Difference between revisions of "A Portrait of Yishmael/2"
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<li>Abarbanel contends that even before the incident Sarah was planning to expel Yishmael, fearing that otherwise he would claim rights to the inheritance.  Seeing Yishmael being the center of attention simply confirmed her suspicions that the longer he stayed, the more difficult disinheriting him would become.</li> | <li>Abarbanel contends that even before the incident Sarah was planning to expel Yishmael, fearing that otherwise he would claim rights to the inheritance.  Seeing Yishmael being the center of attention simply confirmed her suspicions that the longer he stayed, the more difficult disinheriting him would become.</li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
− | <point><b>Evaluation of Sarah</b> – According to the Tzeror HaMor, Yishmael's actions did not warrant an expulsion and Sarah sinned in her actions.<fn>He assumes that the original harsh treatment of Hagar in chapter 16 was similarly sinful, and blames both Avraham and Sarah for their part.  Avraham should never have agreed to take Hagar as a wife in the first place nor allow Sarah's treatment of her afterwards.  Yishmael's birth itself served as a punishment, for his descendants were to bring destruction to Israel.<br/>Tzeror HaMor's reading is likely influenced by Ramban who similarly | + | <point><b>Evaluation of Sarah</b> – According to the Tzeror HaMor, Yishmael's actions did not warrant an expulsion and Sarah sinned in her actions.<fn>He assumes that the original harsh treatment of Hagar in chapter 16 was similarly sinful, and blames both Avraham and Sarah for their part.  Avraham should never have agreed to take Hagar as a wife in the first place nor allow Sarah's treatment of her afterwards.  Yishmael's birth itself served as a punishment, for his descendants were to bring destruction to Israel.<br/>Tzeror HaMor's reading is likely influenced by Radak and/or Ramban who similarly view Sarah's conduct in Chapter 16 as sinful.  Ramban differs, though, in that he justifies the banishment of Yishmael in Chapter 21 (as this was done with Divine consent).</fn>  Her descendants were later punished when Yishmael's progeny refused water to the Children of Israel,<fn>See <a href="ישעיהוכא-יג-יז" data-aht="source">Yeshayahu 21:13-18</a> and the <a href="TanchumaYitro5" data-aht="source">Tanchuma's</a> understanding of these verses.</fn> resulting in many deaths.  Radak, too, suggests that Sarah was deserving of rebuke, saying that Avraham kept quiet only for the sake of "household peace" (‎שלום בית).‎<fn>See Radak Bereshit 16:6 where he similarly says that Sarah sinned in her treatment of Hagar and that Avraham did not rebuke her for the sake of peace.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>Why is Avraham "upset about his son"?</b> Jubilees and Radak interpret that Avraham is upset about the notion of banishing a beloved son.<fn>Cf. Bereshit Rabbah 53:12.</fn>  This reaction is completely understandable given that Yishmael | + | <point><b>Why is Avraham "upset about his son"?</b> Jubilees and Radak interpret that Avraham is upset about the notion of banishing a beloved son.<fn>Cf. Bereshit Rabbah 53:12.</fn>  This reaction is completely understandable given that, according to them, Yishmael had done nothing to deserve expulsion.  In addition, Radak asserts that Avraham loved him both because he was his firstborn and because "בדרך טובה היה הולך, כי הוא גדל עמו ולמדהו דרך ה'‏"‎.<fn>See above that, according to Radak, Avraham would have rebuked Sarah for her request had it not been that he wanted to preserve household peace.</fn>  He claims that given that Avraham taught outsiders to follow in the path of Hashem, it is inconceivable that he did not do the same for his own child, Yishmael.</point> |
− | <point><b>Why did Hashem side with Sarah?</b> Abarbanel | + | <point><b>Why did Hashem side with Sarah?</b> Radak and Abarbanel explain that Yitzchak alone was to inherit, as Hashem wanted the chosen line to emerge from Avraham and Sarah.  Hashem, thus, agreed with Sarah that in order to ensure this and prevent any contesting of the inheritance, Yishmael needed to be expelled from the home.<fn>The expulsion, thus, had nothing to do with the specific actions of Yishmael.</fn></point> |
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<point><b>Hashem saves Yishmael</b><ul> | <point><b>Hashem saves Yishmael</b><ul> | ||
<li><b>Deserving</b> – According to R. Simon in Bereshit Rabbah, Hashem listened to Yishmael and saved him on his own merits.  R. Simon understands the phrase "בַּאֲשֶׁר הוּא שָׁם" to refer to Yishmael's present spiritual status.<fn>See also <multilink><a href="BavliRoshHaShanah16b" data-aht="source">Rosh HaShanah 16b</a><a href="BavliRoshHaShanah16b" data-aht="source">16b</a><a href="Talmud Bavli" data-aht="parshan">About the Bavli</a></multilink>.</fn>  Though his descendants were to oppress Israel, Yishmael himself was righteous and deserving of salvation.</li> | <li><b>Deserving</b> – According to R. Simon in Bereshit Rabbah, Hashem listened to Yishmael and saved him on his own merits.  R. Simon understands the phrase "בַּאֲשֶׁר הוּא שָׁם" to refer to Yishmael's present spiritual status.<fn>See also <multilink><a href="BavliRoshHaShanah16b" data-aht="source">Rosh HaShanah 16b</a><a href="BavliRoshHaShanah16b" data-aht="source">16b</a><a href="Talmud Bavli" data-aht="parshan">About the Bavli</a></multilink>.</fn>  Though his descendants were to oppress Israel, Yishmael himself was righteous and deserving of salvation.</li> | ||
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<point><b>Why is Avraham "upset about his son"?</b> Ramban suggests that Avraham's natural love for his son made it painful for him to banish him. Though Yishmael's actions were wrong, and Avraham might have even understood Sarah's desire for the expulsion, they were not so terrible to prevent his anguish at the action.  R. Avraham b. HaRambam further suggests that Avraham was oblivious to the true nature of his son, favoring him since he was the firstborn.<fn>He asserts that Sarah alone noted his negative character but hid the truth from her husband knowing that it would pain him.</fn></point> | <point><b>Why is Avraham "upset about his son"?</b> Ramban suggests that Avraham's natural love for his son made it painful for him to banish him. Though Yishmael's actions were wrong, and Avraham might have even understood Sarah's desire for the expulsion, they were not so terrible to prevent his anguish at the action.  R. Avraham b. HaRambam further suggests that Avraham was oblivious to the true nature of his son, favoring him since he was the firstborn.<fn>He asserts that Sarah alone noted his negative character but hid the truth from her husband knowing that it would pain him.</fn></point> | ||
<point><b>Why did Hashem reject Yishmael?</b> This approach might suggest that Yishmael was rejected due to both his maternal parentage and his lesser character.  R. Avraham b. HaRambam adds that Hashem agreed with Sarah that Yishmael was to be a negative influence, further justifying the banishment.</point> | <point><b>Why did Hashem reject Yishmael?</b> This approach might suggest that Yishmael was rejected due to both his maternal parentage and his lesser character.  R. Avraham b. HaRambam adds that Hashem agreed with Sarah that Yishmael was to be a negative influence, further justifying the banishment.</point> | ||
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<point><b>Hashem saves Yishmael</b> – This position would probably suggest that, though the expulsion might have been justified, Yishmael's negative actions did not warrant a death sentence.<fn>Both Ramban and R. Avraham b. HaRambam reject the midrashic understanding of the phrase "בַּאֲשֶׁר הוּא שָׁם" which suggests that Yishmael was righteous, probably because they still view Yishmael as somewhat culpable and negative.</fn></point> | <point><b>Hashem saves Yishmael</b> – This position would probably suggest that, though the expulsion might have been justified, Yishmael's negative actions did not warrant a death sentence.<fn>Both Ramban and R. Avraham b. HaRambam reject the midrashic understanding of the phrase "בַּאֲשֶׁר הוּא שָׁם" which suggests that Yishmael was righteous, probably because they still view Yishmael as somewhat culpable and negative.</fn></point> | ||
<point><b>Yishmael after the expulsion</b> – R. Avraham b. HaRambam asserts that Yishmael's becoming an archer, or a man of war, confirmed Sarah's evaluation of his negative character and her worries how this might affect Yitzchak.<fn>Ramban and Seforno suggest that at the end of his life, Yishmael repented from his sins and died a righteous person.</fn></point> | <point><b>Yishmael after the expulsion</b> – R. Avraham b. HaRambam asserts that Yishmael's becoming an archer, or a man of war, confirmed Sarah's evaluation of his negative character and her worries how this might affect Yitzchak.<fn>Ramban and Seforno suggest that at the end of his life, Yishmael repented from his sins and died a righteous person.</fn></point> | ||
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<point><b>Why is Avraham "upset about his son"?</b> According to Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and Rashi, Avraham was upset about his son's actions, not at the request to expel him.</point> | <point><b>Why is Avraham "upset about his son"?</b> According to Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and Rashi, Avraham was upset about his son's actions, not at the request to expel him.</point> | ||
<point><b>Why did Hashem reject Yishmael?</b> Yishmael's actions proved him unworthy and warranted expulsion.</point> | <point><b>Why did Hashem reject Yishmael?</b> Yishmael's actions proved him unworthy and warranted expulsion.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Why is Yishmael made into a great nation?</b> | + | <point><b>Why is Yishmael made into a great nation?</b> The Torah says that this was a reward to Avraham (not Yishmael) and part of the fulfillment of Hashem's promise that Avraham would be the father of a multitude of nations.  Some of these commentators, though, attempt to diminish the promise.  Thus, R. Yitzchak in <multilink><a href="BereshitRabbah47-5" data-aht="source">Bereshit Rabbah</a><a href="BereshitRabbah47-5" data-aht="source">47:5</a><a href="Bereshit Rabbah" data-aht="parshan">About Bereshit Rabbah</a></multilink> and Rashi assert that Yishmael's twelve princes will be short-lived ("כעננים יכלו"‎),‎<fn>This interpretation is a play on the additional and much rarer meaning of "נְשִׂיאִם" as clouds in Yirmeyahu 10:13, 51:16, Tehillim 135:7, and Mishlei 25:14.</fn> and Targum Pseudo-Jonathan says that he is destined to become a "nation of robbers".<fn>Cf. Targum Pseudo-Jonathan that asserts that the cows brought by the twelve princes during the Consecration of the Altar were an attempt to merit the destruction of the twelve princes of Yishmael.</fn></point> |
<point><b>Hashem saves Yishmael</b> – According to Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, Hashem saved Yishmael only for the sake of Avraham and his merits.<fn>Rashi is somewhat inconsistent in his understanding as he points to the Midrash which claims that Hashem saved Yishmael on his own merits, for his present righteous state ("בַּאֲשֶׁר הוּא שָׁם").  Yet, according to Rashi, Yishmael's present spiritual state was one of wickedness.</fn></point> | <point><b>Hashem saves Yishmael</b> – According to Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, Hashem saved Yishmael only for the sake of Avraham and his merits.<fn>Rashi is somewhat inconsistent in his understanding as he points to the Midrash which claims that Hashem saved Yishmael on his own merits, for his present righteous state ("בַּאֲשֶׁר הוּא שָׁם").  Yet, according to Rashi, Yishmael's present spiritual state was one of wickedness.</fn></point> | ||
<point><b>Yishmael after the expulsion</b> – Most of these sources assert that Yishmael repented later in life. Pirkei deRabbi Eliezer depicts Avraham as checking up on his son, and leaving him messages to change certain behaviors, which Yishmael does.<fn>The Midrash has Avraham hint to him that his wife, who refused Avraham hospitality, was unworthy and that he should find another.  Yishmael takes the hint and remarries.</fn></point> | <point><b>Yishmael after the expulsion</b> – Most of these sources assert that Yishmael repented later in life. Pirkei deRabbi Eliezer depicts Avraham as checking up on his son, and leaving him messages to change certain behaviors, which Yishmael does.<fn>The Midrash has Avraham hint to him that his wife, who refused Avraham hospitality, was unworthy and that he should find another.  Yishmael takes the hint and remarries.</fn></point> |
Version as of 11:54, 19 November 2014
Yishmael
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
The scarcity of information about Yishmael leads commentators to evaluate his character based on clues from those who interact with him, specifically Avraham and Sarah. In so doing, though, exegetes find themselves in a catch-22. On one hand, it seems inconceivable that Sarah would expel Yishmael had he been an innocent, righteous youth. On the other hand, it is equally troubling to suggest that Avraham could have raised a son that would commit terrible crimes.
As a result, the commentators' characterizations of Yishmael run the gamut from innocent to evil. Some exegetes, like Radak, posit that Yishmael was a wholesome youth, and Tzeror HaMor even faults Sarah for banishing him. Rashi, following numerous Midrashim, goes to the opposite extreme, painting an utterly wicked Yishmael and interpreting the various stories in which he appears to match this image. Ramban adopts a middle of the road approach, depicting a negative, but not villainous Yishmael.
Neutral to Positive
Yishmael did not actively sin, and may even have had some merits.
- Free – According to Ibn Ezra, "פֶּרֶא אָדָם" is a metaphor for a non-submissive person who is free from the yoke of others.3 The angel told Hagar that Yishmael would be a powerful individual, victorious over his neighbors ("יָדוֹ בַכֹּל"), but simultaneously causing others to fight back ("וְיַד כֹּל בּוֹ").
- Man of the wilderness – Radak asserts that "פֶּרֶא אָדָם" refers to a man of the wilderness who, due to his nomadic lifestyle, will constantly be battling his neighbors ("יָדוֹ בַכֹּל וְיַד כֹּל בּוֹ"). However, he will not flee from them, but manage to dwell amongst them ("עַל פְּנֵי כָל אֶחָיו יִשְׁכֹּן").4
- Man of civilization – Abarbanel reads the opening words of the angel as a rhetorical question: "Will your son be a man of the wilderness?"5 The angel is, thus, informing Hagar that Yishmael will live amongst men ("עַל פְּנֵי כָל אֶחָיו יִשְׁכֹּן"), intermingling and socializing with them ("יָדוֹ בַכֹּל"), rather than alone in the wilderness.6
- According to Jubilees and Ibn Ezra, Sarah was simply jealous,12 while the Tzeror HaMor asserts that she was insulted as she mistakenly thought that Yishmael was laughing at her.13
- Abarbanel contends that even before the incident Sarah was planning to expel Yishmael, fearing that otherwise he would claim rights to the inheritance. Seeing Yishmael being the center of attention simply confirmed her suspicions that the longer he stayed, the more difficult disinheriting him would become.
- Deserving – According to R. Simon in Bereshit Rabbah, Hashem listened to Yishmael and saved him on his own merits. R. Simon understands the phrase "בַּאֲשֶׁר הוּא שָׁם" to refer to Yishmael's present spiritual status.20 Though his descendants were to oppress Israel, Yishmael himself was righteous and deserving of salvation.
- Punishment to Sarah – Tzeror HaMor suggests that it would have been better had Yishmael died from the lack of water, since then he would never have borne a nation who was to oppress the Israelites. Due to Sarah's actions, though, he was saved so that he could later punish Israel.
- Neutral – Ibn Ezra and Radak identify Yishmael's descendants with Arav and Midyan, both of whom live in the wilderness, and as such fulfill the original prophecy to Hagar.
- Negative – Ibn Ezra also suggests that the fourth beast of Daniel's vision refers to Yishmael, who will prevail over many but ultimately be vanquished. Tzeror HaMor similarly identifies Yishmael's descendants with Israel's enemies, associating them with the people of Arav in Yeshayahu 21 who refuse Israel water.21
Mildly Negative
Yishmael had several negative traits, but he was not completely wicked.
- Militancy – Ramban maintains that Yishmael was to become a "פֶּרֶא אָדָם", a militant person always ready to pounce on and devour others.23 He sees in this a punishment to Avraham and Sarah who had sinned in their harsh treatment of Hagar. They were meted a measure for measure punishment, as Yishmael's descendants were to similarly oppress their offspring.
- Inheritance related – R. Shimon B. Yochai portrays Yishmael laughing at the concept of Yitzchak inheriting26 while Seforno has him suggest that Yitzchak was born of Avimelekh, which would thereby disqualify him from inheriting.
- Degrading Yitzchak – R. Saadia suggests that Yishmael was scornfully saying that Yitzchak would not survive to adulthood, while Ramban presents him as more simply poking fun at Yitzchak and the party made in his honor.
- Foolish play – According to R. Avraham b. HaRambam, Yishmael was acting foolishly, laughing and speaking in an unbecoming manner.
- Protect Yitzchak's character– According to R. Avraham b. HaRambam, Sarah wanted to prevent Yitzchak from learning from the bad example set by Yishmael.27 Sarah was not worried about his sharing in a monetary inheritance, but about the two brothers inheriting together, in the sense of growing up together.28
- Prevent Yishmael's inheritance – Seforno asserts that since Hagar was trying to ensure through her son's libel that Yishmael inherit all, Sarah banished them so that they would not inherit at all.
- Punishment – Ramban maintains that Sarah viewed Yishmael's actions as a forgetting of his rightful place as servant. Though this normally would deserve death or corporal punishment, Sarah instead decided to expel Hagar and Yishmael.
Extremely Negative
Yishmael was evil, and he committed the most heinous of crimes, including the threesome of idolatry, murder, and illicit relations.