Torah Readings for Monday, June 15, 2026
Rosh Chodesh Tammuz (First
Day)
28:1-15 Bamidbar (Numbers)
This is the standard reading for each Rosh Chodesh. Rosh Chodesh is the name of the minor holiday that marks the start of each month. The term Rosh Chodesh is translated as New Moon. The first day of the month is referred to as Rosh Chodesh because the months are lunar and the first day of each month comes with the start of the new moon. In the days of the Temple special sacrifices were brought in honor of the new moon. With the destruction of the Temple, the sacrificial system ended. In place of the sacrifices, Jews read a description of the sacrificial offerings, which is described in the first fifteen verses of chapter 28 in the book of Numbers. The Torah reading takes place during the daily morning service. There are many Jews who have no desire to return to the sacrificial system. They use these readings as a way of providing a connection with the past which is one of the keys to our future preservation. Because of its connection with the moon, Rosh Chodesh is thought to have special meaning for women. There are some sages who suggest that wives and mothers should be presented with gifts on this, their holiday. In lieu of gifts, others suggest giving Tzdekah in their honor.
Torah Readings for Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Rosh Chodesh Tammuz (Second
Day)
28:1-15 Bamidbar (Numbers)
Same reading as First Day Rosh Chodesh
Tammuz is the fourth month on the lunar cycle and the tenth month counting from Rosh Hashanah. It is considered the hottest month of the year. This belief gave rise a Talmudic quote, “that asses feel cold even in the month of Tammuz.” This means that fools are never satisfied. Tammuz contains “Three Weeks of Mourning” starting with the seventeenth day of the month. According to tradition, the walls of Jerusalem were breached on that day. Three weeks later on Tisha B’Av, the Temples were destroyed. According to another tradition, Moshe broke the first set of tablets on the 17th of Tammuz. If that were not enough, Tammuz is the month when several famous sages and leaders passed away including Rashi and the seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson who is simply known as “The Rebbe.” According to the traditionalists when the Moshiach comes, this day of fasting will become a day of joy. There are those who suggest that Tammuz should be declared Jewish History Month - a month dedicated to studying the events that led up to the destruction of the “Second Commonwealth” and the Second Temple. Possibly by studying the history of that period, modern Jews might learn the pitfalls of enmity between Jews, the problems of a Jewish society that permitted the growth of gaps between the “haves” and the “have-nots” and the dangers of playing power politics.
Torah
Readings for Saturday, June 20, 2016
Korach
16:1-18:32 Bamidbar (Numbers)
Korach is the fifth sedrah in the Book of Bamidbar or Numbers. The sedrah takes its name from the second word in the first sentence of the portion, “Korach”. Since Korach is actually a person’s name, the Hebrew name for the sedrah and the English translation are the same. Korach is dominated by two of the recurring themes found in Bamidbar - Rebellion and The Super-Natural. The Sedrah may be divided into three parts: Korach’s Rebellion, The Israelites’ Rebellion, and Duties and Gifts for the Kohanim and the Levites.
Korach’s
Rebellion (16:1-35)
The rebellions continue and they continue to escalate in their severity. Korach, a Levite, joins with Dathan and Abiram from the tribe of Rueben to challenge the authority of Moshe and Aaron. Since all of the people are holy, says Korach, why should Aaron and his family hold such an exalted position. Korach includes Moshe in his complaint because Moshe is the one who anointed Aaron. According to the commentators, Korach uses the cunning common to demagogues seeking power. First, he attacks those in power claiming all of the people should share equally in the power. But in the end he really sees himself as actually replacing those whom he is challenging. As a Levite, Korach has been assigned a special role in caring for the Tabernacle. But he does not think it is important enough for him and that may be the source of his discontent. Dathan and Abiram join in the rebellion supposedly because they are angry over the displacement of their tribe, Rueben, by Levi and Judah. There are those who contend that there were actually two different rebellions - one by Korach and one by Dathan and Abiram - and that later editors combined the two episodes. Some see Dathan and Abiram’s Rebellion as merely a challenge to Moshe’s political power. They see Korach’s Rebellion as being far more serious since he is seeking to overthrow the House of Aaron and, by inference, the entire religious system laid out in Shemot, Vayikra and Bamidbar. Regardless of your view of the origin of the rebellions, the text states that these three along with a man named On and two hundred fifty followers confront the two brothers. Why now? Possibly because Korach thinks the Israelites are ripe for a rebellion since they have just been sentenced to die in the Wilderness.
For once Moshe does not lose his temper. Instead he summons Dathan and Abiram and seeks to reason with them. Moshe’s restraint in dealing with these two may be a sign that he views this as the less serious of the two-pronged challenge. When the two rebels refuse to meet with Moshe and begin to defame him, Moshe cries out to Heaven protesting his innocence. The response to Korach’s challenge is interesting. There will be no contest between Moshe and Korach. There will be no debate, no public disputation with a decision rendered on the merits of the case. Rather, Moshe calls out for God to settle the matter directly; by divine intervention in a cosmic manner that will leave no doubt that the judgment is God’s and not Moshe’s. So the earth opens its mouth and swallows the rebels. Of course, there is some question as to who got swallowed. We know that the three ringleaders and the two hundred and fifty who followed them perish. But all of Korach’s family could not been consumed as the text would seem to indicate, since the “sons of Korach” are mentioned in Bamidbar 26:11, in several of the Psalms including the one said every Monday morning and in the First Book of Chronicles. (See Themes for more on this.)
The
Israelites’ Rebellion (17:1-28)
After the episode with the spies and the punishment of Korach, you would think our ancestors would have learned to avoid rebellions. Wrong! The very next day, “the assembly gathered against Moshe and Aaron” (17:7) and chastised them for the deaths of the rebels whom they describe as "people of the Lord” (17:7). God tells the brothers to step aside so that He can destroy the rebellious Israelites. A plague breaks out, but Aaron rises to the challenge. Without regard to his personal safety, he uses the rituals of the Kohein Gadol (fire from the altar and incense) and moves among the people checking the plague that wiped out fourteen thousand, seven hundred of the Israelites. In an attempt to cement Aaron’s position among the Israelites and put an end to these rebellions, we see a further act of the super-natural or, at least unusual, direct divine intervention. The staffs of each tribal leader and the staff of Aaron are placed overnight in the Tent of the Meeting. In the morning, Aaron’s staff has sprouted almond blossoms. For some reason, this last, peaceful manifestation of God’s power strikes a responsive chord with the Israelites. They are chastened. In fact they go to the other extreme. A moment ago, they were ready to overthrow Aaron. Now they tell Moshe that they are afraid to even go near the Tabernacle lest they perish. It is this latest expression of fear that sets the stage for the last third of the sedrah.
Duties
and Gifts for the Kohanim and the Levites (18:1-32)
God now reassures the newly chastened Israelites. The Tabernacle will not be a source of death if the Kohanim and the Levites perform their functions correctly. This time God does not use Moshe as an intermediary in communicating with Aaron. Nor does He speak to the brothers together. Instead, He speaks directly to Aaron, “The Lord said to Aaron…”(18:1). This may have been a further attempt to cement Aaron’s position as Kohein Gadol. It may also have been a way of impressing upon Aaron, who had shown signs of weakness at the Golden Calf and the Rebellion with Miriam that he was responsible for seeing to it that the duties of the Kohanim and Levites enumerated in this chapter were carried out to their fullest extent. The Kohanim had duties, but they were entitled to their “gifts” which are also enumerated in this chapter. The landless Levites were to receive their Tithe from the Israelites. But in turn, the Levites were to give a tenth of their Tithe to the Kohanim. The sedrah, which has been filled with so much tumult, ends in a quiet, benign mode. It is almost as if the text is saying that peace will reign in the community when everybody accepts their own unique role and acknowledges the roles of others.
Themes
Commandments
388.
The Levites’ obligation to guard the
sanctuary (18:4).
389.
The prohibitions against the priests
and Levites doing each other’s work (18:4).
390.
The prohibition against an outsider
serving at the sanctuary (18:4).
391.
The commandment that the guarding of
the sanctuary should be continuous (18:5).
392.
The obligation of a father to redeem
his firstborn son (
393.
The prohibition against redeeming the
firstborn of a kosher animal (
394.
The Levites’ exclusive obligation to
perform the sanctuary service (
395.
The commandments to set aside a tithe
for the Levites (
396.
The Levites’ obligation to donate a
tithe from their tithe to the priests (
Biblical Literacy by Rabbi Joseph Telushkin
In What Sense Did Korach Survive?
This is not a rhetorical question. Normally, we blot out the names of evildoers. Yet with Korach, we do him the honor of naming a sedrah after him. As Rabbi Telushkin points out, this would be like having an annual Benedict Arnold Day. The Sons of Korach do live on. According to some they made a supernatural act of Teshuvah (Repentance) at the moment they were swallowed up and were returned to life. Others say that the sons did not stand with their father and never died either literally or figuratively. When we read psalm 48 every Monday morning, it begins “A psalm, a song by the sons of Korach” we should remember that we can also overcome the environment in which we live. Just as the sons of Korach could overcome the evil nature of their father, so we can all find hope that we can overcome the Inclination to do Evil.
Incense
This ancient
vestige of the
Pidyon ha-Ben
Previous Torah
Portions have described the historic reasons for the ceremony for the
Redemption of the First Born. The
command to actually perform the ceremony is found in
Tithe
The custom of giving a tenth of one’s earnings to charity finds its origin in the commandment to give a tenth to the Levites (18:24). The Levites must give a tenth of the Tithe they receive from the people to the Kohanim. In other words, nobody is exempt from giving. Everybody, no matter how poor, is supposed to practice the mitzvah of Tzedakah.
Korach and Pirke Avot
In the Chapter
Four of Pirke Avot, Rabbi Elazar HaKappar says: “Envy, desire and ambition drive a man out of
the world.” (
Concepts of Holiness
In “Korach
Among Us,” Yeshayaahu Leibowitz compares two concepts of holiness. The first is found at the end of last week’s
Torah portion which finishes with the commandments about the Tzizth. The fringes are here so “you may remember and
do all my mitzvoth and be holy to your God: I am your God.” The second concept is found in the opening
verses of this sedrah when Korach declares, “All the community [of
Twenty-first Century Korach
Biblical characters and tales from the Bible have provided authors through the ages with themes and characters for their own works. In 2010, we saw the debut of “Korach” a play written by Judith Malina. Malina, the daughter of a Conservative Rabbi, is no stranger to Jewish sources. While the Korach of the commentators may be a villain for challenging Moses, Malina sees him as “history’s first anarchist.” Moses is the authority figure building the new nation who will not tolerate any challenge to his authority. Korach must be silenced because if his voice is heard - “We are all holy!” – then other challenges will surely follow and that will be the end of central authority. Regardless of what you think of Malina’s interpretation, it is important to note that characters of the Bible are often rich, multi-textured beings that provide us with food for thought on questions both great and small.
Korach and Tammuz
It is fitting that we read Korach on the first Shabbat of Tammuz, when the death throes of the Temple begin that will result in destruction and exile. Korach reminds us of the critical role that the Priests and Levites played as interface between God and the Israelites; of the need to provide for them so that they could be totally focused on their holy mission. But the tragic events of Tammuz remind us of how far from that lofty goal the religious officialdom of the Second Temple had fallen. In the last centuries before the destruction of Temple, the position had become a political football and worse. Men stole from the Temple treasury to finance their quest for the position. Men killed other men to gain control of the position. Rulers sought out the help of the Romans to secure the position. Politics became intertwined with religion as those wearing the vestments of house of Aaron and the tribe of Levi joined jockeyed for temporal power. Had the Temple as a force for morality been destroyed long before the building itself thus rendering it useless? As we read Korach during Tammuz, should we be leery of those religious figures who would use their role as rabbis and spiritual leaders to control the reins of temporal power?
Haftarah
11:14-12:22 I Samuel
The Man and the Book: First and Second Samuel were
originally just the Book of Samuel. At
the start of the 16th century, the Venetian printer, Daniel Bomberg
introduced the division into the TaNaCh.
Bomberg took the division from Christian text that had made the split so
that writings could conform to the size of the scrolls used by the Greeks. The Book of Samuel covers a major period in
Jewish History including the last of the Judges (Samuel) and the establishment
of the Monarchy under Saul and David.
Events in the life of Samuel are covered in the first twenty-five
chapters of First Samuel. The rest of
First Samuel concerns itself with the fall of the house of Saul and the rise of
the house of David. Second Samuel is a
continuation of the events in the life of King David. The two volumes cover about 120 years, from
around 1085 B.C.E. to 965 B.C.E. So why
do these two volumes bear Samuel’s name if he was only alive for about the
first seventy-five years covered by the narrative? Samuel was a major figure in our tradition. One of the psalms (99:6) elevates him to the
level of Moshe and Aaron. From an
historic perspective he was the last and greatest of the Judges. He was the one who began the work of
re-uniting the tribes and drawing them out of the spiritual and ethical sloth
that had become common place following the death of Joshua. Also, he was the one whom God chose to anoint
and guide the first two royal households of the Jewish people. In other words, Saul and David could not have
existed had it not been for Samuel. Based on information in Chronicles as well
as the Book that bears his name, we know that Samuel was a Levite. We know that he was a Nazir. We know he had two sons. And we know that he was not a “happy person”
by the time of his death. Furthermore,
in dealing with the issue of the monarchy, Samuel shows himself to be a
complex, conflicted person. When the
Israelites come to Samuel and ask him to get them a king, he denounces their
attentions. Yet Devarim describes the
proper behavior for a king, so God could not have been opposed to a king. In fact it takes divine intervention to get
Samuel to comply with the peoples wishes.
The measure of his greatness might be found in the lines that describe
his death. “And Samuel died; and all
The Message: The haftarah begins with the third naming of Saul as King of Israel. He has been chosen twice before in episodes described in chapters 9 and 10. This ceremony is public and marks the final transformation from the leadership of the Judges to the leadership of the Monarchy. The haftarah continues with Samuel’s valedictory. First he proclaims his own honesty as a public official. The he recounts the wonders that God has performed for the Israelites and takes them to task for wanting a temporal monarch when God was the only king they needed. The people admit the error of their ways. Samuel reassures them that all will still go well if they follow the laws of the Lord.
Theme-Link: There are numerous connections between the
sedrah and the haftarah. According to
tradition, Samuel is a descendant of Korach.
Both the sedrah and the haftarah contain stories of changes in
leadership. In the sedrah, God crushes
the rebels and the leadership stays the same.
In the haftarah, God has sanctioned the change in leadership and Saul
becomes king. Both the sedrah and the
haftarah contain descriptions of miraculous events that are a sign of divine
power. Interestingly enough, the two
great leaders, Moshe and Samuel, proclaim their own honesty. Both men proudly proclaim that they have done
nothing to enrich themselves while in power.
Could any of those who seek public office in our own time make the same
claim? And are we not the poorer for the
fact modern leaders cannot meet the measure of either Moshe or Samuel?
Copyright; June 2026;
Mitchell A. Levin
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