Class Lech Lecha/Noach
Rabbi YY Jacobson
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Dedicated by the Solomon and Teitelbaum families, in honor of Rabbi Mendel Solomon.
Dedicated by David and Eda Schottenstein in the loving memory of Alta Shula Swerdlov; and in merit of Yetta Alta Shula, "Aliya," Schottenstein
It would seem that Noah is the ideal forefather for the Jew; the man who, like Noah, will always be alone amongst the nations, and who lives life based on his own inspired standards and not based on popular trends.
But no. Noah is clearly not Jewish. As a matter of fact, all non-Jews are called by the Torah ‘the children of Noah’. Only Abraham who is born ten generations later will be chosen as the ‘first Jew.’ Why?
Noah is a hard man to understand. On the one hand he is paid the highest of compliments, and is the only man that the Torah itself explicitly coins as a “A Tzadik (righteous man), perfect in his time.” He saved civilization, and every human alive today is one of his descendants. Notwithstanding the ridicule of his neighbors and acquaintances, he trusts G-d implicitly and singlehandedly builds an enormous ark that takes him 120 years! He is a lonely man of faith who rejects world opinion and peer pressure, and retains his integrity despite living in the most morally depraved generation in the history of humanity.
The defining difference between Abraham and Noah is not found in their own levels of faith and piety, rather it is found in how much of that piety they influenced upon others. The hallmark of the Jew is not only that he believes, but that he inspires others to believe. It is not only that he is good, but that he infuses his surroundings with goodness. And that is where Noah failed.
This class will explore the essential meaning of what it means to be a Jew, and why only Abraham and not Noah had what it takes to become the father of the Jewish faith.
We will also learn the history of the name ‘Jerusalem’: Who named the city? When? Why? And what does the name even mean? And what does this have to do with Noah?
Class Lech Lecha/Noach
Rabbi YY Jacobson
Dedicated by the Solomon and Teitelbaum families, in honor of Rabbi Mendel Solomon.
Dedicated by David and Eda Schottenstein in the loving memory of Alta Shula Swerdlov; and in merit of Yetta Alta Shula, "Aliya," Schottenstein
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Anonymous -8 months ago
Jews
Are you saying we have no more Jews because of the flood and because Noah, wasn't a Jews . In that case why is Jesus coming for his people to save them.in the end..
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Jay Gale -7 months ago
I am a Lutheran Christian and can tell you that your statement is flawed. Yes, there are Jews who bless this Earth because Abraham was born 10 generations after Noah. The Bible and the Torah both attest to this.
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Anonymous -4 months ago
This is such bs Abraham was not a jew , plus there is a difference between a jew & an Isreali of today... I can't believe this bs that is changing on the net . I have read it before & Abraham was not a jew at all
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Anonymous -3 months ago
Abraham might never have called himself a Jew, same as Jesus never called himself a Christian. And right now two dozen hypocrites who care more about their jobs than their faith are planning to do the same unto Christanity as their first-century forebears unto Judaism, and all Judeo-Christianity is already being blamed. Not a problem for me, I'm Catholic so it's my fault either way, but still...
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Anonymous -4 months ago
This has been changed to please the fake European Isreali of today. Jesus was not Jewish, Abraham was not Jewish either so if they decended from Noah who was not a jew that doesn't make them jews, but those jews they are talking about are the Roman's who claim to be jews who altered the original Bible to their advantages...
Many many questions
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Anonymous -1 month ago
God would never let anything happen to his word...
Nobody can alter the Holy Bible. If they do heavy punishment. God has kept all the books of the Holy Bible intact for thousands & thousands of years. God can do all things and anything.
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Anonymous -1 month ago
Amen! Amen!
May God bless you all in the almighty name of Yeshua ha'Moshiach, amen! ❤ call on the name of Yeshua ha'Moshiach, and He will answer. He DIED for YOU so that YOU may have ETERNAL LIFE with HIM. Turn from your sin and trust and follow Him with all your heart and soul. He took the penalty for sin of the world upon Himself so that WE may have everlasting life with God almighty. To be separated from God is death. Death is the penalty for sin. Please take this free gift of eternal life that God has offered us in the almighty name of his son, Yeshua/Jesus. He loves us more than we can fathom. We are HIS children created in HIS image. I am spreading the love of Yeshua by loving YOU! Yeshua will give you a reason. Yeshua will give you hope. Yeshua will give you love unconditional. Yeshua will give you freedom. Yeshua will change you from the inside out and make you new, with new desires of your heart. I am telling you this because I love you and don't want you to suffer now or in eternity. Love you all forever ❤
And now you know the gospel. ❤
And now you know the truth and the truth will set you free ❤
May God bless you all in the almighty name of Yeshua ha'Moshiach, amen! ❤ call on the name of Yeshua ha'Moshiach, and He will answer. He DIED for YOU so that YOU may have ETERNAL LIFE with HIM. Turn from your sin and trust and follow Him with all your heart and soul. He took the penalty for sin of the world upon Himself so that WE may have everlasting life with God almighty. To be separated from God is death. Death is the penalty for sin. Please take this free gift of eternal life that God has offered us in the almighty name of his son, Yeshua/Jesus. He loves us more than we can fathom. We are HIS children created in HIS image. I am spreading the love of Yeshua by loving YOU! Yeshua will give you a reason. Yeshua will give you hope. Yeshua will give you love unconditional. Yeshua will give you freedom. Yeshua will change you from the inside out and make you new, with new desires of your heart. I am telling you this because I love you and don't want you to suffer now or in eternity. Love you all forever ❤
And now you know the gospel. ❤
And now you know the truth and the truth will set you free ❤
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Anonymous -1 month ago
you are seriously saying Yeshua/Jesus was not a Jew??
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Kenneth olen Smith -6 years ago
Noach
Shalom U'vracha Dear wonderful Rabbi YY Jacobson, "Todah Rabbah for your wonderful Torah lessons, they are wonderful.Noach and family the beginning of the new world, the children of Noach in our world today are small, if you ask about the Noahides few people know of them. According to the Divine Holy Torah, all the people in the world should be Noahides, except the jewish people. The Sages say the Noahides will one day return to the Holy Torah,and a new world will begin. Avraham is called the father of the nations, Noach was a builder, a man of conviction, G_d reveals His Divine plan and Noach completes it. The children of Noach are people of conviction, but lack the ability to be faithful to the 613 Divine Laws, in other words do not become a Jew unless you can be a good Jew, as my dear friend Rabbi Tovia Singer says. G_ds Priest-hood must be faithful to the yoke of the Torah, and have the ability to share the love of the Creator with all the people of the world. So the Noahides will be faithful to the Divine Seven laws, and feel that they are able to be faithful to G_d. What event will one day bring the people of the nations into unity of the Noahide Laws, in your opinion.
Sincerely with Gratitude
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mamush1999 -9 years ago
Transcript of the Shiur with additions:
Noach Was A Righteous Man . . . But
By Yochanan Gordon
The theme of this
article is based on a shiur from Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Jacobson on
www.theyeshiva.net with additions of my own where noted.
Noach is an enigmatic personality. The Torah
itself seems to equivocate regarding his celebrity. The opening verse of the parashah states that Noach was righteous in his
generation. Rashi, whose commentary is dedicated to improving the literal
readability of each verse, comments on the words “in his generation,”
essentially asking what the Torah’s implications were with that statement.
Rashi mentions that there are sages who interpret these words both positively
and negatively. The first group of rabbis explain that Noach was so great that
his sagacity was unaffected by the degeneration of the society in his time.
However, the second group of rabbis said that the Torah was being critical of
Noach, saying that his greatness was only discernible due to the sinfulness of
his generation, and had he been accompanied by a sage on the caliber of Avraham,
he would certainly have been overshadowed.
These days, nary an hour goes by without
devastating headlines from the Holy Land. So while our thoughts are affixed to
Israel and specifically Yerushalayim, it would be appropriate here to dwell on
the origins of the name of our holy city and how its name relates to the
present idea. The Midrash in Bereishis Rabbah (56:10) states, “Avraham called the
city Yirah based on the verse, “And Avraham
called the name of that place Hashem Yirah.” Shem,
the son of Noach, called the place Shaleim based
on the verse, “MalkiTzedek, the King of Shaleim.” G‑d said, “If I call the name
of the place Yirah in accordance with the name
given by Avraham, Shem, who is also a holy man, will object. Rather, I will
call it Yerushalayim, combining the two names together.”
Front-and-center in this week’s Torah portion
is the story of the flood which claimed all of civilization save Noach, his
family, and select animals that Noach was commanded to take with him onto the
Ark. Given Noach’s righteousness, why didn’t G‑d choose him, not Avraham, as
the progenitor of the Jewish people?
Avraham is credited with being the father of
monotheism. But upon further reflection that is not accurate and it is not the
characteristic that defines Avraham’s legacy. Noach himself was a monotheist;
Shem, the son of Noach, we know was the head of a rabbinic academy in which
Yaakov our patriarch learned. It is where Rivkah, when she was confounded with
her pregnancy problems, went for advice. The Torah, at the end of Parashas Bereishis, introduces
us to wonderful, seemingly G‑d-fearing personalities as Shes, Lemech, and
Mesushelach—all of whom could be classified as monotheists. So clearly there is
something deeper at play in Avraham being the one whom G‑d chose to found the
Jewish nation.
There is a perplexing verse in Yeshayahu 54 which states, “For this is to me [as] the
waters of Noach, as I swore that the waters of Noach shall never again pass
over the earth.” If Noach was righteous and the one person in all of
civilization who gave G‑d a sense of respite in creating this morally bankrupt
world, why is the flood then attributed to the one person who was chosen to
rebuild the world after the flood?
The Zohar on Parashas Noach (58, page
67b) writes, “Once G‑d told Noach that he and his family will be saved, he did
not pray for the rest of civilization and it was destroyed. That is why the
flood is named after him.”
The Zohar, on
the same page, quotes a saying of Rebbe Yehudah who said in defense of Noach,
“What could Noach have done better? Noach was scared for himself that he not
perish among the guilty of the world.”
It is emerging clearer based on the words of
the Zohar that Noach’s error was that he acted a
bit selfishly in saving himself and his family from the flood and not worrying
about the safety and wellbeing of the world. You’ll recall that Rashi at the
outset of the parashah insinuates the question,
“Why did G‑d command Noach to build the Teivah as
a means to saving himself and his family from the flood? G‑d has many ways with which he
could save.” Rashi explains that the Torah was teaching us that Noach was
commanded to involve himself in the construction of the Ark over a 120-year
span, in order that it would pique the curiosity of passersby and he would
arouse them to repent, ultimately leading G‑d to repeal the decree to destroy
the world. It seems, however that Noach missed the message that was being
imparted to him, and through his inaction on behalf of civilization proved to G‑d
that he was not the person to promulgate the message that G‑d had envisioned
for his people.
The Gemara in Shabbos, regarding the laws of Chanukah and where to
situate the menorah, further accentuates this
idea. “The rabbis taught: the mitzvah is to place
the Chanukah menorah at the doorway facing the
outside. If you live on a second floor, place it by the window overlooking the
public domain. But at a time of danger, it is enough to just place it on your
table.”
Both the Avodas
Yisrael of Koznitz and the Lubavitcher Rebbe, of
blessed memory, interpret this Gemara
exegetically, referring to the inner message behind the luminescence of the
Chanukah menorah. Each Jew represents a walking menorah. We are in this world to promulgate the light
of Torah and mitzvos to fellow Jews, and a life
of ethics and morality based on the mitzvos that
were commanded to Noach for civilization as a whole. As far as the letter of
the law is concerned, the Gemara clearly states
that if there is spiritual danger in which a specific individual doesn’t feel
secure enough to protect him or herself from the ails of society, it is enough
for such a person to bolster his self-image by performing the mitzvah within his or her own four cubits. In a sense,
Rebbe Yehudah’s defense of Noach as recorded in the aforementioned Zohar raises this supposition. Noach was afraid of
perishing with the guilty of the world; hence, there was not much more that
Noach could do in his situation.
Every part of Torah is eternally relevant. Even
the events of the flood and other stories we are told throughout Sefer Bereishis apply to
each of us here and now as much as they did to the subjects of the stories at
the time that they occurred. For this reason, the Baal Shem Tov sought to
explain G‑d’s exhortation to Noach, “Enter the Teivah,”
as if to command each of us in spiritually tumultuous times to take succor in
the words of Torah and tefillah. However, we must
not forget that later in the parashah, G‑d’s
commandment to Noach to disembark from the Teivah
was equally forceful. This means, if at one point or another we feel that going
on display to promulgate the Jewish idea to the greater world will put us in a
precarious spiritual situation, we are permitted to work inwardly—but that is a
permissibility for that point in time and not a philosophy of life.
With Avraham, his weltanschauung was
different; it seems that he was chosen by G‑d specifically because of the
message that he promoted. Rashi in Parashas Lech Lecha, on the words,
“And the souls that they (Avraham and Sarah) made in Charan,” comments, “This
means the people that they brought under the wings of the Divine presence; Avraham
would convert the men and Sarah would convert the women.” The Gemara in tractate Sotah
10b states, “And he called there in the name of G‑d, master of the world.” Reish Lakish said, ‘Do
not read it “Vayikra,” meaning “he called,”
rather “Vayakri, he made others call.”’ This
teaches that Avraham our father taught all the passersby to call out in the
name of the A-mighty.”
Perhaps, this Gemara
outlines the extent of the responsibility of the Jew to carry G‑d’s message to
the world. The Gemara concludes, “This teaches
that Avraham our father taught all the passersby to call out in the name of G‑d.”
The words used by the Gemara for passersby is over v’shav. I’d like to suggest that these words on
the level of remez tell us that a Jew’s
responsibility is to involve him or herself with all people who fit between the
over and the shav,
meaning people who are transgressors and those who have already engaged in some
form of repentance.
It seems like this is the question which has
in a sense divided the Jewish people throughout the centuries. Are we meant to
focus our service inward or outward? The yeshiva
world has always promoted the message of personal service. Notwithstanding
that, the Chasam Sofer
in his sefer on the Torah, as well as in the
introduction to his responsa to Yoreh Deah, and
the Chofetz Chaim in the third chapter of his sefer Chomas Hadas both write that the purpose of Yiddishkeit is to be found in the worldview of Avraham.
This idea is what drives the differences in
the name given to Yerushalayim by Avraham and Shem. Shem wanted to call the
holy city Shaleim, as if to indicate that the
purpose of a Jew’s life in this world is inward reflection in order to attain
individual wholesomeness and perfection of character and Divine service.
Avraham, conversely, argued that it is not enough for one to work on himself or
herself. Avraham prescribed a life of yirah, where
others should see and be influenced by our service of the Creator and
ultimately seek a healthy life lived not selfishly, but to reveal a higher
purpose in the lives of society as a whole.
The world has clearly not solved the problem
that we face with regard to radical Islam. Israel has seen an escalation in
terror that it hasn’t seen for quite some time. The world as a whole has been
consumed in discussion regarding the solution to religious violence and how to
integrate religious Muslims into a civil society. Reb Naftoli Ropshitzer
records an interpretation to a verse in Tehillim:
“Mei’oyvai techakmeini mitzvosecha—from my
enemies I have become wiser in my performance of mitzvos.”
He writes, “We should apply the tactics of our enemies to our performance of mitzvos. Chazal teach us
that there is a difference between the words oyeiv
and sonei, both which mean enemy. Oyeiv refers specifically to Yishmael whereas sonei refers to Eisav. King David writes, “Mei’oyvai techakmeini mitzvosecha”—from Yishmael we can
learn how G‑d would like us to perform His mitzvos.
Perhaps if we internalize and embrace this
message, this perpetual problem that has plagued us for decades will finally be
resolved. v
Comments for Yochanan Gordon are
welcome at [email protected].
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Tuvia Bolton -11 years ago
Idolatry and addiction
I took a long course in addictions and I think that idolatry is something similar but much deeper. To the degree that, Interestingly, idolatry can be the CURE for addictions; The addict is advised to relinquish his ego (admit his helplessness, confess, turn himself over etc) to the 'god of his understanding' and ......all 'gods' work.
It seems to me that the reason Abraham was so anti-idolatry and adament in spreading 'his' idea of G-d was not bec. the others don't work or bec. they aren't 'true' but because they aren't ULTIMATE truth and leave too much room for egotism. That Abraham prooved by undergoing ten TESTS that seemed to indicate that G-d doesn't work and He doesn't keep His promises!! In other words Avraham wanted the entire world to do as he himself did and 'believe in the truth BECAUSE it is truth.'
Could be the need for idolatry is rooted in human faults but I think it's more rooted in the human 'essense' i.e. the ability to choose. In this case the mistaken choise of what apparantly 'works' over what's really 'right'. That's why when Moshiach fills the world with truth all idolatry will be obsolete (as we say in Alenu).
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eli -11 years ago
the soul of addiction
Much depth in this essay. Where to redirect our attention? Anybody have examples of 'true carriers of value'?
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