Posts Tagged ‘Vayera’

In Parshat Vayera, we read about a seminal event in Biblical history: Avraham, upon Hashem’s request, brings his son Isaac up to a designated spot to sacrifice him, only to be stopped at the last moment by a malach – a holy messenger of Hashem. We refer to this event as “Akeidat Yitzchak ben Avraham” – the binding of Isaac, son of Abraham. On a simple level, the title is perfectly appropriate, as Isaac is indeed the one being bound, and this story recounts that event. The gemara asks a question though: Why is the event not referred to as “Akeidat Avraham et Yitzchak” – Abraham’s binding of Isaac – since this event was a test that Hashem gave specifically to Abraham? The text says, “v’Hashem nisa et Avraham” – and Hashem tested Abraham (Breishit 22:1) so one would think that the title of the occurrence would reflect the story’s focus on Abraham.

To understand this we need to understand a few elements about the character of the avot in general, and of Yitzchak in particular. The NeTziV (Rabbi Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin from Veloshin) explains that each of the avot is associated with a unique aspect of divine service which they performed. While all the avot embodied all three qualities to some degree, each one had a particular quality that they represented completely and perfectly. Avraham represents Torah, Yitzchak represents Avoda (prayer, and service to Hashem in general), and Yaakov represents gemilut chassadim. Hashem gives a unique and direct response to each of these three qualities, and so responds to all of the avot in the area of all three; however, Hashem responds in a manner l’maala min hateva (on a supernatural level) to the unique quality that each individual av perfected. The NeTziV states that Hashem responded to Yitzchak’s perfection of avoda, directly and l’maala min ha teva, with parnassa – livelihood and sustenance.

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 7 September 2010 08:53

In this week’s parsha, Vayera, we read about a seminal event in Biblical history: Avraham, upon Hashem’s request, brings his son Isaac up to a designated spot to sacrifice him, only to be stopped at the last moment by a malach – a holy messenger of Hashem. We refer to this event as “Akeidat Yitzchak ben Avraham” – the binding of Isaac, son of Abraham. On a simple level, the title is perfectly appropriate, as Isaac is indeed the one being bound, and this story recounts that event. The gemara asks a question though: Why is the event not referred to as “Akeidat Avraham et Yitzchak” – Abraham’s binding of Isaac – since this event was a test that Hashem gave specifically to Abraham? The text says, “v’Hashem nisa et Avraham” – and Hashem tested Abraham (Breishit 22:1) so one would think that the title of the occurrence would reflect the story’s focus on Abraham.

To understand this we need to understand a few elements about the character of the avot in general, and of Yitzchak in particular. The NeTziV (Rabbi Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin from Veloshin) explains that each of the avot is associated with a unique aspect of divine service which they performed. While all the avot embodied all three qualities to some degree, each one had a particular quality that they represented completely and perfectly. Avraham represents Torah, Yitzchak represents Avoda (prayer, and service to Hashem in general), and Yaakov represents gemilut chassadim. Hashem gives a unique and direct response to each of these three qualities, and so responds to all of the avot in the area of all three; however, Hashem responds in a manner l’maala min hateva (on a supernatural level) to the unique quality that each individual av perfected. The NeTziV states that Hashem responded to Yitzchak’s perfection of avoda, directly and l’maala min ha teva, with parnassa – livelihood and sustenance.

The place where Hashem directs Avraham to bring Yitzchak is the future site of the Beit HaMikdash, where the Jews in Eretz Yisrael would offer up the Korban Tamid (an offering brought twice daily, every day, and a staple part of the Temple service). A korban is avoda in the truest sense of the word, and specifically, the Korban Tamid is linked to the blessing from Hashem of parnassa in Eretz Yisrael. The NeTziV explains that when Avraham brings up Yitzchak to be sacrificed, the act he performs mirrors the service and the idea of the Korban Tamid. Avraham was well aware of this parallel; the gemara says that the Avot kept all the mitzvot, and this was Avraham’s way of fulfilling the mitzva of Korban Tamid in a time when the Beit HaMikdash had not yet been built. Here, Yitzchak IS the Korban; he literally manifests the avoda itself. Moreover, from all the Avot, Yitzchak is the truest representative of Eretz Yisrael. Through his life, Yitzchak never left Israel; he is bound to the land in a way above and beyond that of the other two avot, Avraham and Yaakov.

In this way, it is clear that the akeida had to be at the future site of the Beit HaMikdash that Avraham brought Yitachak up to, as it sets a precedent for Jews in Eretz Ysrael who would later bring the Korban Tamid at that same place. And in the same way that Hashem responds to Yitchak’s perfection of avoda at the akeida with the blessing of parnassa l’maala min ha teva from that point onward, Hashem responds to the Jews performing avoda in Eretz Yisrael with shefa (an overflowing) of blessing and parnassa. (As a side note, this is why we read the story of the akeida on Rosh Hashana – a time when we pray for sustenance and livelihood for the year to come).

Through all of this, we can come to understand why the event is called “Akeidat Yitzchak” and not “Akeidat Avraham et Yitzchak.” Although the test was indeed for Avraham, the center point of the story is Yitzchak – and all that he represents.

It is so important for all Jews to take their avodat Hashem seriously especially in these difficult, global financial times. May Hashem bless all Jews worldwide with parnassa and hatzlacha, but specifically to the Jews who are embodying the qualities of Yitzchak Avinu by living in Israel. I hope that this will be an attraction to all Jews to return to Eretz Yisrael so we can speedily reach the time of geula and the rebuilding of the Beit Hamikdash, and bring korbanot in the makom of the akeida once again.

Edited by Emuna Diamond

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Last Updated on Sunday, 8 November 2009 10:51

The Akeida, the binding of Isaac is a story fundamental to our tradition. It is found in our daily liturgy, we read it on Rosh Hashana; and then again in the yearly Torah reading. It’s a story we trip over again and again, an endlessly provocative story. In fact, I am probably more upset reading it since I’ve become a father. Why would God command the sacrifice of a child? I may temporarily achieve a flash of understanding using one commentary, or another, but still I don’t ever fully grasp it. This is a story whose mystery is not to be exhausted. Nevertheless. I will try again to understand the story. Today I will use a midrash from Genesis Rabba, one that Rashi picks up on, to wrestle with its meaning yet again.

Rashi on Genesis 22:12 (on the angel of God’s words “Now I know that you are in awe of God”): Look God, I will explain to you my gripe [Abraham said], Yesterday you said to me “in Isaac you will have offspring named for you” then you came back and said, “take please my son” and now you say “do not do anything to the boy”! The Holy One Blessed Be He said: “I will not desecrate my covenant, and what emerged from my lips I will not change” (Psalms 89:35). When I said, “go take him”, “what emerged from my lips I will not change”. I didn’t say to you “go slaughter him”, rather “take him up”. Now that you’ve taken him up, put him down!!

The midrash turns the story completely around. God reassures Abraham that God has been consistent all along. It is Abraham who misunderstood God. And, moreover, the reader has misunderstood the story. For the sake, it seems, of God’s consistency, we are not to believe the plain meaning of what we just read. Are we, then, to believe that this story is all about miscommunication – this story of ultimate sacrifice whose mystery is at the heart of our tradition? There are a number of ways we might understand this midrash. Here I will entertain two possibilities. The Rabbis, post the failed Bar Kochba rebellion were frightened by the kind of religious zeal that would lead one to sacrifice one’s son. Thus, with the powerfully transformative tool of exegesis they radically tame the story. They take the edge off, and the knife out. Rather than a story about being willing to kill for God it becomes a story about being willing to serve God peacefully.

Reading the Akeida according to this midrash, I ask why would Abraham misunderstand God’s word? Why would he hear a command to slaughter in a simple command to raise up his son? Perhaps Abraham was making a mistake, a common mistake made in the course of our most important relationships. We often misunderstand the voices of those we are most intimate with, hearing echoes of a harsher voice from the past, voices that drowns out the present. Instead of hearing the gentle voice of our beloved or a trusted colleague, we hear a critical demanding voice belonging to another time and place. And we act on that misunderstanding in a way that often reinforces our mistaken belief. When we hear the command, the demand of another, divine or human, instead of a modulated measured request we might hear “Give me everything. Do the impossible. Destroy your life for my sake, I will take nothing less”. We then resist, or perhaps we withhold, pretending to give what we believe is required, but, after all, giving nothing in response. Or, maybe, in a misguided act of protest, we set out to destroy ourselves as we believe has been commanded.

If, then, the Akeida developed in a cultural context of human sacrifice, as scholars claim, perhaps what Abraham is hearing are the divine voices that guided him before the God of the Israelites revealed Himself to Abraham. He is hearing the divine voices from an earlier period in his life that drown out the strange, unfamiliar voice of Abraham’s new God. He hears then, the unspoken command to sacrifice his son echoing from an earlier stage in his life. But, as it turns out, Abraham was utterly wrong about who his new God was. He was confusing this God with the gods of the past. When God told him to take up his son, he heard “kill your son”. But that wasn’t it at all. This God is not a God who demands the lives of our children.

What this Midrash, then, comes to teach us is this: If we truly heard the gentle and loving voice of a divine or human other reminding us that giving does not have to be annihilating, we might then give more freely. Only in trusting the other not to destroy or require destruction, would the possibilities of gifts freely offered multiply. Were we to listen to this lesson the command, the demand in our own psyches, might be transformed. Instead of hearing the internal destructive voices we might hear these words instead: “take please your son, your only son, the one you love, and go, raise him up, hold him high up and show him to me, for he is beautiful. Raising him up is all the gratitude and recognition I need. And put that knife down!!”

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Last Updated on Monday, 2 November 2009 12:44

[podcast]http://atid.s467.sureserver.com/parshah/vayera5769.mp3[/podcast]
Click here to view the source sheet.

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Last Updated on Monday, 2 November 2009 11:51
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Last Updated on Sunday, 9 November 2008 03:41