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Being Part of Society Rabbi Yaacov Haber Parshas Lech Lecha One of the most difficult decisions facing Orthodox Jews in
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Perhaps there is a hint to consider hidden in this weeks Parsha. Abraham met Shem, Noah’s son. How did you manage to escape the flood? He asked him. Shem replied that while in the ark, he did a tremendous amount of work for the future of the world. He became a virtual zookeeper so that the world would continue post flood. At that moment Abraham accepted upon himself to become a baal chesed. He would devote his life to doing for others. Abraham was a Universalist. There were no Jews; he worked for the world. And then at an old age Abraham was told to circumcise himself. You are different, G-d said, you must look different and your descendants must be permanently stamped as different. A nation will come forth from you. Abraham just became a nationalist. But what was Abraham’s first act of nationalism? What did he do immediately after his bris? He sat outside of his tent, in great pain, only to open his doors to three idol worshipping Arabs and to treat them like the angels that they really were. Abraham became a nationalistic Universalist! © Copyright 2005 TorahLab.org |
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