Flooded With
Violence
Noah’s response to
the flood indicates that violence is an ingrained aspect to human nature that
must be acknowledged and channeled for good.
By David Nelson
The following article is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
The story of God's eradication of humanity with the flood is
well known. The decision was based on God's deep disappointment with humanity's
immersion in chamas, violence. God attempts to rectify the situation by
regenerating humanity through a single tzaddik [righteous person]--Noah, and
his family.
A midrash relates that God had created and destroyed several
worlds before this one because all were flawed. Yet after the flood, God
decides never to destroy the world (by flood) again. Why?
Perhaps the answer lies in Noah's response to the flood.
When the waters dry up, Noah leaves the ark. We expect some expression of
gratitude to God for having been spared. A song, perhaps, or a dance. Instead,
Noah builds an altar and, unbidden, sacrifices some animals to God. God smells
the pleasant barbecue smell and then decides never to destroy again ". . .
since the devisings of humans are evil from their youth" (Genesis 8:21).
God realizes that even Noah, the finest of his generation,
whose intentions are unimpeachably pure, expresses gratitude with a violent
act. Violence, apparently, is a built-in part of humanness that cannot be
corrected in any new improved model. The hardest part of the realization is
that this deep-rooted violence is no less a reflection of God than any other
part of being human. God, after all, has tried to solve the problem of violence
with violence.
In response to these sobering realizations, the mandate of
vegetarianism (Genesis 1:29) is rescinded as unrealistic. We are permitted to
kill for food, but only in a restricted and controlled manner, and we must
never kill each other. God makes a covenant, a promise, never to destroy again,
to live, forever, with the imperfections. God seals the covenant with a
rainbow, a wonderful symbol of weaponry turned into a commitment for hope and
peace.