2007, October 7th, Shabbat Beraishit Drash for
Library Minyon
Diane Roosth
Shabbat Shalom.
When I decided to speak about this parsha, what attracted me
was the notion of God as the ultimate parent in creating the
world. Thanks to Rabbis Arielle Hanien, Joel Rembaum, Susan
Leider and Perry Netter for their insights.
My goal today is to talk about our understanding of God as
the parent creator, and how our creation story acknowledges the
importance of the land of Israel, of family and relationships,
and of community. For purposes of this drash, I will refer to
God in the feminine, and as Elohim, the God of judgment, who
deemed creation as good. I will leave the drash on why God has
many names and what those names mean for others to explore.
Rashi’s commentary on the first words of the Torah, from
which he draws on midrash, makes the link between the land and
this parsha. Rashi asks, "Why in Bereishit did the Torah begin
with creation of the land, and not that ‘this month shall be for
you the beginning of months (the laws of Rosh Hashana in
Nissan)"? Rashi suggests that the reason for commencing with
creation, and not the beginning of the Jewish calendar, is to
justify the allocation of the Holy Land to the Jewish People.
Commentators were concerned that some Jews might react to
this idea with a guilty conscience, feeling that the Land
rightfully belongs to others. Thus, the Torah begins with our
history, that the Land rightfully belongs to whomever Elohim
grants it, and that all of Her commandments are just. The
covenant between Elohim and the Jewish People begins in
Bereishit, and is reinforced throughout the Torah in stories,
codes of laws and commandments.
The commentary Bereishit Rabbah emphasizes that the message
of Bereishit is addressed essentially to the Jewish people. The
commandments of the Torah include many which are dependent upon
the occupancy of the Land of Israel by the Jewish People. Today,
this suggests Jews who live in Israel or make Aliyah to Israel
are helping to fulfill Elohim’s wishes of inhabiting the Land
which She gave us.
The Land of Israel has been good for the Jewish people and
the people have been good for the land. The American Israel
Economic Forum website identifies the strengths and potential of
the Israeli economy in areas including information technology
and communications, and in agriculture and the environment. Some
interesting facts include:
Israel is the 100th smallest country with less
than 1/1000th of the world’s population. Israel has:
the highest concentration of hi-tech companies in the world
apart from Silicon Valley; more than 3000 high tech companies
and start-ups; and the highest concentration of home computers
per capita. Israel has the highest ratio of university degrees
to the population in the world. The cell phone was developed in
Israel by Israelis working in the Israeli branch of Motorolla.
Voice mail technology was developed in Israel. The first PC
anti-virus software was developed in Israel in 1979.
Relative to its population, Israel is the largest immigrant
absorbing nation on earth, most notably the hundreds of
thousands from the former Soviet Union. Israel leads the world
in the number of scientists and technicians in the workforce
with 145 per 10,000. Israeli scientists developed the first
fully computerized, no-radiation, diagnostic instrumentation for
breast cancer.
Israel is the only country in the world to enter the 21st
century with a net gain in the number of trees, made more
remarkable because this was gained in an area considered mainly
desert and afflicted by forest fires set by its enemies.
Israel has contributed to finding new resources for energy
that will diminish our dependence on oil and other limited
resources. A recent Community Brief in the Jewish Journal
noted that an Israeli company plans to build the world’s largest
solar energy park in Southern California’s Mojave Desert to
supply enough electricity to power 400,000 homes in Central and
Northern California.
Our understanding of Israel involves the Land and the people
of Israel in a relationship with Elohim. We are told "In the
beginning of creation, Elohim created light, saw that it was
good and separated light and darkness, Day and Night". This
becomes a pattern for creation as Elohim creates all living
things and finds them good.
We learn from Ethics of the Fathers (24): "Beloved are people
for they were created in the image of Elohim…" Thus, the
creation of human beings and of being in a relationship with
Elohim, was a reflection of the attributes of Elohim.
We have the capacity to create, just like Elohim. We, like
Elohim when She created the world, have a week of work. We are
commanded to observe the Shabbat, a day of rest, just like
Elohim.
On Yom Kippur, we focus on our relationship with ourselves,
our relationships with others, and our relationships with
Elohim. Some of our Shabbat liturgy speaks of love between
Elohim and the people Israel as a metaphor for a loving
relationship. We traditionally read Shir Hashirim on Friday
night, a book of Jewish allusions of relationships and passion.
We bless our children, our creations, Friday night before
Kiddush, with the same blessing the priests gave the Jewish
people.
In the stories of Bereishit, we are reminded of Elohim’s role
in creation and reproduction, be it animal, vegetable, mineral,
or people. Elohim is the ultimate parent. We read stories
throughout Bereishit about the world She created and the
challenges of matching expectations with reality, control with
free choice.
"Va-Yahr Elohim Ki Tov". Elohim saw that this world was good,
from the beginning of creation. This phrase is the refrain at
the end of every stage and every day of creation in this parsha.
As a parent, I believe that Elohim inspired the creation of
each of my children and was present at each childbirth. "Va-Yahr
Elohim Ki Tov". And Elohim saw that these children were filled
with potential.
I am filled with a sense of new beginnings as I see my sons
growing and maturing into adulthood and creating their different
paths. Like most parents, I have had areas of differences of
opinion, such as which political party to register with for
upcoming elections or whether to vote at all. As a parent, I
believe part of watching children grow up is accepting their
becoming increasingly independent in their thoughts, decisions,
and actions. I also believe one challenge for teenage and young
adult children like mine is defining their own ideas and paths
and being comfortable when these differ from those of their
parents.
"Va-Yahr Elohim Ki Tov". And this, too, is good.
As an Emma, I trust that I have guided my children by setting
an example. Welcoming guests around a Shabbat or Holiday table,
visiting sick friends and family in the hospital, calling my
aging mother during the week or before Shabbat, recycling paper
and plastic, and creating compost, are a few of the ways I hope
I have modeled how Elohim has given us the ability to care for
others, care for ourselves, care for our environment, and
appreciate what Elohim has created for us.
"Va-Yahr Elohim Ki Tov". My children have seen these things,
and come to recognize them as good. We see them acting on these
values, integrating them in their lives and their choices, and
we echo Bereishit, after Elohim, Who creates humans in Her image
saying, "this is good". "This is very good".
For David, making Aliyah is his dream. He will be living on
Kibbutz Sa’ad. He has been told he will have a roommate from
Ethiopia, who like himself, will be a Lone Soldier, without
immediate family in Israel.
David has been nurtured by this community at Temple Beth Am,
by his Abba and myself, by his brother Meir, by his extended
family and friends, by Camp Ramah, USY, his education and his
faith in Elohim. He has shown by his actions his commitment to
Klal Yisrael. Whether it was helping a child in childcare or
another teen, working on staff at Camp Ramah, speaking about
Israel programs for USY, or reading Torah at a Shiva Minyon, he
has shown himself to be a responsible young adult that Israel
will be lucky to have.
"Vayahr Elohim et kol asher asa v’hinei, tov me’od"
Elohim’s affirmation of the very goodness of things comes at
the stage of creation where human beings come to life, a special
kind of creature that will make its own decisions and will act
on its own free will. "Tov Me’od," is Elohim’s endorsement of:
1) the person that can exist and run things on their own that
previously Elohim the creator parent had to handle for him or
her; and 2) the total work of creation that has set potential in
place that can be nourished so the world can become as good a
place as it possibly can be. Having already instructed these
human children well and blessed them, Elohim calls everything
complete, and says Kiddush "vayechulu hashamayim v’haaretz",
that is, the words we say at the conclusion of the 7th
day of our creation story, the same words we use in our Kiddush
and our sanctification over wine. Maybe that’s what we need to
do when we separate from our children, our creations; give life
instructions, give our blessing, see how very good they are, and
let go.
We as a community have the ability to model for our children
the message in Bereishit. Elohim saw that creating light and
darkness, heaven and earth, all animals, all vegetation, the
land and the people, all of this was good. She shows us in
Bereishit that we have the ability to model a community of
caring, appreciation, and creativity by our words, our deeds,
and our relationships. As we enter this new year of beginnings,
of Bereishit, may we continue to show kindness to one another
and to strangers, welcome guests, care for our elderly, respect
the environment, and teach our children and one another to keep
connected with our community, our families, our people and the
Land of Israel. May the Elohim of Bereishit guide us with our
children as the role model parent, inspiring us in relationships
with responsibility, commitment, and covenant.
And may this Shabbat and every Shabbat give us the
opportunity to "vayinafash" re-ensoul ourselves, to revel in the
blessings of "Va-Yahr Elohim et kol asher asa v’hinei, Tov
Me’od", how good it is, this world, these children we have the
privilege to love, how very good.
Shabbat Shalom.