Parshat No'ach Mitzva Watch Kohen -
First Aliya - 14 p'sukim - 6:9-22 The sedra of No'ach continues this thread and tells us that No'ach was completely righteous "in his time". Rashi presents the divergent opinions as to whether "in his time" is complimentary or derogatory. Was No'ach great EVEN in his very wicked generation, or was he great only by comparison to the generation in which he lived. Although Rashi does not seem to favor one possibility over the other, it seems obvious that No'ach was not as great as Avraham Avinu. A look at the fifth chapter of Pirkei Avot will reveal a significant difference between Noach and Avraham. Ten generations between Adam and Noach and between Noach and Avraham, both to teach us about G-d's long patience. Same. Yet when the first full run of ten generations was up, the Flood came. When the second one was up, the Mishna tells us, that Avraham's merit sustained the whole world. Noach's merit was enough only to save his immediate family. Noach is informed by G-d of His plans to destroy the world and is commanded to build an ark, bring into it two of every kind of animal and sufficient food for his family and the animals. Commentaries point out that Noach was given ample time to try to influence his generation to mend its ways. He either didn't succeed or didn't try too hard. He did exactly as he was told (and not more?). Think about this... But No'ach was part of it. And that is
what G-d usually wants when it comes to miracles. We, as humans, relate so much better to
that kind of miracle. Nachshon b. Aminadav needed to jump into the Sea before it would
split. People needed to see what No'ach was doing for 120 years. We need to see some
familiar nature inside a miracle, and we need to see the miracle inside nature. The Talmud (in Pesachim) points to
G-d's instructions to take "Animals that are Tahor (i.e. Kosher) and those that are
not Tahor", as a lesson in speaking with a "clean" language, i.e. not
vulgar. The Torah could have used the word TAMEI (unclean) but chose a longer periphrasis
to use more pleasant terms. Commentaries ask,if this is so, how come the Torah uses the
word TAMEI in many other contexts. The answer is, that when the Torah G-d's commands to Noach to take pairs of animals and 7 pairs of kosher animals and birds are two separate matters. The pairs of animals were for the continuation of the species. These animals, we are taught, came on their own by instinct of self- preservation. On the other hand, Noach had to bring into the Teiva the other animals, whose destiny, so to speak, was the Altar and the dinner table. On that note, another question comes to
mind. How many deer were in the Ark? Seven pairs because the deer is a kosher animal, or
only two because the deer is never brought as a Korban? Since some say that the reason for
the seven pairs was because of sacrifices, and others say it was to provide kosher food,
what's the answerfor deer? Similarly, how many chickens? Sacrifices? No. Food? Yes. So
which was it? Rabbi Zev Leff explains that B'nei Noach are permitted to offer sacrifices
from ANY kosher animal or bird; No'ach was not restricted to cow, goat, sheep,
doves. Hence, for either reason, there were seven pairs of deer, chickens, etc. G'MATRIYA based on L'ORA SHEL TORAH by
R. Yaakov Auerbach z"l Speaking of the Baal HaTurim... The Baal HaTurim sees a hidden clue-reference to the Mabul in the numeric value of KEITZ, 100+90 = 190. The Mabul consisted of 40 days and nights of rain, plus an additional 150 days of the turmoil of the flood-waters before they began to subside.That's 190 days, KEITZ. The Baal HaTurim, a.k.a. Rabbi Yaakov b. Asher Ashkenazi, was born 5029 in Ashkenaz and died in 5103 in Toledo. His major work is the Arba'a Turim, the code of Jewish Law that preceded the Shulchan Aruch. His father and main teacher was Rabbeinu Asher, the RO"SH. The Torah tells us that every living
thing was destroyed by the Mabul except No'ach and those with him in the Teiva. ACH
NO'ACH, just No'ach was left... is numerically equal to 1+20+50+8=79. There is a Midrashic
tradition that OG, an antediluvian giant survived the Flood by holding on to the Teiva. OG
= 70+6+3 = 79. Who survived the Flood? (1) Just No'ach... (2) OG. Rashi later tells us
that the "PALIT" (refugee) who told Avraham of Lot's capture was none other than
OG, a refugee from pre-Flood times. HERE'S A THOUGHT... G-d blessed and commanded Noach and his
family (and all of mankind) to be fruitful and multiply". Noach receives permission
to eat meat (this was denied to the previous generations), but was warned not to eat from
a live animal. Murder and the other Noahide Laws are referred to at this point. We acknowledge the significance of a
rainbow by reciting a bracha when we see one "...He Who remembers the Covenant, is
faithful to it, and keeps His word. Note that of the 10 items mentioned in Avot as having
been created at Some say that a rainbow is a sign thatG-d is angry with the world and would want to destroy it - except He promised not to. On the other hand, Yechezkel describes
the Heavenly Throne as like a rainbow, and the radiance of the Kohen Gadol upon leaving
the Holy of Holies is likened to a rainbow in the sky. And it's beautiful, too. Some time after leaving the ark, Noach
becomes a tiller of the soil and a grape grower. He produces wine and becomes drunk. One
of his sons, Cham, behaves immorally with his father in his drunken state; Shem and Yafet
behave admirably in the situation. When Noach realizes what has happened he curses Cham
and his son Canaan,and blesses Shem and Yafet. Noach lives 350 years after the Flood, and
dies at the age of 950. There are five different periods during
which nature did not behave as we know it today. (1) The "time" before this
world - previous worlds, assuming they existed, did not necessarily have the same laws of
nature; (2) the indeterminable time of B'reishit - G-d's act of Creation of something from
nothing; (3) the Six Days of Creation, during which G-d commanded things to happen, no
doubt in very different ways from the nature He also created; (4) the first 1656 years of
this world, throughout the ten generations from Adam to Noach, when the laws of nature
also seem to differ from what we experience today, (5) the "year" of the Flood. The Torah tells us of the attempt to build the "Tower of Babel", the symbol of rebellion against G-d. (This happened, by the way, 40 years after the Mabul - that's another 40.) G-d thwarted the plans, confused the languages of mankind and scattered the people far and wide. Commentaries contrast the two sinful generations in this sedra. Dor HaMabul was destroyed because their sins included the destruction of society by total disregard of a person for his fellow. Dor HaPlaga sinned against G-d alone, not against each other. Society (albeit altered) can survive; G-d can permit it to continueunder these circumstances. The sedra returns to the lineage of
Noach, this time tracing only through Shem, straight down to Terach and his son Avram
(with wife Sarai). The sedra thus ends with the stage set for the next major phase of
world development - the return to belief in one G-d and the "birth of Judaism". [The No'ach Homepage] |