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Archive for November 27th, 2008

Va Yera Commentary part 1 of 3

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

I had a chance to stop by the new Beth Yeshua congregation in Bloomington for the first time this week. Nice facility, complete even with tv stands. It would be an honor to speak there someday. Here’s part 1 of my three-part commentary on Va Yera. Or listen to it!

Shabbat Shalom.

Today’s parashah is Va Yera, or, “He appeared.” It covers Genesis chapters 18 through 22, and is concerned with a large portion of the life of Abraham, from the destruction of Soddom and Gomorrah, to the binding of Isaac.

As I was studying through this passage, I began to take notice of a familiar pattern, one we’ve seen before and will see over and over again throughout the Torah. The pattern that emerges here focuses on the nature of Adonai’s goodness and mercy, and I believe that once you begin to recognize it, it can solve many of the theological questions many of us struggle with in the early years of our walk of faith.

Let’s begin our study a bit earlier in the book of Genesis, with a passage from the last Torah portion I taught on, Noach.

Genesis 7:1, 4 (CJB)
Adonai said to Noach, “Come into the ark, you and all your household; for I have seen that you alone in this generation are righteous before me. For in seven more days I will cause it to rain on the earth forty days and forty nights; I will wipe out every living thing that I have made from the face of the earth.”

Now notice what happens here. Adonai has seen how violent and evil the world has become and stands ready to judge the world righteously; he stands ready to destroy all life on earth, every living thing.

Yet does He? No. When he notices that Noach, alone among all the people of the earth, is living righteously by walking with Him, Adonai withholds complete destruction and offers Noach and his entire household a way out, a way to avoid being destroyed and suffering His wrath along with the rest of all flesh.

In the case of Noach, this meant building an ark by which a remnant could be saved, the building blocks of a new generation who will become a second chance for humanity to not make the same mistakes and, instead of embracing violence and wickedness, choose to follow Adonai and live a life of obedience.

So as we come into this parashah of Va Yera, what has happened in the world since the flood? Well, some time has passed. In fact, well over 350 years has passed since the flood of Noach’s time and now the descendants of his sons – Ham, Shem and Japheth – have spread out over the face of the Earth. From the time of the flood, two other things have happened as well.

First, lifespans have begun to shrink. While Noach lived for 950 years, his son Shem lived for only 600 years. The next couple generations lived around 450 years, and after that the next three generations lived a mere 250 years or so. By the time we reach Terach, the father of Abram, we see life spans coming closer to what we see possible on the Earth today; Terach lived for only 205 years, and Avram, 175 years. Yitzach 180 years, Ya’akov 147 years and Yosef only 110 years.

This shortening of lifespans is often thought to be due in part to the changes the Earth had undergone during the flood, and that is likely a contributing factor. But I also believe that Adonai allowed this as a lasting judgment against humanity because, in His wisdom, he knew that mankind could not, on its own, live up to any covenant He made with them; so he shortened our years to limit the amount of depravity any one generation could cause.

As lifespans are getting shorter in the time of Abraham, we also see people marrying and having children at younger ages. Prior to the flood, Noach waited until he was 498 before marrying and 500 before he had his first child with his wife. And it was not uncommon for a first-born son to be born when his father was over 100 years old – sometimes well over 100. But in this new post-flood world, all the descendents of Noach’s sons are having their first children when they are in their mid-thirties.

What would the result of this be? Well, a whole lot more people being born, for one thing. As God had commanded, Noach’s sons and their descendants were going out into the Earth and multiplying.

Unfortunately, even though the flood was only 350 years in the recent past, not all of this multiplying was producing new generations of people who feared and obeyed Adonai. In fact, as we studied last time I taught, it only took a couple generations from the flood to produce Nimrod, the ruler who sought to take Adonai’s place as the god of all humanity, and who commanded the building of the tower of Bavel, by which he sought to invade heaven and overthrow God Himself.

Va Yera Commentary part 2 of 3

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

When it comes to dieting, Leptorexin might be the way to go; when it comes to getting your spiritual life in shape, nothing’s better than Torah. Here’s part 2 of my 3-part Torah commentary. Or listen to it!

Now, let’s look at another key episode that demonstrates Adonai’s mercy: the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. Our parashah begins with Adonai visiting Abraham shortly after he has followed God’s command to be circumcised. Because Abraham was faithful in this step of obedience, we read this in Genesis 18, starting at verse 17:

Genesis 18:17-21 (CJB)
Adonai said, “Should I hide from Avraham what I am about to do, inasmuch as Avraham is sure to become a great and strong nation, and all nations of the earth will be blessed by him? For I have made myself known to him, so that he will give orders to his children and to his household after him to keep the way of Adonai and to do what is right and just, so that Adonai may bring about for Avraham what he has promised him.” Adonai said, “The outcry against S’dom and ‘Amora is so great and their sin so serious, that I will now go down and see whether their deeds warrant the outcry that has reached me; if not, I will know.”

What follows is one of the boldest passages in the entire Torah, where Avraham, a mere man, bargains with Adonai to spare the lives of the people in Sodom and Gomorrah. Although performed with great humility, Avraham still has the boldness to question God’s plans, and asks him to spare the cities if, at first 50, and ultimately 10 righteous people are found living there. When not even 10 righteous can be found, we read of God’s judgment in Genesis 19, starting at verse 24:

Genesis 19:24-25 (CJB)
Then Adonai caused sulfur and fire to rain down upon S’dom and ‘Amora from Adonai out of the sky. He overthrew those cities, the entire plain, all the inhabitants of the cities and everything growing in the ground.

Have we found any evidence of the destruction of Sodom and Gamorrah today? Some archaeologists believe they have. Here’s a picture of a site with a destruction layer of ash.

In this same region, there has also been discovered this anomaly, which is the presence of sulfur balls buried deep in otherwise-solid stones and rocks in the area.

While this is of passing interest, let’s move on to the key verses of this part of the parashah, in Genesis 19, starting at verse 27:

Genesis 19:27-29 (CJB)
Avraham got up early in the morning, when to the place where he had stood before Adonai, and looked out toward S’dom and ‘Amora, scanning the entire plain. There before him, the smoke was rising from the land like smoke from a furnace! But when God destroyed the cities of the plain, he remembered Avraham and sent Lot out, away from the destruction, when he overthrew the cities in which Lot lived.

Va Yera Commentary Part 3 of 3

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

The truth of the Torah can be as effective as Alli in the task of stripping away excuses and rationalizations and revealing the sin undernearth. Here’s the final part of my commentary on Va Yera. Or listen to it!

Now, here in this passage, the theme of the nature of God’s mercy is stated clearly for us. “But when God destroyed the cities of the plain, he remembered Avraham and sent Lot out, away from the destruction.”

This should answer a key question many of us ask ourselves about God at one point or another: while bad things do happen, even to those who follow Adonai; while we all sin and fall short of Adonai’s perfect standard of righteousness; does He, ultimately, judge the righteous along with the wicked? That is the very question Avraham put to Adonai when negotiating for Him to spare S’dom and ‘Amora.

Genesis 18:23, 25 (CJB)
Avraham approached and said, “Will you actually sweep away the righteous with the wicked? Far be it from you to do such a thing – to kill the righteous along with the wicked, so that the righteous and the wicked are treated alike! Far be it from you! Shouldn’t the judge of all the earth do what is right?”

In the life of faith, many of us face trials. Somewhere along the way, we picked up the false idea that, rather than our trials and difficulties being the natural result of our bad choices, or perhaps the consequences of living in a world where so few people obey Adonai and openly violate His will – somewhere we got the idea that we were suffering the judgment or wrath of God for some sin we committed. And yet the Torah couldn’t be more clear: that’s not how Adonai works!

Yes, God will correct us. Yes, God will allow ha-Satan to test us at time … the book of Job proves that. Indeed, it rains on the righteous and the wicked alike. We all lose loved ones. Sometimes we fall victims to accidents or disease. Sometimes we are in the wrong place at the wrong time, and we can perish when an earthquake hits, or a volcano erupts or a bridge collapses.

But that is a separate issue from suffering the wrath of God. While we as believers can endure sometimes unbelievable suffering and even the horrors of a Holocaust, the Torah is clear that Adonai does not judge the righteous and the wicked alike. The Holocaust was an act of man against the people of God, but it was not God’s judgment and wrath. When God prepares to pour out His wrath – be it the flood, on S’dom and Gomorrah, upon Egypt to free the Jewish people, or in the future at the time of Jacob’s troubles – He always provides rescue for those who trust in Adonai, obey His commands, and place their hope in His promised messiah – Messiah Yeshua. He is our salvation.

Shabbat Shalom.