Parshat Lech Lecha: Why God chose Abraham
By SHLOMO RISKIN
10/25/2012 14:38
"... And he built there an altar to the Lord and he called out in the name of the Lord" (Genesis 12:8)
Horses in an expansive dune Photo: Israel Weiss
‘... And he built there an altar to the Lord and he called out in the name of
the Lord’ (Genesis 12:8)
Abraham is the first Hebrew, the founder of the Hebrew
nation and the path-breaker who created the Hebrew religion. From this portion
in the 12th chapter of the Book of Genesis until the last word of the Book of
Deuteronomy, it is Abraham’s Israelite descendants who are the major subjects of
the Bible.
Fascinatingly, God commands Abraham to leave his country, his
birthplace and his father’s house to travel to the unknown land of Canaan
(Israel) without any introduction to Abraham’s personality or his previous
connection with God. Indeed, God elects Abraham as the progenitor or patriarch
of “a great nation which will become a blessing to all the families of the
earth” without any mention of Abraham’s worthiness.
This is very
different from God’s commandment to Noah to build an ark, which comes after the
Bible has already informed us that Noah “was a righteous man, wholehearted in
his generation. Noah walked with God” (Gen. 6:9). It also contrasts with God’s
charge for Moses to lead His people in the Book of Exodus, which comes after
Moses left Pharaoh’s palace to empathize with his Hebrew brethren and put his
life on the line by slaying the Egyptian taskmaster who was beating a Hebrew
slave.
So why did God choose Abraham? Maimonides is apparently struck by
this question. His approach is paraphrased in a famous exchange. British
anti-Semite William Norman Ewer wrote, “How odd of God to choose the Jews,” to
which American poet Ogden Nash responded, “It wasn’t odd; the Jews chose
God.”
Abraham chose God. Maimonides maintains that Abraham found God
through his own reasoning powers.
“After this mighty man was weaned, he
began to explore and think. Though he was a child, he began to think
[incessantly] throughout the day and night, wondering,” until, as a result of
his own correct understanding, he reached the truth (Laws of Idolatry, Chapter
1, Halacha 3).
From Maimonides’s perspective it is not only that Abraham
understood that there must be one Power above all powers, one Lord above all
lords who is the Master of the Universe and therefore traded in paganism for
monotheism. Abraham realized that this Unity behind the apparent diversity that
fills the world is an ethical and moral force that insists on righteousness and
compassion; Abraham knew that it is not sufficient to be a monotheist but that
it is necessary to be an ethical monotheist. The Bible itself tells us this:
“Because I [God] have known [loved, chosen] Abraham because he commands his
children and his household after him to observe the way of the Lord to do
compassionate righteousness and moral justice.”
Once Abraham discovered
this great truth, it gave him no rest. He continually built altars and called
upon people to accept his ethical God. It is important to note that on none of
the altars recorded in our portion does Abraham present an offering, a sacrifice
to God; he rather calls out to individuals to join him in his faith and in his
ethical actions. Maimonides continues in his description of Abraham’s mission:
“Once Abraham recognized and understood the ethical God, he began to tell the
idolaters that they were not pursuing the true path; he broke their idols and
informed the people that it is only proper to serve the God of the world… he
stood up and called out in a great voice to the entire world that there is only
one God in the entire universe and it is only Him that they must serve. He would
walk about, call out and gather people from city to city and from kingdom to
kingdom until he reached the land of Canaan, and he called out there in the name
of the Lord of the universe. The people would gather around him and ask him
questions and he would teach each of them according to their respective
knowledge, until he would bring them to the path of truth…” The Kesef Mishne
commentary to Maimonides makes the point that Shem and Eber – although great
individuals who were also close to God and who according to the Midrash
established a great yeshiva where Isaac went to study immediately after the
akeda (binding) – were not chosen to be the first Jews precisely because they
only taught about God to those who came to study in their yeshiva; they were
rashei yeshiva (yeshiva heads), whereas Abraham was a rabbi – an outreach worker
in the style of Chabad and Ohr Torah Stone.
This is what the Bible means
when it speaks about “souls that Abraham and Sarah made in Haran”
(Gen. 12:5). The Midrash explains that Abraham converted the men and
Sarah converted the women. Maimonides further rules that the commandment to love
God includes “making God beloved to all the people of the earth” (Book of
Commandments, 5) and he insists that Jews must even coerce the gentiles to
accept the seven laws of morality (Laws of Kings, 8:10). We are not in any way
commanded actively to convert the gentiles to Judaism; but it seems that, at
least according to Maimonides, we are commanded to convert the world to ethical
monotheism.
The writer is the founder and chancellor of Ohr Torah Stone
Colleges and Graduate Programs and chief rabbi of Efrat.