[Avodah] Faith and Doubt
Micha Berger via Avodah
avodah at lists.aishdas.org
Thu Nov 3 23:03:45 PDT 2016
R' Riskin repeated a brilliant observation by R Moshe Besdin. (H/T
Mosaic Magazine.) I think it says a lot about what it means to have
a life of faith despite having periods of doubt.
Quoting from <http://j.mp/2ekffiv> (on blogs.timesofisrael.com):
...
Noah didn't enter the ark until the water literally pushed him in.
Rashi's phrase that "he believed and he didn't believe" is really
another way of describing an agnostic who remains in the state of his
uncertainty; he believes and doesn't believe. Noah is therefore
described by Rashi as the first agnostic.
The second Biblical agnostic appears in the guise of Haran...
Haran is present at the trial and takes the position of having no
position. He remains on the sidelines thinking that if Nimrod's furnace
will prove hotter than Abramas flesh, he will side with the king; but
if Abram survives the fire, then it would be clear that Abramas God is
more powerful than Nimrodas gods, and he will throw in his lot with his
brother.
Only after Abram emerges unscathed, is Haran ready to rally behind his
brother. He confidently enters the fiery furnace (literally: Ur
Kasdim), but no miracles await him. Haran burns to death.
Is it not strange that the fate of the two agnostics should be so
diifferent? We read how Noah was a man of little faith, and yet not only
does he survive the Flood, he turns into one of the central figures of
human history. He is even termed arighteousa in the Bible.
In contrast, Haran, father of Lot, brother to Abraham, hovers on the
edge of obscurity, and is even punished with death for his lack of
faith. Why is Haranas agnosticism considered so much worse than Noahas?
Rabbi Moshe Besdin, zal, explained that while Noah and Haran shared
uncertainty about God, there was a vast difference between them. Noah,
despite his doubts, nevertheless build the ark, pounding away for 120
years, even suffering abuse from a world ridiculing his eccentric
persistence. Noah may not have entered the ark until the rains
began -- but he did not wait for the Flood before obeying the divine
command to build an ark!
:-)BBii!
-Micha
--
Micha Berger Man can aspire to spiritual-moral greatness
micha at aishdas.org which is seldom fully achieved and easily lost
http://www.aishdas.org again. Fulfillment lies not in a final goal,
Fax: (270) 514-1507 but in an eternal striving for perfection. -RSRH
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