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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Student Summaries of Sichot of the Roshei Yeshiva Yeshivat
Har Etzion
Parashat
LEKH LEKHA
SICHA
OF HARAV AHARON LICHTENSTEIN SHLIT"A
Avraham's
Fear and Our Complacency
Adapted by
Shaul Barth
Translated by
Kaeren Fish
"After these
things, God's word came to Avram, saying, 'Do not fear, Avram: I am your shield;
your reward is very great'" (Bereishit 15:1). Our Sages teach that in every instance
where God reassures someone and tells him not to be afraid, the person concerned
is indeed afraid. We find an example of this in the case of Yaakov: after the
text tells us, "Yaakov was very afraid and it troubled him" (Bereishit
32:8), an angel comes to reassure him.
It is not
clear, in our case, what Avraham fears; therefore, the midrashim attempt
to fill in the picture. R. Levi
(Bereishit Rabba 44:4) offers two possibilities as to why Avraham
would be fearful. The first
suggests that Avraham fears that he has committed a sin by killing innocent
people in war; the second proposes that he fears that all of the surrounding
nations will wage a war of vengeance against him. R. Levi describes the former
fear with the words, "Lest among all of those people whom I killed there was a
single righteous or God-fearing person."
We might have
expected God's response to assure Avraham that even if he had taken an innocent
life, he would have done so by mistake and would not be held guilty. Such things
happen in wartime. But the Midrash
puts a different message in God's mouth: it compares Avraham to a man who sees a
pile of thorns in the king's garden, and goes about removing them. Then he sees
that the king has been watching him – and he tries to run away. The king tells
him not to run, for had he not removed the thorns, the king would have had to
hire someone else to do it; therefore, that man himself should come and receive
his reward.
This parable is
quite astounding: God is telling Avraham that among all the people he killed,
there were no righteous ones. However, this implies that if there had been any
"righteous or God-fearing" victims, Avraham's actions indeed would have been
morally problematic, and he was right to fear this
possibility.
R. Levi thus
presents Avraham's first concern as being for the morality of his actions, and
his second concern as being for his own physical safety and that of his
household.
To our sorrow,
we currently find ourselves in the midst of an armed struggle with our
neighbors. It is possible that during the course of this struggle, we may come
to forget the message that Avraham symbolizes. From time to time, we hear of
mistakes made during the course of I.D.F. operations against terrorists, in
which Palestinian civilians are killed. We certainly make no accusation against
the soldiers for their dedicated defense of Israeli lives. However, we must ask ourselves whether
we devote sufficient thought and concern to the possibility that we have
accidentally taken the lives of innocent people, or whether we have convinced
ourselves that all those who have died are indeed "thorns." I direct my words not mainly at the
commanders of the I.D.F., who generally tend to be cautious about civilian
casualties, but rather at our own religious community.
An absurd
situation has been created whereby anti-religious secularists present
themselves, and are seen by others, as the country's moral compass and
conscience, while Rabbis and Torah scholars fail to take a stand on the
country's burning moral issues. There are numerous reasons for this: the
religious community tends to be more nationalist than other sectors of Israeli
society; the religious community understands that the battle is not only about
land, but stems from something deeper; the religious community feels more
closely bound to the land and is less accepting of any questioning of our
control of it. But none of these facts can explain the phenomenon of ignoring
the moral questions and issues that arise from the situation in which we find
ourselves.
It is clear
that our battle is just and that terrorists must be fought with all our might.
We reject out of hand the approach of the foreign governments that want to
portray us as colonialist conquerors and our presence as immoral. We are certain
of the morality of the war that we are in the midst of, but at the same time we
must ask ourselves why the concerns that so disturb Avraham do not disturb
us.
[This sicha was
delivered at seuda shelishit, Shabbat parashat Lekh Lekha 5763
(2002).]
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