The Torah presents the Jewish people in a way that seems almost contradictory.
On the one hand, in Devarim 4, Moshe describes Israel as a “goy gadol - great nation” admired by other peoples for its wisdom, its closeness to God, and its laws. The nations will declare about the Jews: “Surely this great nation is a wise and discerning people!” Put in contemporary terms: “Look at how smart, successful, and accomplished the Jews are!”
This is an image of grandeur, of a people whose moral and spiritual stature commands respect on the world stage. We rock!
And yet, just a few chapters later in Devarim 7, Moshe reminds the people: “It is not because you are more numerous than all the other nations… indeed, you are the smallest of all nations.”
How can we be both a great nation and the smallest of nations? This paradox is central to the Jewish story. Our greatness has never been about numbers or physical might. It has been about meaning, about carrying a mission larger than ourselves.
Rashi notes that part of our distinction lies in humility. Like Abraham, who called himself “dust and ashes,” the Jewish people do not measure themselves by their own grandeur but by their service to God. This humility does not diminish us; it empowers us. Our role in history is not dependent on demographic advantage, but on the values we embody, the actions we perform, and impact we make.
Great nation, smallest of nations. Humility, accomplishment. These ideals do not compete. They complement and reinforce.
Rabbi Simcha Bunim of Peshischa taught that every person should have two pockets. In one pocket there should be a piece of paper saying: “I am only dust and ashes.” When one is feeling too proud, reach into this pocket and take out this paper and read it. In the other pocket there should be a piece of paper saying: "For my sake was the world created." When one is feeling disheartened and lowly, reach into this pocket and take this paper out and read it.
We can be great while we are small. Being small is no impediment to being great. History bears out the Torah’s vision.
Mark Twain famously observed that although Jews constitute a mere fraction of one percent of the world’s population, they have been heard of everywhere and have contributed far beyond their numbers—to literature, science, art, music, finance, medicine, and philosophy. In his words, “All things are mortal but the Jew; all other forces pass, but he remains.”
Anthropologist Margaret Mead expressed a similar truth that small size is no obstacle to making an impact. She noted, “A few people can’t change the world? Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.”
The Jewish people have been such a people time and time again. Whether in times of peace and prosperity or in the shadow of oppression and devastation, we have brought moral ideals into public life: the sanctity of human dignity, the rule of law, the imperative of justice, the responsibility to care for the stranger.
Jewish tradition values the power of numbers - but not for political clout, military might, or as a prerequisite to making a difference. Rabbi Avraham Danzig (Chayei Adam 68:11) teaches that any mitzvah done in a group is greater than when done alone, for “b’rov am hadrat Melech - in the strength of numbers is the grandeur of the king.” Greatness in Jewish life comes from collective purpose, from people working together for God’s service and the betterment of the world. This is why Jewish continuity has never relied on sheer population growth. It has relied on community, on Jews gathering together to learn, to pray, to celebrate, to grieve, and to build.
What sustains this tiny nation through centuries of exile, persecution, and challenge? What keeps the Jewish engine running like such a great nation?
Hope.
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks distinguished between optimism and hope. Optimism is the belief that things will get better; hope is the belief that we can make them better. Optimism is passive; it depends on circumstances. Hope is active; it depends on us. It takes courage to hope, especially in a world that has often been cruel to the Jewish people. He writes:
“To be a Jew is to be an agent of hope. Every ritual, every command, every syllable of the Jewish story is a protest against escapism, resignation, and the blind acceptance of fate… The name of the Jewish future is hope.” (Future Tense, p. 250)
Hope is not just an emotion in Judaism. It is a way of life. It is what carried our ancestors out of Egypt, sustained us in the wilderness, rebuilt us after the destruction of the Temple, and gave us the courage to return to our land in modern times. Hope is what keeps Jews going in difficult times today. We are, in Rabbi Sacks’ words, “a tiny treasured people” who defy the normal rules of history. Empires rise and fall, but the Jewish people endure.
The paradox remains: we are small, yet great; humble, yet bold; realistic about the world’s dangers yet relentlessly committed to building a better one. Our influence has never come from dominating the world’s stage, but from shaping its conscience.
The Torah’s message is that you don’t have to be large to be great. You must be connected - to God, to one another, and to a vision of the future. That vision is carried by hope, and hope is renewed every time we choose to live as Jews: by studying Torah, doing mitzvot, and working together to make the world more just and compassionate. It, therefore, makes perfect sense for Israel’s anthem to be Hatikvah – The Hope.
We are, and always have been, a tiny hope-y people - fewer in number, greater in purpose, alive with the faith that tomorrow can be better than today. That is not a contradiction. It is our calling.