Friday, November 15, 2019

Parashat Vayeira


Shabbat Shalom! This week’s Torah portion is Parashat Vayera. So much happens in this parasha! Abraham greets some strangers who approach his tent while God is visiting him as he recovers from his bris; Sarah hears she will give birth to Isaac and laughs; Abraham argues with God to try to save Sodom and Gomorrah; the visitors who had been visiting Abraham go on to Sodom and visit with Lot, whose home is then accosted by the xenophobic townspeople; Sodom and Gomorrah are destroyed and Lot's wife turns into a pillar of salt; Lot's daughters think the destruction of the cities is the destruction of the whole world and they worry they have to repopulate the earth with the one surviving man - their father; Abraham banishes Hagar and Ishmael; Abraham and Sarah meet King Avimelech and tell him Sarah is Abraham’s sister for fear that the king will kill Abraham in order to marry beautiful Sarah; King Avimelech, thinking Sarah then is unmarried tries to woo her anyway and God intercedes on Sarah’s behalf before anything too racy happens; King Avimelech is impressed by Sarah and Abraham’s closeness with God and gives them land and livestock; then the parasha ends with the binding of Isaac, which we speak about at some length every Rosh HaShanah. Whew. What a juicy Torah portion. 
Pretty early on in the portion, as the visitors are leaving Abraham’s camp to go on to Sodom and Gomorroh, we see God pondering whether to tell Abraham about the Divine plan to destroy the cities: “Now the LORD had said, ‘Shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do, since Abraham is to become a great and populous nation and all the nations of the earth are to bless themselves by him? For I know him, that he will instruct his children and his posterity to keep the way of the LORD to do what is just and right’” (Genesis 18:17-19). Sefer HaBahir, an anonymous work of Jewish mysticism probably from the 11th century but possibly from the 1st century, offers a commentary on this: “Said the divine attribute of chesed (love): ‘As long as Abraham was around, there was nothing for me to do, for he did my work in my stead’.”
Now this is certainly true for the beginning of the parasha, when Abraham is welcoming in strangers for food and washing, and when Abraham is arguing for God to spare the wicked cities if even 10 people can be found good (bargained down from originally asking God to stay the Divine Wrath if 50 good people are found there). However, as the chapters unfold, Abraham gets weirder and harsher. He kicks out his concubine and first born son to potentially die in the desert. He lies about his relationship and allows some creep to openly hit on his wife, and of course the final transgression against his family - he tries to kill his favored son as a sacrificial offering. 
There are countless midrash trying to understand Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice Isaac, and the eternal question that always seems to go unanswered is, “Why was he so willing to go to bat for the wicked strangers in a city he didn’t even live in, and was so silently complacent when it came to saving his own son from God?” One possible answer is that he felt defeated. He tried to save Sodom and Gomorrah but he failed. His nephew and great-nieces made it out alive, but their family is irrevocably broken by the death of their mother and the terrible mistake the young women make once they are safely out of Sodom. Abraham is heart-broken. He has left his home to follow this God that no one else in the world believes in, and now he has seen the havoc that this God can wreak and maybe he is having doubts about the relationship he thought he had with God. 
There’s a sense of inevitability to this sequence of events. Everything works out the way God thinks it should, despite all human efforts to the contrary, for good or bad. As many have posited, it’s possible that Abraham had faith that God would ensure he didn’t really kill Isaac if Isaac was to be the next in line to create this great nation that Abraham has promised to be. Afterall, despite Abraham’s bad decisions with Sarah and Avimelech, God didn’t allow Sarah to commit adultery. And it’s also possible that Abraham believed that even if he refused to carry out the sacrifice that Isaac would somehow be killed anyway and he would have to have yet a third child to carry on his lineage. Afterall, he was already told by God to dispose of one son, and his attempts to turn God away from killing didn’t work for Sodom and Gomorrah. 
I think many of us face moments when we take the path of least resistance because of the seeming inevitability of the situation. Even if we know we are not doing the right thing, whether through actions or inactions, we just keep our eyes down and trudge through, hoping someone else (perhaps God?) will intercede, or that if no one intercedes, it must have been the right thing all along. Yet, we know that causing undue harm is never the right thing all along. I certainly don’t believe that causing trauma to other humans is ever what God truly wants.Sometimes to ensure that undue harm and trauma aren’t happening, that means standing up against God or the status quo and saying, “Shall not the Judge of all the earth deal justly?” We may win some or lose some, but at least we will know that we did what was necessary to knock some holes into the injustice of the world, and when we are successful, we will know that we made much needed repairs to the world’s foundations of justice and righteousness. May we never see injustice as inevitable, harm as a necessary evil, and may we never silently comply with deeds we know to be immoral. Amen and Shabbat Shalom. 

Friday, November 1, 2019

Parashat Noah - Community


Shabbat Shalom! This week’s Torah portion is Parashat Noah. This week’s parasha contains many gems to glean, but one that I’m thinking about a lot lately is the importance of companionship that comes up in these sub-plots. 
Noah doesn’t just bring one of each animal onto his ark, he brings two, and in some cases fourteen, of every animal. Obviously, this serves a biological need as the rest of the earth is about to be destroyed, and the purpose of bringing the animals is to repopulate later. But it also takes pains to tell us how they entered the ark in their groupings, of their own accord, and stayed with their kind. This is most often understood midrashically as evidence of the Divine influence that the carnivores did not eat the herbivores but rather stayed with their own during the 40 days of the flood. Additionally, we may understand this as a signifier of their pack logic, and the fact that the animals relied on one another for comfort and guidance in this time of turmoil and confusion. 
After the flood, when Noah is left with no friends or community and is alone in his vineyards, he turns to drink and becomes a messy drunk. We see the effects of the recent trauma and his loneliness weighing in on him. This family has been trapped in close quarters with another for over a month, and now they have some space to escape one another some, but there is literally no one else left on earth to socialize with instead. This leads to his own misery and clearly damages his relationships with his children, especially Ham who ends up cursed largely because of Noah’s foolishness.
At the end of the parasha, we see a potentially negative aspect of community: mob-mentality and the fervor of an unchecked goal. The traditional understanding of the Tower of Babel is to read these people as wicked and deserving of being cut off from one another, but we could also simply admire their ability to communicate with one another and strive toward something greater than themselves. 
Judaism is largely about community. We pray in groups, we study in pairs. We are meant to do Jewish together, making the world better hand-in-hand and not as single efforts by ourselves. Today we blessed our furry companions. Sometimes it is easier to appreciate them because they love us so unconditionally. They never argue or talk back, they don’t stay out late without letting you know they’re safe (usually). They just want cuddles and food. 

But let us learn from our ancestors in this parasha, including their mistakes, and remember to also appreciate those of our own kind - our fellow humans, our fellow Jews, our families and friends - and let us strive toward a great goal together in the spirit of great love and compassion.