|
|
|
|
|
Parshat
Noach:
Noah and Moshe - a midrashic comparison In
memory of Yoni Jesner z"l This
week we will engage in a study of Midrash. We will try to understand an
entire set of Midrashim that compare Noach with Moshe. Whenever we
detect a “theme” in the midrash, or an ongoing comparison, we have
to ask ourselves: 1.
Why is the source of the comparison: Textual similarities? Similar
circumstances? 2.
What is the purpose of the comparison, or , what lessons does it teach? Today,
we will look at a number of midrashim on this theme and try to analyse
their content. Some
Mekorot for Chavruta study Midrash
1:
Devarim Rabba 11:3 “Noach
said to Moshe: ‘I am greater than you because I was delivered from the
generation of the Flood.’ Moshe
replied: ‘I am superior to you. You saved yourself but you had no
strength to deliver your generation; but I saved both myself and my
generation when they were condemned to destruction at the time of the
Golden Calf.’ Whence this? ‘And the Lord repented (vayinachem) of
the evil which He said He would do to His people’ (Ex 32:14)....” Midrash
2
: Bereshit Rabba 36:3 “R.
Berechia said: Moshe is more special than Noach. Noach moved from the
status of “a righteous man” (6,9) to “a man of the earth”(9,20),
whereas Moshe began as an “Egyptian man”(Ex 2:19) and progressed to
become “A man of God”(Deut 33:1)...” -
Think about these comparisons drawn between these two personalities. -
Think about the episodes which are spoken of in these midrashim -
What makes the two figures are comparable. In what way are they
different? -
What progression is noted by the Midrash within each of their lives? *
These Rashi’s will also be useful: (1.)
6:4 Vekafarta (2.) 6:9 Bedorotav *
Comparisons between Noach and Avraham: 30:10, 36:3 The
Shiur Section: “Noah
was a righteous man; he was blameless in his age” (6:9) “...you
alone have I found righteous before Me in this generation” (7:1) Our
parsha begins with a description of a world of “hamas” (6:11) -
violence, chaos, societal breakdown. Humanity has degenerated to
frightening depths: “All the thoughts of (man’s) heart are towards
evil, all the time” (6:5). God decides to destroy the human race. “I
have decided to put an end to all flesh”(6:13). It would seem that the
God’s decision to put an end to humanity is unequivocal, total. But
suddenly we read of an exception, a lone individual who might survive
the devastation. “The
Lord said, I will blot out from the earth the men who I created .... for
I regret that I made them. But Noah found favour with the Lord.”
(6:7-8) Noah
would seem to be quite something. His stature is such that he can escape
the global Armageddon. Clearly he is a lone pillar of integrity in a
degenerate world. His personality broadcasts a strident message of
goodness in dramatic contrast to his fellow citizens.
His good deeds, his independent sense of morality, his fear of
God, single him out as a Tzaddik. Indeed it is somewhat terrifying that
in an entire world, only one lone individual might be found worthy. THE
MIDRASH With
this as our background let us move on to our Midrashim that compare
Moshe with Noach. Noach is the hero of our Parsha. He is the only
righteous person of an entire generation. It is only natural to see a
desire on the part of the Midrash to compare him with another tzaddik,
Moshe, but also puzzling to see the way he is “put down” in
the comparison with Moshe. Let us begin with the first Midrash - Devarim
Rabba 11:3 (midrash 1). The
discussion here seems somewhat egotistical: “I am better than you ...
I am superior to you..” but this is just the style of the
Midrash. Let us delve into the claims of each one. “Noach
said to Moshe: ‘I am greater than you because I was delivered from the
generation of the Flood.’ Moshe
replied: ‘I am superior to you. You saved yourself but you had no
strength to deliver your generation; but I saved both myself and my
generation when they were condemned to destruction at the time of the
Golden Calf.’ Whence this? ‘And the Lord repented (vayinachem) of
the evil which He said He would do to His people’ (Ex 32:14)....” Why
is Noach better than Moshe? He says “I was delivered from the
generation of the Flood.” So what? What implication does this have for
Moshe? Did Moshe have his own “Flood”? to
my mind, this exchange hides a very hurtful jibe at Moshe. Noach
suggests that whereas he outlived his evil generation due to his
righteousness, Moses did not outlive his generation. After all, was
Moses not restricted from entering the Land of Israel? In the wilderness
generation, who was allowed in to Israel and who was restricted from
entering? The sinners of the “spies” episode were barred from the
land and the next innocent generation are allowed to enter the land. And
what about Moshe? He dies with the sinners in the desert. What
conclusion might one reach?
That Moshe too is guilty? Noach outlives his evil generation.
Moshe dies with them. Is he also somehow implicated in their sin? (See
Devarim 1: 37, 3:26) Moshe
replies to Noach’s accusation: “Yes maybe I died with my generation,
but my generation lived and died a natural death. Your generation were
killed in the Flood. You sat back and watched them die. I used all my
energy in a titanic effort to save their lives.” BEGIN
MY WORLD ANEW Here
we have the first parrallel between Moshe and Noach. They were both
offered a most weighty proposal. They were both given the opportunity to
become the beginning of a new nation/world where all the sinners around
them would perish. With
Moshe (Ex 32:14) in the wake of the Golden Calf: “Leave
me for a moment and I will destroy their memory from under the heavens
and I will make you into a stronger nation than them” With
Noach (6:17): “I
am about to bring the Flood - waters upon the earth - to destroy all
flesh under the sky in which there is a breath of life ... But I will
establish my covenant with you (Noach)...” They
are given the same offer. You live and the others will die. Moses is
outraged. Noach accepts. Moses
prays, argues, bargains with God and eventually the decree is revoked. ‘And
the Lord repented (vayinachem) of the evil which He said He would do to
His people’ (Ex 32:14)....” With
Noach, the same phrase is used for the Divine decree of destruction, but
it is precisely this sentence of death which remains in effect despite
Noach: “And
God regretted (vayinachem) that he had made man .... The Lord said ‘I
will blot them out....’” (6:7) [Do
note the connection between the word "vayinachem" and the name
Noach as the verse in Bereshit 5:26 indicates] SPIRITUAL
DARWINISM God’s
idea is somewhat sound: The people have gone rotten. They are beyond
repair. Destroy them and use a tzaddik as the progenitor of a new
civilisation. Maybe it will work! Maybe it will create a more righteous
future! What is so bad? If we weed out the evil of each generation and
breed only the good people, we will have a better future, the
spiritually “fittest” will survive, a selection process that should
reap good fruit. What is wrong with spiritual Darwinism? Apparently,
Noach accepts this situation. Does he agree with the plan ideally? At
the very least, he accepts God’s plan in practice and does not fight
this decree. Moshe , however is different. He cannot stomach the
abandonment of Am Yisrael. How can one give up hope on the entire
nation? Whatever they have done, you don’t destroy a nation in it’s
entirety! This cannot be done to Am Yisrael! Moshe says, “If you
destroy them, destroy me too.” Noach
DID save the world. But in what way? At what cost? It
is somewhat ironic that Noach's birth is accompanied by a hopeful
prayer. His name - Noach (rest) - emerges from the wish: “May
this one relieve (yenachamenu) us of our labour and the pain of our
hands in the soil that God has cursed.” (5:29) Noach
should bring relief (yenachamenu) to a troubled world. Except that
rather than working to improve the world, to relieve its suffering, by
improving the generation and saving it from within, he saves the world
by letting it die (vayinachem) and by he - Noach - the sole survivor,
creating a world anew. Now the result will be secured. The world will be
less violent, more ethical and orderly, but look at the methods, look at
the cost! The
Zohar (1:254) pictures God Himself as criticising Noach for his
laid-back attitude: “When
I told you that you were the only tzaddik in the generation, I informed
you so that you would pray for them and request mercy! When you realised
that YOU would be saved via the ark, you were no longer moved to appeal
to Me for mercy!” PARALLELS So
we have a first similarity between Noah and Moshe: The offer to start
the world anew with them as the seed , the progenitor. This , however,
is not the only similarity between Moshe and Noach. There are others. 1.
They both float on water in an ark - a “teva”. 2.
In both cases, the “teva” is waterproofed with pitch (6:14 and Rashi
there). 3.
Another textual parallel. 40 days and nights. They both spend the same
period in blessed isolation. Moses at the heights of Mt. Sinai and Noah
in the ark. 4.
In this context note that, in the same way that Noach waits 7 days
before the 40 days of the flood ensue (7:4), Moshe also waits 7 days
before his 40 day period on Mt. Sinai (Ex. 24:16). Maybe
the summation of these CONCEPTUAL and TEXTUAL similarities allows the
Midrash to draw comparisons between the two figures. (And interestingly
enough the Kedushat Levi tells us in his opening comments this week that
according to the AriZal, Moshe is a "gilgul" of Noach. Now I
am far from being a chasid of the doctrine of gilgul, but if I
understand his point, he would seem to be stating that it is as if Noach
is given a second chance to "get it right" in the personality
of Moshe!) PROGRESSION “R.
Berechia said: Moshe is more special than Noach. Noach moved from the
status of “a righteous man” (6,9) to “a man of the earth”(9,20),
whereas Moshe began as an “Egyptian man”(Ex 2:19) and progressed to
become “A man of God”(Deut 33:1)...” Bereshit Rabba 36:3 This
fascinating Midrash draws upon a contrasting parallel between these two
figures. The key word is “Ish”. Noach moves from ‘Ish tzaddik’
to ‘Ish Adama’. Moshe moves from his ‘Ish Mitzri’ status to
‘Ish Elokim’ - the auspicious God-Man, reaching the human limits of
Godliness. This
Midrash appears in the "scene" immediately following the flood
episode, in which we watch Noach begin his new world by planting a
vineyard and getting drunk. Of course, It is possible that he was not
aware of the effects of wine on his system, but still, the pristine
image of the "tzaddik" is somewhat tarnished when we reflect
upon the image of a drunk Noah rolling about naked in his tent. What has
happened to our Tzaddik,Noach? Has he fallen from his spiritual heights,
down to the physical "earth"? At
the start of the Noah story, Noah is presented as someone who can resist
his generation and their hedonistic indulgences. He would seem to be a
person capable of control, holding
himself back from being sucked in to the vices and perversities
of the Flood generation. But now, we see him out of control, rolling
naked in a drunken stupor. Questions are raised about Noach. Has he
changed? Was he really so righteous or was it only a relative thing (Rashi
see 6:9), in comparison with the people around him? - had he lived at
another time, in a different place, maybe he would not have stood out. Moshe’s
life on the other hand, is a life of constant and steady progression. He
begins as an Egyptian prince with a conscience, becomes a faithful
shepherd, is chosen for leadership by God, rises to levels higher still
when he communes with God in Mt. Sinai. Eventually, Moses reaches a
spiritual level unmatchable by another human. Moses’
direction is heavenwards. Noach has no visible signs of piety. ANTI-CHRISTIAN
POLEMIC Thus
far, we have tried to analyse the midrashim from within, from text and
context. I did however, hear a more historical angle on this Midrash, in
the name of Rabbi Dr. Irving Jacobs from Jews’ College, London. He
explained that these midrashim emerge from the era of early struggle
between Christianity and Judaism, in the formative years, when
Christianity was braking away from Judaism and trying to justify itself
vis-a-vis Judaism. The
Christians had rejected Mitzvot Ma’asiyot - Halacha. They abandoned
the performance of
circumcision and kashrut etc. To support their case, they sought
out Biblical models -tzaddikim - who were chosen by God despite their
NOT keeping Torah MiSinai. Noach was an ideal candidate. He is given the
title “Tzaddik”, but yet, we see no trace of Mitzvot. - And ideal
role model. They looked to Noach as a justification of their new
religion. How
did the Rabbis respond to this new “reading” of Noach as a person? We
all know that many midrashim have their origin in the sermons of Rabbis
of those times. These were the derashot given in the shuls of Tzippori,
Lydda, Tiberias. Why would the Rabbis "put down" Noach and
prefer Moshe? After all, the text does tell us that Noach was a tzaddik.
Rabbi Irving Jacobs suggests that it was a response to the mood of the
age. Because the Christians venerated Noach, the Rabbis responded by
demonstrating how, despite his righteousness, Noach could not compare
with Moses - the lawgiver himself - source of Torah
shebichtav and Torah shebeal
peh. This
approach is interesting in its placing our "drash" in a
definitive historical framework. However, as we have demonstrated, the
Biblical parallels and textual nuances in themselves leave a clear
opening for a more negative view of Noach independently of the ancient
Rabbinic polemic. LESSONS
FOR TODAY Let
us return to an earlier point, and to something which may give you some
food for thought. Noah
saves his generation , by giving up on the rotten element and saving the
good. Moses is unwilling to follow this path. He prefers to work with
everyone, despite their sins, despite their faults and mistaken
direction. He will not give up on Am Yisrael. This
got me thinking about today’s Jewish world. Intermarriage is running
at 50% and more. Assimilation is happening before our very eyes. Over
80% of Jews today are nonobservant. Are Am Yisrael are sinking,
drowning? What are the prospects for the future? Some
people have a Noach attitude. We will lock ourselves in the “teva”,
in our frum communities, protect our children, bolster ourselves. Better
to save a few. Let the Torah world be strong, and if we lose the others,
what can we do? But
this is not the attitude of Moshe Rabbeinu. He cares for Am Yisrael as a
nation. He holds on tenaciously, refusing to give up hope on a single
Jew. He tries to bring the entire nation, however distant, however far
removed. When I think about it, maybe Moshe’s attitude DID cost him
his entrance ticket into Eretz Yisrael. Had he accepted God’s offer,
he would have entered the promised land. By leading his malfunctioning
generation, he too lost his chance to enter Israel. But the thought of
condemning the nation of Israel is sinners, branding them as wicked, was
unthinkable to Moshe. He wished to steer the entire nation, with the
good and the bad, the observant and the non-observant, to the promised
land. So
- are you with Moses, or are you with Noah? Shabbat
shalom.
|
|||
|
|
|||||||