Sunday, October 3, 2010

Netivot Shalom on Parshat Noah


Here is a lesson I will teach this week at DC Beit Midrash. Enjoy!


Torah: Noah was a perfectly righteous man in his generation; Noah walked with the L-rd.”

Rashi: Some interpret this verse as praise of Noah; Noah would have been even more righteous had Noah been in another generation. Others interpret the verse as criticism, that Noah would have been nobody had he been born in the generation of our father Abraham.

Scripture states of Abraham, “Abraham walked before G-d.” Noah needed support walking while Abraham was self-supporting and walked in his own righteousness.

Netivot Shalom: It is difficult to understand, if we can interpret the verse as being in praise of Noah, why we would interpret it as criticism. Furthermore, the Torah itself testifies that he was a perfectly righteous person, that is, righteous in complete and total; how could that be criticism? … We must also understand the emphasis on ‘in his generation.’ Scripture also states further on, ‘I see that you are righteous before me in this generation.’ Whether this is in praise or criticism [why emphasize it?] For the purposes of the story, it would have been sufficient to state that Noah was a perfectly righteous person and thus was saved from the Flood. We must also understand the phrase, ‘’Noah walked with L-rd.” Again, it would have been sufficient to know that Noah was a perfectly righteous man… we must also try to understand why scripture uses ‘L-rd’ with Noah and ‘G-d’ with Abraham.

One can understand this matter by starting with the comprehension that the foundation of divine worship has two aspects, love of G-d and awe of G-d. This is hinted at by the verse ‘Bereshit Bara Elokim,’ – Bereshet=B’Reshit,/ two authorities, that is the two foundations of fear and awe. It states in the introduction to the Zohar, ‘The first commandment is awe of G-d, the second commandment is love of G-d.’ How can we understand that the first commandment is to be in awe of G-d, even though love is greater than awe? We can understand this through an analogy to one who builds a palace. The first thing one must do is build a healthy foundation, and only after this foundation is built may one construct a great building that will not shudder and fall. So to is divine worship. A person has bad forces within, as it is written, ‘A person’s nature is bad from his youth.’ Uprooting this evil is the foundation of a life of divine service. Any time a person does not purify the evil desires that person cannot arise to the level of loving G-d and clinging to G-d, which are the ultimate purposes of the Torah.

The counsel to uproot the evil power within, this is the first commandment, of awe of G-d. The beginning of wisdom is to awaken simple awe, that there is judgment and a Judge, and that the Creator, G-d, Bless His Name, knows all of a person’s deeds and thoughts. As the Shulchan Aruch says, ‘When a person concentrates on the fact that the Great King, the Holy One Praised be G-d, whose glory fills the whole earth, stands by a person and perceives all deeds, immediately awe descends upon a person.’ Only by means of this awe can one purify the evil desires that one has from youth, and after building this foundation from simple awe may one rise ever higher, to construct a building of love and clinging to G-d, which is the Torah’s entire purpose. Without such a foundation, it is impossible to build such a structure, to rise up to the level of loving G-d .

As in the case of an individual, so too with the entirety of generations, the first commandment is awe of G-d. The task and designated responsibility of the first generations, before the Time of Repair, before the arrival of our father Abraham with whom the Time of Repair began, was awe of G-d. It was only possible after this foundation was established to begin the construction of the World of Repair through the means of our father Abraham, whose character was Love. The Holy Arizal stated that, each and every day since Creation has a special designated purpose, as does each individual and every generation. The goal of Noah’s generation, which preceded the Time of Repair, was awe, the first commandment. This was the task of the perfectly righteous Noah, to serve G-d with awe. This is how Noah fulfilled the will of G-d completely for his generation.

…This is why the Torah states that Noah was a perfectly righteous man ‘in his generation.’ … He fulfilled perfectly the task assigned to his generation. This is why Noah ‘walked with the L-rd,’ for ‘the L-rd’ is the divine aspect of awe and might, and Noah’s ‘walking’ means that his path was, as its is written, ‘G-d dwells before me always.’ … Had Noah busied himself with love of G-d he would not have fulfilled the designated task of his generation.

… Thus we find that scripture states that ‘Noah walked with the L-rd,’ while of Abraham it states that he walked before ‘G-d,’ for G-d is the name for the divine attribute of kindness. This is the distinction between Noah’s divine service of awe and Abraham’s divine service of love. This is the reason why we find that our Father Abraham was active among those of his generation, as it states in the Midrash that he made converts, while Noah was not active in this way. Awe’s character is withdrawal, rather than expansion. …This is why Abraham, whose work involved divine love, tried to bring other in his generation under the wings of the Divine Presence, while Noah, whose work involved divine awe, did not do so.