Difference between revisions of "Avraham's Prayer for Sedom/2/en"
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− | <p>Avraham was praying both for the righteous of Sedom and for the land itself to | + | <p>Avraham was praying both for the righteous of Sedom and for the land itself (but not its evil inhabitants) to be saved.</p> |
− | <mekorot><multilink><a href="MoshavZekeinimBereshit18-23" data-aht="source">R. Yehuda HeChasid</a><a href="MoshavZekeinimBereshit18-23" data-aht="source">Bereshit 18:23</a><a href=" | + | <mekorot><multilink><a href="MoshavZekeinimBereshit18-23" data-aht="source">R. Yehuda HeChasid</a><a href="MoshavZekeinimBereshit18-23" data-aht="source">Bereshit 18:23</a><a href="R. Yehuda HeChasid" data-aht="parshan">About Moshav Zekeinim</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RadakBereshit18-24" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="RadakBereshit18-24" data-aht="source">Bereshit 18:24</a><a href="RadakBereshit18-32" data-aht="source">Bereshit 18:32</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About R. David Kimchi</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="MaaseiHashemMaaseiAvot17" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Hashem</a><a href="MaaseiHashemMaaseiAvot17" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Avot 17</a><a href="R. Eliezer Ashkenazi (Maasei Hashem)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Eliezer Ashkenazi</a></multilink></mekorot> |
<point><b>"הַאַף תִּסְפֶּה צַדִּיק עִם רָשָׁע"</b> – Radak understands "הַאַף" to mean "הגם" and that Avraham is questioning if killing the righteous with the wicked is also part of the sentence of the wicked.<fn>Radak also brings the opinion of Onkelos and Ramban above, that "הַאַף" relates to anger and Avraham is questioning if Hashem's anger is leading him to kill also the righteous.</fn></point> | <point><b>"הַאַף תִּסְפֶּה צַדִּיק עִם רָשָׁע"</b> – Radak understands "הַאַף" to mean "הגם" and that Avraham is questioning if killing the righteous with the wicked is also part of the sentence of the wicked.<fn>Radak also brings the opinion of Onkelos and Ramban above, that "הַאַף" relates to anger and Avraham is questioning if Hashem's anger is leading him to kill also the righteous.</fn></point> | ||
− | <point><b>"הַאַף תִּסְפֶּה וְלֹא תִשָּׂא לַמָּקוֹם לְמַעַן חֲמִשִּׁים הַצַּדִּיקִם"</b> – According to all these sources, these words represent a second request, that Hashem should not destroy the city itself | + | <point><b>"הַאַף תִּסְפֶּה וְלֹא תִשָּׂא לַמָּקוֹם לְמַעַן חֲמִשִּׁים הַצַּדִּיקִם"</b> – According to all of these sources, these words represent a second request, that Hashem should not destroy the city itself.<fn>Throughout the Torah, the sins of people affect the land, incurring a punishment on it as well. In the flood story, for example, the violence of the people led not just to their destruction but to that of the world itself. Here, too, the city and ground are to be destroyed, and according to this position, Avraham tries to prevent this.</fn>  However, these commentators differ in their understanding of Avraham's reasoning.  Radak asserts that Avraham was requesting that the physical city be spared due to the merit of the righteous people, while the Ma'asei Hashem maintains that Avraham did not think it was fair that the righteous should lose their land.<fn>He adds that Avraham might be further motivated to save the land because it belonged to him as part of Hashem's promise.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>Meaning of "לַמָּקוֹם"</b> – This approach holds that "לַמָּקוֹם" means literally the | + | <point><b>Meaning of "לַמָּקוֹם"</b> – This approach holds that "לַמָּקוֹם" means literally the place itself.<fn>Ma'asei Hashem rejects the possibility that the verse refers to all of the people of the city, wicked included, since it is unfathomable that Avraham should ask that sinners who had not repented should go unpunished. In addition, he asserts that Avraham is explicitly asking that justice be done, while saving the sinners is not an act of justice, but rather of mercy.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>Relationship between the requests in verses 23-25</b> – According to these commentators the verses contain two different requests, that the righteous be saved (vss. 23 and 25) and that the land not be destroyed (v. 24).  According to Ma'asei Hashem the common denominator is the demand that justice be done | + | <point><b>Relationship between the requests in verses 23-25</b> – According to these commentators the verses contain two different requests, that the righteous be saved (vss. 23 and 25) and that the land not be destroyed (v. 24).  According to the Ma'asei Hashem, the common denominator is the demand that justice be done for the worthy people of the city.  However, it is unclear why Avraham goes back and forth between his different requests.</point> |
− | <point><b>Collective punishment</b> – This approach might maintain that Hashem had never planned to collectively punish Sedom | + | <point><b>Collective punishment</b> – This approach might maintain that Hashem had never planned to collectively punish Sedom, but rather that there were simply no righteous people to save.<fn>Radak implies that collective punishment is affected by the level of righteousness of the individual.  If worthy, he will be saved despite the surrounding destruction, but if he is less worthy he might perish together with them.  In this case, it is unclear if all were active sinners or simply not righteous enough.</fn> Avraham, however, was unaware of this reality and mistakenly thought that Hashem was going to unjustly destroy them and their land.</point> |
− | <point><b>Collective salvation</b> – According to this approach there is no discussion of collective salvation by either Avraham or Hashem; both believe that the sinners need to be punished and that it would be unjust for them to be saved.<fn>This issue is one of the motivating factors leading Ma'asei Hashem to | + | <point><b>Collective salvation</b> – According to this approach there is no discussion of collective salvation by either Avraham or Hashem; both believe that the sinners need to be punished and that it would be unjust for them to be saved.<fn>This issue is one of the motivating factors leading Ma'asei Hashem to maintain that the discussion in verse 24 is about the land rather than the wicked of the city.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>Why does Avraham stop at ten?</b> R. Yehuda HeChasid and Radak assert if there were less than | + | <point><b>Why does Avraham stop at ten?</b> R. Yehuda HeChasid and Radak assert if there were less than ten righteous people, there would no longer be any justification to save the land.<fn>Radak notes that in Yechezkel 22, Hashem seems willing to save the land for even just one good person.  He suggests that there the person spoken of is a totally righteous person who attempted to reform those around him.  If no such people were to be found, though, there is not enough merit to save a city.  As further proof that sometimes the land will be destroyed despite the presence of even very righteous people, Radak points to Yechezkel 14:16 where Hashem says that though Noach, Daniel and Iyyov might be saved, "the land will lay barren".</fn>  Regarding the salvation of the righteous, though, it would not matter how many or few there were; each individual should be saved for his own deeds regardless of the presence of others.  The Ma'asei Hashem, in fact, asserts that Avraham had planned on asking Hashem to save even one, but Hashem ended the conversation before he could.</point> |
<point><b>Final outcome</b> – Though Hashem agreed to Avraham's request, the land and people were destroyed since there were no righteous people.</point> | <point><b>Final outcome</b> – Though Hashem agreed to Avraham's request, the land and people were destroyed since there were no righteous people.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Why was Lot saved?</b> Radak and Ma'asei Hashem both maintain that Lot was not righteous and was saved not due to his goodness, but out of kindness to Avraham.<fn>According to Radak, Avraham had not prayed for | + | <point><b>Why was Lot saved?</b> Radak and Ma'asei Hashem both maintain that Lot was not righteous and was saved not due to his goodness, but out of kindness to Avraham.<fn>According to Radak, Avraham had not prayed for Lot at all, not knowing if he was deserving.  Ma'asei Hashem, though, maintains that Avraham had intended to pray for Lot individually but was not given a chance.  Hashem, who knew of this desire of Avraham, granted it anyway.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>Why does Hashem consult with Avraham about Sedom?</b> These commentators could explain like <multilink><a href="RashbamBereshit18-17" data-aht="source">Rashbam</a><a href="RashbamBereshit18-17" data-aht="source">Bereshit 18:17</a><a href="R. Shemuel b. Meir (Rashbam)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Shemuel b. Meir</a></multilink> that Hashem told Avraham about Sedom because Hashem was going to destroy land which belonged to Avraham.<fn>Radak, though, says that Hashem had multiple reasons for sharing with Avraham.  As most of the world was to descend from Avraham, it was only right to share His plans for them.  In addition, Hashem hoped that Avraham's children would learn from the fate of Sedom to do what is right.  [ | + | <point><b>Why does Hashem consult with Avraham about Sedom?</b> These commentators could explain like <multilink><a href="RashbamBereshit18-17" data-aht="source">Rashbam</a><a href="RashbamBereshit18-17" data-aht="source">Bereshit 18:17</a><a href="R. Shemuel b. Meir (Rashbam)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Shemuel b. Meir</a></multilink> that Hashem told Avraham about Sedom because Hashem was going to destroy land which belonged to Avraham.<fn>Radak, though, says that Hashem had multiple reasons for sharing with Avraham.  As most of the world was to descend from Avraham, it was only right to share His plans for them.  In addition, Hashem hoped that Avraham's children would learn from the fate of Sedom to do what is right.  [Sharing the prediction about Sedom with Avraham would make it obvious that Hashem rewards and punishes and would preclude the possibility that this was simply a coincidental natural disaster.]  Finally, Hashem wanted Avraham to question His justice, attempt to find merits, and through the process to better understand His judgments.</fn></point> |
</category> | </category> | ||
<category name="">Only for the Righteous | <category name="">Only for the Righteous |
Version as of 06:24, 16 November 2014
Avraham's Prayer for Sedom
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
In trying to understand Avraham's prayer, commentators struggle with both the theological problems raised by Hashem's modes of justice and how to understand the relationship between Avraham's various requests. Some commentators are troubled most by the specter of collective punishment. Thus, according to R"Y Bekhor Shor and others, Avraham is making a two pronged argument, and Hashem acquiesces to both pleas. Avraham's stronger claim (invoking Divine justice) denounces collective punishment, while his secondary appeal (to God's attribute of mercy) is for collective salvation.
R. D"Z Hoffmann, links Avraham's two objections, explaining that Avraham recognized that there was no middle option – either all would be saved or all would perish. Thus, Avraham bargains with Hashem to set a minimum threshold of ten for avoiding collective punishment and opting instead for collective salvation. R. Hirsch also views Avraham's arguments as a single one, but he claims that, from the outset, Avraham knew that Hashem never intended to punish the righteous. According to him, all of Avraham's overtures were to request only that Hashem save even the wicked for the benefit of the righteous.
Others find the entire notion that sinners could go unpunished to be even more profoundly disturbing. Thus, a commentary from Qumran suggests that the entire discussion revolves only around sparing the innocent, and there is never any doubt that the evildoers will be obliterated. Similarly, the Ma'asei Hashem agrees that Avraham was not praying for the sinners, but he contends that Avraham's prayer was nonetheless a dual one, both on behalf of the righteous and that the land itself should not be destroyed.
Even for Sinners
Avraham asked for all of the people in Sedom to be saved if a quota of righteous was met. This approach splits, though, regarding for whom Avraham needed to actively pray:
For Both Righteous and Wicked
Avraham was praying for everyone in Sedom to be saved, both the righteous and the wicked.
- Also – According to R. Yosef Bekhor Shor,4 "הַאַף" modifies the word "צַדִּיק" (not "תִּסְפֶּה"), and Avraham is asking Hashem, "[If the sinners are the ones responsible for the outcry] will also the righteous perish with them?"
- Anger – Most of the other commentators5 assert instead that the word "הַאַף" refers to Hashem's anger,6 and that Avraham is asking that Hashem not allow His anger to cause the worthy to perish with the wicked.7
- Justice and mercy – According to most of these commentators, the various verses contain two distinct requests, that Hashem not destroy the righteous (vss. 23 and 25) and that he also save the wicked (v. 24).9 It is not clear why Avraham goes back and forth between these pleas for justice and mercy.
- Justice for the upright – According to the Ran and Akeidat Yitzchak, the arguments are interconnected and all stem from one desire, that there be justice for the righteous. This is explicit in Avraham's plea in v. 23, and his additional request that also the wicked be saved (v. 24), is only for the benefit of ("לְמַעַן")10 the righteous. If the evildoers were all to be wiped out, the righteous whose livelihood depended on them would perish as well, and this, Avraham contends, would be an unjust equation of the worthy and unworthy (v. 25).
- Collective salvation – Also according to R. D"Z Hoffmann, Avraham is really making only one request. Avraham thought that Hashem was judging the city as one entity, and that there were only two possible outcomes; it would either be wholly saved or completely destroyed.11 Therefore, he first points out the injustice to the innocent of totally destroying it, proceeds to ask that instead all be saved, and concludes by repeating the reasoning behind this request.
- Unjustified – Most of these commentators would likely explain that Hashem had never intended to apply collective punishment in Sedom,12 and that Avraham was simply unaware of this. According to R"Y Bekhor Shor, Hashem would even have saved any individual righteous people from the destruction.13
- Justified – R. D"Z Hoffmann, though, asserts that Avraham did not object in principle to collective punishment,14 and the entire dialogue was only about the threshold which needed to be reached to avoid its implementation. According to him, even in the end, Hashem agreed only to save all or nothing. If there would be ten righteous people, the city would merit collective salvation, but any less than ten would perish together with the wicked.15
- Mercy – R. Yosef Bekhor Shor, Ramban, and R. D"Z Hoffmann all assert that this salvation is an expression of Hashem's mercy.
- Justice – Akeidat Yitzchak and Abarbanel, in contrast, maintain that in saving the wicked Hashem is being just to the righteous who would perish without the resources provided by their neighbors.
- Repentance – According to Shadal, Hashem is willing to save the wicked if enough righteous are present, due to the hope that the latter will succeed in influencing and reforming them.
- Lot's family – Bereshit Rabbah and Abarbanel explain that Lot's family numbered ten,16 and it was them which Avraham's prayer had in mind.17
- Unfair – According to R"Y Bekhor Shor, if there are so few righteous, it is no longer fair to request that their merits save the wicked. He assumes that, in such a case, Hashem would still save the deserving individuals,18 and only punish the rest of the city.
- No chance of reform – Shadal suggests that less than a quorum would stand no chance of reforming the evildoers, and thus the entire reason for sparing the wicked would not apply.
- No need for the wicked – Akeidat Yitzchak asserts that Avraham could not ask for either too many or too few to be saved. If there were a significant portion of righteous in the city, they would no longer be dependent on the wicked, thereby eliminating the justification for saving them. However, if on the other hand, there were merely a handful of righteous, they could easily flee, and then, too, there would be no need to save the wicked.19
- According to R"Y Bekhor Shor, Akeidat Yitzchak, and Abarbanel,22 although Hashem was not willing to save the city if there were fewer than ten righteous people, he was willing to save the individuals who were worthy,23 and thus Lot was saved24 because of his righteousness.25
- R. D"Z Hoffmann, in contrast, asserts that even the righteous were only to be saved if there were ten or more. Though Lot was not corrupt, to escape collective punishment he would need a special miracle. This he merited only for Avraham's sake.
Specifically for the Wicked
Avraham was praying only for the sinners, being certain that Hashem would save the righteous even without any special supplication.
For the Physical Location
Avraham was praying both for the righteous of Sedom and for the land itself (but not its evil inhabitants) to be saved.
Only for the Righteous
Avraham was praying only for the righteous, that they should not be punished due to the rest of the people's sins.
- Also – R. Y"S Reggio understands it to mean "הגם" and that Avraham is saying, "Will you also kill the righteous?"
- Anger – The Biur, instead, relates the word to anger,49 and has Avraham question why Hashem needs to act with His attribute of justice, which inevitably leads to collective rather than individual punishment.50
- In contrast to most commentators, Seforno51 reads these words of Avraham as a statement and not a question.52 The word "אַף" is understood as "even though" rather than "also" or "anger", as above. Thus, Avraham is telling Hashem, "Even though you do not plan to save the wicked due to the righteous, it is still unfathomable that you should kill the righteous with the wicked...".53
- Biur and R. Y"S Reggio instead assert that Avraham realized that Hashem meant to destroy Sedom via a messenger54 who would not be able to differentiate between good and evil.55 He, thus, requests that Hashem save the entire immediate vicinity of the righteous so that they not perish with the wicked.56
- According to Seforno, verse 23 is Avraham's opening question and then verses 24-25 together act as a reinforcing statement in which Avraham points out that although he does not expect the sinners to be saved, nonetheless the righteous should not die.
- The Biur and R. Y"S Reggio instead read verse 24 as a suggestion of how to implement the justice requested in verse 23.58 In verse 25, Avraham concludes that if his suggestion is not taken, injustice will be done.59
- According to Seforno, the Biur, and R. Y"S Reggio, even though Avraham only spoke about saving the righteous, Hashem responded that He would be even willing to save the wicked if there were sufficient righteous people61 to merit it.62 Thus, Hashem was not only willing to avert collective punishment but also to collectively save.63
- According to the fragment from Qumran and HaRekhasim Levik'ah, in contrast, neither Avraham nor Hashem looked to save the sinners, as they did not deserve it. In fact, it is probably a discomfort with the concept of collective salvation that motivates their entire read of the story.64
- "לַעֲשׂוֹת צְדָקָה וּמִשְׁפָּט" – Seforno explains that Hashem wanted to teach Avraham about his attributes of both mercy and justice. Wherever there is a quorum of righteous who might be able to lead the wicked to repent, Hashem is willing to grant them a stay. If not, though, justice will be done.65
- "הָיוֹ יִהְיֶה לְגוֹי גָּדוֹל" – The Biur and R. Y"S Reggio assert that since Avraham was to become a well known nation, Hashem did not want future generations to complain that Avraham had not attempted to avert the disaster.66 Hashem, thus, gave him an opening to pray on Sedom's behalf.67