בֹּקֶר וְיֹדַע ה’ אֶת אֲשֶׁר לוֹ (במדבר טז, ה)
In the morning, G-d will make known who is His. (Bamidbar 16:5)
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His intention was to delay, with the hope that they might retract. -Rashi
The atonement achieved through teshuva,
repentance, takes “but one ‘turn’ and in one moment”, in the words of
the Zohar (vol. 1, p.
129a). Why then did Moshe feel that they needed an entire night to
repent? And if it was a matter of time until they’d reach that decisive
moment, what determined that one night was a sufficient waiting period?
The answer is that Moshe wasn’t merely stalling for time. With the words “in the morning”, he was alluding to the type of teshuva
he was hoping for; a transformative teshuva that shines bright
like the morning. Yes, one’s past sins can be atoned through one moment
of sincere regret, even if that remorse was triggered simply by the fear
of future retribution. Yet such repentance does not change the
individual. His fear of retribution is merely another manifestation of
his egocentric fixation on personal survival and preservation.
Teshuva
brought about through internally developed love and devotion to G-d, on
the other hand, is transformative. Not only does the penitent
become a changed man, but he even brings light and G-dly life into his
past negative behaviors, which ironically served as the catalyst for his
rebounding dedication to G-d’s will. Likewise, the Baal Hatanya
explains the phrase “good deeds” used by Chazal in their common
expression “teshuva and good deeds” not as a virtue of its own, but as descriptive of the teshuva; a repentance which causes one’s deeds to be beautiful and radiant.
Moshe
therefore emphasized that he was waiting for the morning light.
Thereby, he expressed his hope that the retraction and repentance of
Korach and his company would not be one stemming from their darkest
fears, but a luminous and inspiring teshuva that would illuminate their lives and the lives of those around them.
The transformative Teshuvah you speak of also transforms past sins into world-changing merits, because the "new person" no longer functions in that character.
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