The Children Of
Noach
As the children of
Noach, we are challenged to follow his example of resisting the corruption of
our society, walking with God and living with our brothers and sisters in love
and peace.
By Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger
The following article is reprinted with permission from Kolel: The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish
Learning.
Overview
Creation is not off to such a good start: the earth is
filled with violence and corruption, and so God decides to flood the earth and
start over, choosing Noach to build an Ark to save himself and his family and
at least one pair of every kind of animal. After the flood, God establishes the
Rainbow covenant with every living creature. Humans decide to challenge God by building
the Tower of Babel, so they become dispersed, and the portion ends by
introducing us to Avram and Sarai, who will later on become Abraham and Sarah,
the First Family of the Jewish nation.
In Focus
"And Noach went forth, and his sons, and his wife, and
his son's wives with him."
-- (Genesis 8:18)
Pshat
After the flood, God makes the waters recede; once Noach
determines that there is dry land, God gives him permission to leave the Ark
with his family, and let all the animals go, so that the earth could be
repopulated and the Creation process could begin again with a new covenant and
a new set of "parents" for humankind.
Drash
The contemporary Torah commentator and Reform rabbi Kerry
Olitsky, in his book Renewed Each Day: Daily Twelve Step Recovery
Meditations Based on the Bible, connects this verse with a famous explanation
of the Adam and Chava (Eve) story. According to a midrash, God decided to
create the world with just one man and just one woman so that everybody would
know that they have a common ancestor, and nobody would feel superior to
another. So Rabbi Olitsky interprets the Noach story as the Torah's way of
emphasizing this point- we're all related, we all can trace our ancestry not
only to Adam and Chava, but also to Noach and his (unfortunately unnamed) wife,
who were "righteous in their generation." Thus, if the Torah really
wants us to understand that we're all connected to each other in the most basic
way, through common ancestry, perhaps it's challenging us to treat each other
like the brothers and sisters we are.
The problem, of course, is that the brothers and the sisters of the Bible don't
always treat each other so well--the language of "siblinghood" is
nice, but families can be cruel and jealous, as the Genesis stories of Yitzkak
and Yishmael, of Yaakov and Esav, and Yosef and his brothers will all amply
demonstrate in the weeks to come. In fact, I once heard another contemporary
Torah scholar, Rabbi Arthur Green, say that the basic question of the entire
book of Genesis is: "How can I live with my brother?"
So how DO we live in peace and harmony with the other people--our brothers and
sisters, to use the Torah's imagery--with whom we share our communities, our
countries, our planet? Returning to Rabbi Olitzky's interpretation, our
capacity for loving and moral behavior is made stronger by remembering that we
are not only all children of Adam and Chava but also of Noach. What's the
difference? Perhaps the difference is that Adam and Chava lived in a less
complicated world than Noach did--they had violence in their family, for sure,
but they didn't have to face the pressure of resisting a whole society and its
unGodly values. Noach did; he and his family weren't perfect, but in a society
filled with violence, greed, theft, corruption, materialism, and so on, he
resisted and "walked with God." (cf. Genesis 6:9-13) That's who we're
descended from- somebody who saw a better way than others did, who lived his
values and faith, who rose above a society and treated people as if they were
not only related, but created in the Image of God.
Seen this way, the traditional Hebrew phrase "bnei Noach," which
literally means "children of Noach" but has the idiomatic meaning of
[non-Jewish] "human being," becomes a title of great dignity and
hope. We are the children of great men and women, who are capable of more than
we think, and who can live with our brothers and sisters in peace and love if
only we will remember where we came from, and where we want to go.
Rabbi Neal Joseph Loevinger is currently the rabbi of
Temple Israel of Swampscott and Marblehead, MA. A former student at Kolel, he served as Kolel’s Director of
Outreach from late 1999-2001. He was
ordained in the first graduating class of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic
Studies of the University of Judaism, and holds a Master’s of Environmental
Studies from York University in Toronto.