The Miraculous
Nature Of Covenant
God’s covenant
with Noach showed him and us the possibility of transforming the human
condition of loneliness into the miracle of connection.
By Rabbi Shimon Felix
The following article is reprinted with permission from The Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
An interesting element in the story of Noach and the flood
is the amount of time spent by Noach preparing for the big event. All the steps
of the building of the ark, the collecting of the animals, and then bringing
them into the ark are described in some detail. According to a Rabbinic
tradition, Noach spent 120 years building the ark and getting everything ready
for the crucial moment.
The Midrash has an explanation for this protracted period of
preparation: Noach used this time to warn his fellows, and to try and convince
them to repent of their evil behavior, and thereby turn away the wrath of God
and avert the flood. Sadly, he failed, and, in spite of 120 years of his best
efforts, they all refused to listen, and to change, and were ultimately
destroyed.
In one of the verses dealing with this period of
preparation, there is an interesting statement that God makes to Noach. After
dictating to him the measurements of the ark, and its structural features, God
tells him: "And I shall establish my covenant ('brit') with you, and you
shall enter into the ark, you and your sons and your wife and your sons' wives
with you." In this entire section, God has been very clear and precise
about the instructions he gives to Noach, in terms of the ark and the saving of
the animals. The precise nature of this covenant, however, is unclear. If God
is giving Noach all the technical information needed in order to save himself,
his family, and the animal species, what is the need for this covenant, the first
ever mentioned in the Bible? What is its nature, its content?
Some of the commentaries (Chizkuni, Radak) understand the covenant as simply
being a promise, a guarantee, as if to say, I promise you that you and your
children will live through the deluge, that you will survive it.
Rashi feels that this is superfluous; after all, he's got the boat, built
according to God's specifications, he's been warned, what does he need a
covenant for? Rashi's answer is this: OK, the ark will float, Noach will not be
drowned, but what will he eat for the many months in the ark? Any food he
brings with him now will rot over all that time, and he's got to feed his
family AND all the animals! Rashi's answer is this: The covenant was needed to
guarantee that the food would not go moldy, and Noach and his passengers would
not starve. Rashi, reminding us of another problem we forgot about, tells us
that the covenant was also needed to prevent the evil people of Noach's
generation (everybody!) from losing patience with Noach the nudnik (120 years
of 'God is going to kill you all, you better be good, repent, a flood is
coming') and simply killing him.
It would seem that, for Rashi, covenant denotes something supernatural, some
divine intervention designed to prevent natural processes (rot, people getting
angry at someone who annoys them, and then leaves them to drown) from
occurring. For the other commentaries, covenant simply means a guarantee, a
promise, and does not necessarily imply any special divine intervention in the
natural order of things.
Why does Rashi feel compelled to see covenant as being something that implies a
divine, supernatural intervention in the way of the world? Or, if we look at it
from the other direction, and recognize that Rashi has raised a couple of good
technical problems which the Biblical narrative does not, and which Noach must
deal with, why is a covenant the necessary vehicle for dealing with the rot and
the nasty neighbors? Why do these problems need the apparently miraculous
solution of covenant?
Perhaps the answer is to be found in the nature of a covenant. Covenant is of
course a very big word for the Jewish people. Often, we are described as a
covenantal people, defined by our intimate, ongoing relationship with God, and
the signs of his covenant with us; the Torah, Shabbat, the Land of Israel, the
Mitzvot. This being the case, it would seem to be worth our while to think a
moment here about what a covenant is; what does it mean for two beings to enter
into a binding, reciprocal, long-term (if not eternal) relationship, and what
is so special about it?
The very idea of a covenant, a deep, lasting connection and partnership, an
ultimate commitment between two individuals, can itself be seen as an
abrogation of the way of the world, and is therefore itself a kind of miracle.
In nature, each individual is ultimately alone, faced with the need to
guarantee his own physical and emotional survival and integrity, trapped in his
own way of seeing and experiencing the world. We are all, ultimately, on our
own. Only fleetingly, and often problematically, nervously, is one connected to
others, and then often only out of necessity, or self-interest. This is true
when the partners to the relationship are both people, and their covenant is
'only' an abrogation of the natural selfishness and self-interest that human
beings are heir to. It is all the more true when only one of the two partners
is human, and the other is divine.
The image we have of Noach is that of a lonely, solitary man. In the 120 years given
him by God to turn the hearts of his friends and neighbors, he failed to make
one real connection, to have one real friend, whom he could convince to see
things as he did. Imagine, not one human being on the entire planet who shared
his world view, his way of understanding things! Noach, during this 120 year
period, and, later, in the ark, while, outside, his entire world was being
destroyed, and finally, after the deluge, when he leaves the ark to find every
single person he had known now gone, vanished, is a model of man alone,
separate, unconnected to others. (I am purposely discounting his family here;
they are consistently presented as simply appendages to Noach, not individuals
with whom he is truly in relationship or dialogue. In fact, after the flood,
his relationship with his children seems very problematic, viz. the story of
his drunkenness and the behavior of his son Ham.)
The covenant, the real miracle that God was offering Noach, was simply this: If
a flood is coming, there are practical, simple steps to be taken, and
you must take them. But, there are also other, deeper, trickier issues to be
faced, and for those, we must make a covenant together. Because your biggest
problem is that you are alone, and you do not have to be. Sure, you can build
an ark and load it with supplies, but there is something inherently wrong,
barren, rotten, with such a solitary existence. I also will need to protect
you, Noach, from your angry neighbors, which clearly indicates how truly alone
you are, and how dysfunctional that is. The purpose of our covenant is to
defeat this aloneness, and give you the miracle of relationship. Now, if we can
accomplish that miracle, the miracle of dialogue, of brit, which is,
ultimately, the biggest miracle of all, as you have so tragically learned over
the last 120 years, then there will be nothing rotten about your being holed up
alone, just you and your immediate family, with your provisions, inside the
ark, with all the world outside. And the wet, angry mob outside, banging on the
door of the ark as the flood waters rise, will not be such a problem, for I
will be there, inside, with you.
By offering Noach a covenant, a relationship, after 120 years of loneliness and
frustration, God was showing him the most basic and crucial miracle of all, the
miracle which transforms the natural human condition of being alone into one of
connection, of relationship. This is the true meaning of covenant, and this is
our role as a covenantal people; to connect, only connect.
Rabbi Shimon Felix is
the Israel Director of the Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel. He lives with
his family in Jerusalem, and has taught in a wide variety of educational
frameworks in Israel and abroad.