A Thought on the Parsha
Feel free to download and print the Parasha sheet and share it with your friends and family: Click here: Parashat Chayei Sarah
The Mixed Blessing of Retirement
After the climax of the akeida at
the end of last week's parsha, Avraham and Sarah quickly disappear from
the scene in this week's parsha. Sarah, of course, dies at the very
beginning of the parsha, but even Avraham quickly fades into the
background. The spotlight moves to Avraham's servant, to Rivka and her
family, and then to Yitzchak. While Avraham remarries and sires many
children, this appears almost as a footnote, and we read soon thereafter
of his death and burial.
Now, we would expect this fading out of Avraham when the story shifts its focus to Yitzchak, as it does in parashat Toldot, just as Yitzchak fades into the background when Yaakov moves to the foreground in parashat Vayetze.
However, in Chayei Sarah, Yitzchak has not yet moved to center stage,
and yet Avraham has already moved into the background. Why is that?
I
believe what we are seeing is Avraham's retirement. Avraham has
struggled all his life. To call out in the name of God, to battle kings
and to save his nephew, to deal with kings who would take his wife, but
most of all to have a son who would succeed him. Finally, after much
struggle - first in believing in a divine promise that was not
materializing, then in believing it to have been fulfilled through
Yishmael only to see that possibility rejected by God, then in finally
having a son through Sarah only to have it followed by God's
incomprehensible command to bring his son as a sacrifice, and then in
offering his son up only to be told to take him down - finally, finally,
he has the son that he has been promised, and all is well. "And God
blessed Avraham with everything" (Breishit 24:1). Avraham has the son
that he has always prayed for and he has achieved all that he has set
out to achieve. His struggles are finally over.
But
with the end of struggle, also comes the end of challenge, the end of
meaning and of purpose. Consider the contrast that we are presented with
at the end of Vayera. Avraham comes down from the mountain after almost
sacrificing his one son that Sarah bore to him at his advanced age, and
what does he hear? That, in the meanwhile, his brother, Nachor, has
effortlessly had eight children through his wife, Milkah. And Avraham is
the one with the blessing! But such is the case. A blessing means work,
a blessing means struggle. Avraham is at the center of history. Every
part of Avraham's life is imbued with meaning, both for him and for
future generations. Meanwhile, his brother Nachor might be having eight
children and living the good life, but he does not exist on the
historical scene. His life is not one of significance, not one of
meaning.
What
then happens to Avraham when he stops struggling? He moves into
retirement and off of center stage. He will now have six more children
and another wife, but they are nothing more than a footnote, a
parentheses. It is the life of challenge - the life that produced
Yitzchak, that presented him with ten trials that he lived up to in his
service of God - that is the life worth recording
Struggle
gives purpose to our lives. More than that, only those things that we
struggle for, that we sacrifice for, are the things that we truly hold
dear. This point is made in the Jewish context by Yishayahu Leibowitz in
"Religious Praxis" (in Judaism, Human Values, and the Jewish State). There he compares the symbol of Christianity - the cross- with a somewhat analogous Jewish symbol of sacrifice - the akeida. Both speak to the notion of sacrifice, but in profoundly different ways:
[Christianity's]
symbol, the cross, represents the sacrifice God brought about for the
benefit of mankind. In contrast, the highest symbol of Jewish faith is
the stance of Abraham on Mount Moriah, where all human values were
annulled an overridden by fear and love of God. . . No doubt a religion
of values, an "endowing religion" such as Christianity. . . is capable
of gratifying certain psychic needs. Today, "seekers of religion" or
"seekers of God" in order "to fill a vacuum in the soul" are legion.
Such a religion is likely therefore to attain some popularity. It will
never become an educative force. Men like comforting religions which
require no effort, but they do not revere them or take them seriously.
It is a basic psychological fact that men respect and adore only that
which is demanding, which requires sacrifices and imposes duties."
It
is in this vein that the midrash teaches that "Three great gifts were
given to the Jewish people. . . are acquired only through suffering. . .
and they are: Torah, the Land of Israel, and the World-to-Come." (Sifrei, vaEtchanan).
To achieve the things that are most important, we must struggle to
achieve them. And though our struggle to achieve them, they become most
important to us.
Anything
truly worthwhile in our lives, anything worth having, anything that we
treasure, is a thing that we have had to work for, a thing that we have
had to sacrifice for.
Just
as it was with Avraham's struggles on account of his children before
and after they were born, just as it was with all our foremothers who
were childless and struggled to have children, so it is with all of us
and our children. The more we sacrifice, the more with invest in our
children, the more we endure tza'ar giddul banim,
the pains of child rearing, whether we want to or not, the stronger our
bond with them is, the more they mean to us, the more every moment with
them is imbued with meaning.
For
every one of us, we must make sure that we do not move into an early
retirement from life, from its struggles and from its accomplishments.
Let us make sure never to lose sight of those things that are truly
important - God, Torah, the Land of Israel, Klal Yisrael,
and of course, our family and our children. Let us always be prepared
to endure the struggle that is necessary, necessary because what we
struggle for is so important, and necessary because it is through the
struggle that they will become ever so important to us.
Shabbat shalom!
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