
Beloved friends, talmidim, and fellow travelers on the derech —
Rabbi Fohrman’s core thesis is that the Torah presents two seemingly contradictory accounts of why Moses could not enter the Land—not as a textual flaw, but as complementary perspectives that reveal deeper truths about leadership, faith, intimacy with God, distance/separation, and the transition from the miraculous desert life to settled life in Israel.
This essay weaves in Miriam, Korach’s rebellion, the intermediate judges (from Jethro), the spies, and themes of kal vachomer, Eichah (lament/distance), and faith.
I want to speak from the heart about the most painful verse in the Torah for anyone who loves Moshe Rabbeinu. At the end of his life, standing on Har Nevo, looking out over the Land he had carried in his heart for forty years, Moshe hears the words that break the heart of every sensitive reader: “For your sake, Hashem was angry with me.”
Not “because of what I did.” Not even “because I hit the rock.” “Because of you.”
How do we understand this? How does the man who gave everything — who stood in the breach at the Golden Calf, who taught Torah to a stiff-necked people for forty years, who begged God to erase him rather than destroy them — end up excluded from the very Land he was bringing them to?
The answer is not simple. It is not one story. It is two stories that the Torah deliberately places in tension. Because of this, we will struggle with them until they reveal a single, searing truth.

The Numbers Perspective: The Rock and the Missed Lesson
In Bamidbar 20, after Miriam dies, the well stops. The people who had been carried for thirty-eight years by her merit suddenly face thirst again. God tells Moshe: Take the staff (Aharon’s staff, the sign against rebellion from the days of Korach), gather the people, and speak to the rock.
Moshe gathers them. He looks at them — still speaking the language of Korach, still calling themselves “rebels” — and cries out in anguish: “Listen, you rebels — can we really get water from this rock?”
There is a double entendre here that only someone who has lost a sister can fully feel. The word הַמֹּרִים can be revocalized as addressing Miriam herself: “Listen, Miriam — how can we possibly draw water without you?”
Broader Context: Three Water Crises & Miriam’s Central Role
The story is the third of three desert water crises:
- Crisis 1 (Exodus 15, right after the Red Sea): Bitter waters at Marah. Miriam sings her song immediately before.
- Crisis 2 (Exodus 17): God commands Moses to hit a rock with his staff → becomes Miriam’s well.
- Crisis 3 (Numbers 20): Miriam dies → the well stops. God commands us to speak to “the rock.”
Miriam’s name permutations (Hebrew anagram play, no vowels in Torah scroll):
- מרים → מרים (marim = bitter) — Marah waters.
- מרים → מרים (merim = lift up) — Moses lifts his hand to strike.
- מרים → מרים (morim = rebels) — “Listen, you rebels.”
Every possible reading appears exactly in these stories, and Miriam herself appears (singing or dying) right before each crisis. This is not a coincidence; it signals her deep, behind-the-scenes role.
Fohrman begins exploring Miriam’s early life (the Nile story and the Sea of Reeds song) for further insight. He notes the odd phrasing “Miriam the prophetess, sister of Aaron” and her separate women’s song after the main Song of the Sea — questions the Midrash addresses.
The Story Re-Read with Full Context
After Miriam dies at Kadesh (the “topic sentence” of the chapter), the Well of Miriam stops. For the first time in 40 years, there is no water. The people immediately fall into rebellion, language lifted straight from Korach:
- They congregate/gather against Moses and Aaron (וַיִּקָּהֲלוּ… עַל מֹשֶׁה וְעַל אַהֲרֹן) — the exact rare phrasing from Korach’s rebellion.
- They cry: “If only we had died with our brethren…” and complain about being brought into this terrible desert with no water or fruit.
In the Korach story, this exact sequence led God to tell Moses and Aaron to separate themselves so He could destroy the congregation. Here, the same setup occurs — the people gather against the leaders, Moses and Aaron retreat to the Tent of Meeting and fall on their faces, the glory of God appears — but God does something completely different.
God’s Counter-Plan
Instead of destruction, God gives a counter-offensive against the rebellion:
- Take the staff — specifically Aaron’s staff that had been placed before the Ark as a sign (אוֹת לִבְנֵי מֶרִי) for future rebels. It is “Lecture #59” — the visual reminder of Korach, so they never have to relive that trauma.
- You and Aaron gather the congregation (הַקְהֵל אֶת הָעֵדָה) — reverse the rebellion. Don’t let them gather against you; take the initiative and gather them for the miracle.
- Speak to the rock before their eyes — the same rock that had been struck 40 years earlier and had become Miriam’s Well. It will give its water.
This is the new paradigm for a post-Miriam world.
Moses’ Despair and the Double Entendre
Moses takes the staff as commanded and gathers the people, but then he speaks these haunting words:
שִׁמְעוּ נָא הַמֹּרִים הַמִּן הַסֶּלַע הַזֶּה נוֹצִיא לָכֶם מָיִם “Listen, you rebels — can we really draw water from this rock for you?”
Fohrman shows this is not skepticism about miracles (Moses has performed plenty). It is despair born of deep understanding:
- Miracles require either extraordinary faith (placing oneself vulnerably in God’s hands) or Miriam’s sustaining merit/well.
- The people are in full Korach-style rebellion — the opposite of faith — and Miriam is dead. The well has stopped.
- Moses sees no path forward.
There is a chilling double entendre in הַמֹּרִים (“rebels,” spelled unusually without the vav). Revocalized, it becomes מִרְיָם — Miriam. Moses is almost crying out to his dead sister:
“Listen, Miriam — how can we possibly get water from this rock without you?”
He then does the only thing he knows from the old paradigm: he lifts his hand and strikes the rock with his staff (the same staff from 40 years ago), trying desperately to restart Miriam’s Well the old way. Water comes — but God declares he failed to sanctify His name through faith.
The Deeper Meaning of Rashi’s Kal Vachomer
This is the key payoff. In a world where Miriam carried the people with her faith (the daily miraculous well), the rock had one final lesson to teach before they entered the Land:
If a rock — which does not speak, does not hear, needs nothing from God, receives neither reward nor punishment — still obeys when God speaks to it, then kal vachomer we, who do receive reward and punishment, should listen and obey.
The rock represents life without Miriam. The people must now learn to live with direct, daily faith and obedience rather than being carried by a tzaddik’s merit. Hitting the rock was clinging to the old way; speaking would have modeled the new way and taught the lesson publicly.
Fohrman supports this with a beautiful Midrash (Seder Olam): The three siblings provided three daily miraculous gifts for basic survival in the desert —
- Well (Miriam) — water to drink
- Cloud (Aaron) — guidance on where to camp
- Manna (Moses) — food to eat
Life in the desert was “miraculous on a mundane level.” These were not one-time spectacular events like the Red Sea; they were everyday sustenance. With Miriam gone, that sustaining system begins to end. The rock’s lesson is how to continue in a relationship with God when the “easy” daily miracles that a tzaddik carries are no longer there.
The Eichah Midrashim
Fohrman highlights two ancient Midrashim that treat Eichah as more than a coincidence:
- Three prophets used the language of Eichah (Eichah Rabbah):
- Moses (Deut. 1:12): “How can I bear your burden alone?” (about introducing judges).Isaiah: “How has she become a harlot?” (Israel’s spiritual betrayal).Jeremiah (Lamentations 1:1): “How does she sit in solitude?” (Jerusalem’s destruction).
- Connection to Adam (play on Ayekah / אַיֶּכָּה — “Where are you?”): Same four letters as Eichah. God asks Adam, “Where are you?” after the sin, and he laments his expulsion from the Garden. The Midrash parallels this with God bringing Israel into the Land (their “paradise”), commanding them, their failure, and His lament with Eichah when He casts them out. Both are laments over separation and distance from an intimate relationship with God.
These Midrashim frame Eichah as a word of lament over distance — not just sadness, but the pain of relational rupture. This sets up the entire speech in Deuteronomy.
The Theme of Deuteronomy 1
The speech’s introduction is deliberately odd: it lists many places but highlights one with a time marker — they are only 11 days’ journey from Chorev (Sinai), yet this is the 40th year.
The central question the speech poses: Why did it take 40 years to travel what should have been an 11-day journey?
The answer, from everything we know in the Torah, is the sin of the spies. The speech is Moses’ retrospective on how that failure (and its roots) shaped everything.
Multiple Textual Connections: Judges + Spies
Fohrman shows that Deuteronomy 1 does not treat the spies in isolation. It deliberately weaves in the story of the intermediate judges (from Jethro in Exodus 18) with striking parallels. He lists at least six clear connections (and hints there are more):
- Whose idea was it?
- Judges: Originally Jethro’s idea (Exodus). In Deuteronomy, Moses presents it as his own.
- Spies: Originally God’s command (Numbers). In Deuteronomy, the people propose it.
- “It was good in my eyes” / “a good thing” — identical language of approval for both proposals.
- Tribal representatives — judges chosen from heads of tribes; spies are one from each tribe.
- “Bring the difficult things to me” — Moses tells judges to bring hard cases to him. The spies’ story opens with the people coming to Moses with their difficult request (“Let us send spies”).
- Big people / small people — Judges are instructed to treat the great and small equally. Spies’ story features giants (big) vs. people who feel like grasshoppers (small).
- “Do not be afraid — God is with you” — Moses reassures judges that God stands behind justice. He gives the exact same reassurance to the people about conquering the Land (“God goes before you and will fight for you”).
These are not random overlaps. Fohrman argues this is a deliberate Torah technique: two stories linked by multiple textual “waves” of connection. Each story illuminates the other. Understanding the judges’ episode helps explain the spies (and vice versa), and both together explain why Moses could not enter the Land.
He gives a model from elsewhere in the Torah (Joseph & brothers paralleled with Deuteronomy 21’s laws of the “loved” vs. “hated” wife, recognition/yakir, “found to him,” and “first of his loins”) to show how Deuteronomy sometimes functions as commentary on earlier stories.
How This Fits the Larger Series
- Mei Merivah / hitting the rock. Moses fails to model the transition from a world sustained by Miriam’s merit/faith to one of direct obedience and faith. He is barred as a leader.
- The spies (and their roots in the judges episode) introduce distance when closeness to God feels too burdensome. Moses sees himself implicated (“God was angry with me because of you”). Eichah is the lament over that distance.
Faith as intimate trust vs. the introduction of intermediaries/distance, and the consequences for entering the Land.
The Eichah Midrashim, the lament-over-distance theme, and the “wave encoding” of parallel stories are excellent for shiurim, especially around Tisha B’Av, Parshat Devarim, or themes of leadership and faith transitions.
Moshe does the only thing he knows from the old paradigm. He lifts his hand and strikes the rock with his staff — the same staff that had worked forty years earlier when Miriam was still alive. Water comes. But God says: You did not believe in Me to sanctify My name.
Rashi, quoting the Midrash, tells us what was lost. Had Moshe spoken to the rock, the people would have witnessed a living kal vachomer. If a rock — which neither speaks nor hears, which needs nothing from God and receives neither reward nor punishment — still obeys when God speaks, then how much more should we listen and obey?
That lesson was never taught. Moshe tried to restart the old miracle rather than model the new relationship the people would need in the Land. In other words, this relationship was one of direct obedience without the daily burden of carrying a tzaddik. In that moment, he was barred from leading them in.
The Devarim Perspective: “Because of You”
But Moshe himself, forty years later, does not speak about the rock. He speaks about the spies. And he says something astonishing: “For your sake, Hashem was angry with me.”
When we look carefully at Devarim 1, we see that the story of the spies is not told in isolation. It is deliberately woven together with another story — the story of the intermediate judges that Moshe accepted from his father-in-law Yitro.
Here are just some of the textual threads the Torah places between them:
- In both cases, someone proposes a “solution” to a burden that feels too heavy.
- In both cases, the response is “It was good in my eyes.”
- In both cases, tribal representatives are chosen.
- In both cases, the language appears: “Bring the difficult things to me.”
- In both cases, we hear about “big” and “small” — giants versus grasshoppers; great people versus small people who must be treated equally.
- In both cases, Moshe reassures: “Do not be afraid — God goes before you.”
The Precedent In Our Generation
These are not coincidences. They are the Torah’s way of telling us that the spies were not an isolated failure. They grew out of a precedent set years earlier. Specifically, this happened when Moshe accepted the introduction of intermediaries between himself and the people — and between the people and God.
When closeness felt too burdensome, a technical solution was introduced. The people learned that when the direct relationship with God feels overwhelming, you can ask for something in between. The spies were given the same request, now on a national scale. “Send men ahead of us”—give us a buffer, give us reconnaissance, give us something that makes the terrifying intimacy of “God will fight for you” feel more manageable.
Moshe, looking back, sees that he himself had opened that door. And so, even though every fiber of his being fought against the spies, he was included in the decree. “For your sake, Hashem was angry with me.”
The Single Root: Distance and the Lament of Eichah
Both failures — the rock and the spies — are about the same thing: the introduction of distance when intimacy felt too costly.
The Midrashim on אֵיכָה (Eichah) make this explicit. The same letters that appear when God laments Adam’s expulsion from the Garden (“Ayekah — where are you?”) appear when Moshe laments the burden of the people. They also appear when Isaiah laments Israel’s spiritual harlotry and when Jeremiah laments Jerusalem sitting in solitude. Eichah is the sound of separation — the pain of a relationship that was meant to be direct and has become mediated, distant, or broken.
Moshe’s tragedy is that at two critical moments — once by accepting the judges and once by striking instead of speaking — he participated in that distancing. Even if only by not fully resisting it, he was part of it. And because he was God’s closest servant, the standard was absolute.
What This Means for Us
My friends, this is not a story that lets us off the hook. It is a story that demands receipts.
The people wanted water without having to place themselves in God’s hands. They wanted spies instead of raw trust. They wanted judges between themselves and Moshe, and between themselves and God. And at key moments, even Moshe went along with the technical solution instead of insisting on the direct one.
The Land was never going to be entered by people who still needed to be carried. It was going to be entered by people willing to speak to the rock — to obey even when the daily miracles of the wilderness were withdrawn.
That is the lesson Moshe was meant to teach and could not fully model. That is why, in the end, he could only see the Land from afar.
But here is the hope that burns in my own heart as I teach these parshiyot in prison, in our small Beit Midrash, and to my own family:
The Torah: Return to Me, and I will return to You.
The same Torah that records Moshe’s exclusion also records his final song, his final blessing, and the promise that a prophet like him will arise. The distance he helped introduce — and the distance he suffered — is not the last word. The Tree of Life still stands. The hidden sparks are still returning. And the One who lamented “Ayekah” and “Eichah” is the same One who says, even now: “Return to Me, and I will return to you.”
May we have the courage to speak to the rock in our own lives — to choose the direct relationship, the uncomfortable intimacy, the “receipts” of real faith — so that when our own Nevo comes, we will not only see the Land, but enter it.
For your sake, Hashem was angry with me. May we learn from his pain what it truly costs to keep the relationship direct.
With love and with hope for the full redemption, Hazan Gavriel ben David Esnoga Beit HaShoavah — Amarillo
Key Takeaways
- Moshe’s exclusion from the Land stems from his actions that introduced distance between God and His people.
- The narrative contrasts two moments: striking the rock and the request for spies, both of which highlight the consequences of lacking a direct relationship with God.
- Moshe’s pain reveals a profound truth about maintaining close, direct relationships instead of relying on intermediaries.
- The Torah teaches that true entry into the Land requires a willingness to embrace direct obedience and intimacy with God.
- Hope remains as the same God who laments separation also calls for return and closeness from His people.




































