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Parshat
Bereshit:
A Living Creation
Sources and
questions for chavruta study 1. Study
Bereshit Ch.1 Who is the
primary "actor" in this perek? How does the
world function in response to God's command? Does the world have an
independent role vis a vis God? 2. See the
following comments by Rashi: (i) 1:11 “
etz pri “ & 1:12 “leminehem” For what was the
earth punished? What textual
detail is this comment by Rashi (or more accurately, the midrash) based
upon? - How does the
second Rashi fit (philosophically) with the first? (ii) 1:16
" Hameorot hagedolim" - Why was the
moon diminished? - How does this
explanation fit with the words of the Torah text? (maybe a clue
which links to the previous Rashi: look at the word me'orot and examine
its spelling. Now see Rashi on passuk 21 and note the spelling of the
word "gedolim" there) - Does this
midrash fit into the p'shat here? (The answer might be that it does not) (iii) 2:7 "vayipach
be'apav" - On what basis -
according to this Midrash - does God create man of earthly dust and of
his own divine breath? - see also Rashi
on 1:26 which picks up upon a similar theme. Why is it important to God
to have this "symmetry" in creation? How do the ideas
expressed in these comments by Rashi fit with your impressions of
Bereshit perek 1 on your initial reading? 3.. If you are
interested in a challenge, see Rav Kook's Orot Hateshuva Chapter 6 ,
section 7. Shiur: Bereshit Chapter
1 is characterised by a mood of strict obedience and total surrender
before the divine word, the command of the Almighty. "By the word of God the heavens were created and by the spirit
of his mouth all its hosts ... He spoke and they came into being, he
issued a command and they stood." (Tehillim 33). Reading
the chapter we witness an immediate response to each creative
statement : "And the Lord said, let there be light ... and there
was light" (Bereshit 1:3) God creates the world by the "ten
utterances" (see Avot Ch.5). through which He commands his world to
come into being, and each order is directly followed by it's execution.
An atmosphere of submission permeates the chapter. It is its hallmark
and theme. God is the all-powerful creator, commanding and demanding by
his very will. And the world responds as an obedient servant. But yet, despite
this atmosphere of God's mastery and His absolute control over the
world, the Midrash rather surprisingly raises a completely contrasting
image. In place of an inanimate world, without independent will,
responding to the command and desire of the architect of all creation,
the Midrash prefers to talk of a world which springs into life
resonating with an identity and will all of it’s own. The Midrash
portrays the creation as if it were independent of G-d or even more
extreme, that the world is rebelliously defiant of God's will! II Rashi in his
commentary brings just a few examples which give us a representative
sample of this line of thought: 1:11
“etz pri - God intended
(and commanded) that the wood of the
trees would taste like their fruit (etz pri). But it did not do
this. Instead, 'The earth brought forth trees that bore fruit (etz oseh
pri) and not trees that were fruit (etz pri). Because of this, when Adam
was cursed for his sin, the earth was punished too ... " 2:7
"God made man of a combination of the higher worlds and the
lower worlds; a body from the lower worlds and a soul from the upper
worlds. This because the first day's creation was heaven and earth
(upper and lower). On the second day: the sky - the upper world; on the
third day: the continents - the lower world; on the fourth day: the
planets (upper); on the fifth day: the fish (lower), thus on the sixth
day God was forced to create man of both the upper and lower worlds.
Were this not the case, there would be jealousy and competition within
the creation..." The earth
defiant? Jealousy within the creation? Clearly the
theological challenge presented by these comments is enormous. First, what is
the meaning of this resistance on the part of the world to God? Can the
inanimate creation resist its creator? And is God powerless to prevent
the independence of His creation? Secondly, are we
claiming that the world came into being in a way that is different to
God's plan?(1) We might
cast our minds to the Rashi at the end of the first passuk in the parsha,
that God had intended to create a world in the mode of "din"
(strict justice), but that he 'realised', that a world of this type
could not remain in existence, so he created a system that incorporated
'rachamim' (mercy) in coalition with 'din'. What is this? Does God lack
the ability to plan appropriately? Can God not bring his plan of
creation into reality? (2) Before we launch
into theology, let us at least acknowledge that Rashi's comments are
rooted in textual difficulties. When Rashi talks about "din"
transforming to "rachamim", he is bringing this explanation to
explain the textual problem of God's name being different in Chapter 1
and Chapter 2 of Bereshit. Likewise, when he talks about the trees or
the sun and the moon, each of these comments are based on a close
reading of the words. ( etz pri and not etz oseh pri; me'orot and
taninim ha-gedolim both in their "chaser" format; the meorot
hagedolim then reduced to me'or hagadol and me'or hakatan.) The image which
emerges then , from the midrash, is of a creation not responsive and
submissive, but rather, restless and rebellious. A world with a life of
it’s own .How are we to relate to this image of the world vis a vis
the Almighty? Is God not the supreme architect? Can we talk of God
dominated by his creation? And maybe, most
importantly, we must ask something about the text itself. The text of
Bereshit Chapter 1 conveys a sense of total order and obedience. The
Midrash gives an impression of disarray, rebelliousness, restlessness.
How are we to understand this dissonance between pshat
and drash? iii An idea: What
about man himself? Of all creations, Man has the greatest spiritual
awareness and intellectual perception of God! Man resides in the Garden
of Eden where God “walks
in the garden with the daily breeze" (3:8) Adam HaRishon would seem
to have the potential of dialogue with God, to have an intimate
relationship with his maker. How
could this man sin? How could Adam defy the word of God in a world where
God is all-pervading, where the divine presence is so evident? How could
he disobey the very being that breathed the breath of life into his
lungs? But
apparently this potential exists within man. We can easily forget about
God, remove him from our consciousness. Despite being fully aware of the
Almighty and His expectations, his restrictions, Adam has no problem
with shutting God out. Biblical Man has the capability to disobey and
transgress in the same way that in our lives, at certain moments, we too
somehow manage to shift God consciousness to the back room of our mind. Is
the Midrash transposing this quality of Adam and Eve, a certain drive
for independence, an insatiable curiosity, a mood of rebellion - despite
God’s intense presence - onto all the other of God’s creations?
Maybe the midrash reminds us that ALL creation is essentially the same.
All creation yearns for freedom, for independence of spirit. One
of my teachers - Rav Yehudah Shaviv - once made a fascinating remark in
this regard. When examines Chapter 1 of Bereshit closely, there are
carefully chosen phrases which describe God's actions in creation.
Certain creations are enacted with the term “Vaya'ass - and He
made". Others creations are brought into being via a statement
rather than an action, the famous asara ma'amarot. To
a certain degree, the very fact of creation via a verbal statement
assumes a speaker and a listener; a commander and a “commanded”. The
fact that the "listener" is to be addressed by a verbal
statement indicates to us that he is not controlled directly by God, but
has the power to enact that command and bring it into reality. However
this notion of response, of independent listening; the existence of a
being that might obey a command must always allow the probability of
deviance and possibly disobedience. If we call out to light to make
itself [compare putting on the light when entering a house, to
announcing “can someone turn on the light”] rather than making it
directly the assumption is that just as there is expectation of consent
and obedience there is also the option of the action happening in a way
that I did not expect. Maybe the order will be issued and the person
that responds will do it in their own style, maybe they will get it
wrong, maybe they will refuse. Verbal creation invites independence and
by the same token, the possibility of a disobedience. More about this
later. IV “LET
US MAKE MAN IN OUR IMAGE: The “image of God” finds its expression in
man’s freedom of choice: his control of himself exclusively by choice
and the free reign of the intelligence. It is not predetermined by
natural tendencies or
behaviour
patterns .... Even though we fail to grasp the inner workings of God
mind - if we did we would be He - we know this. Man’s free choice is a
product of God’s self retraction (tzitzum) whereby God makes room for
his creatures to act on the basis of their own choices. They are not
restricted by higher controls. This is the meaning of creation ‘in
God’s image’ - that man is in no way predetermined. He is free to
act for good or for evil as he desires. He can even perform acts which
go against his own nature, or which defy God’s will. The image of God
is expressed with the name “Elohim” meaning a judge or an authority. ...
thus the Torah does not state in reference to the creation of man,
“And it was very good” as it does with all other creations. Instead,
this statement is related to “all that he had made” (1:31) ... With
all other life forms we can say that “God saw them” because they
have certain laws of nature and thus they can be “seen” i.e.
perceived according to their fixed
behaviour
patterns, and they will remain that same way for all time. But man is
not open to definition through any innate characteristic or
predisposition. He defines himself through his choices....” (Meshech
Chochma 1:26 and 31) God granted man a special gift. Man is like God, he is his own authority. God is ‘Elohim’ meaning a judge - a decision maker as to what is right and wrong - and man is in His image. Man, like God can determine his actions. Man can choose the path of good and the path of evil. He decides. Animals have fixed pre-programmed behaviour patterns; for what they hunt and when, for organising their packs, for relating to their mate. Plant life is predetermined, pre-programmed. Man is different; he defines himself. By the same token, however, man is unpredictable, and thus, says the Meshech Chochma, we cannot even talk about a realistic assessment of man. About man, we cannot say “God saw it and it was good” because at some level, God cannot “see” man. With man, we must wait to observe the outcome of his choices to judge whether he is good or bad. This view would reject the Midrashic perspective entirely. Indeed, most of us with a rationalistic point of view would concur. What is the meaning of the rebellion of an inanimate world? But this view of the Meshech Chochma already demonstrates a certain thing. It tells us that God's creation - even the very "image of God" itself - once it enters the world, is not necessarily God like. Man is given a God-like power of freedom and creativity. Yet at the same time, this allows for evil. Capricious man might reflect God's image in some way, but the Man of Free Choice might decide to act in defiance of God's will. The “God idea” has been "brought down" to the world, but in its worldly form, it is unpredictable and faulty. V The mystical thinkers
applied this rule to
the world as a whole. God is
perfect, but the world is not. God's plan of the world might have been
perfect in concept, but the moment in which the concept is transformed
into a reality, it becomes limited.
The concrete world reflects the world of the ideal but the ideal
cannot be fully translated into the particular. The perfect blueprint is
perfect because it is in concept. The moment it descends from the lofty
heights of the Divine to the earthy reality of the physical, it comes
into being as flawed from the outset. Whenever
an idea is reduced from it’s abstract form to the reality of
existence, it will always differ in some way from the ideal. In Kabbala,
this is known as the principle of sh’virat
hakelim. The very transmission of a spiritual, abstract concept into
a physical, finite realm, necessitates, inevitably, a certain
curtailment of it’s grandeur, a limitation of it’s scope. It's
like the problem of how to describe a perfect God in human terms. Every
description limits God in some way. If we say God is "good",
or "mighty", or "compassionate", that is a human
description of God, but God is beyond human description, beyond time and
space, beyond human conception. Some philosophers tried to describe God
via negative attributes eg. God is "not evil", "not
weak". But this too creates problems. What
the real source of the problem comes to is that the infinite cannot be
described by the finite. God cannot be truly understood from our human
perspective. And
this simply begs the question. How did God with his divine, inscrutable,
perfect Will, create a world? Can God's ideal will, his perfect mind
become a physical, mortal, limited creation? VI In
a celebrated passage in Orot Hateshuva (6:7), R. Kook discusses the
problem of the tree and the fruit. As mentioned, God commands the tree
to produce itself as “etz pri" - a tree that tastes identical to
the fruit. The unfortunate result is “etz oseh pri”
a tree that is tree-like, but that gives forth fruit. What
is the meaning of this? Rav Kook explains that this is a metaphor for
‘the sin of the world’ or the reduction, the diminishment of
creation. He asks: If the aim of a tree is fruit production, then why is
there a need for the bland lifeless wood? Why not create a tree that is
fruit-like itself? "At
the start of the process of creation it was planned that the tree would
have the taste of its fruit. In the same way as the spiritual objectives
and goals may be perceived clearly and felt, it was intended that the
entire process of becoming; the means to every spiritual objective, even
wider spiritual goals, should have been suffused with the same intensity
of spirituality as the spiritual goal itself. But
the nature of the earth, the inertia and bustle of life ... meant that
only the fruit - the
end-goal, the prime ideal - would have the taste. But the
"tree" that carries the fruit, despite its essential role,
fossilised and materialised and lost their taste. This is the "sin
of the world" ..." In a perfect
world, the road towards a worthy goal should be an easy one.
The vision of truth should be evident to all. In an imperfect
world, we find ourselves confused by the fact that the route to the good
is frequently paved with much pain, misfortune and difficulty. According
to Rav Kook, God’s original intention was that ideals should always be
clearly in sight. The means to a particular worthy goal should have been
suffused with the same meaning as the ends. In the imagery of the
Midrash, the bark should taste the same as the fruit! The means and the
objective should be unified by a single vision. But this was not to be.
The world "sinned." The
result: that the tree remains a tree. A means to a goal but the goal is
now distinct and separate from the tree itself. How does this
happen? How is it that the plan of the all powerful God can be
frustrated and altered? The word "chet" in Hebrew usually
means "sin". But the verb itself can also have a different
meaning. Sometimes it indicates a certain
misdirection. Missing a target in Hebrew is also described with this
verb. The "sin of the world" is not so much a sin but a
distortion, or a perversion. The ideals in life should be visible at all
times, even in the nitty-gritty of life. In this way the tree (the
means) will taste like the fruit (the end product). But somehow, this
theoretical state of being is not reflected in reality. This is in some
was a rebellion. It is a shallowness within the world that obscures
truth and meaning. When we sin, when
Adam sinned, the selfsame process happens. The truth is blinded by the
momentary glimpse of something tantalising. We don't know how to see the
process of life as infused with the ultimate goal. If we could see that
even the drudgery of life were filled with meaning, then we might tend
less to the momentary diversions of defying God. In some way,
there is a parallel between man's sin and the sin of the earth. With
both of them, were the intensity of God, of perfection, to be a more
total awareness, the problem would not exist. (see Orot Hakodesh 3
pg.140) I will leave you to think about this with a similar comment by the Sefat Emet - the first Gerrer Rebbe: "In
Rashi it states that God had intended to create the world with the
attribute of "Din" (Justice). However, God saw that the world
would collapse if it was guided exclusively by strict Justice applied
the additional force of "Rachamim" (flexibility-mercy). This
is not to say that God reversed His initial intent. Rather, we might
understand that the way of "Din" is the way that things SHOULD
be "down here" in this world, for man's thoughts and will
SHOULD act to fulfill God's design perfectly to the letter! However in
our realisation that Man cannot act in all ways with total perfection,
then, he should apply the "midat haRachamim". In concept one
should strive for the level of "Din", for the concepts touch
the Source of thought and his actions the Source of action" (5637) God intended to
create an ideal - Din - world, but no sooner had he created it, there
was a necessity for a certain flexibility, a less exacting approach.
Inherent in the act of Maaseh Bereshit is a certain “fall.” The
reality could never match the concept. In this sense, Reality is defiant
to God. Shabbat Shalom footnotes (1) I wrote this
shiur some years ago in 5761. Just this year somebody brought my
attention to a shiur on this very theme by Rav Motti Elon http://www.kerenyishai.org/shiur_english/bereshit61.htm Please read his
shiur alongside mine! (2) A third point
that we might mention relates to our second comment of Rashi. Here we
enter a realm known as “yesh kin’ah bema’aseh bereshit”
- that there must be a certain balance or symmetry in the
creation. There is a competition between the 'elyonim'
- the upper (angelic?)
worlds - and the 'tachtonim' - the
lower (human) worlds. They compete with each other over the ownership of
each day of the week, and over the ownership of man. What is the meaning
of this competition? And why does God give in to their pressures? Does
He want this cosmic symmetry? |
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