Though millions of men and
women filled the world, God chose one man. Why did God choose Abraham? The
rabbis say that he chose him as the rock on which to build the world.
THIS WEEK'S TORAH PORTION:
Lech Lecha (לך לך | Go
forth)
Torah: Genesis 12:1-17:27
Haftarah: Isaiah 40:27-41:16
Gospel: Matthew 1:1-17
All Things Created for Him
The rabbis say that God
chose Abraham before the creation of the world. He looked for a single
righteous man for whom He could justify creating the world. As He looked into
the future, scanning over the generations of human beings to come, His eyes
fell upon the righteous Abraham. On Abraham’s merit He chose to create the
world:
A parable: Once there was a
king who was sought to build a palace. He began to dig, going further down, to
lay a foundation, but he found only swampy soil. And so it was in many places.
He was not able to build until he dug in one place, and there he found bedrock
(petra, פטרא). Thus he said, “I am building and placing foundations here,” and
he built. So too, the Holy One, blessed be He, sought to create the world. He
was sitting and scrutinizing the generation of Enosh and the generation of the
flood, and He said, “Why should I create the world and let those wicked men
arise and vex me?” But when the Holy One, blessed be He, saw Abraham arise in
the future, he said, “Behold, I have found a rock (petra) to build upon and to
lay the foundation of the world.” Thus he called Abraham “Rock,” as it says [in
Isaiah 51:1-2], “Look to the rock from which you were hewn.” (Yalkut Shimoni,
Bamidbar, 23:766)
Did God really create the
entire world only for the sake of Abraham? For the sake of Abraham’s Seed, the
Messiah, He brought the whole world into being. During the Talmudic Era, the
great academies in Babylon agreed that God created the world only on the merit
of one righteous man, but they argued over which righteous man that was. Rav
claimed that God created the world for the sake of David. Shmu’el countered
that God created the world for the sake of Moses. But Rabbi Yochanon
contradicted both and said, “The world was created only for the sake of the
Messiah.”
Rabbi Yochanon’s opinion
prevailed. The sages agree that God created the world only for the sake of
Messiah—Abraham’s Seed. Paul of Tarsus taught the same concept. He believed
that all things were created only for Messiah: “All things have been created
through Him and for Him” (Colossians 1:16).
God chose Abraham out of the
sea of humanity two thousand years before the birth of Yeshua. He chose Him to
be the father of the Jewish people and the father of the line of Messiah. This
explains why the Messiah is called the “Son of Abraham,” i.e., Ben Avraham, at
the beginning of the Gospel of Matthew. According to Paul’s teachings, the
Messiah is the “Seed of Abraham.” God chose a childless man married to a barren
woman to become the father of the Messiah, the father of the Jewish people, and
the father of many nations.
-First Fruits of Zion
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