Parashat Masei begins with what appears to be a list of places.
Rameses.
Sukot.
Eitam.
Pi HaChirot.
Marah.
Eilim.
At first glance, it reads like an itinerary. A record of where Israel stopped, where they rested, and where they gathered themselves enough to move again.
But Torah is practicing the sacred art of noticing.
It notices the departure as carefully as the arrival. It remembers where freedom began, where fear returned, where the waters opened, where the waters became bitter, and where shade and abundance finally appeared.
Nothing is removed from the sacred map.
Not the triumph.
Not the trembling.
Not the thirst.
Not even the place where they nearly forgot who they were.
Western thinking is usually more concerned with destination than formation. We ask where a person arrived, what they accomplished, how long they worked, what they built, and whether the world called them successful. We speak easily about what comes next, but often lack the courage to account for the road that brought us there.
Torah does not permit that kind of forgetfulness.
When retirement comes, it is not simply the end of work. It is the naming of a road traveled, burdens carried, sacrifices made, and years given that cannot be gathered back into the hand.
When a child celebrates another birthday, we are not merely counting years. We are standing before the mystery of a life still unfolding. We look at the child we once carried and the person now emerging, and we realize that time has been moving even when we were too busy to notice.
A birthday is a station.
Retirement is a station.
A decision that changes the direction of a life is a station.
Some choices announce themselves with thunder. Others arrive quietly, sit beside us, and alter the road forever.
A life-changing decision is rarely born in one moment. It is usually the gathering of many places: the room where we first became restless, the season when something no longer fit, the bitter place we survived, the voice we could no longer ignore, and the moment we became honest enough to move.
Moses is commanded to record Israel’s departures and journeys. Liberation is recorded. Fear is recorded. The sea is recorded. Bitter water is recorded. Shade and abundance are recorded.
The splendor is not merely in reaching Canaan. It is in noticing that God was present at every station.
God was not only waiting in Canaan.
God was in the leaving.
God was in the uncertainty.
God was at the sea.
God was at Marah.
God was beneath the palms of Eilim.
Perhaps one of the great tragedies of life is not that God was absent, but that we moved too quickly to notice where God had been standing.
Luke begins with similar language:
“He entered Jericho and was passing through it.”
Jericho appears to be another place along the road. Messiah is traveling toward Jerusalem, and the crowd expects him to keep moving.
But there is a man in a tree.
A man whose name is known, but whose humanity has been buried beneath his occupation, his wealth, his reputation, and his wrongdoing.
The crowd has reduced him to the worst thing it knows about him.
That is one of the cruelest habits of human beings. We demand the freedom to become more than our failures while denying that same freedom to somebody else.
Everyone sees Zacchaeus.
Few truly notice him.
They see a tax collector.
They see a collaborator.
They see a sinner.
Messiah sees a son of Abraham.
Everyone else sees a man to pass by.
Messiah stops.
He is passing through Jericho, but when he reaches Zacchaeus, the journey changes direction.
“I must stay at your house today.”
The house of a tax collector becomes a sacred station.
The crowd calls it scandal.
Heaven calls it salvation.
Masei teaches that every station matters.
Luke reveals that sometimes a person is the station.
Wisdom begins when we slow down long enough to notice who has been standing beside the road, waiting for someone to call them by name.