From Chabad.org: The Jewish people rejected the pleas of Joshua and
Caleb, and decided to stone them. G‑d intervened, His glory appearing
over the Tabernacle. G‑d informs Moshe of His decision to
instantaneously wipe out the Israelites in a massive plague due to their
persistent lack of faith. Moshe successfully invoked G‑d's mercy and
pointed out that this mass execution will cause a mammoth desecration of
G‑d's name. "People will assume that G‑d lacked the power to defeat the
Canaanites in battle, so He instead slaughtered His people," Moses
argued. Although G‑d agreed not to immediately wipe out the Israelites,
that generation would not enter the Land. G‑d instructs the Jews to
reverse course, and to head back to the desert.
So
Moshe and G-d take turns giving up on the Israelites. This time Moshe
saves the day with his quick thinking arguments. It's always amazing
when Moshe is able to hold sway with G-d, appeasing Him with logic that
He undoubtedly already knew. It must be that there was a benefit to 1)
manually going through the arguments, and 2) recording those arguments
for us to learn from. It could be similar to the concept of Vidui, or
verbally admitting one's sins. There's a benefit to arguing for what you
believe in!
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