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The Israel
Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Themes and Ideas in the Haftara
Yeshivat Har Etzion
********************************************************* This haftara series is dedicated in memory of our beloved Chaya Leah bat Efrayim Yitzchak (Mrs. Claire Reinitz), zichronah livracha, by her family.
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RAV SOLOVEITCHIK'S
Reflections on the Tishah BeAv Kinot
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PARASHAT
MATOT-MAS'EI
COMPLEMENTARY
REPROACHES
Rav Mosheh
Lichtenstein
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
YIRMIYAHU AND YESHAYAHU
Over the next two weeks, we will be reading two haftarot of doom
that deal with Israel's abandonment of God, the first taken from the beginning
of the book of Yirmiyahu and the second from the beginning of the book of
Yeshayahu. Apart from the
prophecies of consecration, these two haftarot constitute the opening
prophecies of these books. We wish
today to compare and contrast the two rebukes in the hope that this will shed
light on these prophecies and allow us to better understand the causes of the
destruction.
SIMILARITIES AND
DIFFERENCES
Let us begin with the similarities. Both prophets speak of Israel's
abandonment of God, using the metaphor of harlotry to describe the phenomenon –
"How is the faithful city become a harlot" (Yeshayahu 1:21); "when upon
every hill and under every green tree you did sprawl, playing the harlot"
(Yirmiyahu 2:20).
Nevertheless, there seem to be significant differences between the two
prophecies. First of all,
Yeshayahu's rebuke is harsher and directed at the people as a whole, whereas
Yirmiyahu speaks in a more moderate tone.
Yeshayahu presents Israel's lack of gratitude reflected in their
abandonment of the Creator as contrary to natural morality and as a perversion
of basic religious intuition:
The
ox knows its owner, and the ass his master's trough; but Israel does not know,
My people does not consider.
(v.3)
Even an animal instinctively recognizes who provides its basic
necessities and therefore remains attached to its trough. It does not go out to graze in other
fields, but rather remains faithful to its provider and does not become
estranged from him. Man, however,
abandons Him who provides him with all his needs and fails to recognize Him as
such. This, of course, is presented
as a severe religious failure and stated as a caustic rebuke. Thus, the next verse continues: "A
sinful nation, a people laden with iniquity, a seed of evildoers, children that
deal corruptly: they have forsaken the Lord, they have provoked the Holy One of
Israel to anger, they are gone away backward" (v. 4).
Yirmiyahu, on the other hand, does not present the people's idol worship
as corruption, but rather as the tragic mistake of a panic-stricken and erring
people. Therefore, the prophet
wonders how it can be that the people prefer idols that have no substance over
the God of Israel.
What
iniquity have your fathers found in Me, that they have gone far from Me, and
have walked after vanity, and are become themselves worthless. Neither did they say, Where is the Lord
who brought us up out of the land of Egypt, who led us through the wilderness,
through a land of deserts and of pits, through a land of drought, and of the
shadow of death, through a land that no man passed through, and where no man
dwelt. (vv. 5-6)
It seems that this should be punctuated with a question mark, rather than
with an exclamation point. This
line of astonishment regarding Israel's actions continues:
For
pass over the isles of Kitiyim, and see; and send to Kedar, and consider
diligently, and see if there has been such a thing. Has a nation changed their gods, even
though they are not gods? But My people have changed its glory for that which
does not profit. (vv. 10-11)
The metaphor
that Yirmiyahu uses to describe Israel's conduct is also different in its very
essence from that used by Yeshayahu.
As we have already seen, Yeshayahu sharply contrasts Israel to animals
who know their place, whereas Yirmiyahu simply asks in wonderment: "Is Israel a
servant? Is he a homeborn slave? Why is he become a prey?" (v. 14).
THE ADDRESS OF THE
REBUKE
The
priests said not, Where is the Lord? And they that handle the Torah knew Me not:
the rulers also transgressed against Me, and the prophets prophesied by the
Ba'al, and walked after things that do not profit. (v. 8)
Thus, Yirmiyahu continues the line taken by many prophets and often
expressed in Scripture, according to which the criticism is directed not at the
failed political leadership, but at the spiritual leadership, which is held
responsible for the corrupt and irresponsible social and religious atmosphere.
Many examples can be brought to
illustrate that this is a general approach found throughout the later
Prophets. Here we wish to show how
this perspective fits in with Yirmiyahu's entire prophecy, as opposed to
Yeshayahu's rebuke.
THE SOCIAL
DIFFERENCE
We now come to the fundamental difference between the prophecy of
Chazon Yeshayahu and our haftara in particular, and between the
book of Yeshayahu and the book of Yirmiyahu in general. Yeshayahu's primary struggle is with a
hedonistic society, built around pleasure, which tramples, exploits and
oppresses the weak, and creates a deep social divide. Even though the geo-political situation
is beginning to deteriorate with the rise of Ashur, and the political cracks
that will ultimately lead to the great crisis are growing, the people do not
feel that they are living under constant threat, nor do they plan their actions
based on a sense of immediate physical danger. In such conditions, high society
flourishes in its corruption, and Yeshayahu fights against it. However we understand the political
reality of the time (this is not the forum for such a discussion, and the author
lacks the qualifications to do it justice), what we can say with certainty based
on a careful examination of the book, is that Yeshayahu identifies the serious
spiritual failure of his generation on the interpersonal plain. This finds expression in the haftara
of Chazon in the famous verses:
…
Your hands are full of blood. Wash
you, make you clean; put away the evil of your doings before My eyes; cease to
do evil; learn to do well; seek judgment, relieve the oppressed, judge the
fatherless, plead for the widow." (vv. 15-17).
How
is the faithful city become a harlot? It was full of judgment; righteousness
lodged in it; but now murderers.
Your silver is become dross, you wine is mixed with water: your princes
are rebellious, and companions of thieves: every one loves bribes, and follows
after rewards: they judge not the fatherless neither does the cause of the widow
reach them. (vv. 21-23)
Yirmiyahu, in contrast, lives in a threatened and retreating society that
is under constant security pressure.
In such circumstances, people turn to other-worldly spiritual factors,
both out of a sense and recognition of the nullity of pleasures and a change in
priorities that follows from new situation, and out of the hope that the
spiritual factor found outside the world of man will be able to overcome the
earthly political reality and save them from their enemies. Seeing the spiritual state of the people
– rather than geo-political alliances - as the basis of political reality is
what underlies the spiritual struggle in the book of Yirmiyahu. Whereas Yeshayahu preached about this
and the people ignored his warnings, Yirmiyahu's generation adopted this
outlook, but instead of turning to God, the King of kings, they went after
vanity. Thus, their fundamental
problem was not moral corruption, but substituting another god for the God of
Israel.
The people recognize that a spiritual factor is responsible for their fate, but
they err in their identification of this factor.
CORRUPT SOCIETY OR SPIRITUAL
ERROR
Let us now move on to the second and more significant issue in the haftara, namely, Yirmiyahu's
understanding of idol worship.
Yirmiyahu relates to Israel's worship of idols as an abandonment of
God. Of course, idolatry is folly
and falsehood, or as Yirmiyahu puts it, "vanity" and "things that do not
profit." Indeed, in many places, the prophets attack idolatry for the lie that
it represents, as we shall see in the haftara for Shabbat Nachamu, where Yeshayahu scorns
and derides idolatry as a metaphysical outlook. But the relationship that exists between
God and Israel is based not only on intellectual recognition of the truth; it is
a personal and existential relationship.
This principle is heavily emphasized by the Kuzari as the basis for the service of
God, and its application regarding the prohibition of idol worship finds
explicit expression in the Ramban's commentary to the Torah:
In
my opinion, the Torah mentions jealousy regarding idol worship exclusively with
respect to Israel. The reason for
the jealousy is that God set Israel apart for Himself as His unique people, as I
explained above. If His own people
turn to other gods, God will be jealous of them, just as a man is jealous when
his wife goes off after other men, or when his servant takes himself another
master. Scripture does not use the
term with the other nations, to whom He gave the hosts of heaven. (Ramban, commentary to Shemot
20:2)
The Ramban means to say that idolatry for Israel is not merely a
metaphysical error and a failure to recognize the Creator of the universe and
His kingship in this world, but also a betrayal of the relationship between
lover and beloved. For him, as for
the Kuzari, this relationship is unique to Israel, and this is what
underlies the book of Shir ha-Shirim.
A key verse in this week's haftara points to the two-fold problem
of Israel's turning to idols:
For
My people have committed two evils; they have forsaken Me the fountain of living
waters, and have hewn them out cisterns, broken cisterns that can hold no
water. (v. 13)
As we see, the
prophet complains about two evils.
The one is going after broken cisterns that can hold no water, that is,
turning to falsehood and vanity.
This, however, is not the entirety of his complaint; he adds another
argument, namely, the very abandonment.
The problem is not the error, but Israel's betrayal of God. This point is emphasized by the contrast
made to the other nations:
For
pass over the isles of Kitiyim, and see; and send to Kedar, and consider
diligently, and see if there has been such a thing. Has a nation changed their gods, even
though they are not gods? (vv. 10-11)
Yirmiyahu's rebuke can only be understood in the framework of the
assumption that idolatry constitutes betrayal and not only error. If idolatry is merely an error, why
bring support from the fact that other nations stubbornly cling to their
mistakes? Are we supposed to learn something from that? If, however, we
recognize that a "personal" relationship exists between Israel and God, we can
then understand that the prophet contrasts the fidelity of the nations to their
gods to Israel's treachery.
TWO REBUKES – TWO
REPAIRS
To summarize,
two haftarot of rebuke are directed at us during the two remaining
Shabbatot of the Three Weeks.
The one focuses on the religious problem, on Israel's faithfulness to
God, and the leadership's responsibility in that regard, whereas the other one
emphasizes the problems of justice and righteousness and turns to the individual
as well as to society that they should improve their moral ways. Israel's redemption will come through
the repairs of these two problems, and Zion will be redeemed through judgment
and return to God. We therefore
read both haftarot, each one complementing the other, in order to
reprimand Israel and bring them to repent.
(Translated by David Strauss)
"An idol appears near, but is distant. What is the reason? He carries it on his
shoulder, bears it, and in the end his god is with him in his house; he cries
out until he dies, but it does not hear nor does it save him from his
troubles. The Holy One, blessed be
He, on the other hand, appears far, but there is none closer than He, for Levi
said: From the earth to the firmament is a walk of five hundred years, and from
one firmament to the next is a walk of five hundred years, and the width of the
firmament is [a walk of] five hundred years, and
so too regarding each of the firmaments… See
how elevated He is above His world, yet a person enters a synagogue, stands
behind a pillar, and prays in a whisper, and the Holy One, blessed be He, hears
his prayer, as it is stated: 'Now Channa spoke in her heart; only her lips
moved, but her voice was not heard' (I Shemu'el 1:13), and the Holy One,
blessed be He, listened to her prayer.
And so too regarding all of His creatures, as it is stated: 'A prayer of
the afflicted, when he faints' (Tehilim 102:1) – like a person who speaks
in his friend's ear and he hears.
Is there a God closer than this, close to His creatures like a mouth to
the ear?" (Yerushalmi, Berakhot 9:1)
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