[Avodah] Sand and stars
T613K at aol.com
T613K at aol.com
Sun Nov 20 00:43:25 PST 2011
From: hankman <hankman at bell.net>
"
>> While I had the Chumash Torah Mai'ira open on my computer, I checked
out something else that bothered me in the past. In the bracha that
AA would have children as the stars in the heavens and the sand on the
shores of the sea. The implication is that the huge numbers of grains of
sand and the numbers of stars should be equivalent. I found this to be
a stretch not likely to be true so I looked for other ways to understand
this bracha.
Here are some of the peshatim he brings:
[snip]
2) They should be as large as stars b'ayechus in that each star is
individually large as an entire world, and be many b'kamus, as the number
of grains of sand, [snip]
6) Even should they be trodden upon by the nations like the sand on the
shores, nevertheless they will shine as brightly as the stars,
7) they are compared to the stars that they will be a guiding light to
the proper path to the nations, just as the stars are guides to find the
right path in navigation, and they are compared to the sand that they
will endure the constant trials and tribulations of the nations just as
the sand endures despite the constant battering by the waves of the ocean.
<<
Kol Tuv
Chaim Manaster
>>>>>
The Torah doesn't say that the number of Avraham's descendants will be the
same as the number of stars or the same as the number of grains of sand in
the world. That would be an impossibilty, because that number of people
couldn't physically fit on the surface of Planet Earth, even stacked up in
skyscraper buildings. (To picture it, picture that every grain of sand in
the world was the size of a person! Where would they all fit?!)
What the Torah actually says is just as the stars and the sand are too
numerous to count, so Avraham's descendants will be too numerous to count, and
it uses stars and sand as metaphors for objects that are too numerous to
count.
"I will make your offspring as the dust of the earth so that if one can
count the dust of the earth, then your offspring, too, can be counted." (Ber
13:16)
"And He took him outside, and said, 'Gaze now, toward the heavens, and
count the stars if you are able to count them.' And He said to him, 'So shall
your offspring be.' " (Ber 15:5)
And finally:
"I shall surely bless you and greatly increase your offspring like the
stars of the heavens and like the sand on the seashore." (Ber 22:17)
Now, even though the Torah doesn't say that stars = grains of sand, it
does seem to imply that. Yet, as you say, to the naked eye of the average
observer, there appear to be far more grains of sand than there are stars in
the heavens. In fact, on a clear night with no light pollution, a human
being with excellent vision can only see about 5000 stars. That is certainly a
number that can be counted!
Yet today we know that there are far more stars than that.
We have here one of many clues scattered through the Torah as to its Divine
authorship. Thousands of years ago, when the Torah was given, what human
being could have known that there were many, many more stars than the
visible ones in the heavens?
By juxtaposing stars and grains of sand, the Torah does seem to imply that
the numbers are of equal magnitude, but who could have known that a few
thousand years ago? Indeed, even a hundred years ago, people didn't know
that!
Today we know that there are in fact MORE stars in the universe than there
are grains of sand on earth! The numbers are staggering, truly
mind-boggling, numbers that even the greatest genius cannot really grasp. There are
somewhere between two billion and four billion stars in our galaxy alone,
and this Milky Way galaxy is only one of BILLIONS OF GALAXIES!
There is a very suggestive Rashi on one of the pesukim I quoted above, Ber
15:5 -- "Hashem took Avraham outside." The pshat, as Rashi says, is that
He took him outside his tent so he could look up at the night sky. But
Rashi brings another explanation, namely, that He took him outside the world
(!) and raised him above the stars so that he could look down on them!
This certainly suggests that Hashem showed Avraham the true magnitude of the
numbers involved and the accuracy of the comparison between stars and grains
of sand.
Of course, as I said, He could not have been promising that we would
literally reach the same number, because it's not physically possible. It is
just that we will be uncountable.
It is also likely that the use of stars and sand as metaphors is meant to
convey other, additional, messages (you mentioned some). I could make some
up on the spot, e.g., that something which is trampled underfoot and
considered worthless -- sand -- can in fact be incredibly valuable and important
-- when silicon is turned into computer chips. And so the Jews....etc.
I would urge you to read a magnificent, fascinating and inspiring science
book about how the universe not only gives signs of being Designed, but
also gives signs that its Designer deliberately planted clues to His
existence. The book is called *THE PRIVILEGED PLANET: HOW OUR PLACE IN THE COSMOS
IS DESIGNED FOR DISCOVERY* -- by Guillermo Gonzalez and Jay W. Richards.
Meanwhile, see "The Galaxy Song," a delightful and edifying little video
about the vast size of the universe:
_http://www.flixxy.com/galaxy-song-eric-idle.htm_
(http://www.flixxy.com/galaxy-song-eric-idle.htm)
--Toby Katz
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