Difference between revisions of "Purpose of Akeidat Yitzchak/2/en"
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<h2>Overview</h2> | <h2>Overview</h2> | ||
− | <p> | + | <p>In attempting to answer the many questions raised by the akeidah, many exegetes question certain assumption regarding some of our core theological beliefs and perceptions.  Thus, Ralbag challenges the conception that Hashem must be totally omniscient and limits Hashem's foreknowledge of the choices an individual will make.  As such, he takes the text at face value and asserts that the purpose of the <i>Akeidah</i> was for Hashem to evaluate the extent of Avraham's devotion. </p> |
− | <p> | + | <p>Others question our perceptions regarding the Avot rather than Hashem. Rashbam, thus, knocks down the notion that the <i>Akeidah</i> marked the pinnacle of Avraham's career, asserting that it was actually a low point as it constituted a punishment for sins he had committed.  Shadal's approach makes one ask a similar question, whether the Avot from the very beginning shared the value system later set forth in the Torah, or whether they journeyed towards that goal. According to his position, until the Akiedah, the entire world, Avraham included, viewed child sacrifice as the highest form of devotion to God.  It was only through the trial that Hashem taught that all were mistaken and that the practice was, in fact, immoral and repugnant.</p> |
− | <p> | + | <p>Finally, R. D"Z Hoffmann and other modern scholars repel the idea that there is an independent human ethic.  The <i>Akeidah</i> taught that one must always be willing to sacrifice one's entire being to God, including perceived values of right and wrong, in the recognition that it is only Hashem's word which defines morality</p></div> |
<approaches> | <approaches> | ||
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<point><b>Hashem's knowledge</b> – Rashbam's understanding that the story is not a test at all eliminates the question of why Hashem, in His omniscience, would need to test someone in order to know how they will act.</point> | <point><b>Hashem's knowledge</b> – Rashbam's understanding that the story is not a test at all eliminates the question of why Hashem, in His omniscience, would need to test someone in order to know how they will act.</point> | ||
<point><b>Avraham rewarded</b> – The fact that Avraham is rewarded and deemed to be "God-fearing" at the end of the experience is hard to reconcile with the view that the whole ordeal was a punishment. However, it is possible to suggest<fn>Rashbam, however, does not say this.</fn> that the <i>Akeidah</i> served to not only punish Avraham, but also as an opportunity for him to correct his mistakes.<fn>R"Y Medan (see above note) suggests that Hashem's forgiveness of Avraham on Mt. Moriah points to the future role of the altar to be built there - atonement for sin and Hashem's granting of mercy rather than justice.</fn>  If the pact with Avimelekh demonstrated a lack of obedience to Hashem's will, Avraham's utter submission during the <i>Akeidah</i> proved that he was once again God-fearing and, as such, deserving of reward.<fn>Chagai Ben-Artzi (see note above) explains that with Avraham's obeisance to Hashem's directive, Hashem was able to renew the covenants that had been nullified.  He thus blessed him once again with seed and conquest. Ben-Artzi suggests that it is Yitzchak who serves to totally correct his father's deeds when he insists on living and working specifically on Philistine land, despite their attempts to chase him away.</fn></point> | <point><b>Avraham rewarded</b> – The fact that Avraham is rewarded and deemed to be "God-fearing" at the end of the experience is hard to reconcile with the view that the whole ordeal was a punishment. However, it is possible to suggest<fn>Rashbam, however, does not say this.</fn> that the <i>Akeidah</i> served to not only punish Avraham, but also as an opportunity for him to correct his mistakes.<fn>R"Y Medan (see above note) suggests that Hashem's forgiveness of Avraham on Mt. Moriah points to the future role of the altar to be built there - atonement for sin and Hashem's granting of mercy rather than justice.</fn>  If the pact with Avimelekh demonstrated a lack of obedience to Hashem's will, Avraham's utter submission during the <i>Akeidah</i> proved that he was once again God-fearing and, as such, deserving of reward.<fn>Chagai Ben-Artzi (see note above) explains that with Avraham's obeisance to Hashem's directive, Hashem was able to renew the covenants that had been nullified.  He thus blessed him once again with seed and conquest. Ben-Artzi suggests that it is Yitzchak who serves to totally correct his father's deeds when he insists on living and working specifically on Philistine land, despite their attempts to chase him away.</fn></point> | ||
− | <point><b>"כִּי עַתָּה יָדַעְתִּי כִּי יְרֵא אֱלֹהִים אַתָּה"</b>< | + | <point><b>"כִּי עַתָּה יָדַעְתִּי כִּי יְרֵא אֱלֹהִים אַתָּה"</b> – According to this approach,<fn>Rashbam himself does not say this but rather understands the verse to mean that, after the event, Avraham's fear of God became public knowledge, apparent to the entire world.  It was not Hashem who gained new knowledge, but rather the public.</fn> Hashem might be speaking of His own knowledge. Earlier, in his interactions with the Philistines, Avraham had not acted in a God-fearing manner, but now, once again Hashem can recognize Avraham's obedience. This is not theologically difficult, since according to this reading, Hashem did not lack knowledge which was then supplied, but rather Avraham lacked fear which he then achieved.</point> |
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<point><b>How can Hashem command murder?</b> According to this approach, Hashem had never intended to allow Avraham to carry though with the plan,<fn>According to Chagai Ben-Artzi (see above note), in contrast, Hashem might originally have in fact intended that Yitzchak be killed, and thus given back to Hashem.  Since Avraham broke his covenant with Hashem, Hashem planned to retract his side, the gift of Yitzchak and blessing of progeny.  It is not clear,however, why Hashem would need Avraham to be the instrument through which Yitzchak was returned to Hashem..</fn> but He intentionally gave Avraham an overly harsh command so that he would suffer as a result.  It is unclear, though, why Avraham did not argue with Hashem over the directive.</point> | <point><b>How can Hashem command murder?</b> According to this approach, Hashem had never intended to allow Avraham to carry though with the plan,<fn>According to Chagai Ben-Artzi (see above note), in contrast, Hashem might originally have in fact intended that Yitzchak be killed, and thus given back to Hashem.  Since Avraham broke his covenant with Hashem, Hashem planned to retract his side, the gift of Yitzchak and blessing of progeny.  It is not clear,however, why Hashem would need Avraham to be the instrument through which Yitzchak was returned to Hashem..</fn> but He intentionally gave Avraham an overly harsh command so that he would suffer as a result.  It is unclear, though, why Avraham did not argue with Hashem over the directive.</point> | ||
<point><b>Polemical motivations</b> – It is possible that Rashbam's interpretation is at least partially polemically motivated:<br/> | <point><b>Polemical motivations</b> – It is possible that Rashbam's interpretation is at least partially polemically motivated:<br/> | ||
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<li><b>Hashem never really commanded a sacrifice</b> – R. Saadia deals with this question at length, offering four possible explanations of how Hashem did not really go back on His word. Some of these are somewhat similar to Ralbag's reading above, and posit some ambiguity in the wording of the original command,<fn>Thus, he suggests that one can read "וְהַעֲלֵהוּ... עַל אַחַד הֶהָרִים אֲשֶׁר אֹמַר אֵלֶיךָ" to mean "and offer him on one of the mountains <b>if</b> (not that) I tell you".  Alternatively, he suggests that "וְהַעֲלֵהוּ" refer to an unnamed subject, and not Yitzchak.</fn> which allows for the possibility that Hashem never really asked that Yitzchak be sacrificed.<fn>R. Saadia adds that precisely because this was a test, Hashem had to allow Avraham to think He meant one thing when He intended another and therefore could not have explicitly revealed his true intentions.</fn>  R. Saadia's comments are explicitly polemical, responding to Moslem claims that if God can command one thing and then retract it, it is also possible that He can command the Torah and then replace it.<fn>See R. Saadia's discussion in HaEmunot VeHaDeiot 3:9 as well.</fn>  In his reply, R. Saadia distinguishes between Hashem's private instructions to Avraham and the Torah's mitzvot which were explicitly given to be permanent.</li> | <li><b>Hashem never really commanded a sacrifice</b> – R. Saadia deals with this question at length, offering four possible explanations of how Hashem did not really go back on His word. Some of these are somewhat similar to Ralbag's reading above, and posit some ambiguity in the wording of the original command,<fn>Thus, he suggests that one can read "וְהַעֲלֵהוּ... עַל אַחַד הֶהָרִים אֲשֶׁר אֹמַר אֵלֶיךָ" to mean "and offer him on one of the mountains <b>if</b> (not that) I tell you".  Alternatively, he suggests that "וְהַעֲלֵהוּ" refer to an unnamed subject, and not Yitzchak.</fn> which allows for the possibility that Hashem never really asked that Yitzchak be sacrificed.<fn>R. Saadia adds that precisely because this was a test, Hashem had to allow Avraham to think He meant one thing when He intended another and therefore could not have explicitly revealed his true intentions.</fn>  R. Saadia's comments are explicitly polemical, responding to Moslem claims that if God can command one thing and then retract it, it is also possible that He can command the Torah and then replace it.<fn>See R. Saadia's discussion in HaEmunot VeHaDeiot 3:9 as well.</fn>  In his reply, R. Saadia distinguishes between Hashem's private instructions to Avraham and the Torah's mitzvot which were explicitly given to be permanent.</li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
− | <point><b>Morality of the command and Avraham's agreement</b> – Most of these sources do not explicitly address this issue, but may assume, | + | <point><b>Morality of the command and Avraham's agreement</b> – Most of these sources do not explicitly address this issue, but may assume that, by definition, any command of Hashem must be moral.  Avraham recognized this, and thus did not question the command even though he did not understand how a directive to perform child sacrifice could possibly be ethical.<fn>See R. Y.B. Soloveitchik, <i>Abraham's Journey</i>, (New York, 2008): 190.  He speaks of Avraham as "suspending judgement" (as opposed to Kierkegaard's suspension of the ethical, discussed below).  Though Avraham could not himself understand how the command was ethical, he suspended his own judgement, knowing that Hashem is a moral God and therefore all His directives must be moral as well.</fn></point> |
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
</category> | </category> | ||
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<li><b>Raise as a banner</b> – Bereshit Rabbah, the gloss in R"Y Bekhor Shor, <multilink><a href="AbarbanelBereshit22-3" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="AbarbanelBereshit22-3" data-aht="source">Bereshit 22:3</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink>, and the Keli Yekar go a step further in asserting that the word "נִסָּה" is related to the word "נס", or banner. Through the <i>Akeidah,</i> Hashem set up Avraham as a signpost for others to emulate.</li> | <li><b>Raise as a banner</b> – Bereshit Rabbah, the gloss in R"Y Bekhor Shor, <multilink><a href="AbarbanelBereshit22-3" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="AbarbanelBereshit22-3" data-aht="source">Bereshit 22:3</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink>, and the Keli Yekar go a step further in asserting that the word "נִסָּה" is related to the word "נס", or banner. Through the <i>Akeidah,</i> Hashem set up Avraham as a signpost for others to emulate.</li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
− | <point><b>"כִּי עַתָּה יָדַעְתִּי כִּי יְרֵא אֱלֹהִים אַתָּה" | + | <point><b>"כִּי עַתָּה יָדַעְתִּי כִּי יְרֵא אֱלֹהִים אַתָּה"</b> – According to Bereshit Rabbah, R. Saadia, Lekach Tov, Rambam, and Keli Yekar,<fn>He also raises the possibility that the verse should be read as if it says "הנה ידעתי" rather than "עתה ידעתי".  Hashem, thus, is declaring, "Behold, I always knew that you were God fearing..."</fn> Hashem is not saying, "now I know" but rather "now I have made Avraham's fear of God known to others."<fn>R"Y Bekhor Shor, instead, claims that Hashem simply spoke in common parlance ("דברה תורה בלשון בני אדם"), acting as if He had not known Avraham's extraordinary awe until Avraham passed the test, even though He had known of it all along.</fn> </point> |
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<point><b>Hashem's knowledge</b> – This approach can maintain Hashem's perfect knowledge since it does not assume that He learned anything new from the experience.</point> | <point><b>Hashem's knowledge</b> – This approach can maintain Hashem's perfect knowledge since it does not assume that He learned anything new from the experience.</point> | ||
<point><b>What was the public supposed to learn?</b> Though these sources agree that the <i>akeidah</i> was supposed to demonstrate Avraham's worthiness, they disagree regarding the specific message it was supposed to impart:<br/> | <point><b>What was the public supposed to learn?</b> Though these sources agree that the <i>akeidah</i> was supposed to demonstrate Avraham's worthiness, they disagree regarding the specific message it was supposed to impart:<br/> |
Version as of 22:47, 19 September 2017
Purpose of Akeidat Yitzchak
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
In attempting to answer the many questions raised by the akeidah, many exegetes question certain assumption regarding some of our core theological beliefs and perceptions. Thus, Ralbag challenges the conception that Hashem must be totally omniscient and limits Hashem's foreknowledge of the choices an individual will make. As such, he takes the text at face value and asserts that the purpose of the Akeidah was for Hashem to evaluate the extent of Avraham's devotion.
Others question our perceptions regarding the Avot rather than Hashem. Rashbam, thus, knocks down the notion that the Akeidah marked the pinnacle of Avraham's career, asserting that it was actually a low point as it constituted a punishment for sins he had committed. Shadal's approach makes one ask a similar question, whether the Avot from the very beginning shared the value system later set forth in the Torah, or whether they journeyed towards that goal. According to his position, until the Akiedah, the entire world, Avraham included, viewed child sacrifice as the highest form of devotion to God. It was only through the trial that Hashem taught that all were mistaken and that the practice was, in fact, immoral and repugnant.
Finally, R. D"Z Hoffmann and other modern scholars repel the idea that there is an independent human ethic. The Akeidah taught that one must always be willing to sacrifice one's entire being to God, including perceived values of right and wrong, in the recognition that it is only Hashem's word which defines morality
For Hashem: Evaluating Avraham
Hashem needed to test Avraham in order to evaluate the extent of his faith as, until the Akeidah, Hashem did not know the extent of Avraham's devotion to Him.
For Avraham
Avraham, rather than Hashem, was supposed to learn from the experience. This position subdivides regarding whether the test was beneficial or punitive in nature:
Punishment
The experience was meant to punish Avraham for having made a covenant with the Philistines.
- As Christians viewed the Akeidah as a prefiguration of Jesus's death on the cross, Rashbam might have wanted to cast the story in a much more negative light, suggesting that it is not the epitome of Avraham's relationship with Hashem, but rather the result of a sin.
- Y. Bin-Nun28 alternatively suggests that Rashbam might be combating the idealization of the Akeidah common among those in the Middle Ages who were forced to martyr their children for God, and looked to Avraham's action as a model to emulate.29
Reward
Acting on Hashem's directives brought Avraham to new levels of faith, and merited him rewards that he would not have received had he not been tested by Hashem.
- Tested – R. Saadia and Ramban maintain that the word "נִסָּה" means tested, but that a test need not be for the tester. It is the person being tested who gains from the experience.31
- Trained – On the other hand, according to R"Y Albo and the Biur, the root "נסה" means trained or accustomed.32 By commanding Avraham to sacrifice his son, Hashem trained his heart towards proper fear and service of God.33
- Self-development – Ran, R"Y Albo, and the Biur explain that acting on a belief serves to strengthen that belief.35 Though Avraham's willingness to do Hashem's bidding and sacrifice his son was not in question, having to actively bind Yitzchak and raise the knife raised his fear of God to new levels. Undergoing a trial changes a person in a way that merely thinking can never do.36
- Increased reward – Ramban and R"Y Albo37 maintain that, after the trial, Avraham merited a reward not only for his good intentions, but also for his positive actions. R. Saadia points out that Hashem often presents the righteous with many trials in this world in order to later merit them with redoubled rewards.38
- Made known / was known – R. Saadia suggests that the word "יָדַעְתִּי" should be understood as if written: "והודעתי".43 Through the Akeidah, Hashem proclaimed to the world the level of Avraham's righteousness. Ramban similarly rereads the verb "יָדַעְתִּי", but turns it into the passive, "נודעה". Now that Avraham had actualized his potential, his awe of God was known in practice.
- Words of the spokesperson – Seforno, instead, claims that it is the angel speaking in his own name who declares, "now I know that you are more God-fearing [than me, the angel]."44
- The text prefaces that this was a test – Ibn Ezra asserts that this is not the only place where Hashem appears to have changed His mind, pointing to the replacement of the firstborns with the Levites as another example. Nonetheless, he explains that in this story, the fact that the narrative opens with the words "And Hashem tested Avraham" proves that, from the outset, Hashem had no intention of Avraham's carrying through with the slaughter.
- Hashem never really commanded a sacrifice – R. Saadia deals with this question at length, offering four possible explanations of how Hashem did not really go back on His word. Some of these are somewhat similar to Ralbag's reading above, and posit some ambiguity in the wording of the original command,45 which allows for the possibility that Hashem never really asked that Yitzchak be sacrificed.46 R. Saadia's comments are explicitly polemical, responding to Moslem claims that if God can command one thing and then retract it, it is also possible that He can command the Torah and then replace it.47 In his reply, R. Saadia distinguishes between Hashem's private instructions to Avraham and the Torah's mitzvot which were explicitly given to be permanent.
For Others
The primary objective of the trial was not for its actual participants, but to teach others looking in from the outside enduring lessons about Hashem's ways and/or worship.
Explanation of Choice of Avraham
The Akeidah was meant to demonstrate Avraham's worthiness and why he merited to be selected by Hashem to be the father of the chosen nation.
- Test – Most of these sources understand the word according to its simple sense, to mean "to test" or "try" but claim that a test is sometimes aimed not at the tester, or even at the one tested, but rather at the audience who watches or hears of the trial.50
- Raise as a banner – Bereshit Rabbah, the gloss in R"Y Bekhor Shor, Abarbanel, and the Keli Yekar go a step further in asserting that the word "נִסָּה" is related to the word "נס", or banner. Through the Akeidah, Hashem set up Avraham as a signpost for others to emulate.
- Avraham's unconditional fear and obedience – Most of these sources claim that the trial was meant to prove to all the extent of Avraham's love of and obedience to God. Avraham's willingness to sacrifice his only, beloved child at Hashem's behest, proved why Avraham merited to be Hashem's choice.
- Avraham worthy despite not practicing child sacrifice – Shadal, in contrast, suggests that, through the Akeidah, Hashem wanted to make clear to the entire world that the fact that the Children of Israel do not practice child sacrifice is not a sign of lack of devotion to God. Thus, Avraham's readiness to sacrifice Yitzchak demonstrated that had Hashem so desired, he, too, would have been willing to sacrifice his loved ones. Hashem, though, has no desire for child offerings. As such, Israel has no reason to feel inferior, and pagan nations should not view themselves as superior.
- Satan and other angels – Jubilees, Pseudo-Philo, Bavli, Bereshit Rabbah, Rashi, and R"Y Bekhor Shor suggest that the test was aimed at the Satan and/or other angels who had questioned Avraham's loyalty and obedience to Hashem.55 Such beings need not have been physically present to see the event.
- Other people – Most of the other sources more simply suggest that the lesson was for the other nations (or, according to Shadal, Israel as well) living in or after Avraham's generation who had heard of (even if they did not witness) the event.56 Radak points out that word of the experience spread due to its being recounted in the Torah.57
- Avraham not unique – For Shadal, this is not a question, as he does not suggest that the story's goal is to show Avraham's uniqueness, but only that he is no less devoted than others.
- No ulterior motive – Philo asserts that most people who offer their children in sacrifice do so with an ulterior motive in mind, stemming either from a desire for glory or out of fear or hopes of preventing some catastrophe.58 Avraham, though, had neither purpose in mind, only the desire to do Hashem's bidding. Moreover, Avraham was not offering any child, but his beloved, only child,59 who had been granted to him miraculously in his old age.60
- Full awareness – Rambam adds that the fact that Avraham first bound Yitzchak three days after receiving the Divine directive means that he was not acting in a state of shock or bewilderment in which he could not think through the action's consequences, but rather with full cognizance of the meaning of the deed. He acted out of neither desire for reward nor fear of punishment, but solely out of love and awe.
- According to the Bavli,62 the verse is referring to events not recorded in the Torah, which led to the need to demonstrate Avraham's righteousness to the world. R. Yochanan suggests that the phrase refers to the complaints of the Satan against Avraham,63 while R. Levi suggests they refer to Yishmael's claims that he was more worthy than Yitzchak.64
- Alternatively, this approach could say that the phrase serves to link the Akeidah to the previous chapter's description of the miraculous birth of Yitzchak and the promise "כִּי בְיִצְחָק יִקָּרֵא לְךָ זָרַע", both of which contributed to the difficulty of the trial.
Model of How to Worship Hashem
The episode teaches how to properly serve God and about the need to completely submit ourselves to His will.
- Willingness to sacrifice for God – R. D"Z Hoffmann asserts that the Akeidah teaches that when asked, one must be ready to sacrifice one's self (or, what is even more difficult, one's child) for Hashem. Though Hashem does not demand this all the time, and has no need for pointless sacrifices of the self, there are certain circumstances when martyrdom is expected of an individual. Proper service of Hashem entails a constant recognition of that fact. Thus, every time an individual offers an animal sacrifice for Hashem, he makes the same declaration as Avraham that he is submitting and surrendering his entire being to God, and that the animal is serving a substitute for the person himself.66
- Priority of Divine will over human ethics – In a similar vein,67 many modern scholars suggest that the point of the Akeidah was to teach that when human ethics seem to conflict with the Divine will, priority must be given to Hashem's command.68 There is no such thing as an independent human morality.69 In the words of the Aish Kodesh: "The nations of the world think that truth exists in and of itself and that God commanded truth because it was of itself true... not so the nation of Israel who say... all truth that is in the world is only because God commanded it."70