Aliya-by-Aliya Sedra Summary
The only high note of this universal downslide comes at the end of the sedra: "But No'ach found favor in G-d's eyes". [P> 6:9 (4)] The sedra of No'ach continues this thread and tells us that No'ach was "completely righteous IN HIS TIME". SDT 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 No'ach and Avraham. Ten generations between Adam and No'ach and between No'ach 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. No'ach's merit seems to have been only enough only to save his own family. On the other hand, there was a significant difference between the generations of No'ach and Avraham that cannot be ignored, and make comparisons unfair. The Torah essentially repeats that No'ach had three sons - Sheim, Cham, and Yefet, and that the world was totally corrupt. [S> 6:13 (48)] Then No'ach 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 No'ach 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... He could have left No'ach on his own, to do the whole job of saving his family and sample pairs of all the animals. He didn't do that either. (It probably would have been humanly impossible for No'ach to have done the whole job on his own.) What G-d did do is command No'ach to build an ark of a specific size, a three-tiered floating structure, and to gather all the food necessary to feed many, many animals and his family for a year. This, say some commentaries, cannot be done without a heavy dose of miracle, of suspension of the laws of nature. But it wasn't all supernatural. 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. We need to see some familiar nature inside a miracle... and we also need to see the miracle inside nature.
SDT Baal HaTurim points out that the Torah says EILEH TO-L'DOT... four times
(as opposed to V'EILEH -PC), and each time it comes to negate what came before
it. EILEH TO-L'DOT SHAMAYIM VA'ARETZ... nullifies the TOHU VAVOHU (chaos and
emptiness that preceded formation of this world). ...NO'ACH, to negate the
generations that came before him. SHEIM (No'ach's son), to negate CHAM and
YEFET. ...YAAKOV, to negate EISAV.
G-d's commands to No'ach to take pairs of animals as well as 7 pairs of kosher animals and birds, are two separate matters. The pairs of animals were for the survival and continuation of the species. These animals, we are taught, came on their own by instinct of self- preservation. On the other hand, No'ach had to bring into the Teiva the other animals, whose destiny, so to speak, was the Altar and the dinner table.
How many deer were in the Ark? Rabbi Zev Leff explains that B'nei No'ach are permitted to offer sacrifices from ANY kosher animal or bird; No'ach was not restricted to cow, goat, sheep, and two types of doves - the only acceptable animals and birds for Korbanot of a Jew in the Mikdash. Hence, for either reason, it would seem that there were seven pairs of deer, giraffe, gnus (nothing much, what's gnu with you?), chickens, sparrows, etc.
SDT Rashi states that the word YONA (dove) is treated grammatically as feminine throughout the Tanach, regardless of whether it is actually a male or a female
HERE'S A THOUGHT... We can see in the account of the Flood and its aftermath, a continuation of creation. It is as if stage 1 of creation was recorded in Breishit and here we have stage 2. In other words, the world as we know it came into existence during the 6 days of creation AND during the Flood which took place 10 generations later. Sort of like a rough draft and a further revision. We learn about the world from all that the Torah tells us. G-d blessed and commanded No'ach and his family (and all of mankind) to be fruitful and multiply". No'ach 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 and/or inferred, at this point. Again (third time?), No'ach and family are told to be fruitful and repopulate the world.
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 the instant between the Six Days of Creation and the first Shabbat, all but the rainbow are supernatural. The rainbow, then, can be seen as a bridge between the natural and the supernatural. Put differently, we should see G-d's handiwork in all the elements of nature, not just in obvious miracles. "The mouth of the Earth" was a one-time creation to dispose of Korach and his gang. But regular rocks and hills, crags and clefts are no less part of G-d's handiwork. Some say that a rainbow is a sign that G-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 on Yom Kippur is also likened to a rainbow in the sky. And it's beautiful, too.
[P> 9:18 (12)] Some time after leaving the ark, No'ach 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 Yefet behave admirably in the situation. When No'ach realizes what has happened, he curses Cham and his son Canaan, and blesses Shem and Yafet. No'ach lives 350 years after the Flood, and dies at the age of 950. The arithmetic of No'ach's years (600 before + 350 after = 950) seems not to take into account the year of the Flood. There is a good case to be made for not considering the duration of the Flood in calculations of the chronology of the world. We might look at the Flood as a period of "suspended animation" - laws of nature were not in effect; perhaps time as we know it cannot apply to that interval. The animals in the ark did not function in their normal ways. No'ach had no sleep during the whole period (if we take statements made as literal). [P> 10:1 (14)] The Torah next outlines the generations that followed No'ach including mention of Nimrod, the mighty rebel against G-d, and the nations that came from Sheim, Cham and Yefet. These are the descendants of No’ach (numbers in brackets count the 70 nations of the world). We’ll call NO’ACH the zero genera- tion. That makes SHEIM, CHAM, and YEFET, the first generation after No’ach.
The Torah starts the genealogy with Yefet. Generation 2 from Yefet are:
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 continue under these circumstances.
[P> 11:12 (2)] Arpachshad had Shelach at 35. Lived 403 more years (438). The events the Torah mentions at the end of Parshat No'ach did not happen in the sequence recorded. Commentaries explain why.
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".
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