HOME | CONTACT US | DONATE LoginLOGIN Ask the RabbiASK THE RABBI
Chabad.org - Torah, Judaism and Jewish Info
 
Chabad.org » Kabbalah Online » Weekly Torah » Archives » Bamidbar - Numbers » Chukat » Contemporary Kabbalists » Transforming the Primordial Snake
PrintSend this page to a friendShare this
Comment2 Comments
Transforming the Primordial Snake
Submission to G-d's will is the key to life.

Transforming the Primordial Snake


G-d said, "Make a venomous snake."(Num. 21:8-9)

In responding to their sin by unleashing deadly, poisonous snakes against them, G-d was telling the people that sin, which was introduced to humanity by the Primordial Snake, leads to death, while submission to G-d's will is the key to life.

Since the snakes were deadly, anyone who had been bitten was for all intents and purposes already dead. Healing the bitten person was thus tantamount to resurrecting him.

Now, in order to resurrect a dead person, it is not enough to simply infuse his body with life, because the body has already lost its capacity to support life. First, the dead body had to be made capable once more of living. This can be done only by a force that transcends the laws of nature, including the dichotomy of life and death. Infusing this transcendent force into the dead body restores its capacity to support life, after which the person's soul can re-enter it and he can live again.

Resurrection requires eliciting a level of divinity that transcends the dichotomy of life and death….

This is why G-d also commanded Moses to heal the people using a snake. By using the image of the deadly, Primordial Snake to restore life, G-d indicated to them that resurrection requires eliciting a level of divinity that transcends the dichotomy of life and death. When people saw the snake, they understood that in order to elicit this transcendent divinity and be healed, they had to transform their own, inner "snake" - their evil inclination - into a force of good.

The evil inclination impels us to sin for comfort, pleasure, or excitement. When we convince it that the truest comfort, pleasure, and excitement lie in holiness, it plunges headlong into fulfilling G-d's purpose on earth, endowing our drive toward divinity with much greater power than it could have had otherwise. Thus, the initially evil inclination becomes the source of merit and goodness. The snake is transformed from the source of death to the agent of life.

[Based on Likutei Sichot vol. 13, pp. 75-77]

Copyright 2001 chabad of california / www.lachumash.org

PrintSend this page to a friendShare this
Comment2 Comments

From the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe; adapted by Moshe Yaakov Wisnefsky   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Moshe Yaakov Wisnefsky is a scholar, writer, editor and anthologist, living in Jerusalem. He has recently produced two monumental works: "Apples from the Orchard: Arizal on the Weekly Torah" and a Chumash translation with commentary based on the works of the Lubavitcher Rebbe (Kehot).
Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson (11 Nissan 1902–3 Tammuz 1994) became the seventh Rebbe of the Chabad dynasty on 10 Shevat 1950. He is widely acknowledged as the greatest Jewish leader of the second half of the 20th century, a dominant scholar in both the revealed and hidden aspects of Torah, and fluent in many languages and on scientific subjects. The Rebbe is best known for his extraordinary love and concern for every Jew on the planet, having sent thousands of emissaries around the globe, dedicated to strengthening Judaism.

Moshe Yaakov Wisnefsky is a scholar, writer, editor and anthologist, living in Jerusalem. He has recently produced two monumental works: "Apples from the Orchard: Arizal on the Weekly Torah" and a Chumash translation with commentary based on the works of the Lubavitcher Rebbe (Kehot).

The content on this page is copyrighted by the author, publisher and/or Chabad.org, and is produced by Chabad.org. If you enjoyed this article, we encourage you to distribute it further, provided that you comply with the copyright policy.
 

Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Aug 5, 2011
That mjust be it!
I think I understand why they were ordered to build a statue of bronze snake and was told to uplifted it. It was a mystery for me.
Posted By Nozomu Suzuki, Willowdale , On

Posted: Mar 3, 2010
I went to bed with this on my mind....Why oh why do we not understand what the Temple of G-d was all about...silly silly children...Pray for Mosheiah...pray for ISRAEL ps I am not in Isreal yet...but my heart is...dieing to get there!!!
Posted By krose, Yountville, Israel



 


Contemporary Kabbalists
Transforming the Primordial Snake
Conquering the Impurity of Death
Battling Our Enemies Within