Parasha No. 2: Noah
“ Noa'h…”
Bereshit (Genesis) 7,
1 - 11, 32
Commentary
by Pr. Rav Yehoshua Rahamim Dipur
based on the books of our Sages
http://www.modia.org
dufour@modia.org
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Be holy and multiply
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1st Level, for everyone
2nd Level, advanced students only
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1st Level, for everyone
Ellé tolédote Noa'h
Noa'h iche tsaddiq tamim haya bédorotav
éte haEloqim hithallékh Noa'h
véyyoléd Noa'h chélocha vanim
éte Chém éte 'Ham vééte Yaféte
Plan
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Principle message
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Themes in the parasha
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Commentary of Rabbenu Bahya
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The concept: mithalekh betumo
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- 1st level: hithalkhut
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- 2nd level: begin to be a tzaddik
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- 3rd level: temimut
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The role of the tzaddik in his generation
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The tzaddik and the Jew
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Reading material
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Personal development
Principle message
We have seen how parasha Bereshit reveals to us the aim of creation,
the raison d’etre of the universe and of humanity, and the
role of man in this creation.
This means that a divine plan is revealed through the Hebrew Torah:
- to make man a partner in creation as the place of G-d’s presence;
- to communicate to him the knowledge of G-d ‘s inner life, within
a partnership; this level is expressed most in man’s make up
which is made up of male and female, and is therefore in the image
of Hakadosh Barukh Hu and the Shekhina;
- and, moreover, the Creator reversed the roles (ki veyhakhol,
if one can say that), and remitted to man the control of Creation.
How?
Given the distance between the two partners, this transition from Creator
to man leads to a diminishing of the divine presence, which is the
shekhina, on earth.
But G-d, through the Torah, gave man the power to correct this diminishment.
This is what we mean by tikkun, or reparation.
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Ribbi Yaakov Abuhatzera brings together all these concepts:
“
Bereshit gematria ke shehinat uzenu
the word Bereshit has the same gematria (numerical value)
as shekhinat
uzenu (the Shekhina [presence of God] is our strength).
lirmoz de ikar ha Torah ve haavoda ve hamitzvot
to indicate that the essence of the Torah, prayer and the mitzvot
hakol hu let tikkun ha Shekhina
everything is for the tikkun of the shekhina,
lefi she be khol yom va yom
so that every day and all days
trikha binian mehadash
the Shekhina must be built anew
ve ze hadavar talul bivene Yisrael
and this is the role of bene Yisrael.
We shall see how this in the life of Noah.
Themes in the parasha
This parasha recounts the entry into Noah’s ark, the flood, the
exit from the ark, the commandment to fructify on earth, the warning
against murder, the covenant and its symbol the rainbow, Noah’s
drunkenness, his three sons and their descendants, the tower of Babel,
the generations till Abraham in Haran.
From the time of the exit from the state of the Garden of Eden, humanity
rapidly became what we know it to be today, for we have hardly progressed
since then: science and knowledge have certainly developed, but their
use is as brutal and murderous as in the story of Cain and Abel. Worse
still, science and technology have amplified the power of murder: never
has humanity engaged in so many genocides. It has learnt nothing from
history and genocides continue to take place at an accelerated rate.
We are simply primitives who are armed with more dangerous arms. Adults
and children wallow in electronic war games that are based on destruction
and massacre; murder films and novels are regular best sellers; and
everyone is addicted to the thrill of watching images of destruction
and horror on their television sets or listening daily to news of attacks
or catastrophes on the radio -- not to mention killings and violence
which result from cruel economies and greedy arms trading. These cruelties
and brutalities ensure the standard of living of the Western world,
and we are completely indifferent to them. These are the values on
which our advanced, democratic societies, which claim to champion the
rights of man, are based.
It is within this context that a certain type of man appeared: “Noah
was a just man and perfect in his generations, and Noah walked with
God” (Genesis 6, 9). Here we have the clues to enable us to understand
how such a destructive cycle of violence can be stopped.
This is why it is particularly important to study this parasha.
Studying the parasha in English however will not teach us anything
about its message. We need to study the Hebrew text directly and examine
corresponding links between verses and words of the same roots, in
order to grasp the complete message of this parasha.
All those who wish to study and understand the Torah must therefore
learn Hebrew.
In Hebrew the above quote reads as: Noah ish tzaddik
tamim hayabedorotav et-haelohim hithalekh-Noah.
The key to the message is found in each of the Hebrew words.
We shall see this, when we study the commentaries of Rabbenu Bahya
and of the Shla (Rabbi Yeshayah Horowitz).
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Commentary of Rabbenu Bahya (dec. circa 1340)
Rabbenu Bahya begins his commentary of each parasha with a verse from
Proverbs, Mishle.
He demonstrates that the verse from Proverbs summarizes the content
of each parasha. The essence of the Torah is never to separate life
from thought, for the Torah represents life and the laws of the man
and of the world.
We shall discover through this verse a new way of understanding the
Book of Proverbs.
The verse he uses for Noah is verse 20, 7: mithalekh
betumo tzaddik, ashere vanav aharav - “The just man walketh in his integrity:
his children are blessed after him.”
Man is not a just man, a tzaddik, until he walks in the path of life
that is directed towards Hashem.
The concept: mithalekh betumo ( man walks in his integrity)
This means dutifully carrying out the mitzvot, with love and fear,
without pride, without boasting or seeking honors and recognition.
He who does not do this is a sinner.
The attribute of a tzaddik (his midda) is therefore to carry out the
mitzvot completely; this means that he should not glorify himself in
his eyes or in the eyes of others. This is what is written in the preceding
verse of Proverbs (20, 6): rav-adam yikra ish hasedo veish emunim
mi yimtza - “Most men will proclaim everyone his own goodness: but
a faithful man who can find?”
Therefore what this parasha, and Judaism, demands of man is:
- to follow not only a moral path,
- to carry out not only all the mitzvot of the Torah,
- but to achieve the level of tzaddik and “hide one’s
good deeds.”
Therefore to be a just man, a tzaddik, involves three levels of growth:
- 1st level, hithalkhut:
This is to be someone who wants to follow God’s way (mithalekh),
which means first to shun violence (hamas) and in
particular that of one’s generation, as did Noah.
We can summarize this in four points:
One) be aware of the violence of our generation,
Two) examine if we are not part of it,
Three) follow the precepts of Hashem,
Four) walk in his path.
- 2nd level: begin to be a tzaddik
It is the wise, intelligent person who acts, a hakham lev, not someone
who only thinks or someone who talks first (so many theories and
debates have tried to remake the world and have had no effect except
to do away with two things: the small deed and the art of being silent
and avoiding slander. Our Sages call the man who falls into this
trap, which includes all of us all the time, an evil, a pratting
fool (read Proverbs 10, 8).
- 3rd level: temimut
This signifies the level of accomplishment, the state of a tzaddik
bitemimut;
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this is a man who acts with love and fear of God; and for this reason
he conceals his good deeds.
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this is a man who tries to reach the most perfect level in all of his
actions; in this way he links himself to temima, to that which is whole
and complete and which characterizes Hashem and the Torah. Read Psalm
119, 1 and Psalm 15 which describes the tasks that need to be accomplished.
When these levels are reached, then a good deed
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will bear many fruits,
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will serve as a good example for children who will learn it and follow
in its path: read Proverbs 14, 26.
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The role of the tzaddik in his generation
The concept of the tzaddik refers to
his own generation, since his role is to restrain the violence of
his generation. This also limits
the figure of the tzaddik: this is why the commentaries on the words “in
his generation” note that Noah would perhaps not have been a
tzaddik in the generations of Abraham or of Moshe. But it is already
an achievement if one succeeds in not succumbing to the faults of one’s
environment!
In the same vein, our Sages draw another conclusion: “he who
masters a particular subject (for instance astronomy at that time would
correspond to physics, mathematics or computer science today) but does
not use it for a good purpose, Hashem says of him: ‘but they
regard not the work of the Lord, neither consider the operation of
his hands’ (Isaiah 5, 12). This means that the tzaddik must use
all the resources which the Creator gave him to do good. This is the
teaching of Rabbi Shimon ben Pazi in Tractate Shabbat 75 a, which I
cite in my paper on suicide and the Jewish tradition in order to show
how important it is for us to use our professional knowledge in order
to help those who suffer and that ethical conduct alone is insufficient.
The tzaddik and the Jew
1. Jewish tradition offers a program for the reconstruction of the
world which is based on man bettering himself.
2. This program of self development, which consists in tikkun of middot
(repairing personal qualities), involves a number of progressive
stages.
3. This program must aim at attaining its end and completely
involving the Jew; it is for this reason that our Sages say that a tzaddik who
is not complete is a bad tzaddik (Berakhot 7 a).
Because of the urgency and the need to repair a world which is
destroying itself, the Creator chose a small deed and a small people
- the Jewish people, and gave them a set of laws: the Torah. Those
who, in the name of freedom of thought, do not accept this account
of the Jewish people, cannot understand the eternal and important
role that Jews play, despite their small number, at every level
and in every type of society. Our enemies are correct when they
say “they [the Jews] are everywhere.”
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Whether a Jew feels he is “religious” or not is of no
consequence: he cannot avoid this universal task of improving the world,
which he can carry out and apply to the most diverse areas of human
activity. This is a historical and anthropological characteristic and
the Jewish people have played this role for thousands of years, while
the majority of other nations have disappeared in terms of defined
peoples.
Tradition says that there is always a minimum of 36 just people who
save the world during the most dangerous times: “36 within the
Jewish people, and 36 outside the Jewish people.” Every knowledgeable
person will understand that this refers to the expanded name for God
which has 72 letters. This is the aim of creation which must renew
itself in order to succeed, as is written in the last chapter of the
book of Isaiah.
Furthermore, our Sages say that the Creator waxes
angry when the tzaddikim do not play a strong enough role according
to the needs of their generation (Shabbat 30 b).Without them, the world would be at the mercy of the
reshaim, the evil ones who fear no one, and who, even at the gates
of hell, do not change their conduct and are capable of using every
tool, including religion, to do evil (Eruvin 19 a).
The role of the Jew or the just man or tzaddik is
so important that it can prevent the destruction of the world: it
is as though the world
can be re-created through him (Yoma 38b). Our texts compare
this role to the resurrection (Pessahim 68 a). Even the memory of a tzaddik is
a source of benediction, as is said when one talks about a former Sage:
zekher tzaddik livrakha (Proverbs 10, 7; Yoma 37 a), “the
memory of a tzaddik is a benediction.”
This is so important for the Hakadosh barukh hu, and for the existence
of the world, that when a tzaddik dies, another one is born at that
same moment (Yoma 38 b). This is a phenomenon that has been seen
time and again among the descendants of those who love Torah.
This role of the tzaddik to “do” good (as is indicated
in the grammatical form of the expression: “to do tzaddik” ),
and the involvement of Jews in this task, have led to the emergence
of a major facet of Jewish life: the great Sages who possess perfect
knowledge, who have fully developed their personal potential through
the holiness of their middot, and who are dedicated to teaching their
disciples to follow in their path. We call these just men Rabbenu,
Gaon, HaKaddosh, Rabbi, the Tzaddik. These
Sages are rare men and they are a light for their generations and for
all generations. They contribute
in this way to the universal messianic mission, as is said of King
David that he was Mashiah. This does not imply the concept of the Mashiah
as someone who will arrive at a certain time to lead the Jewish people.
Judaism does not deal, or should not according to our texts, with the
question of who or who is not the Mashiah; only results can prove this.
No one can claim this grand collective role, which entails immense
struggles against evil and between the demands of divine justice (tzedek)
and goodness (tzedaka), without risk to himself and to others. As is
written in Zohar II 190b: when the Supreme will falls on the tzaddik,
it is to demonstrate the love of Hakadosh barukh Hu for the tzaddik and everything that surrounds him.
As we noted from the very beginning, modesty and humility are essential,
and when we accept that we are nothing, we see that we are all equal
and that what we have derives only from the goodness of God and from
Torah.
The role of the tzaddik always entails tzadaka.
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Note on the concept of tikkun
The concept of tikkun has now entered the everyday vocabulary of religious
Jews and needs to be explained in all its facets:
1. This is the reparation of a failing or fault in the make up of an
object, person or situation.
2. This is a method of reparation which was formulated by our Sages
and which consists in texts which one must study and prayers one must
say on specific dates and times, or in specific situations, after having
carried out acts of purification (for example, those of mikve,
tzedaka, vidui, ritual bath, charity, avowal of sins, etc.). Thus we have the
tikkunei hatzot which are said at midnight.
3. A special tikkun, also based on the Sages, are the texts we read
at night on certain festivals, such as the tikkunei Shevuot, or the
tikkunei of the night of Hoshana Rabba.
4. The tikkun neshama belongs to a higher level of reparation. It involves
not just repairing one’s behavior and attitudes, but the very
nature of one’s soul, for certain things could have happened,
perhaps in past lives or in the purification process after death, which
necessitate praying for the soul. The greatest Jewish mystics speak
of this level but few are able to live at this level of purity, or
even claim to understand them. Only exceptional Sages, who have been
recognized as the great tzaddikim of their generation, can talk or
give advice at this level; anyone else who does so is a charlatan.
Judaism, which has thousands of years of knowledge of human nature,
warns against venturing into these domains. The sons of Aharon (Aaron)
perished this way. King David believed he could easily venture into
these paths but he encountered the greatest of difficulties. And we
are nothing in comparison. Stories abound in Hassidic and folk literature
about experiences with the “dibbuk.”
5. We also speak of tikkunei Shabbat (in the plural) which consists
in the practice of reading a collection of poems and Psalms which describe
the beauty of Shabbat and which were put together by kabbalists, especially
the Ari zal.
6. The tikkunei Klali, of Rabbi Nahman of Breslaw, help to purify the
mind and the body.
7. We also speak of tikkunei ha lashon in cases when an extra letter
appears in a word, producing anomalies. Refer to Rashi’s analysis
of this phenomenon in his commentary on Bereshit 49,22, Shemot 18,
8, Bemidbar 11,16, Isaiah 9, 6 and Job 32, 3. These anomalies have
great significance, for they often transmit the secrets of the Torah,
or their aim is to avoid an interpretation which would harm the Torah.
They are also called tikkunei sofrim.
8. There is also the tikkunei korim, which are books that set out clarifications
in order to avoid misinterpretation of the Torah.
9. Last but not least, the Tikkunei Hazohar which is one of the books
of the Zohar whose 70 chapters comment solely on the first word of
the Torah, describing the many links that exist between the verses
and letters of the Torah at the highest level of understanding. This
book is written in Arameic. It is the basis of most of kabbala commentaries.
10. A popular concept is the tikkunei haolam which involves a reparation
of the world at every level, particularly the societal organization,
and is usually a ruling of decision of a Sage which has been recognized
by an entire generation and which changes certain customs for the good
of the community. The concept refers therefore to things that increase
harmony in the world.
11. Finally, all the above represent the most authentic form of Judaism,
which holds that the Jewish people are engaged in the “tikkun” (reparation)
of a world in which positive and negative forces confront each other.
The reparation was begun at the individual level, with the patriarchs,
and was then pursued at the level of the family, then of the nation.
There were times when this process faltered, as during the destruction
of the Temple. But there is also the certainty that the process of
reparation will not fail and that ultimately it will lead to the fulfillment
of the divine plan. We find here too the concepts of teshuva (return)
and of Mashiah (messiah) which is very complex and is analyzed in detail
at the end of Tractate Sanhedrin, and by the Rambam. There have always
been people who exploit these concepts and hopes and fool honest individuals
who do not have the knowledge to discern true from false: this is what
leads to false messiahs. The process of tikkun is authentically Jewish,
but it is difficult to mobilize and to discern. It is however one of
the bases of Jewish emuna (faith and trust) and this is the reason
why the Rambam includes it in his fundamental principles, ha ikarim.
Recommended Reading:
Read attentively, in context, the verses cited above,
and Rashi on Shmot 23, 8; Devarim 4, 5, 16, 19.
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Personal Development
Review the parasha and form your own conclusions:
Exchange ideas with family, friends, colleagues on:
- paths of life,
- moral choices,
- differentiation from the masses, particularly with reference to opposition
to violence and support of victims,
- greater sensitivity to suffering,
- greater commitment to self-development rather than to one’s
career.
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2nd Level: for advanced students only
Bereshit, explained by the Shla
Plan
1. Sources
2. Rashi’s commentary
3. Problems posed by Rashi’s commentary
4. Implications of this debate
5. Women’s greatness as perceived by the Shla
In his book Shnei Luhot Habrit (Two Tables of the Covenant, Rabbenu
Yeshaya ben Avraham Hallevi Horowitz (1560-1630), known as the Shla
Hakadosh, devotes his entire commentary on Noah to the commandment “be
fruitful and multiply” (peru urvu).
1. Sources
A preliminary discussion can be found in Tractate Yevamot 65.
- The Mishna notes that only man has the obligation to carry out this
commandment because it is linked to the act of conquering the land:
peru urvu u mileu et-haaretz vehibeshuha; “be fruitful and
multiply and replenish the earth “ (Bereshit 1, 28 and Noah
9, 1), a task which was given to man when he conquered the land.
- Ribbi Yohanan ben Broka, however, maintains that since the text of
the commandment (Bereshit 1, 28) is preceded by Vayevarekh otam Elokim
vayomer, “And Elokim blessed them, and Elokim said unto them” [male
and female], this indicates that the commandment is an obligation for
both men and women.
- All agree that the expression is both a blessing and a commandment
(mitzva).The essence of a blessing is to enable human beings to fructify.
- Tractate Sanhedrin 59 notes that this commandment was accepted by
men and women when the Torah was given to them, for it is followed
by: shuvu lahem leaholehem, “get you into your tents again” (Deuteronomy
5, 27), which means “towards your wives and conjugal intimacy
and procreate.”
- Everyone therefore considers it to be a mitzva (commandment).
2. Rashi’s commentary
Rashi’s commentary on Noah 9, 7 “And you, be fruitful
and multiply, bring forth abundantly in the earth and multiply therein” covers
several levels:
- lefi feshuto (according to the literal meaning), harishona
liveraha (at first he interprets it as a blessing: as in Bereshit 1,
28 and
here in 9, 1 of Noah), vehane letzivuye (here he interprets it as a
commandment: as of verse 9, 4);
- ulefi midrasho (according to the midrash) lehakish mi
sheeno osek biferia urevia leshofeh damim (link a murderer who sheds blood to he
who does not carry out and keep the mitzva of “fructify and multiply.”)
Rashi elucidates the debate thus:
- clarify if it is a blessing or a commandment;
- he then adds a second instruction, demonstrating the link between
abstinence from the commandment and murder, through a process of demonstration
called ekesh, whereby the secondary meaning is found in the alliance
and juxtaposition of two apparently independent subjects (Note Rashi’s
use of lehakish).
The midrash referred to by Rashi is Yevamot 63 b where Ribbi Eliezer
explains the link between murder and non-realization of the commandment
of procreation: this is demonstrated first in verse 9, 6 of Noah shofeh
dam haadam baadam damo yishafeh, “whoso sheddeth man’s
blood by man shall his blood be shed” and then (ekesh) in verse
9, 7: “and you, be fruitful and multiply.”
3. Problems posed by Rashi’s
commentary
- The Mizrahi, a great commentator of Rashi, interprets Rashi’s
comments as representing an evolution within the text: what was first
a blessing becomes later a commandment (9, 7) and there is no longer
any association with the blessing.
- The Ramban notes that Rashi cites Ribbi Eliezer as a reflective midrash,
as a proposition, not as a law of halakha.
- The Shla, in keeping with his great gift of pedagogy which allowed
him to teach at the simplest and most complex levels, put order in
the texts and the commentaries.
He summarizes everything and sees no contradiction between the Sages
since they are all in agreement, except that each one stresses a different
part of the commandment:
- from the time of Adam, what God said included both benedictions and
blessings;
- in Noah, there is not just a repetition but an instruction that he
who does not procreate sheds blood and is a murderer;
- Ribbi Yehuda made a further contribution: this type of sin has to
be punished and a warning is therefore given;
- Tractate Sanhedrin stresses the commandment, but does not reject
the blessing: it simply demosntrates that in 9, 7 the commandment is
made more explicit, to the point of entailing punishment.
All of this serves to show exactly what is entailed in the Jewish
method of study; it is not enough to say that “we received the
revelation” and thereby draw facile conclusions: it is necessary
to understand both the written and oral text. This type of analysis
requires an in-depth knowledge of Hebrew and the text’s structure,
otherwise one can draw any interpretation and invent endless theories
and religions according to the intellectual climate of the times -
whether of Rome, Greece, the desert, philosophy, myths, or the latest
modern culture. This is what history is made of; but the Jewish people
continue to be faithful to their law and to their rigorous form of
study. By returning to the Hebrew source one can always succeed in
refuting wild interpretations and uphold the strict teachings of the
Sages (rather than finding partial codes that prove partial theories).
4. Important implications of this debate
One question remains: why was this commandment said both to Adam and
to Noah?
It would be too difficult to deal here with all the complex ideas entailed
in the answer, so I will give a partial answer.
In Yevamot 63, Ribbi Yaakov states that he who does not procreate
harms the image of God, his dmut; we know that man was created in the
image of God in two aspects, “in his image and in his likeness:” naase
adam betzalmenu kidemutenu, “Let us make man in our image, after
our likeness” (Bereshit 1, 26). The Shla says that the tzelem
refers to the holiness of the soul and the dmut refers to the holiness
of the body.
The murderer who kills these two levels harms the image of God in
man (whether he kills a head of state, a stranger or his enemies).
This is similar to the sin of Adam, which led to the first murders
in history, to the delusions of grandeur in the generation of the flood,
the conflicts and confusion of the generations of exile; processes
which continue to be actualized in the follies of modern nations.
A certain type of man was needed in order to arrest this process.
Judaism calls this type of man a tzaddik. Noah was a tzaddik. The concept
of a tzaddik entails not only morality of the soul, but also morality
of the body (as we have just noted) and is characterized by the act
of circumcision (the covenant symbolized by the circumcision) which
is totally adhered to. At the human and spiritual levels, both Adam
and Noah were born circumcised.
This process of moral improvement would be adhered to from generation
to generation till the Mashiah, as can be seen in the word toledot
in Bereshit 2, 4 and in verse 4, 12 of the book of Ruth where the greatness
and completeness of man is stressed by a double vav in the word toledot
instead of one vav.
But when the human race enters the ark, in a state of precariousness
and imperfection, the word toledot only has one vav.
Murder cannot be carried out on the tzelem (ki betselem
Elokim asa et haadam 9, 7) because our soul retains its divine nature, but it
can be carried out on the body which is the other dimension of man
made in the image of God, the dmut and at this level murder and non-procreation
are the same.
Noah succeeded in separating himself from the degradation around him
and “walked with God” (6, 1) as in the garden of Eden and
as Abraham would do later (24, 40). It was the beginning of what would
become the Jewish people, and of the holy covenant that was made through
the flesh. (Religions which adopted strands of Judaism, such as Christianity
did not retain the ritual of circumcision because they did not understand
the moral role it played amidst the surrounding degradation; they claimed
that the world and man had been saved, and they abandoned the tools
that enable salvation. The consequences are well known.)
It is for this specific reason (the isolation of Noah in the Ark or
the isolation of the Jewish people), that the commandment to procreate,
linked to this covenant, is not included in the 7 moral laws imposed
on all humanity and which characterize the stage of bnei Noah.
This confirms (together with the commentary on Bereshit) the importance
attributed to procreation by Judaism and Jewish families who devote
themselves to Torah study.
5. Women’s great nature
and role, as perceived by the Shla
Let us end, this 1,000th commentary on Noah, with the Shla’s
comment on verse 31, 30 of Proverbs. This verse forms part of Eshet
hayil, the poem sung every Friday night: sheker hahen vehevel
hayofi, isha yirat Hashem hi tithallal: “Favor is deceitful and beauty
is vain but a woman that feareth Hashem, she shall be praised.”
Midrash Yalkut Shimeon shows that the proverbs of King Solomon are
not adages of popular wisdom but keys to the interpretation of the
Torah:
- sheker hahen (favor is deceitful) refers to Noah whose
name has the same letters as hen and who failed to live in a state
of paradise,
as seen in the wine incident:
- hevel hayofi (beauty is vain) refers to the beauty of Adam who,
through his sin and fall, failed to keep his promises;
- and finally isha yirat Hashem hi tithallal (a woman that feareth
Hashem, she shall be praised) refers to Moshe, who feared God and was
praised and who did not disappoint, but upheld the ideal image of humanity
till the end of his life. Moshe is also called by the feminine form
of the personal pronoun “you” in Devarim 5, 24 when he
tries to persuade his people to love Hashem, as in Rashi’s commentary
on this verse.
That the greatness of man is expressed through the word isha (woman)
- illustrates how eminent a role women have in Judaism: those who hold
opposite views on this subject do not know the texts fully and do not
understand how Jewish couples adhere to the texts in their daily life.
Only women were created according to His ratzon - the supreme name
of God. Man may say in his morning prayers that he “thanks God
for not having made him a woman” but a woman “gives thanks
for having been made according to His ratzon” since one should
give thanks both in bad and in good times. One can add that man gives
thanks for the joy of discovering that his complement is a being who
is worthy of great praise because she belongs to so high a level. Women,
aware of their greatness and beauty, give thanks in truth and modesty, “for
having been made according to His ratzon.”
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Recommended Reading
Torah
Read attentively and in context the verses quoted above, and Rashi.
Talmud
Tractate Yevamot, 60 and after.
Halakha
Sefer hammitzvot 212
Mishne Torah: Nashim, Ishut, 15, 1-2
Shulhan Arukh: beginning of Even haezer.
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Reminder. There are “only” three mitzvot in the entire
book of Genesis:
Parasha Bereshit: be fruitful and multiply (1, 28)
Parasha Lekh Lekha: the circumcision (17, 10)
Parasha Vayishlakh: the prohibition against eating the hollow of the
thigh.
These form the basis of all the other mitzvot.