Parashat Tzav - Shabbat Hagadol: Redemption - the easy way and the hard way

Outtake if needed: Just when, why and how does the fiery fanatic Elijah become a venerable sage?

The Sabbath before Pessah is called "The Great Sabbath" (Shabbat Hagadol) because of the last verse of the reading from the prophets (haftara) for that day: "Behold I send you Elijah the Prophet before the coming of the great and awesome day of the Lord" - the day of Redemption (Malachi 3:23). It is certainly logical that we feature Elijah, herald of the redemption, before Pessah, the "time of our freedom" and redemption from Egyptian servitude. But what kind of person is this Elijah, "messenger of good news, salvation and comfort" (Grace after Meals)? The biblical Elijah was a zealot who slaughtered 450 prophets of Baal after a contest at Mount Carmel, and challenged God to punish the Israelites for having rejected His covenant and allowed Jezebel to murder the Lord's prophets (I Kings 19:10). But somehow in talmudic and folk tradition, Elijah morphs into a benign, grandfatherly figure who drinks from a special goblet at everyone's Seder table, blesses every newborn male baby with his presence at every circumcision and frequently appears as a deus ex machina to teach important lessons and save people's lives at critical moments. Just when, why and how does the fiery fanatic become a venerable sage? Let us look again at the biblical text and I believe we'll discover the dynamics of the process. Elijah lives in Israel under the idolatrous monarchy of Ahab and Jezebel, Baal devotees who murdered the prophets of the Lord. The wrath of God is expressed in the form of a drought which wreaks havoc on the land. Elijah stages a Steven Spielberg-style extravaganza: He convinces King Ahab to invite all the Israelites to the foot of Mount Carmel, where he has the 450 prophets of Baal choose a bull. Elijah takes another bull, and each animal is cut in half and placed on an altar without a fire - one altar to God and one to Baal. The offering on whichever fire descends from on high will be the victor. After the better part of a day of fruitless prayers, incantations and orgiastic immolations by the prophets of Baal, Elijah first drenches his offering in water and then calls out to God. A fire descends from heaven, consuming his offering together with the wood, the stones, the water and the earth. The Israelites cry out: The Lord! He is God!" Elijah then slaughters the 450 prophets of Baal, clouds gather and a great rain comes down. Elijah is exultant, until he receives a message from Queen Jezebel, who vows that "at this time tomorrow I shall make your soul like one of those [prophets of Baal]." Elijah is shocked that she does not repent or seek forgiveness for her idolatrous ways. Yet he also understands the shrewdness in her words. After 24 hours, she shall have him killed! Why not immediately? Because it will take the Israelites only 24 hours to forget the immediacy of the miracle. After only one day, the Israelites will forget about God and allow the wicked queen to destroy His only remaining prophet. Elijah escapes to Beersheba and asks that his soul be taken by God. An angel provides him with food and sends him on a 40-day journey to Mount Sinai. God asks why he has come, and he responds: "I have been a zealot, yes a zealot for the Lord God of hosts, because the Israelites have forsaken Your covenant; they have destroyed Your altars, they have killed Your prophets and they now seek to take my life as well, I who am now left alone" (I Kings 19:10). Elijah understands that despite the great miracle he wrought at Mount Carmel, no one has repented, nothing has changed, and his life is in danger. God then sends Elijah a vision: a great, powerful wind, but the Lord is not in the wind; an earthquake, but the Lord is not in the earthquake; a fire, but the Lord is not in the fire. And after the fire comes a still, silent sound - the voice of the Lord. God is telling His prophet that people aren't moved by miracles on a mountain - whether Mount Sinai or Mount Carmel - and that the Israelites will not be forced into submission by dire punishments. After the first revelation at Sinai, they worshiped the Golden Calf, and after the revelation at Mount Carmel, they didn't repent of their idolatry, despite their shouts of "The Lord! He is God!" The Israelites will be moved only by learning of God's second revelation at Sinai - the glimpse He shared with Moses into His divine essence by the still, small voice of kindness and understanding, by the God of love and forgiveness (Exodus 34:6-8). And this is precisely what Malachi says at the conclusion of his prophecy. There is the possibility that "the end of days" will be awe-some and awe-ful, replete with war, destruction and the bare survival of the faithful remnant; but the preferred possibility is that the end of days come as a result of national repentance for ignoring the voice of God, and the return of Israel to our heavenly Father in love and gratitude rather than out of fear. Elijah must "turn back the hearts of the parents to their children and the hearts of the children to their parents" with the still, silent sound of unconditional love. God does not want to "strike the land with utter destruction" at the end of days (Malachi 3:24). The rabbis of the midrash go one step further. God is teaching Elijah that the prophet wanted to punish Israel only because he grossly misjudged them when he said, "They rejected Your covenant." Elijah will be "translated to heaven" (II Kings 2:1, 11, 12), will shuttle between heaven and earth, will go to every Pessah Seder where Jews celebrate God's promise of redemption, and attend every circumcision where Jews demonstrate their willingness to shed blood for the covenant. The prophet will transform his people not by judging (or misjudging) them, but only by loving them with the still, small sound of our Father's unconditional love.