Rabbi Uri Sherki
And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children
24 Elul 5763
English translation of a
lesson transcript
that has not been edited by Rabbi Sherki yet
At the end of his book, the
prophet Malachi discloses a Divine promise. Malachi, the last book in order of
Trei Asar, or the Twelve Prophets, is also the last of the books of
prophesy; this promise, therefore, concludes the period of prophetic
revelation. As the word of God stands to disappear for a significant period of
time, there is a need for a Divine pledge (Malachi 3, 22-24):
Remember the law of Moses
My servant, which I commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel, even
statutes and ordinances. Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before
the coming of the great and terrible day of the LORD. And he shall turn the
heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their
fathers; lest I come and smite the land with utter destruction.
The prophetic period, which
began with God’s word at the world’s creation, ceases with these words: the
prophesy reveals pursuing historical success to be dependent on the renewed
appearance of the prophet Eliyahu. In this context, Eliyahu appears in a role
in which his main responsibility is to make peace between fathers and
sons—between the older and younger generations. It follows, therefore, that
there is a certain disagreement between the fathers and sons, one which only
Eliyahu can resolve.
Eliyahu Makes Peace?!
It is surprising that Eliyahu
is chosen to settle the dispute between the fathers and sons. Why is he
specifically chosen from amongst all the prophets to make peace? In light of the
fact that in a previous story Eliyahu failed at efforts to educate the Jewish
nation, it seems that he is not qualified for this endeavor.
The well known story involves
Eliyahu and the four hundred and fifty ne’vei baal, the “prophets” of the
idol baal: he assembles the nation at Har Carmel; arranges for a
competition between himself the ne’vei baal; and attempts to relay a
didactic message to bnei yisrael intended to catalyze teshuva (Melachim
1 18:21):
And Elijah came near unto
all the people, and said: 'How long halt ye between two opinions? if the
LORD be God, follow Him; but if Baal, follow him.' And the people answered
him not a word.
After the ne’vei baal
fail at their attempts to bring their sacrifice, Eliyahu brings his sacrifice (Melachim
1 18: 36-39):
And it came to pass at
the time of the offering of the evening offering, that Elijah the prophet
came near, and said: 'O LORD, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Israel,
let it be known this day that Thou art God in Israel, and that I am Thy
servant, and that I have done all these things at Thy word. Hear me, O LORD,
hear me, that this people may know that Thou, LORD, art God, for Thou didst
turn their heart backward.' Then the fire of the LORD fell, and consumed the
burnt-offering, and the wood, and the stones, and the dust, and licked up
the water that was in the trench. And when all the people saw it, they fell
on their faces; and they said: 'The LORD, He is God; the LORD, He is God.'
Eliyahu, showcasing a great
success in the midst of the nation, causes them, seemingly, to repent as they
cry out: 'The LORD, He is God; the LORD, He is God.' He subsequently exploits
the moment of ecstatic enthusiasm and, within one day, kills all of the
ne’vei baal in Nachal Kishon; this is surely a great victory for
Eliyahu.
He later arrives at
Yizrael, the winter house of the kings of Israel, and meets a messenger sent
by Achav’s wife, Isabel. The messenger relates Isabel’s reaction (Melachim 1
19:2)
Then Jezebel sent a
messenger unto Elijah, saying: 'So let the gods do [to me], and more also,
if I make not thy life as the life of one of them by to-morrow about this
time.'
Isabel warns that she intends
the kill Eliyahu in the exact manner that he killed the ne’vei haBaal.
It is important to understand the political situation: Isabel’s willingness to
threaten Eliyahu in such a flagrant manner that day after his impressive victory
evidences the power and influence she retains; the nation continues to respect
and heed the words of the queen. Apparently, therefore, the efforts of Eliyahu
did not draw the expected results and the nation did not repent its previous
ways.
Eliyahu’s
Didactic Failure
After hearing the harsh words
of Isabel, Eliyahu flees to Be’er Sheva; from there he goes down to the
desert; and it is there that an angel appears to him (Melachim 1 19 4-10):
But he himself went a
day's journey into the wilderness, and came and sat down under a broom-tree;
and he requested for himself that he might die; and said: 'It is enough;
now, O LORD, take away my life; for I am not better than my fathers.' And he
lay down and slept under a broom-tree; and, behold, an angel touched him,
and said unto him: 'Arise and eat.' And he looked, and, behold, there was at
his head a cake baked on the hot stones, and a cruse of water. And he did
eat and drink, and laid him down again And the angel of the LORD came again
the second time, and touched him, and said: 'Arise and eat; because the
journey is too great for thee.' And he arose, and did eat and drink, and
went in the strength of that meal forty days and forty nights unto Horeb the
mount of God. And he came thither unto a cave, and lodged there; and,
behold, the word of the LORD came to him, and He said unto him: 'What doest
thou here, Elijah? And he said: 'I have been very jealous for the LORD, the
God of hosts; for the children of Israel have forsaken Thy covenant, thrown
down Thine altars, and slain Thy prophets with the sword; and I, even I
only, am left; and they seek my life, to take it away.'
This story resembles many
aspects of the story of Moshe Rabeinu: both Moshe and Eliyahu fast for
forty days and forty nights; God reveals Himself to both Moshe and Eliyahu at
Har Sinai; Eliyahu enters the very same cave in which Moshe heard the shlosh
esrei middot, the thirteen attributes of God.
As God reveals himself to
Eliyahu He asks a strange question: 'What doest thou here, Elijah?’ God
instructed Eliyahu to come to Har Sinai; it is surely clear why he is
there.
It is integral, therefore, to
understand the meaning of the question 'What doest thou here (po), Elijah?’
The word “po” does not refer to “here”—at Har Sinai, but rather
“here”—in this world, olam ha’zeh. The question was: “what are you
doing in olam ha’zeh, Eliyahu?” How do you understand your role in this
world as a prophet of God? Eliyahu, though, answers with harsh accusations of
Bnei Yiroel:
“The children of Israel have
forsaken Thy covenant, thrown down Thine altars, and slain Thy prophets with the
sword”
Chazal explain that Eliyhu’s
words cause the following reaction from God:
Eliyahu says: “The children
of Israel have forsaken Thy covenant” and God asks: My oath or your oath?
Eliyahu says: “thrown down
Thine altars”, and God asks: My alter or your alter?
Eliyahu says: “and slain Thy
prophets with the sword” and God asks: My prophets or your prophets?
In other words God is asking
Eliyahu: How is this your business? What do you want? The oath and the alters
and prophets belong to God and not Eliyahu. Eliyahu then responds: “and they
seek my life, to take it away”. Here the problem becomes a personal issue of
Eliyahu; it is not a problem with the nation—as it once seemed—but rather with
Eliyahu.
It is at this point that
Eliyahu merits a exceptional revelation (Melachim 1 19,1-14):
And He said: 'Go forth,
and stand upon the mount before the LORD.' And, behold, the LORD passed by,
and a great and strong wind rent the mountains, and broke in pieces the
rocks before the LORD; but the LORD was not in the wind; and after the wind
an earthquake; but the LORD was not in the earthquake; and after the
earthquake a fire; but the LORD was not in the fire; and after the fire a
still small voice. And it was so, when Elijah heard it, that he wrapped his
face in his mantle, and went out, and stood in the entrance of the cave.
And, behold, there came a voice unto him, and said: 'What doest thou here,
Elijah?' And he said: 'I have been very jealous for the LORD, the God of
hosts; for the children of Israel have forsaken Thy covenant, thrown down
Thine altars, and slain Thy prophets with the sword; and I, even I only, am
left; and they seek my life, to take it away.'
This unique revelation comes
to teach Eliyahu a didactic message: Wind, earthquakes, and fire are all
impressive and exciting, and yet that is not where God is found; He is found,
rather, in the “still small voice”. True education, that which
penetrates to the soul and remains there, is only successful if done through
calm means, rather than wind, earthquakes, and fire. It is impossible to
educate the nation through zealousness alone.
At the end of the revelation,
Eliyahu is asked again: “'What doest thou here, Elijah?” It seems that
God it testing Eliyahu to see whether he comprehended the message,
whether he understood the lesson that God was teaching him. Eliyahu’s response,
though, is the very same response that he answered the previous time:
“'I have been very jealous
for the LORD, the God of hosts; for the children of Israel have forsaken Thy
covenant…. and they seek my life, to take it away.”
Eliyahu Hanavi did not
understand the lesson.
Following Eliyahu’s response,
God assigns him a number of tasks (Melachim1 19, 15-16)
And the LORD said unto
him: 'Go, return on thy way to the wilderness of Damascus; and when thou
comest, thou shalt anoint Hazael to be king over Aram; and Jehu the son of
Nimshi shalt thou anoint to be king over Israel; and Elisha the son of
Shaphat of Abel-meholah shalt thou anoint to be prophet in thy room.
God excuses Eliyahu from his
duties: He commands him to perform a number of last assignments; to appoint
Chazael as the king of Aram and Yehu as king over Israel; and afterwards to
appoint a replacement for himself, Elisha ben Shefat. And, thus, immediately
after Eliyahu performs these three tasks, he ascends to heaven in a storm,
fury. The message of dismissal comes after God sees that Eliyahu does not know
how to work with people; he who does not know how to deal with people, does not
belong on Earth. Ramban explains that God says to Eliyahu that if he continues
in this manner, he will eventually kill everyone and thus it is preferable that
he ascend to Heaven now. Eliyahu’s extreme personality does not mesh with
matter of this world. If so, though, why is Eliyahu specifically chosen to
organize the worldly matters before the arrival of “the day of the Lord”?
The Two Types of Holiness
After Eliyahu ascends to
Heaven he undergoes a dramatic change. It is great to begin as one zealous for
the word of God, but ultimately it is important to moderate one’s stance and
that of judgment. It is this that Eliyahu learns in Heaven. Eliayhu Hanavi is
he who says:
“for the children of Israel
have forsaken Thy covenant”
And thus God sends him to see
that the case is not so, for in actuality bnei yisroel are following the
agreement He made with them. We can learn a lot about the nature of peacemaking
from the fact that Eliyahu was chosen for such a task: it cannot be achieved
through naiveté, leniency, or shortcuts; rather, the peacemaker must be one who
opposes shortcuts, he who is adamant and zealous is fitting for the role.
However, he must first make a short visit to Heaven in order that he reveal the
root of the Israeli nation which appears in all factions of the nation, and only
then can he herald peace.
Harav Kook explains the task
of Eliyahu Hanavi: he is the link between the various facets of the nation. The
nefesh of the nation is the sinners of Israel; the spirit, the scholars; those
who connect between the soul and the spirit are the neshama of the
nation. In the language of Harav Kook:
I see with my eyes the
light of Elijah’s life rising, his power for God being revealed, the
holiness in nature breaking forth, uniting with the holiness that is above
course nature, with the holiness that combats nature. We fought nature and
emerged victorious. Material nature crippled us, struck us in our thigh, but
the sun shone to cure us of our limping. Judaism of the past, from Egypt
until now, is a long battle against the ugly side of nature, be it human
nature in general, or the nature of the nation and of every individual. We
fought nature in order to subdue it. It succumbs before us; the worlds are
increasingly refined. At the essential depth of nature a great demand wells
up for holiness and purity, for delicacy of soul and refinement of life.
Elijah comes to herald peace, and in the inner soul of the nation a life
stream of nature breaks forth and approaches holiness. The remembrance of
the Exodus from Egypt becomes a remembrance of the delivery from nations; we
are all approaching nature and it beckons to us. Nature is conquered before
us and its demands are increasingly consonant with our noble demands from
the source of holiness. The youthful spirit that demands its land, its
language, its freedom and honor, its literature and strength, wealth, and
feelings, is flooded with a flow of nature, which within is full of holy
fire.
(Orot Hatchiyah 30)
Rav Kook admits that he
himself saw “ascending light of the life of Eliyahu”. When Rav Tzvi Yehuda
would teach this passage to his student he would point to himself and say: “I
see, with my own eyes, the ascending light of Eliyahu”. And what does one see?
One sees how the holy nation struggles with nature. Holiness is generally found
in opposition with nature, above nature. In order to maintain holiness it is
necessary to overcome nature. This, however, is not the truth in its fullest
sense: there is holiness latent in the depths of nature, a holiness which is
much deeper than that which opposes nature. Ultimately, this holiness, which is
hidden in nature,
תובעת את עלבונה
And the first form which this
holiness in nature assumes is that of the impudence and opposition of the
holiness which is above nature.
The Disagreement Between
Parents and Children.
This is the disagreement
between parents and children. The parents are the old generation, the old guard,
representing the Kedushah (holiness) fighting nature. Their children are the new
generation, representing the Kedusha that is stored in the natural, which
bursts out and interrupts at the first stage in the form of Chutzpah, opposition
and defiance. Therefore only one who stands above the Kodesh may connect
these two extremes; Eliyahu HaNavi.
This battle between the two
Kedushot has still not ended, and we may feel it too. The fundamental source
that opposes religion and the Torah that we see today is since Torah and
religion as a whole are fighting against a foreign lifestyle. This lifestyle
carries within it a flash of holiness intrinsically against this very lifestyle.
The function of Eliyahu HaNavi is to unite these “Kedushot.” It is the
task of holy people to reconcile this battle with nature. As long as we continue
the fight with nature, nature will fight back. So that we may bring the coming
of Eliyahu HaNavi we must reconcile with nature.
In order to be successful in
this mission we must do things according to the hour that maybe opposed
to normal Halachah. Eliyahu sacrificed at Har Carmel offerings on an altar that
was outside of Jerusalem – a transgression normally punishable by “Karet.” Who
gave permission to Eliyahu to make a sacrifice outside Jerusalem? None other
than himself! Prophets such as Eliyahu HaNavi have the authority to make
instructions that are relevant the hour, ones that otherwise may not be given.
But that was so when Am
Yisrael had Neviim, but how are we to act when there are no Neviim? The prophet
Malachi says it explicitly (Malachi 3:22)
"Remember the Torah of
Moshe my servant, that I commanded him at Horev, these statutes and laws
upon all Israel"
We must only act according to
the Torah that was given to Moshe, there is no leniency to permit any different
instructions, no matter how pressing the hour. So how may we bring together
these two extremes, how to connect the opposite ends? This question too, the
prophet Malachi taught from the following passage: "Here I send you Eliyahu the
prophet ...". The prophet assures us that prophecy will return and moreover,
before his coming, Hashem will reveal the Torah that unites the intuition of the
older generation with the intuition of the younger generation. The Navi reveals
to us that there will be the Torah of HaRav Kook. Kedushah that is above
the natural, and Kedushah that is within the natural.
In fact Moshe Rabbeinu already said there are two kinds of Kedushah (D’varim
30:6)
"Hashem, your God, will
circumcise your heart and the heart of your offspring, to love Hashem your
God, with all your heart and all your soul, that you may live."
From a close inspection of
this passage, it can be said that there are two types of word concerning the
heart: There is the word for the heart of the fathers and the word for the heart
of the offsprings. Rav Kook explains that there are philosophical differences
between the fathers and the sons. For this reason, each of these groups has a
different character evident in their response.
The reason for Kefira. (/Heresy).
When the older generation wants to cause the young generation to do Teshuva,
it is their responsibility to know how to approach the younger generation in the
appropriate way so as to inspire them to do Teshuvah. It is important to
know how to talk to others. Once, a Talmid Chacham from Hungary sent a letter to
Rabbi Zvi Yehuda when his father was still alive. In the letter were serious
objections against Rabbi Kook. One of the objections raised in the letter to
Rabbi Kook was that he spoke with secular people in a national secular style and
not in the traditional Torah style. Rabbi Zvi Yehuda replied to the Talmid
Chacham that this is one of the laws of “Tochechah” – of giving a rebuke. It is
Halacha to for the one who is rebuking to speak in a language that will be
understood. There is no point in saying things that are correct and true if they
cannot be heard.
Therefore, in order to cause the younger generation to do Teshuvah we have to
understand the true desire of the young generation. And that is: that their
“Emunah” is immense and not lacking in any way. The younger generation demands a
greater Judaism, a more meaningful Judaism. The younger generation has a greater
soul, so to speak, and their souls seek out a path free from pettiness and
triviality. This is the real reason for Kfirah, for the denial, not because
of a loss of faith, rather because of the magnitude of their faith!
In his book “Orot HaEmunah - Lights of Belief,” Rav Kook writes on the belief
that the Torah is heaven sent (Min Hashamayim). Some Jews believe that the Torah
was given to us by Hashem, and there are others who deny that belief. But do
they even know what they are talking about?
There is denial (of God) that
is effectively acknowledgement, and belief and acknowledgement of Hashem that is
effectively Kefira - a denial of belief. How can this be?
A person acknowledges that Torah is given to us by Shamayim (the skies). What we
now need to check is whether these are the same skies that the Torah came to us
from, and what is the height of these skies. Sometimes the heavens that had
previously borne us the Torah have become so strange and distorted, that nothing
remains real in our Emunah.
And how is Kfirah (denial)
like acknowledgement of Hashem? When all of a man’s perception is based on those
same distorted skies, the reason for his denial is not out of stubborn refusal
to accept Hashem, it’s because he is unprepared to accept Torah from heavens
that are so low. In such a case this denial is a considered an acknowledgement
of Hashem. Don’t believe everyone who says that he does not believe.
In order to bring about
Teshuva in this generation, we will need people who are first and foremost able
to “turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children
to their fathers” and make peace between the kedusha which is opposed to nature
and the kedusha which is found inside the nature.
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