Outnumbering
מִי מָנָה עֲפַר יַעֲקֹב (במדבר כג, י)
HAS ANYONE COUNTED THE DUST OF YAAKOV... (BAMIDBAR 23:10)
The mitzvot they fulfill with dust are innumerable: “You shall not plow with an ox and a donkey together” (Devarim 22:10); “You shall not sow your field with a mixture of seeds” (Vayikra 19:19)... —Rashi
Bilaam extolled the praise of the Jewish people, thereby explaining why he is unable to curse them. According to one interpretation brought by Rashi, Bilaam exclaimed “The mitzvos that they observe with dust alone are innumerable!” Rashi then cites a few examples of the many mitzvosobserved with dust.
Rashi’s choice of examples, however, was not arbitrary. Rather, the specific mitzvos cited by Rashi emphasize another nuance in Bilaam’s praise.
There are several mitzvos in the Torah which are not only obligatory upon the Jews, but on “the offspring of Noach” – all of mankind – as well. Among those commandments, the Talmud states that gentiles are forbidden to crossbreed animals and graft different species of trees together. Still, the prohibition of hybridization for gentiles is limited. “They are permitted to wear garments of mixed fabrics [of wool and linen] and sow diverse seeds together; they are forbidden only to hybridize dissimilar animals and graft trees of different kinds (Sanhedrin 56b).”
For a Jew, however, these very prohibitions are broader in scope. The non-Jew’s restriction is limited to direct mutations to nature. A Jew, however, is even prohibited to join two species to plow under one yoke, or to plant diverse seeds in which the hybridization later happens on its own!
Therefore, to explain Bilaam’s praise that the merits and mitzvos of the Jewish people are so numerous, Rashi specifically cites these twomitzvos as examples. These two examples draw attention to the fact that even in those aspects of mitzvah observance – and the ensuing merit -that are incumbent upon the rest of the world, the Jew’s obligations in those very areas outnumber them.
—Likutei Sichos vol. 38, p. 96, fn. 50













