It’s All About Redemption Part IV
Parshas Vayera
Posted
on November 15, 2005 (5766) By Rabbi Aron Tendler reposting from torah.org
Original posting by Rabbi
Aron Tendler, with name changes by me in order for
people not familiar with the
Hebrew names to follow and also using the tetragrammaton of YHVH for G-d)
The
Price of Limits – The Destruction of Evil
There was but one, and only barely
so.
In all of Sodom and Gomorrah only
Lot was deemed worthy of saving. Had they listened, his other children would
have also been saved; but in the end, only Lot, his wife, and their two
daughters accepted G-d’s decree and the inevitability of destruction. They fled
from the conflagration of Sodom, but even so Lot’s wife did not escape.
Lot and his daughters understood
that salvation was the gift of a second chance at goodness and life; however,
the gift demanded that evil be left behind. It demanded that they recognize
evil for what it is and flee from it without looking back. They had to flee
without regret for the evil being destroyed.
Lot’s wife could not do so. She had
to look back. She could not leave it behind. Therefore, she too was destroyed.
The story of Sodom and Gomorrah’s
destruction is the story of human choice and the extremes of free will. It is
the story of wasted potential and the inevitability of evil’s destruction.
Where good (Teshuvah – repentance) will no longer exist there can only be
destruction. It is inevitable.
G-d will not sustain evil. G-d
gives humankind enough rope with which to hang themselves, but His universe
will not sustain evil. Evil will end as definitively as the passage of time,
the movements of the cosmos, and the ebb and flow of life. It is built into the
inviolate laws of nature.
(Bereshis 8:22) “The days of
the earth shall be forever… summer and winter, day and night shall never
cease.”
(Rav Shimshon Raphael Hirsch)
“…Moreover, these more pronounced and rapid changes in the conditions of life
resulted in a shortening of the human life span which, very soon after the
Flood, declined to the level at which it has since remained constant…
This curtailment of the human life
span was an effective means of making certain that evil will never again gain
the upper hand for an indefinite period. Not even the mightiest of despots can
wield his scepter for much longer than fifty years. The shorter human life span
has served to emphasize the verity that G-d can build His kingdom even upon the
perceptions voiced by young children. “Out of the mouths of children and
sucklings You have fashioned invincible might.” He has founded His kingdom not
upon the cleverness of the old but upon the purity and innocence with which
children enter the world…
As long as evil men were able to
live on earth for seven and eight centuries, this younger, better, generation
never had an opportunity to come into its own. But now, having curtailed the
ordinary human life span, G-d can have one generation die off quickly and allow
a new, better generation to take its place…”
This theme is clearly evidenced
elsewhere in the Torah: a) The Mabul. b) The destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah
c) Moshe killed the Egyptian overseer because he knew that no good would come
from him. d) The Ben Sorer U’Moreh (rebellious son) who is executed because of
what he will become. e) The command to destroy Amalek.
Built into the natural and moral
laws of the universe is the inevitable destruction of potential that will only
produce evil. Whether an individual overseer determined to kill his charge so
that his immorality and rebellion not be exposed, or a generation of near
immortals that squandered their unimaginable potential of living in Paradise –
the destruction was inevitable.
In contrast were Ishmael and Esau.
First Ishmael. An angel appeared to Hagar in this week’s Parsha and saved Ishmael
from death. Rashi (21:16) relates the Medresh that the angels wanted Ishmael to
die. “Why are you giving water to the one (Ishmael) whose children will kill
your children with thirst?” Better Ishmael should die now at the age of 17 and
never realize the potential for evil that will emanate from him? YHVH did not
listen to them. Why?
Soon enough we will revisit Esau’s
hatred for Jacob. Chazal (Jewish
commentators of the Bible) understood that Esau and his descendents (the
Romans) were responsible for the many centuries of church persecution and
anti-Semitism. Why didn’t YHVH nip it all in the bud? Why allow for such evil
to arise. If evil was inevitable so too should have been its destruction!
I would like to suggest that the
fact that YHVH did not destroy Ishmael and Esau from the outset is because they
did not and do not represent unrepentable evil. With Ishmael Rashi recorded YHVH’s
answer to the angels. “What is Ishmael now? Is he evil or good?” The angels
responded, “good.” YHVH said, “Therefore I judge him as he is, not as he will
do.” That also means that YHVH judged Ishmael as he was and not by who will
emanate from him.
Inevitable destruction of evil
assumes that repentance will not happen. “We (the Torah) know that this child (the
rebellious son) will eventually stand at the crossroads and kill travelers for
their money. It is better that the rebellious son die now while yet innocent
than be executed in the future as a murderer.”
Moshe witnessed the Egyptian
overseer beating a Jewish slave who knew that he (the overseer) had gone
against Pharaoh’s explicit instructions to not cohabit with the Jewish slave
women. Fearing for his own life the Egyptian decided to kill the witness, the
woman’s husband. Moshe looked into the future (Shemos 2:12, Rashi) and knew
that no good would come from him. He deserved to be destroyed.
The prediluvium world lived for
1656 years before YHVH sealed the decree of its destruction. In that time they
proved their singular determination to serve themselves at the expense of all
and everything. “And YHVH saw that the wickedness of Man was great upon the
earth… I will blot out Man whom I created from the face of the earth…” There
was no hope. Humankind had chosen evil over good and death over life. The destruction
was inevitable. Not so with Ishmael and Esau.
(17:5) “Your name shall… be Avraham
because I have made you the father of a multitude of nations.” Ishmael, Isaac /
Jacob, and Esau – the core of the monotheistic world emanates from Avraham and
Sarah. All of them (Ishmael and Esau included) will be part of, “the families
of the earth shall bless themselves by you.”
Blessing is the potential for good.
The greatest good is believing in YHVH and teaching others to do believe in
Him. It is therefore the greatest blessing.
Monotheism dominates our world
because of the three great historic religions, Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam. Granted, there are significant differences in their practices and
theologies; however, their shared fundamental monotheism has spread the world
over through the efforts of Avraham’s children. YHVH did not snuff out the
lives of Ishmael and Esau because their potential was and remains good. Only
unrepentable evil must be destroyed. Regardless of then or now, Ishmael and Esau
have the potential for great good.
The bottom line is that YHVH will
not sustain the total loss of goodness. So long as goodness is possible YHVH provides
the chance for its expression. If goodness is no longer possible (Mabul,
Mitzri, Amalek, Rebellious Son) destruction is inevitable.
At what price? What was the cost of
wiring the universe so that it will not sustain continuous and unrepentable
evil? Rav Hirsch explained that by altering the physiology of the world after
the Mabul (or during the Mabul) YHVH shortened the life span of the human and
the ability to perpetuate and perpetrate generations of evil. However, along
the way He also shortened the ability to perpetuate and perpetrate generations
of goodness. Avraham died when he was 175. Isaac died at 180. Jacob died at
147. Even Moshe died at the tender age of 120. The price of curtailing evil was
the curtailing of good. Clearly, YHVH decided that it was worth limiting the
potential for good in exchange for limiting the potential for evil.
Our overriding concern was and
remains the destruction of evil. We stand at the threshold of very great
happenings. The battle between good and evil is fought on every front. Do not
underestimate the strategies of evil. It attempts to reach inside and convince
us that good is evil and evil is good. It attempts to confuse us with human
failings, inconsistencies and mistakes. It wishes us to believe that such
humanness is evil. Granted, no one is perfect and to be human is to make
mistakes; however, do not allow the exposure of our humanness to hide our focus
on goodness and the destruction of evil. All evil like Sodom and Gomorrah must
end in its time. The Sadams and Arafats of the world deserve to die and do die.
The evil they perpetrated will also be destroyed. That part of Ishmael is like
Amalek and is unrepentable. That part must be destroyed. How and when it
happens will be determined by the will of YHVH.
As simple and simplistic as it may
sound, I have said before that I am proud that my country and President have
chosen to serve Hashem’s will. The cost is often greater than first assumed,
and as a nation we suffer those losses together. In my mind all other concerns
are secondary. YHVH and His universe will not sustain evil.
No comments:
Post a Comment