Aliya Summary: The scouts spent forty days reconnoitering the land.
They returned to the Israelite encampment with specimens of Canaan's
produce, and with an ominous report. They conceded that the land flowed
with milk and honey, but they warned that its population was mighty and
the cities well fortified and impossible to conquer. Only Caleb and
Joshua, the scouts representing the tribes of Judah and Ephraim,
dissented. They argued that the land was magnificent, and there was no
reason for concern because G‑d could surely bring the Israelites victory
in battle. The Jewish people spent that entire night wailing,
expressing their preference to return to Egypt rather than be defeated
in battle by the Canaanites.
The Kotzker Rebbe and
others define two components of the Sin of the Spies from this part of
the passuk. First, that we saw ourselves as small and insignificant.
Second, that we were concerned about how others perceived us. With G-d
obviously on our side (we know what happened to Egypt and we witnessed
so many miracles performed on our behalf), we should not have viewed
ourselves that way. And, how others perceive us is their problem, not
ours.
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