said to them about the cities (v. 19): "[Do they dwell] outdoors or in fortifications?" So, no matter what, they were obliged to answer him on what he ordered them; what then is their crime and what is their fault when they said to him (v. 28): "Alas! for the people is fierce, and the cities are fortified [and] big"? Did he send them in order that they testify to him falsehood? Do not think that their crime was their saying "A land that consumes its dwellers" (v. 32) alone; for even before they would say that, the quarrel of Caleb with them took place. Also, it is stated (Deut. 1:28): "Our brethren have melted our hearts, saying, 'A people too great and too high for us' " etc., and here it is stated (below, 14:3): "...to fall by the sword, our women and little children will be taken captive." But even Moses our master said to their descendants similar things, and exaggerated to them about the strength of the people and the fortifications of their cities and the power of the giants, much farther than what the spies told their forefathers, as it is stated (Deut. 9:1-2): "Listen, O Israel! You are crossing today the Jordan, to enter and inherit nations greater and more powerfull than you, cities great and fortified in the heavens, a nation great and high, decendants of giants, of whom you know and have heard: who can stand up before descendants of a giant?" Now if the crime of the spies and their sin was in this manner, who would he dissuade their descendants as the spies have dissuaded their forefathers? Furthermore: What was the reason of Moses our master in this mission? If the Land is good and the people weak – then [all is] well; and if it is bad or the people are strong, does he intend turning them back to Egypt? But the resolution of the matter is thus: Israel spoke in the manner of all who enter to wage war in a foreign land, who usually send men before them to study the ways and the entrances to the cities; and when they return, the seekers go at the front of the army to show them the ways, in the manner that it is stated (Jud. 1:24): "Show us please the entrance to the city," and they advise them what city to fight first and from what side it is easier to conquer the land. Thus they have explicitly said (Deut. 1:22): "And they shall return to us word, the way through which we shall ascend and the cities" etc.; i.e., the cities which we shall enter first, from where we shall enter the entire land; and this is proper counsel for all conquerors of lands. Furthermore, so too did Moses himself do, as it is stated (below, 21:32): "And Moses sent to spy out Ya`zer," and similarly by Yehoshua bin-Nun (Josh. 2:1): "Two men as spies." Therefore Moses approved; because Scripture will not rely in any of its deeds upon a miracle, but will command the warriors to arm and guard and conceal themselves, as Scripture appears in the war of the Ay (Ibid., 8:2) which took place according to Hashem's word, and in many places. Then Moses consulted the ''Shekhina'' and Hashem gave him permission and said to him: "Send for you men and they shall seek the Land of Canaan, and let them study it and tell you, and according to them you shall take counsel about the conquest." Now Moses said to them (v. 17): "Ascend thus through the Negev," meaning: Go up this way through the Negev so as to study the people that dwell in the land of the Negev, from the side where israel was, is it strong and they would need for their purpose to guard themselves very much and arm themselves. Similarly the cities, if they are fortified then the [enemy] may entrench themselves therein and they would need to build a rampart and siege-walls, or they may enter from another side. He told them further to study the land itself whether it is good or bad, because if it is bad, they would conquer first some other places, for they were seeking out the Emorite mountain from the side of Hebron; for even Joshua didn't conquer them all. This is the meaning of the verse (19): "And how is the land that they dwell therein?" – about the people that dwelled in the Negev. It is also possible that Moses, because he knew that [the Land] was fat and good, as he has been told (Ex. 3:8): "...to a good and wide-stretched land" etc., therefore he ordered them to pay attention to learn about that, in order that they may tell the People, who would rejoice and renew their strength to go up there happily. Therefore he told them (v. 20): "And you shall be strong and take from the fruit of the Land," in order that they see in their own eyes the praise of the Land. It is well-known that Egypt is not very far from Hebron, only a seven-day walking distance, and the Land of Canaan reaches on its border near Egypt; it is impossible that those dwelling in Egypt didn't know about the Land of Canaan whether it was good or bad. But the intention of Moses was to study the way in which he should ascend and the cities which he should conquer first, as I have explained. Indeed, Israel in the land of Egypt were slaves [doing] punitive service, neither knowing nor understanding [such matters]; therefore Moses wanted the [spies] to tell them all about the Land, to gladden them with its virtues, for he knew all about them. What appears to me from the language of Scripture is, that Moses did not consult the ''Shekhina.'' Rather, this is the meaning of "Send for you": They agreed to send seekers. Now the custom was to send "two men as spies in secret (saying)" (Josh. 2:1), and that they should send from their lower ranks. But Hashem who knows future events commanded him to send one man per every tribe of Israel, and that they be the chieftains among them, because Hashem wished all the leaders to be involved equally in the matter, perhaps they shall reckon and return to Hashem; and if not, may the [evil] decree [apply] equally to the entire People. This is the meaning of "according to the word of God" (v. 3), that they be – at Hashem's order – chieftains and leaders of the Children of Israel. And what appears to me according to the plain meaning of Scripture is, that Hashem did not mention to Moses their request that they requested to send spies nor the consent of Moses to their request, for if it was thus, Scripture would have recounted here: "And the Children of Israel approached Moses and said: 'Let us send men before us' etc. And Moses approved," and afterwards it would state: "And God said to Moses, saying: Send for you men as they said unto you, one man" etc. But the matter was thus: Israel requested the mssion, Moses approved, and then the Word came to Moses like the other Commandments, and He said to him simply: "Send for you men." This is the meaning of the words: "...and they shall reconnoiter the Land of Canaan that I am giving to the Children of Israel," for He is speaking of a new matter which has not been discussed before. And all this transpired so, because Hashem wished for the sake of His justice that the mission be at His commandment, and that all their tribes and leaders be involved, in order that they may be saved. It also appears furthermore that they requested from Moses: "Let us send men before us and let them unearth the Land for us" (Deut. 1:22), which is the searching among the roads and about the purpose of conquest, from a similar phrase as "unearthed food" (Job 39:29). This is the meaning of "before us," that they shall go after them on their [the spies'] way, similar to the phrase (above, 10:33): "And the ark of the covenant of God travelled before them." But Hashem commanded "...and they shall seek out the Land of Canaan," which is similar to the meaning of "choice," like those who wish to buy something, from the phrase: "Besides the men who seek out and the merchants" (2 Chron. 9:14) and so too: "...to the Land that I have sought out for them" (Ezek. 20:6), and so too: "...to seek out a resting place for them" (above, 10:3). Therefore Moses commanded them to spell out "whether it is good or bad" etc., "is it fat or lean" etc, and all this to gladden them, for "it is the choicest of all lands" (Ezek. 20:6) so that they ascend unto it with great desire. Now the matter was stated here briefly, for so it was. But in the Duplicate Torah [the Hummash of Devarim] Moses mentioned to them all the details from the beginning, to tell them their crime, for they have sinned in their requesting and asking [this] of their own accord. But according to our Rabbis, they sinned by saying: "Let us send men before us," because they saw the salvation of Hashem which he was performing for them regularly, and they ought to go after the cloud to wherever the Spirit will be there to go. Moses acquiesced to them to satisfy their desire, and "I approved of the matter" (Deut. 1:23) would mean that I forbore your evil and instructed to do it. And Hashem commanded him to send one man per the tribe of his ancestors etc., similar to what is stated in Samuel (1 Sam. 8:7): "Listen to the People to all that they say to you; for it is not you that they have rejected, but it is Me that they have rejected from reigning over them." Now these men were not specified by names according to the Word of Hashem as they were with the Recountings (above, 1:5-15) and the Allotment of the Land (below, 34:19-28); for with the Commandment of God – no mishap may befall its followers, and the keeper of a Commandment shall know no evil outcome; but He, may He be blessed, commanded Moses: "One man per the tribe of his ancestors you shall send" etc., and that they be chieftains; and Moses, of his own accord, selected these ones and sent them, and they caused their own souls evil.
אבל יישוב הענין בזה, כי ישראל אמרו כדרך כל הבאים להלחם בארץ נכריה, ששולחים לפניהם אנשים לדעת הדרכים ומבוא הערים ובשובם ילכו התרים בראש הצבא להורות לפניהם הדרכים, כענין שנאמר (שופטים א' כ"ג): "הראנו נא את מבוא העיר" ושיתנו להם עצה באיזו עיר ילחמו תחילה ומאיזה צד יהיה נח לכבוש את הארץ. וכך אמרו בפירוש (דברים א' כ"ב) "וישיבו אותנו דבר, את הדרך אשר נעלה בה ואת הערים אשר נבוא אליהן", כלומר: הערים אשר נבוא אליהן תחילה ומשם נבוא בכל הארץ. וזו עצה הגונה בכל כובשי ארצות. וכן עשה עוד משה עצמו שנאמר (במדבר כ"א ל"ב) "וישלח משה לרגל את יעזר", וכן ביהושע בן נון (יהושע ב'): "שנים אנשים מרגלים". ועל כן היה טוב בעיני משה, כי הכתוב לא יסמוך בכל מעשיו על הנס, אבל יצוה בנלחמים להחלץ ולהשמר ולארוב, כאשר בא הכתוב במלחמת העי (יהושע פרק ח') שהיתה על פי ה' ובמקומות רבים. אז נמלך משה בשכינה ונתן לו ה' רשות ואמר לו (י"ג ב'): "שלח לך אנשים ויתורו את ארץ כנען" וידעוה ויגידו לכם, ועל פיהם תתיעצו בענין הכיבוש. והנה משה אמר להם (י"ג י"ז): "עלו זה בנגב", וטעמו: עלו זה הדרך בנגב, שידעו את העם היושב בארץ הנגב מפאת הרוח (=מהצד) אשר ישראל שם, החזק הוא ויצטרכו בעניינם להשתמר מאד ולהחלץ. וכן הערים, אם הן בצורות, שישגבו בהן ויצטרכו לבנות דיק וסוללות או שיצאו מצד אחר. ואמר עוד, שידעו בארץ עצמה הטובה היא אם רעה, כי אם היא רעה, יכבשו תחילה מן המקומות האחרים, כי הם היו תרים הר האמורי מצד חברון, כי גם יהושע לא כבש את כולם. וזה טעם "ומה הארץ אשר הוא יושב בה", על העם היושב בנגב. ויתכן כי משה, בעבור שידע כי היא שמנה וטובה, כמו שנאמר לו (שמות ג' ח') "אל ארץ טובה ורחבה, אל ארץ זבת חלב ודבש", בעבור כן אמר להם שיתנו לב לדעת כן, כדי שיגידו לעם וישמחו ויחליפו כח לעלות שם בשמחה, ולכך אמר להם: "והתחזקתם ולקחתם מפרי הארץ" כדי שיראו בעיניהם בשבח הארץ. ומן הידוע כי אין מצרים רחוק מאד מחברון, רק כמהלך שבעה ימים, וארץ כנען מגעת בתחומה קרוב למצרים ואי אפשר שלא ידעו הדרים במצרים ענין ארץ כנען, הטובה היא אם רעה. אבל כוונתו של משה לדעת את הדרך אשר יעלו בה ואת הערים אשר יכבוש תחילה, כאשר פירשתי. ואמנם היו ישראל במצרים עבדים בעבודות פרך, לא ידעו ולא יבינו, על כן ירצה משה שיגידו להם על ענייני הארץ לשמחם במעלותיה, כי יודע היה בהם.
'''Send for you men''' — ''According to your own judgment. I do not command you; if you wish, send. – Because Israel came up and said: "Let us send up men before us," as it is stated (Deut. 1:22) "And you approached me, all of you" etc. Moses, however, consulted the ''Shekhina.'' He [Hashem] said: I told them [the Land] was good, as it is stated (Ex. 3:17): "I shall bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt to a good land." By their life! I shall give them room for error with the matter of the spies, in order that they may not inherit it.'' – The words of Rashi, from an ''aggadah.'' Now we should ask: If so, Moses himself sinned in this matter, as it is stated (Deut. 1:23): "And I approved of the matter." And why did he say to them about the Land: "Is it good or bad?" (v. 19), since he has been told beforehand that it is good and wide-stretched? Furthermore, what did the spies do [bad]? For Moses told them (v. 18): "And look at the Land, how is it, and at the people that dwell upon it: Is it strong or weak? Is it few-numbered or many-numbered?" And he said to them about the cities (v. 19): "[Do they dwell] outdoors or in fortifications?" So, no matter what, they were obliged to answer him on what he ordered them; what then is their crime and what is their fault when they said to him (v. 28): "Alas! for the people is fierce, and the cities are fortified [and] big"? Did he send them in order that they testify to him falsehood? Do not think that their crime was their saying "A land that consumes its dwellers" (v. 32) alone; for even before they would say that, the quarrel of Caleb with them took place. Also, it is stated (Deut. 1:28): "Our brethren have melted our hearts, saying, 'A people too great and too high for us' " etc., and here it is stated (below, 14:3): "...to fall by the sword, our women and little children will be taken captive." But even Moses our master said to their descendants similar things, and exaggerated to them about the strength of the people and the fortifications of their cities and the power of the giants, much farther than what the spies told their forefathers, as it is stated (Deut. 9:1-2): "Listen, O Israel! You are crossing today the Jordan, to enter and inherit nations greater and more powerfull than you, cities great and fortified in the heavens, a nation great and high, decendants of giants, of whom you know and have heard: who can stand up before descendants of a giant?" Now if the crime of the spies and their sin was in this manner, who would he dissuade their descendants as the spies have dissuaded their forefathers? Furthermore: What was the reason of Moses our master in this mission? If the Land is good and the people weak – then [all is] well; and if it is bad or the people are strong, does he intend turning them back to Egypt? But the resolution of the matter is thus: Israel spoke in the manner of all who enter to wage war in a foreign land, who usually send men before them to study the ways and the entrances to the cities; and when they return, the seekers go at the front of the army to show them the ways, in the manner that it is stated (Jud. 1:24): "Show us please the entrance to the city," and they advise them what city to fight first and from what side it is easier to conquer the land. Thus they have explicitly said (Deut. 1:22): "And they shall return to us word, the way through which we shall ascend and the cities" etc.; i.e., the cities which we shall enter first, from where we shall enter the entire land; and this is proper counsel for all conquerors of lands. Furthermore, so too did Moses himself do, as it is stated (below, 21:32): "And Moses sent to spy out Ya`zer," and similarly by Yehoshua bin-Nun (Josh. 2:1): "Two men as spies." Therefore Moses approved; because Scripture will not rely in any of its deeds upon a miracle, but will command the warriors to arm and guard and conceal themselves, as Scripture appears in the war of the Ay (Ibid., 8:2) which took place according to Hashem's word, and in many places. Then Moses consulted the ''Shekhina'' and Hashem gave him permission and said to him: "Send for you men and they shall seek the Land of Canaan, and let them study it and tell you, and according to them you shall take counsel about the conquest." Now Moses said to them (v. 17): "Ascend thus through the Negev," meaning: Go up this way through the Negev so as to study the people that dwell in the land of the Negev, from the side where israel was, is it strong and they would need for their purpose to guard themselves very much and arm themselves. Similarly the cities, if they are fortified then the [enemy] may entrench themselves therein and they would need to build a rampart and siege-walls, or they may enter from another side. He told them further to study the land itself whether it is good or bad, because if it is bad, they would conquer first some other places, for they were seeking out the Emorite mountain from the side of Hebron; for even Joshua didn't conquer them all. This is the meaning of the verse (19): "And how is the land that they dwell therein?" – about the people that dwelled in the Negev. It is also possible that Moses, because he knew that [the Land] was fat and good, as he has been told (Ex. 3:8): "...to a good and wide-stretched land" etc., therefore he ordered them to pay attention to learn about that, in order that they may tell the People, who would rejoice and renew their strength to go up there happily. Therefore he told them (v. 20): "And you shall be strong and take from the fruit of the Land," in order that they see in their own eyes the praise of the Land. It is well-known that Egypt is not very far from Hebron, only a seven-day walking distance, and the Land of Canaan reaches on its border near Egypt; it is impossible that those dwelling in Egypt didn't know about the Land of Canaan whether it was good or bad. But the intention of Moses was to study the way in which he should ascend and the cities which he should conquer first, as I have explained. Indeed, Israel in the land of Egypt were slaves [doing] punitive service, neither knowing nor understanding [such matters]; therefore Moses wanted the [spies] to tell them all about the Land, to gladden them with its virtues, for he knew all about them. What appears to me from the language of Scripture is, that Moses did not consult the ''Shekhina.'' Rather, this is the meaning of "Send for you": They agreed to send seekers. Now the custom was to send "two men as spies in secret (saying)" (Josh. 2:1), and that they should send from their lower ranks. But Hashem who knows future events commanded him to send one man per every tribe of Israel, and that they be the chieftains among them, because Hashem wished all the leaders to be involved equally in the matter, perhaps they shall reckon and return to Hashem; and if not, may the [evil] decree [apply] equally to the entire People. This is the meaning of "according to the word of God" (v. 3), that they be – at Hashem's order – chieftains and leaders of the Children of Israel. And what appears to me according to the plain meaning of Scripture is, that Hashem did not mention to Moses their request that they requested to send spies nor the consent of Moses to their request, for if it was thus, Scripture would have recounted here: "And the Children of Israel approached Moses and said: 'Let us send men before us' etc. And Moses approved," and afterwards it would state: "And God said to Moses, saying: Send for you men as they said unto you, one man" etc. But the matter was thus: Israel requested the mssion, Moses approved, and then the Word came to Moses like the other Commandments, and He said to him simply: "Send for you men." This is the meaning of the words: "...and they shall reconnoiter the Land of Canaan that I am giving to the Children of Israel," for He is speaking of a new matter which has not been discussed before. And all this transpired so, because Hashem wished for the sake of His justice that the mission be at His commandment, and that all their tribes and leaders be involved, in order that they may be saved. It also appears furthermore that they requested from Moses: "Let us send men before us and let them unearth the Land for us" (Deut. 1:22), which is the searching among the roads and about the purpose of conquest, from a similar phrase as "unearthed food" (Job 39:29). This is the meaning of "before us," that they shall go after them on their [the spies'] way, similar to the phrase (above, 10:33): "And the ark of the covenant of God travelled before them." But Hashem commanded "...and they shall seek out the Land of Canaan," which is similar to the meaning of "choice," like those who wish to buy something, from the phrase: "Besides the men who seek out and the merchants" (2 Chron. 9:14) and so too: "...to the Land that I have sought out for them" (Ezek. 20:6), and so too: "...to seek out a resting place for them" (above, 10:3). Therefore Moses commanded them to spell out "whether it is good or bad" etc., "is it fat or lean" etc, and all this to gladden them, for "it is the choicest of all lands" (Ezek. 20:6) so that they ascend unto it with great desire. Now the matter was stated here briefly, for so it was. But in the Duplicate Torah [the Hummash of Devarim] Moses mentioned to them all the details from the beginning, to tell them their crime, for they have sinned in their requesting and asking [this] of their own accord. But according to our Rabbis, they sinned by saying: "Let us send men before us," because they saw the salvation of Hashem which he was performing for them regularly, and they ought to go after the cloud to wherever the Spirit will be there to go. Moses acquiesced to them to satisfy their desire, and "I approved of the matter" (Deut. 1:23) would mean that I forbore your evil and instructed to do it. And Hashem commanded him to send one man per the tribe of his ancestors etc., similar to what is stated in Samuel (1 Sam. 8:7): "Listen to the People to all that they say to you; for it is not you that they have rejected, but it is Me that they have rejected from reigning over them." Now these men were not specified by names according to the Word of Hashem as they were with the Recountings (above, 1:5-15) and the Allotment of the Land (below, 34:19-28); for with the Commandment of God – no mishap may befall its followers, and the keeper of a Commandment shall know no evil outcome; but He, may He be blessed, commanded Moses: "One man per the tribe of his ancestors you shall send" etc., and that they be chieftains; and Moses, of his own accord, selected these ones and sent them, and they caused their own souls evil.
והנראה בעיני בלשון הכתוב, כי לא נמלך משה בשכינה, אבל טעם "שלח לך", כי הסכימו לשלוח מרגלים והיה במנהג כי ישלחו "שנים אנשים מרגלים חרש לאמור" (יהושע ב' א') ושישלחו מקצתם (=מקצת השבטים לא מכל השבטים); והשם היודע עתידות ציוהו שישלח איש אחד איש אחד מכל מטות ישראל ושיהיו הנשיאים שבהם, כי חפץ ה' שיהיו שוים בענין כל הגדולים – אולי יזכרו וישובו אל ה'. ואם אין – שתהיה הגזרה שוה בכל העם וזה טעם (י"ג ג') "וישלח אותם משה... על פי ה', כולם אנשים ראשי בני ישראל המה", שיהיו במצוות ה' נשיאים וראשי בני ישראל. והנראה אלי לפי פשט הכתוב, כי לא הזכיר ה' למשה שאלתם ששאלו לשלוח מרגלים ולא הסכמת משה עמהם, שאילו היה כן, היה הכתוב מספר בכאן: ויקראו בני ישראל אל משה ויאמרו: נשלחה אנשים לפנינו... וייטב הדבר בעיני משה... ואחר כך היה כותב: וידבר ה' אל משה: שלח לך אנשים כאשר דברו אליך איש אחד לשבט. אבל היה הענין כך, ששאלו ישראל השליחות וייטב הדבר בעיני משה, ואחר כך בא הדיבור אל משה כשאר הדברות ואמר לו סתם: "שלח לך אנשים..." וזה טעם "ויתורו את הארץ אשר אני נותן לבני ישראל" – כי הוא מדבר בענין חדש, לא סיפר לו כלל. והיה כל זה, כי ה' חפץ למען צדקו, שתהיה השליחות במצוותו, ושתהיה בכל שבטיהם ובגדוליהם למען ינצלו. וכן נראה עוד, שהם שאלו ממשה (דברים א' כ"ב): "נשלחה אנשים לפנינו ויחפרו לנו את הארץ" והוא חיפוש בדרכים ובענין הכיבוש מלשון (איוב ל"ט כ"ט) "משם חפר אוכל", וזה טעם "לפנינו", שילכו הם אחריהם על דרכם כלשון (במדבר י' ל"ג) "וארון ברית ה' נוסע לפניהם". אבל ה' ציוה "ויתורו את ארץ כנען" והוא כטעם ברירה, כבאים לקנות דבר, מלשון (דברי הימים ב' ט') "לבד מאנשי התרים והסוחרים", וכן (יחזקאל כ') "אל הארץ אשר תרתי לכם", וכן (במדבר י' ל"ג) "וארון ברית ה' נוסע לפניהם דרך שלשת ימים לתור להם מנוחה", ועל כן ציוה אותם משה לפרוט: "הטובה היא אם רעה... השמנה היא אם רזה"... והכלל – לשמחם, כי צבי היא לכל הארצות, ויעלו בה בחפץ גדול. והנה נאמר כאן הענין בסתם, כי כן היה, אבל במשנה תורה הזכיר להם משה כל הדברים מתחילתן להגיד להם פשעם, כי חטאו במה שביקשו ושאלו הם עצמם.
'''Send for you men''' — ''According to your own judgment. I do not command you; if you wish, send. – Because Israel came up and said: "Let us send up men before us," as it is stated (Deut. 1:22) "And you approached me, all of you" etc. Moses, however, consulted the ''Shekhina.'' He [Hashem] said: I told them [the Land] was good, as it is stated (Ex. 3:17): "I shall bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt to a good land." By their life! I shall give them room for error with the matter of the spies, in order that they may not inherit it.'' – The words of Rashi, from an ''aggadah.'' Now we should ask: If so, Moses himself sinned in this matter, as it is stated (Deut. 1:23): "And I approved of the matter." And why did he say to them about the Land: "Is it good or bad?" (v. 19), since he has been told beforehand that it is good and wide-stretched? Furthermore, what did the spies do [bad]? For Moses told them (v. 18): "And look at the Land, how is it, and at the people that dwell upon it: Is it strong or weak? Is it few-numbered or many-numbered?" And he said to them about the cities (v. 19): "[Do they dwell] outdoors or in fortifications?" So, no matter what, they were obliged to answer him on what he ordered them; what then is their crime and what is their fault when they said to him (v. 28): "Alas! for the people is fierce, and the cities are fortified [and] big"? Did he send them in order that they testify to him falsehood? Do not think that their crime was their saying "A land that consumes its dwellers" (v. 32) alone; for even before they would say that, the quarrel of Caleb with them took place. Also, it is stated (Deut. 1:28): "Our brethren have melted our hearts, saying, 'A people too great and too high for us' " etc., and here it is stated (below, 14:3): "...to fall by the sword, our women and little children will be taken captive." But even Moses our master said to their descendants similar things, and exaggerated to them about the strength of the people and the fortifications of their cities and the power of the giants, much farther than what the spies told their forefathers, as it is stated (Deut. 9:1-2): "Listen, O Israel! You are crossing today the Jordan, to enter and inherit nations greater and more powerfull than you, cities great and fortified in the heavens, a nation great and high, decendants of giants, of whom you know and have heard: who can stand up before descendants of a giant?" Now if the crime of the spies and their sin was in this manner, who would he dissuade their descendants as the spies have dissuaded their forefathers? Furthermore: What was the reason of Moses our master in this mission? If the Land is good and the people weak – then [all is] well; and if it is bad or the people are strong, does he intend turning them back to Egypt? But the resolution of the matter is thus: Israel spoke in the manner of all who enter to wage war in a foreign land, who usually send men before them to study the ways and the entrances to the cities; and when they return, the seekers go at the front of the army to show them the ways, in the manner that it is stated (Jud. 1:24): "Show us please the entrance to the city," and they advise them what city to fight first and from what side it is easier to conquer the land. Thus they have explicitly said (Deut. 1:22): "And they shall return to us word, the way through which we shall ascend and the cities" etc.; i.e., the cities which we shall enter first, from where we shall enter the entire land; and this is proper counsel for all conquerors of lands. Furthermore, so too did Moses himself do, as it is stated (below, 21:32): "And Moses sent to spy out Ya`zer," and similarly by Yehoshua bin-Nun (Josh. 2:1): "Two men as spies." Therefore Moses approved; because Scripture will not rely in any of its deeds upon a miracle, but will command the warriors to arm and guard and conceal themselves, as Scripture appears in the war of the Ay (Ibid., 8:2) which took place according to Hashem's word, and in many places. Then Moses consulted the ''Shekhina'' and Hashem gave him permission and said to him: "Send for you men and they shall seek the Land of Canaan, and let them study it and tell you, and according to them you shall take counsel about the conquest." Now Moses said to them (v. 17): "Ascend thus through the Negev," meaning: Go up this way through the Negev so as to study the people that dwell in the land of the Negev, from the side where israel was, is it strong and they would need for their purpose to guard themselves very much and arm themselves. Similarly the cities, if they are fortified then the [enemy] may entrench themselves therein and they would need to build a rampart and siege-walls, or they may enter from another side. He told them further to study the land itself whether it is good or bad, because if it is bad, they would conquer first some other places, for they were seeking out the Emorite mountain from the side of Hebron; for even Joshua didn't conquer them all. This is the meaning of the verse (19): "And how is the land that they dwell therein?" – about the people that dwelled in the Negev. It is also possible that Moses, because he knew that [the Land] was fat and good, as he has been told (Ex. 3:8): "...to a good and wide-stretched land" etc., therefore he ordered them to pay attention to learn about that, in order that they may tell the People, who would rejoice and renew their strength to go up there happily. Therefore he told them (v. 20): "And you shall be strong and take from the fruit of the Land," in order that they see in their own eyes the praise of the Land. It is well-known that Egypt is not very far from Hebron, only a seven-day walking distance, and the Land of Canaan reaches on its border near Egypt; it is impossible that those dwelling in Egypt didn't know about the Land of Canaan whether it was good or bad. But the intention of Moses was to study the way in which he should ascend and the cities which he should conquer first, as I have explained. Indeed, Israel in the land of Egypt were slaves [doing] punitive service, neither knowing nor understanding [such matters]; therefore Moses wanted the [spies] to tell them all about the Land, to gladden them with its virtues, for he knew all about them. What appears to me from the language of Scripture is, that Moses did not consult the ''Shekhina.'' Rather, this is the meaning of "Send for you": They agreed to send seekers. Now the custom was to send "two men as spies in secret (saying)" (Josh. 2:1), and that they should send from their lower ranks. But Hashem who knows future events commanded him to send one man per every tribe of Israel, and that they be the chieftains among them, because Hashem wished all the leaders to be involved equally in the matter, perhaps they shall reckon and return to Hashem; and if not, may the [evil] decree [apply] equally to the entire People. This is the meaning of "according to the word of God" (v. 3), that they be – at Hashem's order – chieftains and leaders of the Children of Israel. And what appears to me according to the plain meaning of Scripture is, that Hashem did not mention to Moses their request that they requested to send spies nor the consent of Moses to their request, for if it was thus, Scripture would have recounted here: "And the Children of Israel approached Moses and said: 'Let us send men before us' etc. And Moses approved," and afterwards it would state: "And God said to Moses, saying: Send for you men as they said unto you, one man" etc. But the matter was thus: Israel requested the mssion, Moses approved, and then the Word came to Moses like the other Commandments, and He said to him simply: "Send for you men." This is the meaning of the words: "...and they shall reconnoiter the Land of Canaan that I am giving to the Children of Israel," for He is speaking of a new matter which has not been discussed before. And all this transpired so, because Hashem wished for the sake of His justice that the mission be at His commandment, and that all their tribes and leaders be involved, in order that they may be saved. It also appears furthermore that they requested from Moses: "Let us send men before us and let them unearth the Land for us" (Deut. 1:22), which is the searching among the roads and about the purpose of conquest, from a similar phrase as "unearthed food" (Job 39:29). This is the meaning of "before us," that they shall go after them on their [the spies'] way, similar to the phrase (above, 10:33): "And the ark of the covenant of God travelled before them." But Hashem commanded "...and they shall seek out the Land of Canaan," which is similar to the meaning of "choice," like those who wish to buy something, from the phrase: "Besides the men who seek out and the merchants" (2 Chron. 9:14) and so too: "...to the Land that I have sought out for them" (Ezek. 20:6), and so too: "...to seek out a resting place for them" (above, 10:3). Therefore Moses commanded them to spell out "whether it is good or bad" etc., "is it fat or lean" etc, and all this to gladden them, for "it is the choicest of all lands" (Ezek. 20:6) so that they ascend unto it with great desire. Now the matter was stated here briefly, for so it was. But in the Duplicate Torah [the Hummash of Devarim] Moses mentioned to them all the details from the beginning, to tell them their crime, for they have sinned in their requesting and asking [this] of their own accord. But according to our Rabbis, they sinned by saying: "Let us send men before us," because they saw the salvation of Hashem which he was performing for them regularly, and they ought to go after the cloud to wherever the Spirit will be there to go. Moses acquiesced to them to satisfy their desire, and "I approved of the matter" (Deut. 1:23) would mean that I forbore your evil and instructed to do it. And Hashem commanded him to send one man per the tribe of his ancestors etc., similar to what is stated in Samuel (1 Sam. 8:7): "Listen to the People to all that they say to you; for it is not you that they have rejected, but it is Me that they have rejected from reigning over them." Now these men were not specified by names according to the Word of Hashem as they were with the Recountings (above, 1:5-15) and the Allotment of the Land (below, 34:19-28); for with the Commandment of God – no mishap may befall its followers, and the keeper of a Commandment shall know no evil outcome; but He, may He be blessed, commanded Moses: "One man per the tribe of his ancestors you shall send" etc., and that they be chieftains; and Moses, of his own accord, selected these ones and sent them, and they caused their own souls evil.
ועל דעת רבותינו חטאו באומרם "נשלחה אנשים לפנינו", (דברים א' כ"ב) בעבור שהם רואים את ישועת ה' אשר יעשה להם תמיד, והיה להם ללכת אחרי הענן אל אשר יהיה שמה הרוח ללכת, ומשה קיבל מהם למלאות תאוותם. ויהיה טעם (דברים א' כ"ג) "וייטב בעיני הדבר", שסבלתי דעתכם והוריתי לעשותו. וה' ציוהו שישלח איש אחד איש אחד למטה אבותיו... כענין שנאמר בשמואל (א' פרק ח') "שמע בקול העם לכל אשר יאמרו אליך, כי לא אותך מאסו, כי אותי מאסו ממלוך עליהם". והנה האנשים האלה לא ניקבו בשמות על פי ה' כאשר היה בפקודים ובחילוק הארץ, כי מצוות ה' לא תבוא בה תקלה לעושיה ושומריה, "ושומר מצוה לא ידע דבר רע" (קהלת ח' ה'), רק הוא יתברך ציוה למשה "איש אחד למטה אבותיו תשלחו" ושיהיו נשיאים, ומשה מדעתו ברר את אלה ושלחם. והם גמלו לנפשם רעה.
'''Send for you men''' — ''According to your own judgment. I do not command you; if you wish, send. – Because Israel came up and said: "Let us send up men before us," as it is stated (Deut. 1:22) "And you approached me, all of you" etc. Moses, however, consulted the ''Shekhina.'' He [Hashem] said: I told them [the Land] was good, as it is stated (Ex. 3:17): "I shall bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt to a good land." By their life! I shall give them room for error with the matter of the spies, in order that they may not inherit it.'' – The words of Rashi, from an ''aggadah.'' Now we should ask: If so, Moses himself sinned in this matter, as it is stated (Deut. 1:23): "And I approved of the matter." And why did he say to them about the Land: "Is it good or bad?" (v. 19), since he has been told beforehand that it is good and wide-stretched? Furthermore, what did the spies do [bad]? For Moses told them (v. 18): "And look at the Land, how is it, and at the people that dwell upon it: Is it strong or weak? Is it few-numbered or many-numbered?" And he said to them about the cities (v. 19): "[Do they dwell] outdoors or in fortifications?" So, no matter what, they were obliged to answer him on what he ordered them; what then is their crime and what is their fault when they said to him (v. 28): "Alas! for the people is fierce, and the cities are fortified [and] big"? Did he send them in order that they testify to him falsehood? Do not think that their crime was their saying "A land that consumes its dwellers" (v. 32) alone; for even before they would say that, the quarrel of Caleb with them took place. Also, it is stated (Deut. 1:28): "Our brethren have melted our hearts, saying, 'A people too great and too high for us' " etc., and here it is stated (below, 14:3): "...to fall by the sword, our women and little children will be taken captive." But even Moses our master said to their descendants similar things, and exaggerated to them about the strength of the people and the fortifications of their cities and the power of the giants, much farther than what the spies told their forefathers, as it is stated (Deut. 9:1-2): "Listen, O Israel! You are crossing today the Jordan, to enter and inherit nations greater and more powerfull than you, cities great and fortified in the heavens, a nation great and high, decendants of giants, of whom you know and have heard: who can stand up before descendants of a giant?" Now if the crime of the spies and their sin was in this manner, who would he dissuade their descendants as the spies have dissuaded their forefathers? Furthermore: What was the reason of Moses our master in this mission? If the Land is good and the people weak – then [all is] well; and if it is bad or the people are strong, does he intend turning them back to Egypt? But the resolution of the matter is thus: Israel spoke in the manner of all who enter to wage war in a foreign land, who usually send men before them to study the ways and the entrances to the cities; and when they return, the seekers go at the front of the army to show them the ways, in the manner that it is stated (Jud. 1:24): "Show us please the entrance to the city," and they advise them what city to fight first and from what side it is easier to conquer the land. Thus they have explicitly said (Deut. 1:22): "And they shall return to us word, the way through which we shall ascend and the cities" etc.; i.e., the cities which we shall enter first, from where we shall enter the entire land; and this is proper counsel for all conquerors of lands. Furthermore, so too did Moses himself do, as it is stated (below, 21:32): "And Moses sent to spy out Ya`zer," and similarly by Yehoshua bin-Nun (Josh. 2:1): "Two men as spies." Therefore Moses approved; because Scripture will not rely in any of its deeds upon a miracle, but will command the warriors to arm and guard and conceal themselves, as Scripture appears in the war of the Ay (Ibid., 8:2) which took place according to Hashem's word, and in many places. Then Moses consulted the ''Shekhina'' and Hashem gave him permission and said to him: "Send for you men and they shall seek the Land of Canaan, and let them study it and tell you, and according to them you shall take counsel about the conquest." Now Moses said to them (v. 17): "Ascend thus through the Negev," meaning: Go up this way through the Negev so as to study the people that dwell in the land of the Negev, from the side where israel was, is it strong and they would need for their purpose to guard themselves very much and arm themselves. Similarly the cities, if they are fortified then the [enemy] may entrench themselves therein and they would need to build a rampart and siege-walls, or they may enter from another side. He told them further to study the land itself whether it is good or bad, because if it is bad, they would conquer first some other places, for they were seeking out the Emorite mountain from the side of Hebron; for even Joshua didn't conquer them all. This is the meaning of the verse (19): "And how is the land that they dwell therein?" – about the people that dwelled in the Negev. It is also possible that Moses, because he knew that [the Land] was fat and good, as he has been told (Ex. 3:8): "...to a good and wide-stretched land" etc., therefore he ordered them to pay attention to learn about that, in order that they may tell the People, who would rejoice and renew their strength to go up there happily. Therefore he told them (v. 20): "And you shall be strong and take from the fruit of the Land," in order that they see in their own eyes the praise of the Land. It is well-known that Egypt is not very far from Hebron, only a seven-day walking distance, and the Land of Canaan reaches on its border near Egypt; it is impossible that those dwelling in Egypt didn't know about the Land of Canaan whether it was good or bad. But the intention of Moses was to study the way in which he should ascend and the cities which he should conquer first, as I have explained. Indeed, Israel in the land of Egypt were slaves [doing] punitive service, neither knowing nor understanding [such matters]; therefore Moses wanted the [spies] to tell them all about the Land, to gladden them with its virtues, for he knew all about them. What appears to me from the language of Scripture is, that Moses did not consult the ''Shekhina.'' Rather, this is the meaning of "Send for you": They agreed to send seekers. Now the custom was to send "two men as spies in secret (saying)" (Josh. 2:1), and that they should send from their lower ranks. But Hashem who knows future events commanded him to send one man per every tribe of Israel, and that they be the chieftains among them, because Hashem wished all the leaders to be involved equally in the matter, perhaps they shall reckon and return to Hashem; and if not, may the [evil] decree [apply] equally to the entire People. This is the meaning of "according to the word of God" (v. 3), that they be – at Hashem's order – chieftains and leaders of the Children of Israel. And what appears to me according to the plain meaning of Scripture is, that Hashem did not mention to Moses their request that they requested to send spies nor the consent of Moses to their request, for if it was thus, Scripture would have recounted here: "And the Children of Israel approached Moses and said: 'Let us send men before us' etc. And Moses approved," and afterwards it would state: "And God said to Moses, saying: Send for you men as they said unto you, one man" etc. But the matter was thus: Israel requested the mssion, Moses approved, and then the Word came to Moses like the other Commandments, and He said to him simply: "Send for you men." This is the meaning of the words: "...and they shall reconnoiter the Land of Canaan that I am giving to the Children of Israel," for He is speaking of a new matter which has not been discussed before. And all this transpired so, because Hashem wished for the sake of His justice that the mission be at His commandment, and that all their tribes and leaders be involved, in order that they may be saved. It also appears furthermore that they requested from Moses: "Let us send men before us and let them unearth the Land for us" (Deut. 1:22), which is the searching among the roads and about the purpose of conquest, from a similar phrase as "unearthed food" (Job 39:29). This is the meaning of "before us," that they shall go after them on their [the spies'] way, similar to the phrase (above, 10:33): "And the ark of the covenant of God travelled before them." But Hashem commanded "...and they shall seek out the Land of Canaan," which is similar to the meaning of "choice," like those who wish to buy something, from the phrase: "Besides the men who seek out and the merchants" (2 Chron. 9:14) and so too: "...to the Land that I have sought out for them" (Ezek. 20:6), and so too: "...to seek out a resting place for them" (above, 10:3). Therefore Moses commanded them to spell out "whether it is good or bad" etc., "is it fat or lean" etc, and all this to gladden them, for "it is the choicest of all lands" (Ezek. 20:6) so that they ascend unto it with great desire. Now the matter was stated here briefly, for so it was. But in the Duplicate Torah [the Hummash of Devarim] Moses mentioned to them all the details from the beginning, to tell them their crime, for they have sinned in their requesting and asking [this] of their own accord. But according to our Rabbis, they sinned by saying: "Let us send men before us," because they saw the salvation of Hashem which he was performing for them regularly, and they ought to go after the cloud to wherever the Spirit will be there to go. Moses acquiesced to them to satisfy their desire, and "I approved of the matter" (Deut. 1:23) would mean that I forbore your evil and instructed to do it. And Hashem commanded him to send one man per the tribe of his ancestors etc., similar to what is stated in Samuel (1 Sam. 8:7): "Listen to the People to all that they say to you; for it is not you that they have rejected, but it is Me that they have rejected from reigning over them." Now these men were not specified by names according to the Word of Hashem as they were with the Recountings (above, 1:5-15) and the Allotment of the Land (below, 34:19-28); for with the Commandment of God – no mishap may befall its followers, and the keeper of a Commandment shall know no evil outcome; but He, may He be blessed, commanded Moses: "One man per the tribe of his ancestors you shall send" etc., and that they be chieftains; and Moses, of his own accord, selected these ones and sent them, and they caused their own souls evil.
1. מה ההבדל בין השקפת חז"ל (המובאת בסוף דברי הרמב"ן "ועל דעת רבותינו") ובין השקפת הרמב"ן (עד "ויתכן כי משה בעבור") בענין חטא העם בשליחות המרגלים? (שים לב: המדובר כאן בחטאם של כל ישראל. בחטא המרגלים עצמם דן גיליון שלח תש"ו, שאלות א', ג', ד', עיין שם).
2. לשם מה מזכיר הרמב"ן בדבריו כאן את שליחות המרגלים ליעזר ואת שליחות המרגלים ליריחו ואת מלחמת העי, ומה רצה להוכיח ע"י הדוגמאות?
3. השווה לדברי הרמב"ן במקומנו את דבריו במקומות הבאים: במדבר א' מ"ה ד"ה ויהיו כל פקודי בני ישראל החל מ"ויתכן שנאמר עוד כי יהיה זה כדרך שהמלכות עושה..."; דברים כ' ט' ד"ה וצוה ופקדו שרי צבאות בראש העם. מהי ההשקפה המשותפת המודגשת ברמב"ן בשלושת המקומות האלה?
4. לשם מה מדגיש הרמב"ן (בדבריו עד "ויתכן כי משה בעבור שידע") כי הארץ אשר ציוה משה לחקרה "הטובה היא אם רעה" – ארץ הנגב היא, וכן "הערים" ערי הנגב הם - איזו קושיה יישב ע"י הדגשה זו?
5. מה ההבדל בתכלית שליחות המרגלים בדבריו הראשונים עד "על העם היושב בנגב" לבין דבריו החל מן "ויתכן כי משה בעבור שידע כי היא שמנה וטובה" עד "כי יודע היה בהם"?
6. מה הדמיון בין דברי ה' למשה בפרשתנו לבין דבריו לשמואל (פרק ח' פסוקים ז'-ח'), ומה רוצה הרמב"ן לישב ע"י הבאת דוגמא זו?