Exile and Redemption
SICHOT OF THE ROSHEI YESHIVA
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Dedicated in memory of
Joseph Y. Nadler, zl, Yosef ben Yechezkel Tzvi
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Parashat PARA
SICHA OF HARAV MOSHEH LICHTENSTEIN
EXILE AND REDEMPTION
Translated by
TWO MODELS OF REDEMPTION
In the second portion of this weeks haftara, the prophet briefly
describes the exile, its significance as a profanation of God's name among the
nations, and the need to redeem Israel as a result.
The parashiyot at the end of the book of Devarim present
two models of redemption. The first
one, found in Parashat Nitzavim, describes a process of destruction and
exile that comes in the aftermath of sin, and in its wake repentance:
And it shall come to pass, when all these things are come upon you,
the blessing and the curse, which I have set before you, and you shall call them
to mind among all the nations, into which the Lord your God has driven you, and
shall return to the Lord your God, and shall obey His voice according to all
that I command you this day, you and your children, with all your heart, and
with all your soul; and then the Lord your God will turn your captivity, and
have compassion upon you, and will return and gather you from all the nations,
among whom the Lord your God has scattered you.
If your outcasts be at the utmost parts of heaven from there will the
Lord your God gather you, and from there will He fetch you: and the Lord your
God will bring you into the land which you fathers possessed, and you shall
possess it; and He will do you good, and multiply you more than your fathers. (Devarim 30:1-5)
Immediately afterwards, in Parshiyot Vayelekh and Ve-Ha'azinu,
we find a totally different description of Israel's redemption. The nation sins, leaves God, and
breaks the covenant, and God responds with the "hiding of His face." This
situation of God's forsaking Israel is the closing point of Parashat Vayelekh
and the opening point of the song of Ha'azinu. The tidings of the end of the exile
appear at the end of the song, but there is no mention of repentance or return
to God. Israel's spiritual state is
not described as having improved and there is no stirring of repentance,
yearning for God, or remorse about the sins of the past. Nevertheless, God intervenes and
redeems Israel out of a different consideration, namely, the profanation of His
name caused by Israel's subjugation to the nations. The people do not attain to
redemption because of their actions and standing, but rather God is concerned
about the glory of His name and therefore saves Israel from the nations and
returns them to their land. This is
not the first time that this argument appears in the Torah as a reason to have
mercy upon Israel; it was already sounded by Moshe Rabbenu at the time of the
sin of the golden calf: "Wherefore should Egypt speak, and say, In an evil hour
did He bring them out, to slay them in the mountains, and to consume them from
the face of the earth? Turn from Your fierce anger, and relent of this evil
against Your people" (Shemot 32:12).
THE TWO MODELS IN THE WORDS OF CHAZAL
In a famous discussion in the Gemara in tractate Sanhedrin (97b),
Chazal inform us of these two models, while disagreeing about the
legitimacy of one of them:
Rav said: All the predestined dates [for redemption] have passed,
and the matter [now] depends only on repentance and good deeds. But Shemuel said: It is sufficient
for a mourner to keep his [period of] mourning.
This matter is disputed by Tannaim: Rabbi Eliezer said: If Israel
repent, they will be redeemed; if not, they will not be redeemed. Rabbi Yehoshua said to him: If they
do not repent, will they not be redeemed! But the Holy One, blessed be He, will
set up a king over them, whose decrees shall be as cruel as Haman's, whereby
Israel shall engage in repentance, and He will thus bring them back to the right
path.
Another [Baraita] taught: Rabbi Eliezer said: If Israel repent,
they will be redeemed, as it is written: "Return, you backsliding children, and
I will heal your backslidings." Rabbi Yehoshua said to him: But is it not
written: "You have sold yourselves for naught; and you shall be redeemed without
money"? "You have sold yourselves for naught" - for idolatry; "and you shall be
redeemed without money" without repentance and good deeds. Rabbi Eliezer retorted to Rabbi
Yehoshua: But is it not written, "Return unto Me, and I will return unto you"?
[1]
It is self-evident that the preferred model is that of repentance that
leads to redemption. The people
repent and draw near to God, God draws them near, and then redemption comes and
actualizes the state of Israel being found under the wings of the Shekhina. And indeed, Rav and Rabbi Eliezer are
unable to accept any other possibility, for if Israel is unfit, it is only right
that they should not be redeemed, but rather they must continue to suffer in
exile until they improve their ways.
According to Shemuel and Rabbi Yehoshua, however, redemption through
repentance is not the only model of redemption.
There is also a model of redemption without repentance. The rationale behind such redemption
is twofold:
1)
Preventing profanation of God's name.
2)
"It is sufficient for a mourner to keep his [period of] mourning" the
difficulty of Israel's subjugation threatens Israel's very existence and the
time has come to bring the exile to a close because of the needs of Israel.
In either case, redemption without redemption is a process that
must be taken into account as a legitimate modus operandi of providence,
which has pity on the glory of God's great name and/or Israel in exile.
THE PREFERENCE OF REDEMPTION THROUGH REPENTANCE
There are two points, however, that must be emphasized:
1)
Despite the fact that both tracks lead to an ingathering of the exiles
and Israel's return to its land, they are not two different models having the
same value and leading to the same goal.
On the contrary, they are utterly different, both with respect to the
historical process that accompanies it, and with respect to the spiritual
meaning of redemption. A people that
is redeemed without repentance is not the same as a people that is redeemed by
merit of its return to God. And the
cost that must be paid by a nation that is redeemed without repentance is much
greater than the cost that must be paid by a nation that repents and returns to
God.
2)
This being the case, it is clearly our hope and prayer that our
redemption will come through repentance, and we do not say that we do not care
how redemption will arrive, as long as we are redeemed.
RETURNING TO THE HAFTARA
At this point, let us go back and examine our haftara, whose
concern is redemption without repentance.
As stated in the verses, the objective of the ingathering of the exiles
is to prevent the profanation of God's name; it is not the merit of Israel that
brings about their redemption. It is
based not upon repentance and good deeds, but rather upon the profanation of
God's name:
But I had concern for My holy name, which the house of Israel had
profaned among the nations, into which they came.
Therefore say to the house of Israel, Thus says the Lord God; I do not do
this for your sakes, O house of Israel, but for My holy name's sake, which you
have profaned among the nations, to which you came. And I will sanctify My great name,
which was profaned among the nations, which you have profaned in the midst of
them; and the nations shall know that I am the Lord; says the Lord God, when I
shall be sanctified in you before their eyes.
For I shall take you forth among the nations, and gather you out of all
countries, and will bring you into your own land.
(Yechezkel 36:21-24)
If we examine the process of redemption described in the continuation of
the prophecy, we will see that the people of Israel leave the exile and return
to their land, even before they repent.
Simply stated, the restoration of Zion as described in our haftara
is executed when most of the people are "non-religious" and fail to observe
Torah and mitzvot. This
follows from the process that dictates the redemption (for they are redeemed
because of the profanation of God's name, and not because they are worthy of
redemption), and is explicit in the verses:
For I will take you from among the nations, and gather you out of
all countries, and will bring you into your own land. Then will I sprinkle clean water upon
you, and you shall be clean: from all your uncleannesses, and from all your
idols, will I cleanse you. A new
heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will
take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of
flesh. And I will put My spirit
within you, and cause you to follow my statutes, and you shall keep My
judgments, and do them. (ibid. vv.
24-27)
As can be seen, the verse that speaks of taking Israel from the nations
and bringing them to the land of Israel is the first stage, whereas giving them
a new spirit and bringing them to follow God's statutes and observe His
commandments appear only afterwards.
The continuation of the prophecy speaks of an ever improving situation in which
Israel rises spiritually and becomes established materially and politically, but
the foundation of the redemption is Divine intervention that redeems Israel,
despite the fact that they are unworthy.
THE PROBLEM WITH THE REDEMPTION IN OUR HAFTARA
It would seem that all is fine and good.
The people of Israel are redeemed, they return to their land and are
purified of their sins. Things,
however, are not so simple, owing to the two points mentioned above. First, this is not the preferred
situation. The situation in which
Israel fails to repent but is redeemed for extrinsic reasons is not a situation
that we strive for. Using the
terminology found in the Gemara in Sanhedrin (98a), which states that
"the [Messiah] son of David will only come in a generation that is entirely
guiltless or entirely guilty," this is a redemption that resembles that of a
generation that is entirely (or mostly) guilty.
The redemption arrives, but Israel's primary interest is that it should
come by way of repentance. More
important than the question whether they are found in their land or on foreign
ground is the critical question of the individual's/the nation's relationship
with the Creator.
It is better to be less guilty and less redeemed than more guilty and
more redeemed, for it is the acceptance of the yoke of heaven and conjoining
with God that lie at the heart of the matter.
From God's perspective, this type of redemption repairs the blemished
world, but only the aspect of the profanation of God's name. The nation's relationship with God is
not repaired in this manner, and thus this type of redemption does not solve the
nation's problem vis-a-vis God.
It might still be argued that the prophet attests that God will return
Israel to their land and draw them near to His service, so that this problem is
resolved as well, and we are dealing here with a prophecy of great consolation. This argument, however, is also
problematic, inasmuch as it ignores the process and the heavy price that it
exacts. The verse in the passage
dealing with repentance in the book of Devarim says that "you shall
return to your heart" (Devarim 30:1), and not that God will take care of
everything from up above. From a
spiritual perspective as well, there is no comparing willing repentance to
repentance imposed by Divine force.
THE MATERIAL PRICE
There is also a difference with respect to the material price. Anyone who reads the description of
the redemption in the book of Yechezkel and contrasts it to that in the
book of Yeshayahu will immediately discern the great difference between
them. In Yeshayahu's prophecies, the
redemption is a most pleasant and elevating experience. The following verses will serve as an
example:
The wilderness and the arid land shall be glad; and the desert
shall rejoice, and blossom like the tulip.
It shall blossom abundantly, and rejoice even with joy and singing: the
glory of the Levanon shall be given to it, the excellency of the Karmel and the
Sharon, they shall see the glory of the Lord, and the excellency of our God
. And the ransomed of the Lord shall
return, and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their heads: they
shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and singing shall flee away. (Yeshayahu 35:1-2, 10)
In the book of Yechezkel, on the other hand, the attribute of
justice is stretched out against Israel, even during the period of redemption. Instead of the blossoming of the
wilderness and the mountains ringing with joy that we saw in Yeshayahu,
we encounter the war of Gog and Magog, with all the ruin and destruction that
that involves. God rules over Israel
with a mighty hand and an outstretched hand, and even when they are redeemed,
this is the mode of governance. The
reason for the difference between the two books follows from the course of the
redemption. When redemption arrives
for a generation that is wholly guiltless and Israel is redeemed following
repentance, then they merit a pleasant and caressing mode of governance. But when redemption arrives without
repentance, and owing to Divine "compulsion," the trait of justice remains in
place, and the redemption leads neither to joy nor to happiness.
THE CONSOLATION
In summary, the haftara testifies that Israel is capable of being
redeemed and purified even in grave situations of sin, but this is a difficult
and problematic course, that does not resemble redemption by way of repentance
and "stirring from below." When God sprinkles clean water on the nation, because
they are unable to purify themselves on their own by way of immersion, this
involves a consolation. For the
people do not sink to the depths of sin, and even if their sins fall into the
category of the uncleanness of a corpse and not that of a menstruous woman, they
have the hope of being purified from above, since it has not been decreed that
they will sink to the depths of sin for all time.
So too, the haftara assigns religious value to the ingathering of
the exiles even before the nation repents, this owing to the prevention of the
profanation of God's name. This,
however, is still not the full and noble redemption described by the other
prophets and set aside for the situation in which Israel is redeemed in the wake
of repentance.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
It goes without saying that the model of the ingathering of the exiles in
our haftara for a nation that does not observe Torah and mitzvot,
in order to prevent the profanation of God's nation, provides much food for
thought about our present historical situation.
Is it right to see the return to Zion in our generation, and especially
in the wake of the terrible profanation of God's name during the years of the
Holocaust, as corresponding to the model set down in the haftara, in
which case the redemption does not follow from the nation and its religious
connection, but from God's exaltedness? Or should we not demean the religious
meaning of the Zionist project as worthy of redemption in its own right? I do
not come to answer these questions, but only to present them to the reader as
something to think about. The
function of the haftara is not only to teach Tanakh, but also
to stir up thought in relation to man's existential state in the present
time. Thus, our raising of these
questions matches the objective of the haftara.
[1] The discussion continues in
the Gemara with each side bringing additional verses to prove its position.