Friday, 10 July 2026

Every Journey Has a Purpose

One of the more puzzling passages in the Torah appears near the end of Sefer Bemidbar. In Parashat Masei, the Torah meticulously lists each of the forty-two places where Bnei Yisrael encamped during their forty years in the wilderness. Our member Rabbi Paul Bloom asks why this should be necessary.

At first glance, this lengthy list seems unnecessary. Why devote an entire chapter to names of places that no longer exist, many of which are never mentioned again anywhere in Tanach? These were not cities with permanent populations or historical landmarks. They were temporary encampments in a barren desert. Why preserve their names for eternity?

Rashi himself raises this question at the opening of the parashah. If we already know that the Jewish people wandered in the wilderness for forty years, what is gained by recording every stop along the way?

Our commentators offer several remarkable answers, each revealing a different dimension of the Jewish journey.

Remembering Hashem's Kindness

Rashi explains that the list is intended to highlight Hashem's compassion. One might imagine that the Jewish people wandered endlessly through the desert like nomads, constantly uprooting themselves. In reality, that was not the case. Of the forty-two encampments, fourteen occurred during the first year after leaving Egypt and eight during the final year before entering Eretz Yisrael. During the intervening thirty-eight years there were only twenty journeys. The nation often remained in one location for extended periods, allowing families to establish stability while learning Torah from Moshe Rabbeinu. Rather than emphasizing hardship, the Torah reminds us how Hashem cared for His people throughout the wilderness.

Celebrating the Faith of Klal Yisrael

The Netziv offers another perspective. The list of encampments demonstrates the extraordinary faith of the Jewish people. They willingly followed Hashem through an unknown wilderness with no maps, no permanent settlements, and no visible destination. Every time the Cloud lifted, they packed their belongings and journeyed onward. Their greatness was not merely that they reached the Land of Israel, but that they trusted Hashem every step of the way. The relationship between Hashem and Klal Yisrael has always been built upon this mutual bond of love and trust. The wilderness became the classroom in which that relationship matured.

A Testimony to Miracles

The Ramban cites the Rambam, who explains that recording the locations also serves as historical testimony . Future generations might question whether an entire nation could truly survive for forty years in one of the harshest environments on earth. By carefully documenting every encampment, the Torah anchors the miracle in real geography and history.

Yet the Ramban concludes that there remains a deeper mystery. Ultimately, the precise reason these names appear in the Torah belongs to the hidden wisdom of Hashem. Not every aspect of Torah can be fully explained through human logic alone.

Leaving Egypt Behind

The Malbim notices an important phrase in the opening verse:

"These are the journeys of Bnei Yisrael who left Egypt..."

Why does the Torah emphasize where they came from rather than where they were going? His answer is profound.  The forty-two journeys were not simply about traveling to Eretz Yisrael. They were about removing Egypt from within the Jewish people. Physical redemption occurred in a single night., but spiritual redemption required forty years. A generation raised in slavery had to become a generation capable of living by Torah in the Land of Israel. Each stop represented another stage of purification—shedding the mentality of bondage and replacing it with faith, responsibility, and national purpose. The destination mattered, but so did the transformation.

The Story of Jewish History

The Abarbanel broadens the discussion even further. Having personally experienced the Expulsion from Spain in 1492, he saw the forty-two journeys as a model for all of Jewish history. Generation after generation, Jews have been forced to move—from Spain to Portugal, from England to France, from Eastern Europe to America, from Iraq, Morocco, Algeria, and countless other lands. Every exile became another station on the national journey toward redemption.

The prophet Yechezkel describes this process in powerful language. In Chapter 20, Hashem speaks of leading the Jewish people through "the wilderness of the nations," where they would be refined before returning home. The wilderness did not end with Moshe Rabbeinu. In many ways, Jewish history itself became an extended wilderness journey. Every exile prepared us for the next stage of redemption. Today, as millions of Jews have returned to Eretz Yisrael after nearly two thousand years, we are witnessing another major encampment on that long journey—a stage that our ancestors could scarcely have imagined.

Our Personal Forty-Two Journeys

The Baal Shem Tov brings this idea into every individual's life. He teaches that every Jew experiences his or her own "forty-two journeys." Life is filled with stages. Some are joyful; others are painful. Some feel like Marah, where everything seems bitter. Others resemble Eilim, where twelve springs of fresh water suddenly appear and hope returns. Every experience teaches us something new. Every challenge develops another spiritual strength. Even the difficult stations become necessary parts of our growth.None of the journeys are wasted.

Every Stop Brings Us Closer Home

Parashat Masei reminds us that Hashem never wastes a journey. Every encampment had a purpose. Every move prepared the Jewish people for the next stage. The same is true for Jewish history. The same is true for each of our lives. And perhaps it is also true for our generation. After centuries of wandering through the wilderness of exile, the Jewish people have once again returned to Eretz Yisrael. The journey is not yet complete, but every step brings us closer to the fulfillment of Hashem's promises.

The forty-two journeys were never merely about traveling through the desert. They were about becoming the people destined to come home.

Every Journey Has a Purpose

One of the more puzzling passages in the Torah appears near the end of Sefer Bemidbar. In Parashat Masei, the Torah meticulously lists each ...