by Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
Torah Reading:
Gen. 12.1-17.27. Haftara Isaiah 40.27-41.16.
Further materials by Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum relating to this and the ensuing parshahs about Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, can be found in EARTH & SPIRIT
No spiritual seeker can fail to be thrilled by the challenge in G-d's words to Abraham with which this parshah begins: "Go to YOUR SELF.". G-d's challenge to Abraham is His challenge to every one of us: to go on the journey of destiny in search of the ultimate Source of the self and the soul. For G-d is the source and goal of all things.
All Abraham's
descendants, the Children of Israel, and all the proselytes who have taken
shelter under the wings of the Shechinah (Divine Presence) are justly proud of
the founder of our faith and our nation. Abraham, "father of a multitude
of nations", is revered not only in Judaism but also in Christianity and
Islam, and evidence of his imprint on the culture and collective consciousness
of mankind may be found in the religions of places as far afield as
The Torah teaches us about the attributes of G-d by telling us stories of the outstanding Tzaddikim of all time, who emulated His ways. Study of the parshiyos recounting the lives of the founding fathers and mothers helps us attach ourselves to the very roots of our souls and to inculcate in ourselves the qualities through which we can come to know G-d. The Torah dwells more on the story of Abraham than of any of the earlier Tzaddikim (such as Adam and Noah) because the qualities embodied in Abraham, and particularly his CHESSED (expansive loving kindness) are the very key to finding G-d.
An originator and
creative genius unique in human history, Abraham entered the world in the year
1948 after the creation (1812 B.C.E.), following twenty generations in which
mankind had degenerated further and further into decadence. The Children of
Adam had strayed far from the glorious role of benevolent kingship envisaged
for Adam as ruler over creation and from Noah's
The popular image of Abraham as a placid, smiling white-haired Sheik amidst his tents and camels belies much of his very essence. From earliest childhood and throughout his life, Abraham was a revolutionary and a rebel against the complex, sophisticated yet often barbaric culture of the ancient Assyrians, Babylonians, Egyptians and Canaanites among whom he traveled extensively. Priests, mathematicians, astronomers, logicians and philosophers were to be found in plenty, but none of them could satisfy Abraham's unquenchable passion to discover the mystery of G-d's unity. The Midrash states that, without a teacher, Abraham's own kidneys flowed with inspiration and understanding, bringing him to supreme heights of attachment to the ultimate powers of creation. Abraham was willing to sacrifice his very life to sanctify the Name of G-d. His methods and teachings are inscribed in his Sefer Yetzirah (Book of Creation), the earliest known text of the Kabbalah.
* * *
The rectification of slavery
Abraham was unable to
keep G-d for himself: he had to give Him to the whole world. By the time we
meet Abraham when our parshah of LECH LECHA opens, he is already 75 years old.
By the time he received G-d's prophesy to go on his journey of destiny -- which
was to bring him eventually to the spot where Adam was formed, the place of the
future House of Prayer for all the Nations -- Abraham was already well
established. He was traveling with his wife, his orphaned nephew, their
possessions, and a company of "souls they had made" during their
sojourn in
Rabbi Nachman of Breslov tells us that when Abraham would come to a town, he would stand up in the town square and start calling everyone to come and listen to him. He would ask them what was the point of squandering their lives on the pursuit of worldly vanity, telling them to think about the purpose of life in this world -- to find G-d. Abraham set the young people on fire with his revolutionary ideas, and they would come running after him.
The Midrash states that Abraham's chief slave, Eliezer, was none other than the son of Nimrod, who had cast Abraham into the fiery furnace in Ur Kasdim. When Abraham escaped, Eliezer was so overwhelmed by the miracle that he abandoned his defeated father and became Abraham's slave and chief convert. Another prominent figure who was willing to become Abraham's slave for the sake of having a connection with this charismatic man was Hagar, daughter of Pharaoh.
Both Eliezer and Hagar
were descended from Ham, the son of Noah, who aroused his father's ire when he
saw his nakedness and was cursed to be slave to his brothers. Abraham's journey
to the
The society that Abraham's descendants were to build there was to be one in which the concept of slavery was to be transmuted. The details of the Covenant of Sinai begin with the laws regulating slavery (Exodus ch. 21). In the power-crazy world of Nimrod, the slave was the lowest of the low, one held captive in the physical power of others. Historically, slaves have been subjected to every kind of abuse, physical and psychological. In contrast, the Siniatic Covenant gives the slave his dignity. Even the Canaanite slave must keep many of the commandments, including circumcision (as we find at the end of our parshah.) In due course the Canaanite slave may even be freed and become a member of the assembly of the Children of Israel.
Abraham rectified the concept of slavery by turning it into a way of understanding our relationship with G-d. Abraham was the first to call himself "Your servant" (Gen. 18:3). In his humility, Abraham knew that before G-d he was but "dust and ashes". Adam was created to be free and to rule the world, but he abused his freedom and fell slave to his lusts. Man pays the price of his sins by serving -- man has to work. Those who are slaves to other men may pay a bitter price for their sins, but those who are willing to serve G-d become free. The more they serve G-d, the more they are freed from servitude to the cycle of lust, sin and degradation. Through serving G-d, man reaches his greatest heights -- and once again he becomes His beloved son.
By the time we meet Abraham in our parshah, he was already the epitome of humility, and he was therefore capable of becoming a master. Abraham rectified the concept of slavery by having slaves like Eliezer and Hagar, who were capable of serving their master in his mission of bringing G-d to the entire world. In this way the power of Ham becomes harnessed in the service of the G-d of Shem. In order to completely rectify the concept of slavery, Abraham's own descendants, the Children of Israel, also had to descend to the level of slaves in Egypt until they were freed by G-d in order to serve Him (see in our parshah Genesis 15:13-14).
Very shortly after
Abraham entered Canaan, famine forced him to go down to
* * *
Conflict and conflict management
Abraham was childless,
and it flew in the face of nature that an old man like him could have children.
Yet his mission in
As the man of CHESSED --
kindness -- Abraham displays his love of peace in his dealings with his nephew
In geopolitical terms,
the war of the Four Kings against the Five (Genesis ch. 14) was a war for
control over the blessed strip of land on the East Coast of the Mediterranean
that is G-d's chosen, Promised Land. "Amraphel King of Shin'ar" is
Nimrod -- Ham's grandson and Abraham's implacable adversary. Ham is fighting
Shem. What spurs Abraham into action is the capture of Lot -- a mortal threat
to
* * *
Hagar and Yishmael
In many places in the story of Abraham, he is depicted as praying to G-d -- because prayer is one of the main pillars in the path of service of G-d which Abraham established. The simple, direct language of Abraham's prayers are a lesson for all, Israelites and gentiles alike, in how to approach G-d with words.
Faith in the power of
prayer is the message of the name that Hagar gave to Abraham's son, Yishmael --
"G-d will hear". Yishmael's service is the service of prayer. It is
an historical fact that Yishmael and his descendants brought knowledge of the
G-d of Abraham and the service of prayer to many parts of the world, including
many of the Children of Ham. As noted earlier, Hagar herself was a descendant
of Ham. In this way, the families of the earth are being prepared for the House
of Prayer for All Nations, when "Yapheth will dwell in the tents of Shem
and
* * *
The Covenant
".which G-d created to DO" (Genesis 2:3): Man was created incomplete in order that he should acquire merit through DOING, serving G-d by completing and perfecting himself. The form of the male ADAM is incomplete as long as the crown of the organ of creation remains covered by the impure ORLAH, the foreskin, a pleasure-center that keeps those from whom it has not been removed uncontrollably attached to the material. The genitals are vital to the whole body and whole person (cf. Deut. 25:12) and the presence of the ORLAH influences the person's mind and outlook, preventing him from becoming being perfectly attached to G-d.
It is said that Abraham agonized long when he began to understand that circumcision was to be the sign of his bond to G-d and the mark of his slave-like attachment to the Master of the Universe. Abraham feared that by cutting his flesh in this way, he would be setting himself apart from the rest of humanity, making it more difficult to bring them to the knowledge of the True G-d. In the end, however, Abraham accepted G-d's commandment, because the purity which the circumcision bestowed upon him enabled him to serve as Priest of all mankind in bringing man to G-d. The sign of G-d's Covenant with Abraham is inscribed upon the very organ with which we procreate, signifying that the foundation of the Covenant is that we submit our powers of procreation to G-d's service.
The commandment of circumcision is not one of the universal commandments of the Torah, but rather the exclusive mark and sign of the Children of Israel. The descendants of Yishmael consider themselves bound by the commandment of circumcision, but they do not perform the P'RIYAH (peeling of the membrane) as practiced by the descendants of Jacob.
Christianity presents itself as a "new stage" in the revelation that began with Abraham, in which the original covenant or "old testament" with Abraham and his biological descendants, marked by the circumcision, was "superseded" by a "new covenant" or "new testament" with all humanity which did not require circumcision. It was the abandonment of circumcision that put the seal on Christianity's break with the Torah of Moses, which states that "an uncircumcised male who will not circumcise the flesh of his foreskin, that soul will be cut off from her people, he has broken My covenant" (Genesis 17:14).
Nothing can change these words, for "G-d is not a man that He should lie or the son of man that He should change His mind. He spoke -- will He not do it? He pronounced -- will He not fulfill it?" (Numbers 23:19). "For I am G-d, I have not changed." (Malachi 3:6). "Go and let us ascend to the Mountain of G-d, to the House of the G-d of Jacob." (Isaiah 2:3).
Shabbat Shalom!
Avraham Yehoshua Greenbaum
