Where Was
Sarah?
Sarah’s death
illustrates the flaw of attempting to impose perfect justice on an imperfect
world.
By Rabbi Avi Weinstein
The following article is reprinted with permission from Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.
Genesis 23:1-2
Now Sara's life was one hundred years and twenty years
and seven years, (thus) the years of Sara's life. Sara died in Arba-Town, that
is now Hevron, in the land of Canaan. Avraham set about to lament for Sara and
to weep over her.
Your Torah Navigator
There are several Midrashim
(rabbinic exegetical narratives) that give Sarah voice. They all understand
that it is significant that Sarah is missing in this parsha and they assume
that she must not have been part of Abraham's decision. The question that
arises is did Sarah ever find out? The following Midrash addresses this issue:
The Midrash From Pirke D'Rebbe Eliezer
When Abraham returned from Mount
Moriah, Satan became infuriated. He had not gotten what he desired which was to
thwart the sacrifice of Abraham. What did he do? He went to Sarah and asked:
"Did you hear what happened in the world?" She answered,
"No." He said, "Abraham took Isaac his son and slaughtered him,
offering him up on the altar as a sacrifice." Sarah began to cry, and moan
the sound of three wails, which correspond to the three blasts of the shofar
(ram’s horn), and her soul burst forth from her and she died. Abraham came only
to find that she had died. From where had he come? From Mount Moriah.
Your Midrash Navigator
1.Whom is to blame for Sarah's
death?
2. Could it have been prevented?
3. We blow the shofar on Rosh Hashanah. We read the Binding
of Isaac on Rosh Hashanah. Sarah's cries correspond to the three blasts of the
shofar. Why do we try to get God's attention on Rosh Hashanah with Sarah's
cries?
A Word
Sarah, our mother, is a complex character. She is sharp,
devoted, generous, harsh and fiercely committed to her family. She is not
usually reticent. Yet, last week when her son Isaac is about to be sacrificed,
Sarah's voice is not to be found. The Parsha tells us that Isaac was spared,
and the Parsha ends by presenting the ancestors of Rebecca who will one day be
Isaac's wife.
The next thing we know about Sarah is that she is dead. Was
her death somehow related to Isaac's trial? Maybe she was already ailing and
old when Abraham left in such a hurry to do the Holy One's bidding. Maybe.
Maybe not.
The Midrash sees Sarah as not being included in the most fateful decision of
her life. She was not chosen to be tested. Could she have lived with Abraham,
knowing that at any moment he, in his devotion to God, could take away that
which was most precious to her without letting her know anything?
The shofar, the cries of Sarah remind the Holy One that the tests He gives
leave marks on the innocent. The trials of Abraham lead to the death of Sarah.
Before we go into judgement, we remind the Holy One the flaws of perfect
justice in an imperfect world. It is better to forego the test then to cause
the suffering of an innocent intimate bystander. Just as no words, only her
sobbing can reflect Sarah's pain, it is the mournful sound of the shofar that
tries to convince the Judge, that judgement isn't worth the trouble.
Provided by Hillel’s
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Learning, which creates innovative
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activities. © 2002 Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.