Friday, June 22, 2012

Rebels: Then and Now

Korah
Numbers 16:1 - 18:32
PrĂ©cis: Korah foments a rebellion, claiming that Moses and Aaron have taken too much power for themselves. Dothan and Abiram also attack Moses’ leadership, claiming that Moses has brought them from a land of milk and honey (Egypt!) only to let them die in the wilderness. A test of fire offerings is arranged, and Korah and his followers are destroyed as the earth opens and swallows them. The People continue to complain, God threatens to destroy them once again, but Moses and Aaron intercede. A plague takes the lives of 14,000 people. A final test – that of staffs – is performed, and when Aaron’s staff miraculously blossoms on the following morning, it is clear that his status as High Priest is secure.
Numbers 16:1-3 Now Korah…with Datan and Abiram…took themselves up against Moses and against Aaron and said, ‘You take too much upon yourselves, seeing that all in the congregation are holy….’”
This year’s reading of the rebellion of Korah takes place at a time of rebellion against authority around the world. Much of the Arab world is in turmoil, an outgrowth of what has been dubbed the “Arab Spring” of 2011. Just this week, elections in Egypt are being bitterly contested, as each side claims victory, and the generals seem intent on retaining their own power.
               
In China, the rising middle class takes to the streets to complain about the corruption of the ruling Communist hierarchy. In Greece, demonstrations for and against their continuation in the Eurozone continue. In the United States, groups as disparate as the Tea Party and the Occupiers proclaim against institutional “rulers” (be it intrusive government or the moneyed “One Percent”).
                
Korah’s rebellion is unique in our Bible, being an attempt to overthrow both the secular (Moses) and religious (Aaron) leadership of the People, both of whom have been designated not by election, but by God Himself. (As a footnote, some scholars believe that this is actually two separate stories which have been joined together by the Great Compiler when our Bible was reduced to written form. This thesis suggests that the rebellion against Moses comes from the tribe of Reuben (Dothan and Abiram), who complain that by right of primogeniture they should be leaders; the fight against Aaron comes from Korah, himself of the tribe of Levi, and seems to be a struggle over which particular Levite family was entitled to the High Priesthood ).
               
The text makes clear who was “right" and who was “wrong” in the story, but the text never really makes clear whether there is a justification for either complaint, at least as seen from the eyes of those who are in rebellion. This is not a surprise, since Moses and Aaron prevail, and history is written by the victors.
This is one lesson to be drawn from the parasha. Whoever prevails in the Arab Spring, the democracy movement in China, the fight against the centralized power of the European Union, the Tea Party or the Occupiers, we can be sure that history will tell the tale based upon whoever wins.
               
A second lesson we draw is that the text makes clear who was “right” and who was“wrong” in the narrative; we know who God intends to rule. Many today who are in rebellion against authority claim that God is on their side. The Korah story should lead us to be skeptical of those who claim to know God’s intent. While the story of Korah shows God’s judgment through His miraculous intervention, it seems unlikely that those who claim God’s mandate have the same kind of proof readily available.

A healthy skepticism of motivation is a third and perhaps most important lesson of this parasha.