The Duality And
Unpredictability Of Human Nature
The creation of
humans and our variability expressed in Bereishit present us with endless
choices and challenges for how to live our lives.
By Gary Rubin
The following article is reprinted with permission from
the UJA-Federation of New York.
Why are we so fascinated, year after year, by the story of
Genesis? While many of us have read the Creation saga since childhood and
revisit it annually as the cycle of Torah readings begins anew, we eagerly
return to the same episodes. Perhaps this is because, as a new year gets under
way, we don’t know how our lives will evolve--and that is the very point of
this story.
The Torah’s second sentence describes God’s spirit as
"hovering" over the waters. As Everett Fox notes in his superb translation,
we can learn the meaning of "hover" from a sentence near the Torah’s
end, when Moses presents his poem to the People of Israel just before his
death. There, he describes an eagle rousing her young out of their nest and
"hovering" over them as they seek to take wing (Deuteronomy 32:11).
The fate of our children is unknown as we guide them out of
our homes and toward taking responsibility for themselves in the world they
will inherit as adults. We do our best to prepare them for an independent life,
but like the biblical eagle, we can at best "hover" near them, giving
them the space they need to strike out on their own. Similarly, at the very
beginning of the Creation story, we learn that God’s character is to
"hover" over the earth, imparting His values, but forever unsure how
his creatures will act when given independence. Before Genesis is over, we’ll
read many examples of people who both fulfilled and confounded His hopes.
Uncertainty is built into the very structure of the world.
Modern commentators have emphasized the fundamental
unpredictability of the apex of God’s creation, human beings. In his commentary
on Genesis 2, the revered Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik masterfully suggested the
ambiguous nature of human beings. He notes that verse 8 describes God as
"placing" Adam into the Garden of Eden to enjoy its pleasures, which
focuses on the passive and hedonistic consumption of the natural environment.
In contrast, verse 15 repeats the placement of Adam in the Garden, but he is
now "taken" to Eden and given the task, "to cultivate it and to
keep it."
The emphasis here is no longer on pleasure, but on
commandment. God has actively taken Adam out of a state of complacency and
conferred on him responsibility. The human being is now a meaningful actor,
controlling the environment, not just existing within it. To these two
dimensions a third is immediately added, for just three verses later, God
creates Eve to be a "fitting helper opposite him." Humans do not
simply relate to their surroundings; they are fundamentally social beings,
requiring mates. But as the Torah shrewdly notes, the nature of a
"mate" is ambiguous. She (or he) is a "helper," but also
"opposite," the Hebrew kenegdo being derived from the word
meaning "different" or "against."
In commenting on only 10 verses, Soloveitchik brilliantly
explicates the Torah’s view of the variability of human nature. The very
varying descriptions of Adam and Eve, the primal man and woman, aren’t mutually
exclusive. Human beings are both individual and social, competitive and
cooperative, hedonistic and hard-working, controlling and influenced by others.
Genesis stresses our ambiguous and unpredictable nature.
A similar theme emerges in Avivah Zornberg’s insightful
commentary on the first book of the Torah. She notes that God created humans at
a unique "pivoting point." Animal life is essentially horizontal,
driven to spread out over the earth; it’s romesset, or "crawling"
(1:21), moving out in groups or herds, controlled by instinct. But while humans
also are commanded to "fill the earth" (1:28), their essential
posture is God-like, for they stand erect or vertical, in a commanding
position.
God directs Adam both to proliferate and to rule. He is the
only creature to be simultaneously horizontal and vertical, meaning that he is
fundamentally capable of animalistic debauchery or of high moral achievement.
Humans are created to be ambiguous, with no hint of whether their lives will
produce disaster or greatness.
Genesis 4, the story of Cain and Abel, also expresses this
ambiguity. This episode begins the longest sustained theme in the Bible: the
triumph of the younger brother over the older. It recurs in the stories of
Ishmael and Isaac; Esau and Jacob; Reuben and Judah; Joseph and his brothers;
and Ephraim and Menasheh. Beyond Genesis, it’s found in the fact that
leadership is conferred on the younger Moses, not the older Aaron, and that
King David is the youngest among his brothers.
By frequently repeating this theme, the Torah clearly meant
to convey a powerful message. Primogeniture, the primacy of the first-born, was
an "iron rule" in the ancient world. The eldest son was thought
naturally to merit leadership and to be entitled to an enhanced inheritance.
The victory of biblical younger sons, who are depicted as wiser and more
righteous than their elders, is meant to demonstrate that humans can shatter
nature’s seemingly ironclad laws through purposeful action. They can shape
history to overcome the limitations of the natural world.
This lesson only can be conveyed in a world in which
primogeniture is the norm. The triumph of the younger in these stories is
remarkable because the dominance of the elder is the usual experience. Here
again, the Torah stresses the essential duality of human nature: we’re usually
ruled by nature and submit to its imperatives, but also can shape our own
futures through acts of will and intelligence. From its very beginning, the
Torah sets forth both possibilities. How we turn out is largely up to each of
us.
So no matter how many
times we’ve read Genesis before, we keep returning to it, for we still don’t
know the ending of the story.
Gary Rubin is managing director of the Commission on the
Jewish People, UJA-Federation of New York. The commission works in the fields
of Jewish rescue, resettlement, forging global Jewish ties, and fostering
Jewish unity.