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Shabbat Shalom: Parshat Va’etchanan
Deut. 3:23-7:11
By Shlomo Riskin
Efrat, Israel - “You are a holy nation to the Lord your G-d… a
treasured nation from amongst all the nations…. It was not because
you were more numerous than all the nations… that G-d chose you
since you are the smallest of all nations. It is rather because G-d
loves you and because of His keeping of the oath which He swore to
your ancestors… “(Deut 7:6-8)
What is the real meaning of the
“election” of Israel? It cannot be because we are better than all
other nations; to dispel that notion one need only to turn again to
the prophetic sections we’ve been reading these past three Sabbaths
from Jeremiah and Isaiah, railing and thundering against the
Israelites because of their immorality and hypocrisy.
Nor is
it because the nation of Israel was a paragon of virtue in the early
days of its formation. On the contrary, during the early chapters of
Deuteronomy Moses actually recounts the backsliding of our people
from the wanton worship of the Golden Calf just forty days after the
Revelation at Sinai, to all of the petty complaints and serious
rebellions against Moses (and G-d!) throughout the Book of Numbers.
G-d could not possibly have been under any illusions about the
superior moral quality of this family – nation that He had “chosen.”
Were we then elected because we were “the least among
nations,” the fewest in number and the weakest in power, as the
above quoted text would suggest? Is that a reason for being chosen?
What is the source of this “love” for us of which our Bible speaks?
Can it be that the Creator of the Universe fell prey to a totally
arbitrary and irrational love which is the Achilles’ heel, the
tragic undoing of so many of His mortal creatures, when love is
merely an expression of emotion to the total exclusion of logic?
Furthermore, why refer to this particular Sabbath as Shabbat
Nahamu, the Sabbath of comfort? Historically, the Israelites
continued to fast in memory of the destruction of the First Temple
throughout the period of the rebuilt Second Temple and renewed
Jewish sovereignty in Jerusalem. We know this from a variety of
sources, including Zechariah 7,8, from Josephus, 2nd Commonwealth
historian, as well as from the legalist- philosopher Maimonides
(Interpretations of the Mishnah, Rosh HaShanah 18). After all, even
our miraculous survival and subsequent rebuilding cannot begin to
remove the pain of the righteous adults and innocent children who
lost their lives in the period of destruction, or erase the force of
the agonizing question, Eicha?! Can our generation’s
remarkable return to our promised homeland provide any kind of
reasonable response to the piercing question mark which arises from
the smoke-stacks of Auschwitz and Buchenwald? So, from whence comes
our comfort?
Rabbi Eliezer Berkovits, in his masterful work
Faith after the Holocaust, cites a bold and startling passage of the
Talmud (B.T. Yoma 69b) which sheds light on this issue:
“Said
R. Yehoshua ben Levi (a survivor of the Second Temple devastation):
Why was our Judicial synod called the “Men of the Great Assembly”?
Because they restored the (Divine) crown to its pristine glory.
Moses came and countered, ‘the great, powerful and awesome G-d’
(Deut. 10) Jeremiah came and declared, ‘The Gentiles have
undermined the infrastructure of His Temple; where is His
awesomeness?’ And he (Jeremiah) deleted (the word) awesome (from G-d’s
praises in the Amidah). Daniel came and cried out, ‘The Gentiles
are subjugating His children; where is His power?’ And he
(Daniel) deleted (the word) powerful (from G-d’s praises in the
Amidah). They (the Men of the Great Assembly, who formulated our
prayers) came and restored, saying, ‘The very opposite is the truth!
Herein lies the power behind G-d’s power: that He conquers His
instinct (to set evil off at the pass before it wreaks its damage )
and has patience for the wicked (to wait for them to repent and
repair the world). And herein lies His awesomeness: were it not for
the awesomeness of the Holy One Blessed be He, how could one
(paltry) nation withstand and survive the (powerful) nations
roundabout.”
Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi’s message is
indubitably clear. G-d has created an imperfect world of freedom of
choice, a seemingly absurd and lawless world in which individuals
will do even that which the Almighty would not want them to do (the
Kabbalistic notion of tzimtzum, the willful “contraction” of the
goodness and justice of the Creator of the Universe, as it were, in
order to leave room for a world of free choice). As the prophet
Isaiah (45:7) declares, “Creator of light and Maker of darkness,
Doer of peace and Maker of evil (sic), I am the Lord, the Doer of
all these things.” G-d has confidence – and even guarantees – that
eventually the wicked will repent, that human beings will eventually
succeed in repairing and perfecting this world in the Kingship of
the Divine, that there will eventually be a messianic period of
world peace and well-being (Isaiah 2, Micah 4, Zechariah 7-9). Hence
G-d allows the world to proceed in accordance “with its customary
way,” without preventing stolen seed from taking root in the ground,
or withering the hand uplifted to smite an innocent human. Hence,
“there is not reward for commandments in this world;” only in the
other, eternal world of souls and spirituality will there be proper
rewards for deeds well done (B.T. Kidushin 39).
Israel plays
a pivotal role in this drama. We are G-d’s “holy nation and
priest-teachers” to the world (S’forno, ad loc), the descendants of
Abraham who chose G-d before G-d chose him (Maimonides, Mishneh
Torah Laws of Idolatry 1, 1-3), guaranteed by G-d of eternal progeny
who would eventually live in the Land of Israel and teach ethical
monotheism to the entire world (Genesis 12:1-3)
Those who
opposed ethical monotheism, relying on might rather than right,
brute violent power rather than love and morality, have all too
often ruled the world – from Pharaoh the totalitarian despot of
Egypt, to Nazi Hitler to radical Wahabi Islam. The very survival of
Israel, our miraculous ability to remain alive despite Egyptian
enslavement and holocaust conflagration with horrific exiles and
persecutions in between, - regardless of the fact that we are the
most paltry in number and the weakest in power of all nations of the
world (indeed, for almost 2000 years we were completely stateless
and army-less), - makes us G-d’s witnesses, adat HaShem, testifying
that G-d is indeed a G-d of love and morality, a G-d of right over
might, a G-d of morality over brute force.
This is G-d’s
power, this is G-d’s awesomeness, and this is the source of our
great comfort: G-d chose you since you are the smallest (weakest) of
all nations, because G-d loves you” – not because you are perfect
but because you are morally better than your enemies, and because
your very survival testifies to the existence and eventual triumph
of a G-d of Justice, morality and peace.
Shabbat Shalom
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