Friends:
The sale of the Birthright is an important ingredient in this week’s Parsha. The narrative tells us that Esav returned home hungry from hunting. He would sell the shirt off his back in order to get to eat some of the lentil soup that Yaakov was making. It would seem that Yaakov was taking advantage of his brother’s weakened condition by securing the Birthright as compensation for food. The Birthright is defined by the ritual tradition that their father and grandfather had carried before them. The sale could be contested later on as being an illegal transaction because Yaakov was taking advantage of Esav at this time. Several commentators bring this up in their writings. It is the last sentence of the paragraph that makes us believe that it is a recognized sale. The Torah tells us in 25:34 that Esav despised the Birthright. Therefore, no matter what value Yaakov placed on it, Esav placed no value on it. Hence this was not an illegal sale. When the Torah tells us in the next narrative of Yitzchak’s sojourn into Philistine territory, Hashem tells Yitzchak not to be concerned because Hashem promised the Land of Israel to Avraham. This was because Avraham obeyed Hashem’s voice, observing His safeguards, commandments, decrees and Torahs (26:5). Rashi explains these four categories of commandments. The safeguards are rabbinic enactments that serve as barriers against transgressing Torah laws. Commandments are laws that man sees as sensible and logical. The third category, decrees, are laws that we cannot explain, hence they are like the king’s laws where his subjects do not understand the logic of it. The fourth category, the Torahs, is the Written Torah and the Oral Torah. The Oral Torah in this discussion is limited to the interpretations transmitted to Moshe at Sinai and is tantamount to having the same authority as the Written Torah. The Sages felt that Avraham had arrived at the knowledge of the entire Torah through divine inspiration, and he observed all the mitzvot voluntarily. This, according to the Ramban, is how Hashem can praise Avraham for observing even these rabbinic enactments. Shabbat Shalom שבת שלום. Rabbi David Grossman
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Friends:
“And Hashem blessed Avraham with everything, BaKol….” (24:1). What “everything” really is is a subject of Midrash and biblical commentary, but in essence the expression “everything” would indicate that he was happy with his portion in life. The Tiferet Uziel, a medieval commentator, states that recognizing the blessing that you have in life is also associated with the age that you are. When you are young, you are uncertain that your resources are sufficient for your present and future needs. In the verse it says first that Avraham was older and advanced in years. At this point in his life he sees that what he possesses is enough to carry him and his family into the future. It is a brachah to reach a certain age and realize that you are secure. Avraham sends his trusted servant Eliezer to arrange for the shidduch of Yitzchak, his son. This trust that Avraham had for his servant is immense. No other task was greater. In the eyes of Avraham, he had to make sure that the future matriarch of Israel would be suited to the character traits that Avraham and Sarah held dear in establishing their own household. Abraham had great trust and confidence in Eliezer. Eliezer is true to the task. This is evidenced by the fact that his name is never mentioned in this Parsha. He is referred to only as the “servant of Avraham.” He never lost sight of his mission. He did not do or say anything that did not support his mission; he never lost focus of the task and how important that task really was. When Rivkah returns with Eliezer and sees Yitzchak for the first time, the Torah states that Yitzchak had gone out to “converse in the field” (24:63). Rashi comments that he went out to pray. Our Rabbis mention that Yitzchak was the patriarch who established the Minchah prayer. The real question that should be asked is: Why doesn’t the Torah specifically say that Yitzchak went out to pray in the field? According to some commentators the Torah uses the expression it does in order to instruct us that when we pray, we should do so quietly in a modest fashion, without fanfare or publicity, and not declare our reverence for Hashem in a loud voice. Yitzchak was a model for this (as would Channah be when she came to the Mishkan to pray for the blessing of a baby.) Somebody walking and seeing Yitzchak out in the field would surmise that he was taking in the pleasant air, or going for a walk enjoying the evening climate and the setting of the sun. The reality of the situation, according to the Rabbis, is that Yitzchak was establishing a new prayer, the prayer of Minchah. Shabbat Shalom שבת שלום. Rabbi David Grossman Friends:
We see an example of visiting the sick in the opening lines of this week’s Parsha, Vayera. God visits, through messengers, the recuperating Abraham. The Rambam, Maimonides, writes that Bikur Cholim, visiting the sick, is a Mitzvah from the rabbis, not from Torah. He continues with the discussion of other mitzvot such as comforting the mourner, and concludes these mitzvot are from the rabbis as they are part of the mitzvah from the Torah of loving your neighbor as yourself. The Rambam seems to contradict himself. If Bikur Cholim is part of the mitzvah of loving one’s fellow man, why does he say that it is a rabbinic mitzvah? One answer is that the Rambam understands there is a general mitzvah to love one’s fellow human, but the specific ways of fulfilling it were enacted by the rabbis. We also see here the mitzvah of Hachnassat Orchim, the welcoming of guests in our home. Abraham runs to provide hospitality to the messengers! This mitzvah was also described by the Rambam as within the rubric of “V’ahavta L’rai’acha Kamocha,” to love your neighbor as yourself. We should actually look at this mitzvah as bearing a similarity to the mitzvah of welcoming Shabbat. Perhaps Shabbat is especially aligned with Hachnassat Orchim as we are involved in Kabbalat Shabbat, greeting the Shabbat. The Rambam describes how the Mitzvah of honoring Shabbat includes washing, dressing up, and “sitting seriously as one waiting to greet the King. The early Sages would gather their disciples, cloaked in Talitot, and say, ‘Let us go out to greet the Shabbat, the King.’” We relate to Shabbat as a personality not just as a particular mitzvah performed on a particular day. Shabbat is defined as hosting the honored Divine Guest visiting our home. It is in a way Hachnassat Orchim for the Almighty. Inviting guests then is the essence of Shabbat. Inviting human guests might even go a step beyond welcoming the Divine Presence. Our Sages teach us, based on Avraham’s zealous acts, that receiving guests is greater than receiving the Divine Presence. Avraham interrupted his prophetic experience to race and greet the three guests. Inviting guests – people who are God’s creations, His children – is an even greater sign of our love of Hashem than actually receiving the Divine Presence. We love Hashem so much that we are always ready to open up our homes to His children. Shabbat Shalom שבת שלום. Rabbi David Grossman Friends:
The story of Avraham begins this week as he is center stage for the birth of the Jewish people. Hashem directs Avraham to leave his homeland and, “go for your own good” (12:1). Rashi tells us that this command form with the added expression “for yourself” indicates that this will be for Avraham’s benefit and for his own good. Here Hashem is saying to Avraham that “your departure from your home and your homeland will be good for you; you will benefit from it; and you will enjoy it.” If this is true, asks the Sefat Emet (Rabbi Yehudah Leib Alter of Gerer, 1847-1905), what kind of test was this for Avraham? If Avraham fulfilled that which God commanded him to, he would benefit and enjoy it. This does not seem like much of a test to be included in the list of the ten tests to which Hashem subjected Avraham. The Sefat Emet answers that Avraham fulfilled all that God commanded him only because Hashem said so. He never did anything that God said for his own benefit. It was Avraham’s attitude and perspective that allowed him to fulfill the test and make it beneficial to him in a spiritual level. During the famine in Canaan, Avraham takes his family south into Egypt. He was fearful of the attraction that his wife Sarah would generate because, as Avraham states in 12:11 “see now I have known that you are a woman of beautiful appearance.” At this stage Sarah has to be at least 65 years old. Many commentators are perplexed by this statement. Is Avraham not aware that his wife is beautiful until now? We do realize that love masks an objective standard of assessing beauty. The Vilna Gaon explains that the Talmud tells us (Megillah 13) that Esther, of Megillah fame, was pale and had a greenish tinge of coloring in her face, but because of her tremendous character of chesed, she projected a certain beauty to people who saw her; she just appeared beautiful because of her character. So, it is possible that the husband sees his wife as beautiful, but in reality his perception is blinded by his own love for her, or perhaps by her character traits. Once Avraham reached this stage of his life and the age that they both reached, he realized that Sarah’s beauty was objective and visible, and not a product of her kind character which she possessed as well. Shabbat Shalom שבת שלום. Rabbi David Grossman Friends:
The yahrzeit for the Abravanel was this past week, so I offer some of his commentary on this week’s Parsha: Hashem directed Noach to build an Ark. The text says that it was made out of gopher wood. This wood had to have been very strong and water resistant. The Abravanel felt that it was balsa wood, which is very light and buoyant. ( as anyone who ever had a model airplane from a plastic bag could attest!) The Ark itself had to be divided into compartments. It would be separated into different levels and sections. These in turn would be divided into smaller rooms. In this manner all the animals would be able to be kept separate. A ship is usually built wide on top and narrow on the bottom. This Ark however was built just the opposite; 50 cubits wide on the bottom and just 1 cubit wide on top. The top of the Ark therefore was very much like a pitched roof so that the waters of the Flood would run off easily. Some say that Noach himself took care of the wild beasts. Shem was in charge of domestic animals; Cham over the birds; and Yephet over reptiles. All of them shared in caring for the other creatures. For twelve months they had to remain among wild beasts and snakes. One may logically ask what carnivorous beasts such as lions ate while they were in the Ark. But when no meat is available, even carnivores can be induced to eat specially prepared vegetarian foods. The Abravanel points out that there was a decree from God that even carnivores be vegetarians in order to make them less ferocious. There is a different opinion stating that carnivorous animals were sustained by a special radiation that God had prepared for this purpose. This is a Midrashic interpretation brought down in the Talmud. The story was related that Avraham’s servant Eliezer met Shem, the son of Noach, and asked him about life in the Ark. Shem had replied: “It was very, very hard. Some animals would eat only by day, while others would feed in the middle of the night, and in all twelve months that we were in the Ark we never got to close our eyes.” God made promises to Noach when he left the Ark, and these promises were for a good reason. When Noach and his children left the Ark they looked out and saw the entire world destroyed. It was desolate and empty with nothing left standing. They began to weep as they gazed on this cataclysm. They had themselves suffered during the Flood and had lost many friends and relatives. They had three major concerns. First, since only Noach and his family had survived they were very much afraid of the wild animals. They were vastly outnumbered by the animals and susceptible to the pack. Second, they were afraid that they would not have food to eat. The earth was completely desolate. Not a single plant or tree had survived the Flood. Even though Noach had taken along all kinds of seeds in the Ark to replenish the world, they would require time to grow. They were therefore in great danger of starvation. The Abravanel points out that the divine permission to eat meat was a necessity in order to avoid starvation since there was no vegetation to feed from. The third concern that Noach and his family had was about strife among the brothers. There was fear that one might kill another like Cain killed Abel, since there were no authorities to instill respect for law and order. Therefore, all the survivors decided not to have any children. God told them not to worry about these three things, that all had been taken care of. Now they would be able to have children, forget about the past, and develop the future. The first Mitzvah of the Torah was reiterated to this generation: Be fruitful and multiply! Rabbi David Grossman |
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