Difference between revisions of "Wanted: A Wife for Yitzchak/2/en"
(Original Author: Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
(Original Author: Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
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<h1>Wanted: A Wife for Yitzchak</h1> | <h1>Wanted: A Wife for Yitzchak</h1> | ||
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<div class="overview"> | <div class="overview"> | ||
<h2>Overview</h2> | <h2>Overview</h2> | ||
<p>Commentators offer a variety of interpretations as to why Avraham sends his servant all the way to Mesopotamia rather than finding a suitable wife for Yitzchak from amongst his neighbors. Josephus and a number of the early medieval exegetes propose that Avraham wants to find a wife from his family. In contrast, the Keli Yakar and R. Hirsch focus on the potential negative influences from marrying a local woman whose idolatrous family is always nearby. Finally, Jubilees and many others stress the moral bankruptcy of the Canaanite people. These different perspectives have important ramifications for understanding Avraham's portrait of the ideal wife for Yitzchak, how the servant's plan of action fit with Avraham's instructions, and how contradictions between the original story and the servant's retelling can be resolved.</p> | <p>Commentators offer a variety of interpretations as to why Avraham sends his servant all the way to Mesopotamia rather than finding a suitable wife for Yitzchak from amongst his neighbors. Josephus and a number of the early medieval exegetes propose that Avraham wants to find a wife from his family. In contrast, the Keli Yakar and R. Hirsch focus on the potential negative influences from marrying a local woman whose idolatrous family is always nearby. Finally, Jubilees and many others stress the moral bankruptcy of the Canaanite people. These different perspectives have important ramifications for understanding Avraham's portrait of the ideal wife for Yitzchak, how the servant's plan of action fit with Avraham's instructions, and how contradictions between the original story and the servant's retelling can be resolved.</p> | ||
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<category name="">Preference for Avraham's Relatives | <category name="">Preference for Avraham's Relatives | ||
<p>The most important criterion in the search for a wife for Yitzchak was a positive one, that she be from Avraham's family.</p> | <p>The most important criterion in the search for a wife for Yitzchak was a positive one, that she be from Avraham's family.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Crux of the position</b> – This approach interprets Avraham's instructions (and their implementation) in light of the news of Rivka's birth which precedes the story as well as the servant's account at the end of the story. It maintains that the servant is not taking liberties with the truth merely in order to flatter. It also assumes that the most logical reason for the servant to go directly to the city of Avraham's relatives was in order to find a wife from Avraham's family.</point> | <point><b>Crux of the position</b> – This approach interprets Avraham's instructions (and their implementation) in light of the news of Rivka's birth which precedes the story as well as the servant's account at the end of the story. It maintains that the servant is not taking liberties with the truth merely in order to flatter. It also assumes that the most logical reason for the servant to go directly to the city of Avraham's relatives was in order to find a wife from Avraham's family.</point> | ||
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<category name="">Aversion to Having Local In-laws | <category name="">Aversion to Having Local In-laws | ||
<p>Avraham wanted to ensure that Yitzchak and his family would not be influenced by his wife's family or have to contend with their possible future claims on his inheritance.</p> | <p>Avraham wanted to ensure that Yitzchak and his family would not be influenced by his wife's family or have to contend with their possible future claims on his inheritance.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Crux of the position</b> – This approach reads Avraham's concerns in light of the Torah's later prohibition in <aht source="Devarim7-1">Devarim 7</aht> of intermarrying with the Canaanites. It thus understands Avraham as similarly being fearful of assimilation. The command to find a wife from a far away country and the injunction against taking a wife from the local populace are viewed as flip sides of the same desire to insulate Yitzchak from bad influences.</point> | <point><b>Crux of the position</b> – This approach reads Avraham's concerns in light of the Torah's later prohibition in <aht source="Devarim7-1">Devarim 7</aht> of intermarrying with the Canaanites. It thus understands Avraham as similarly being fearful of assimilation. The command to find a wife from a far away country and the injunction against taking a wife from the local populace are viewed as flip sides of the same desire to insulate Yitzchak from bad influences.</point> | ||
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<category name="">Avoiding Canaanite Abominations | <category name="">Avoiding Canaanite Abominations | ||
<p>The most critical factor was a negative one, that Yitzchak's wife not be from the morally challenged Canaanite nation.</p> | <p>The most critical factor was a negative one, that Yitzchak's wife not be from the morally challenged Canaanite nation.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Crux of the position</b> – This approach underscores the opening part of Avraham's admonition, the prohibition of taking a Canaanite wife. It concludes, in light of the Torah's earlier curse of Canaan<fn>See Bereshit 9:25-27.</fn> and later revulsion from Canaanite behavior,<fn>See Vayikra 18,20.</fn> that Canaanite society was unique in the depth of its depravity.</point> | <point><b>Crux of the position</b> – This approach underscores the opening part of Avraham's admonition, the prohibition of taking a Canaanite wife. It concludes, in light of the Torah's earlier curse of Canaan<fn>See Bereshit 9:25-27.</fn> and later revulsion from Canaanite behavior,<fn>See Vayikra 18,20.</fn> that Canaanite society was unique in the depth of its depravity.</point> | ||
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Version as of 01:53, 26 June 2014
Wanted: A Wife for Yitzchak
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Commentators offer a variety of interpretations as to why Avraham sends his servant all the way to Mesopotamia rather than finding a suitable wife for Yitzchak from amongst his neighbors. Josephus and a number of the early medieval exegetes propose that Avraham wants to find a wife from his family. In contrast, the Keli Yakar and R. Hirsch focus on the potential negative influences from marrying a local woman whose idolatrous family is always nearby. Finally, Jubilees and many others stress the moral bankruptcy of the Canaanite people. These different perspectives have important ramifications for understanding Avraham's portrait of the ideal wife for Yitzchak, how the servant's plan of action fit with Avraham's instructions, and how contradictions between the original story and the servant's retelling can be resolved.
Preference for Avraham's Relatives
The most important criterion in the search for a wife for Yitzchak was a positive one, that she be from Avraham's family.
- Family – Rashbam defines "מוֹלַדְתִּי" as family.6 Thus, Avraham explicitly instructed his servant to find a wife from his family.
- Birthplace – R. Saadia, Ibn Ezra, and Radak render "מוֹלַדְתִּי" as birthplace.7 However, R. Saadia and Radak add that it was understood that this was where Avraham's family was to be found.8
Aversion to Having Local In-laws
Avraham wanted to ensure that Yitzchak and his family would not be influenced by his wife's family or have to contend with their possible future claims on his inheritance.
- Constant influence – According to Keli Yakar and R. Hirsch, although both the Canaanites and their Mesopotamian counterparts might have been somewhat equally deficient morally or religiously, the negative influence of local relatives is exponentially greater than from those living far away.23 Keli Yakar also draws a parallel between Avraham's admonition that Yitzchak not marry a Canaanite woman and the Torah's later prohibition in Devarim 7 of marrying Canaanite women.
- Danger to inheritance – Chizkuni and Shadal focus instead on the problems caused by local in-laws with regards to Avraham's inheritance of Canaan. Chizkuni asserts that Avraham did not want anyone to say that his inheritance was due to his marriage to the Canaanites rather than being a gift from God.24 Shadal, in contrast, suggests that being related to the Canaanites would make it very difficult to later expel or eliminate them.25
- Birthplace – Chizkuni and R. Hirsch suggest that the word "מוֹלַדְתִּי" refers to Avraham's land or city.26 R. Hirsch, though, suggests that implicit in the usage of the word is Avraham's requirement that the woman also be from his family.
- Family – Shadal asserts that "מוֹלַדְתִּי" refers to Avraham's family but that Avraham set this as a preference rather than a requirement. As proof, he points to the fact that the servant devises the water test, a very inefficient way of finding a maiden from Avraham's family specifically.27
Avoiding Canaanite Abominations
The most critical factor was a negative one, that Yitzchak's wife not be from the morally challenged Canaanite nation.