Ramban on the Parsha | Rabbi Shlomo Friedman (Yeshivat Kerem B'Yavneh)
── Shiur Outline ── (12:08) Ramban on Age Limits for the Census (15:47) Moshe’s Instruction and the Significance of Har HaAvarim (25:42) Why the Sacrificial Laws Appear Here (27:29) Pinchas, Midian, and the Moabite Sin (29:02) Moabite Descendants and Their Intended Legacy (30:04) Ard and Naaman: Family Relations Explained AI-Generated Summary (AI can be inaccurate. Check important information): 1. Dual merit of Pinchas — The Ramban explains that Pinchas was rewarded both for his zealotry in the realm of bein adam la-Makom and for the tzedakah of saving the nation from the plague. 2. Midyan's unique culpability — Although Moav was involved, the evil counsel to use znus as a weapon originated with Midyan and Bilaam, evidenced by the king of Midyan sending his own daughter Cozbi. 3. Preempting the Kal Vachomer — God commanded "Do not distress Moav" before the command to attack Midyan to preempt Moshe Rabbeinu from logicially concluding that Moav deserved harsher punishment. 4. Merit of Lot — Moav was spared from war because they acted out of fear, and more fundamentally, as a reward for Lot who served Avraham Avinu during their travels. 5. Portions by families — Every shevet received an equal portion of the land, and every mishpacha (family) likewise received an equal share, regardless of their individual population count within the tribe. 6. Identity of Ard and Naaman — To resolve contradictions between Bereishis and Pinchas, these were either grandsons called "sons" or later descendants named after original brothers who died childless. 7. Definition of family heads — A rosh mishpacha is typically one who descended to Egypt, but can also be a later figure of such great renown that the clan identified solely by his name. 8. Serach the stepdaughter — According to the Ramban, Serach was the stepdaughter of Asher, and she is listed in the census because she inherited a portion of land from her biological father. 9. Yocheved's delayed birth — Yocheved was the only child of a tribal leader born in Egypt; this was divinely orchestrated so Moshe Rabbeinu would be the right age to lead the Exodus. 10. The age of sixty — The census excluded Yehoshua and Kalev because they were over sixty, proving that yotzei tzava (military service) only applies to those between ages twenty and sixty. 11. Father as heir — The Torah omits the father’s role in inheritance because it is logically derived: since inheritance passes to brothers via the father, the father himself must be the primary heir. 12. Public charge to Yehoshua — Unlike Rashi, the Ramban argues that Moshe's public charge to Yehoshua was not about the people's flaws, but a dignified summary of his responsibilities as a leader and judge.
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