Although God had now cancelled His resolution to annihilate Israel, He was not yet quite
reconciled with them, and they were out of favor during the following years of their march
through the desert, as was made evident by several circumstances. During these years of
disfavor the north wind did not blow, with the result that the boys who were born in the
desert could not be circumcised, as the absence of the wind produced and excessively high
temperature, a condition that made it very dangerous for the young boys to have this
operation performed upon them. 548 As the law, however, prohibits the offering of the
paschal lamb unless the boys have been circumcised, Israel could not properly observe the
feast of Passover after the incident of the spies. 549 Moses also felt the effects of
the disfavor, for during this time he received from God none but the absolutely essential
directions, and no other revelations. This was because Moses, like all other prophets,
received this distinction only for the sake of Israel, and when Israel was in disgrace,
God did not communicate with him affectionately. 550 Indeed Moses' fate, to die in the
desert without entering the promised land, had been decreed simultaneously with the fate
of the generation led by him out of Egypt. 551
But the most terrible punishment of all fell upon the spies who, with their wicked
tongues, had brought about the whole disaster. God repaid them measure for measure. Their
tongues stretched to so great a length that they touched the navel; and worms crawled out
of their tongues, and pierced the navel; in this horrible fashion these men died. 552
Joshua and Caleb, however, who had remained true to God and had not followed the wicked
counsel of their colleagues, were not only exempted from death, but were furthermore
rewarded by God, by receiving in the Holy Land the property that had been allotted to the
other spies. 553 Caleb was forty years of age at the time when he was sent out as a spy.
He had married early, and at the age of ten had begot a son, still at the age of
eighty-five he was sturdy enough to enjoy his possession in the Holy Land. 554
God's mercy is also extended to sinners, hence He bade Moses say to the people: "The
Amalekites and the Canaanites are now dwelling in the valley, to-morrow turn you, and get
you into the wilderness by the way of the Red Sea." God did this because He had
firmly resolved, in the event of a war between Israel and the inhabitants of Palestine,
not to aid the former. Knowing that in this cast their annihilation was sure, He commanded
them to make no attempt to enter the land by force. 555 "It had been My
intention," said God, "to exalt you, but now if you were to attempt to make war
upon the inhabitants of Palestine, you would suffer humiliation." The people did not,
however, hearken to the words of God that Moses communicated to them, and all at once
formed in battle array in order to advance against the Amorites. They thought that after
they had confessed their sin of having been misled by the spies, God would stand by them
in their battles, so they said to Moses: "Surely these few drops have not filled the
bucket." Their transgression against God seemed to them only a peccadillo that had
long since been forgiven. They were, however, mistaken. Like bees the enemies swarmed down
upon them, and whereas these had in former times fallen dead of fright upon hearing the
names of the Israelites, now a blow from them sufficed to kill the Israelites. Their
attempt to wage war without the Holy Ark in their midst proved a miserable failure. Many
of them, and Zelophehad among these, met their death, and as many others returned to camp
covered with wounds. The wailing and weeping of the people was of no avail, God persisted
in His resolve, and they brought upon themselves grave punishment for this new proof of
disobedience, for God said to Moses: "If I were to deal with them now in accordance
with strict justice, they should never enter the land. After a while, however, I shall let
them 'possess the land, which I sware unto their fathers to give unto them.'" 556
In order to comfort and encourage Israel in their dejection, Moses received directions to
announce the law of sacrifices, and other precepts laid down for the life in the Holy
Land, that the people might see that God did not mean to be angry with them forever. When
Moses announced the laws to them, a dispute arose between the Israelites and the
proselytes, because the former declared that they alone and not the others were to make
offerings to God in His sanctuary. God hereupon called Moses, and said to him: "Why
do these always quarrel one with another?" Moses replied: "Thou knowest
why." God: "Have I not said to thee, 'One law and one ordinance shall be for you
and for the stranger that sojourneth with you?'" 557
Although the forty years' march through the desert was a punishment for the sin of Israel,
still it had one advantage. At the time when Israel departed from Egypt, Palestine was in
poor condition; the trees planted in the time of Noah were old and withered. Hence God
said: "What! Shall I permit Israel to enter an uninhabitable land? I shall bid them
wander in the desert for forty years, that the Canaanites may in the meantime fell the old
trees and plant new ones, so that Israel, upon entering the land, may find it abounding in
plenty." So did it come to pass, for when Israel conquered Palestine, they found the
land not only newly cultivated, 558 but also filled to overflowing with treasures. The
inhabitants of this land were such misers that they would not indulge in a drop of oil for
their gruel; if an egg broke, they did not use it, but sold it for cash. The hoardings of
these miserly Canaanites God later gave to Israel to enjoy and to use. 559
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