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Korach and John Lennon

The Father of Spiritual Anarchy

    Rabbi YY Jacobson

    2693 views
  • June 22, 2011
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  • 20 Sivan 5771
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Class Summary:

Korach and John Lennon: The Father of Spiritual Anarchy

Dedicated by David and Eda Schottenstein, in the loving memory of a young Jerusalem soul Alta Shula, daughter of Rabbi Yossi and Hindel Swerdlov. And in honor of their daughter Yetta Alta Shula, "Aliyah" Schottenstein.

Wise or Boorish?

 

This week’s portion, Korach, relates the tragic story of the mutiny staged by a man named Korach (Numbers chapter 16), who organized a rebellion against Moses and Aaron, chosen by the Almighty to serve respectively as the Prophet and as the High Priest of Israel.

 

The rabbis in the Midrash made a strange observation. “Korah was clever,” the rabbis declare, “so why did he commit such a folly”? What propelled the wise Korach to declare war against Moses and Aron.

 

Their question is intriguing. How did the rabbis know that Korach was clever? Never has this person or his wisdom been mentioned in the Torah before? Whence the certainty that Korach was a wise man? Perhaps he was a fool.

 

 The answer, of course, is that the rabbis discerned the wisdom of Korach from this very incident. The very mutiny of Korach against the authority of Moses and Aaron, demonstrates wisdom and perception.

 
But why? On the surface, the mutiny seems to be a symptom of good old jealousy, of an unbridled ego craving power and fame.

 

No Distinctions

 

Let's dissect the argument of Korach.

 

“The entire community is holy,” argued Korach to Moses and Aaron in this week’s portion, “and G-d is within them. Why do you exalt yourselves above the community of G-d?”

 

These are powerful words. G-d is within each and every person. Why does anybody consider themselves spiritually superior to anybody else? Truth and holiness are embedded in each and every soul; within every pulsating heart flows the cosmic energy, so why is Moses telling people what G-d wants? Why is Aron serving as the exclusive High Priest?

 

Why does a Jew need Moses to teach him the word of G-d and Aaron to perform the service in the Holy Temple in his stead, when he (or she) himself possesses a soul that is a spark of the Divine flame? Why can’t he realize his relationship with G-d on his own, without teachers, leaders, and priests?

 

Korach is the father of spiritual anarchy. Korach argues against all forms of spiritual authority and leadership, and against any proscribed role in the spiritual community. Korach aspires to create a society free from distinctions, borders, and categories. We are all Divine, and hence we are all one.

 

Imagine. Imagine there was no Moses, no Aron, no Sanctuary, no Kohanites, Levites or Israelites, and no religious authorities too. It's easy if you try. And the Jews would live as one.

 

And then from the Jews, Korach believed, the holistic energy flow would travel to all of mankind. “And the world would live as one.”

 

Korach’s message—let us confess—touches a chord in us. There is something about his vision that resonates in our hearts. This is because Korach was dead right (which is why the Torah wants us to know about his ideology.)

 

But he was also dead wrong.

 

From Unity to Multiplicity and Back

 

We all come from one source. All of us originate in the “womb” of G-d, so to speak, where we are indeed singular. Before creation, there was only undefined unity. There were no borders, definitions, or distinctions. No heaven, no earth, and no countries. No teachers and students. No cultures, nations, and tribes. All of us were submerged in the singular unity of the Endless Light.

 

On our deepest level, we crave to recreate this wholesomeness in our lives. We yearn for our egos to melt away in the singularity of existence. Remember the sense of ecstasy you felt in the good old times sitting with your friends in the middle of the night, playing the music. There was no you or I; only the music.

 

Each of us, in our own way, pines to go back to that pre-creation paradigm of unity. We want to imagine that we were never created. Imagine…

 

But—lo and behold—created we were…

 

Modern Age Spirituality

 

The idea that all souls are the same was Korach’s mistake, and it is one of the mistakes of modern new-age spirituality. We are accustomed to thinking that definitions create barriers, and barriers cause mistrust and hatred. We are convinced that to be spiritual means to have no borders.

 

But creation was the act of making borders. From unity came multiplicity. From a single undefined G-d, came an infinitely complex and diverse universe. Diversity is sewn into the very fabric of existence. No two flakes of snow are alike; no two people are alike. There are tens of millions of different species of plants, fish, birds, reptiles, insects, and mammals. And there are inherent divisions between people, such as male and female, body and soul, and the specific divisions into nations, cultures, and individuals.
 

Why did G-d create multiplicity? Because the deepest unity is the unity found within diversity. If we are all the same, unity is no achievement. The truest unity is achieved when differentiation and demarcations are imposed upon the primordial oneness, and its component parts are each given a distinct role in existence, complementing each other. Like notes in a ballad, each of us represents a unique and distinct note, and together we recreate a cosmic symphony, not by singing the same note, but by expressing our individual notes as an indispensable part of the song. Every individual existence is part of a symphonious expression of the singular essence of its Creator. In this world, we must achieve unity within diversity.

 

For the unity of humankind, we need one G-d; but for G-d's unity to be complete we need human diversity, each individual fulfilling his or her role in existence, sharing with others their unique contribution, and learning from others the wisdom they lack on their own.

 

Our differences must not divide us; on the contrary, our differences complete us.

 

This is true on a political and sociological level as well. Many believe that worldwide anarchy could lead to worldwide peace. Yet anarchy is never peaceful because the conflict in the world is not the result of the division of our planet into superimposed countries and cultures. Conflict is the result of the truth that there exist inherent differences between peoples and when these differences compete, conflict is born. Our role as humans is not to deny that there are distinctions, but rather to create those types of borders and boundaries that will foster respect, unity, and love within the inherent diversity of mankind.

If we create unity by denying that there are any differences between us, our unity will be skin-deep and short-lived, once we realize that there are indeed distinctions. Besides, by denying our differences, we will deprive each other of what each of us can give the other which the other lacks. Real unity is one that is achieved within our diversity, or as Robert Frost wrote, good fences good neighbors make.

It's like in a marriage. If the unity of a couple is based on the idea that they are one and the same, the marriage may not endure, when the differences emerge. It is in the respect of differences where we achieve an authentic and enduring oneness.

Imageless

And it goes one step deeper. Since G-d has no image, the only way a world filled with images can grasp His unity is by diverse images integrating, for each of them captures a part of the truth, none of them captures it all. Together we recreate the oneness.

 

To experience undefined unity in a world of definition, diversity is the only way. By the integration of diverse forces, we capture that transcendental unity.

 

Fusion

 

The Chabad school of Jewish spirituality takes it a step deeper.

 

G-d can’t be defined by unity or by multiplicity. Just as He transcends plurality, He also transcends unity. Therefore, it is only through the fusion of unity and multiplicity—through a place that transcends both of them—that we can connect to the true undefined essence of G-d.

 

If you choose unity and “worship” it, you are clinging to one aspect of G-d. Conversely, if you embrace the ethos multiplicity, you are acknowledging another aspect of G-d. Only in the fusion of the two, only in discovering the unity within multiplicity, and the multiplicity within the unity, do you touch the undefined essence of G-d, which transcends and integrates all-ness and oneness, where nothingness and something-ness are one.

 

Swallowed and Consumed

 

What was the end of the Korach saga?

 

Korach and his colleagues were swallowed by the earth. The 250 leaders of Israel that joined his mutiny were consumed by a flame. This is a psychological description of what happened to many an idealist who attempted to live by Korach’s mythical unity and by John Lennon’s Imagine and imagination. It occurred to a generation of young passionate and beautiful Americans who worshipped and romanticized unity at the expense of all forms of authority, borders, and distinctions.

 

The harsh, competitive reality of earth “swallowed” up much of their young idealism and selflessness. Their passion ascended in the flames of time, as they themselves were absorbed by the self-serving and egocentric demands of planet earth. From beneath the crust of the earth, we can still recognize stretched-out arms, silently asking the question, what happened to all of the love?

 

For the love that defies borders is short-lived. It ascends in the flames of ecstasy and nothing of it remains in the harsh realities of planet earth. Only love and unity that recognizes diversity, borders, and categories, will allow heaven and earth to touch lips with each other.


(This essay is based on an address by the Lubavitcher Rebbe in 1957 and 1971, published in Likkutei Sichot, vol. 18 pp. 202-211)

Please leave your comment below!

  • G

    gm -7 years ago

    better title for this article - "All you need is love?"

    Reply to this comment.Flag this comment.

  • TBT

    Tuvia Bolton TB -7 years ago

    Seems to me the opposite. Korach stressed that everyone is different while Moshe taught they are all the same.
    Korach said that everyone is holy therefore everyone can do what they want and being that everyone is different telling them what to do (as Moshe wanted) is dictatorship.
    We see it clearly here in Israel, the 'beautiful people' oppose Judaism bec. (in their words) 'Here is NOT Iran"!! i.e. don't take away my individuality.

    Moshe, on the other hand, taught that EVERYONE must strive to bring heaven to earth no matter how big or small. That makes everyone equal.

    But IN FACT the opposite was true. By keeping everyone grounded and out of heavenly matters Korach made them all equal to animals (albeit cultured ones). While Moshe connected them with the SOURCE of all uniqueness (Yechida means ONE but it also means Unique)

    That's what I think.
    Moshiach NOW!

    Reply to this comment.Flag this comment.

    • E

      Eli -7 years ago

      In other words: Korach came as a direct correlation to the story of Eldad and Medad and to Moshe's response to Joshua.

      Reply to this comment.Flag this comment.

Essay Korach

Rabbi YY Jacobson

  • June 22, 2011
  • |
  • 20 Sivan 5771
  • |
  • 2693 views
  • Comment

Dedicated by David and Eda Schottenstein, in the loving memory of a young Jerusalem soul Alta Shula, daughter of Rabbi Yossi and Hindel Swerdlov. And in honor of their daughter Yetta Alta Shula, "Aliyah" Schottenstein.

Class Summary:

Korach and John Lennon: The Father of Spiritual Anarchy

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