Genesis 1:1-6:8 – Isaiah 42:5-43:10 – John 1:1-18
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Bereshit
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Parashat Bereshit
1. "In the beginning of God's creation of the heavens and
the earth" (Genesis 1:1) is perhaps the most famous Bible verse. What is the
dichotomy that is inherent in the pairing of "heaven and earth?" How does this
reflect the classic debate between Hillel and Shammai?
Nick Amic
The Talmud relates a classic debate between two
competing schools - Bet Hillel and Bet Shammai -- on the subject of the order
of creation:
The School of Shammai
says that first the heavens were created, then the earth . . . The School of
Hillel says that first the earth was created, and then the heavens.
b. Chaggiga 12a
This debate has two layers that we'll explore: the
pairing of heaven and earth, and the dichotomy of the two in relation to us.
The opening line of the creation story is
surprisingly illogically unbalanced. It pairs the creation of the
cosmos-replete with it's billions
of stars, numerous galaxies, etc. with the creation of one small planet, a
virtual speck in comparison. King David offers some insight into this
perplexing duality:
What is a human that you should remember him . . . Yet you
have made him slightly less than the angels, and you have crowned him with
glory and majesty. You give him dominion over the work of your hands.
Psalm 8:4-7
The opening line of Genesis is meant to alert us not
only to the centrality of humans, and thereby shows God's infinite love and
desire for us, but also shows that we have some responsibilities in relation to
God's purpose of creating humans.
So what is the purpose of humans on this earth? The
Midrash tells us God's purpose of creating the Earth was to create "a dwelling
place in the lowly realms" (Midrash Tanchuma) where the spiritual and
the physical could meet. Which is the order? Shammai says that the "spiritual
heavens" take precedence in that God first projected from himself the spiritual
potential of creation and then embodied it in a physical reality. Plainly put:
"God makes the spiritual physical; the Jew makes the physical spiritual." Rabbi
Menachem Shneerson succinctly explains the opposing view: "From the Hillel
perspective, the ultimate purpose of creation is not to ‘spiritualize' the
material existence, but that the material existence, as it is, should serve the
Divine will." From Hillel's perspective, physicality itself declares God's
glory in that God determined that such a "lowly" thing can be used as it is to
praise him.
In truth the answer to this question is paradoxical
in nature. Judaism, in its comfort with paradoxes says we can appreciate the
merits of both approaches simultaneously. This leads to one final dichotomy
contained in the very word Bereshit itself. The sages point out that the
word is an acronym for bet reshit (two firsts). The "two firsts"
referred to are also a dual-nature of the purpose of creation. The Torah
(referred to as reshit in Proverbs 8:22) expresses the "instruction
manual" for how to elevate mundane items-flour and water to make matza,
blood from animals to atone, etc. - towards a spiritual fulfillment. The people
of Israel, and
those among the nations attached to her through Messiah (called reshit
in Jeremiah 2:3), are the testament to God's glory. That God, being so beyond
the limitations of physicality, could commune and receive praise from humans
that are utterly bound to an ego-centered and physically driven nature. This
marrying of the Torah and the people of Israel
is ultimately fulfilled in Messiah Yeshua - who at once embodies the Torah and
is the culmination of Israel.
Through following him we both display the ability of flesh and blood to worship
the Divine, and thus we also are elevating the physical to one day bring about
a whole new heaven and earth.
2. What is the purpose for the creation account, and what
is the "Light" of which the text speaks?
Joshua Brumbach
The Torah relates the story of the six days of
creation in order to refute other theories that claim the universe came into
being through some cosmic accident or coincidence. The story of creation speaks
in general terms to illustrate that nothing came into being except at God's
command. The Hebrew word bara emphasizes this point. Bara, used
here for "create," can only be used in connection to God (never for humans),
and alludes to the creation of something from nothing.
The Torah's narrative of creation is meant to
directly establish God as the sovereign of the universe. Unlike other origin
myths circulating around the ancient Near East, the biblical account makes no
attempt to explain the origins of God, or try to persuade the listener of God's
existence. The existence of God is assumed. Therefore, it immediately jumps to
the explanation of God's creation of heaven and earth.
In verse three, God says "'Let there be light': and
there was light." If the sun and moon were not created until the fourth day of
creation (see Genesis 1:14-19), what
is the "light" that is being spoken of here. Interestingly there are two
answers. The Yalkut Shemoni, a medieval rabbinic anthology, commenting on this
verse states:
"And God saw the light, that it was good." This is the light
of the Messiah . . . to teach you that God saw the generation of Messiah and
his works before he created the universe, and he hid the Messiah . . . under
his throne of glory. Satan asked God, Master of the Universe: "For whom is this
Light under your Throne of Glory?" God answered him, "It is for . . . [the
Messiah] who is to turn you backward and in who will put you to scorn with
shamefacedness."
Yalkut Shemoni on
Isaiah 60
The pre-existence of Messiah, and his presence at creation
has been discussed widely among many Jewish writers throughout history.
According to Midrash Haggadol, "The final goal of humanity is to attain the
state of the days of Mashiach; therefore the name of Mashiach had to be
formulated even before the world's inception (1:1)." According to the
Babylonian Talmud:
It was taught that seven things were created before the world
was created; they are the Torah, repentance, the Garden of Eden, Gey-Hinnom,
the Throne of Glory, the Temple, and the name of the Messiah . . . The name of
the Messiah, as it is written: "May his name [the name of the Messiah] endure
forever, may his name produce issue prior to the sun."
b. Pesachim 54a,
b. Nedarim 39a, also Midrash on Psalm
93:3
Midrashic legend teaches that this light is hidden
until the Messianic Age, after which it will be once more revealed. When this happens, it will be like in
Revelation (Rev. 21:22-23, 22:5, etc.), where there will no longer be need of
the sun, for God's presence, will provide all needed light. The Messiah is also
clearly connected to the themes of light and creation in John 1:1-18.

Deborah Pardo-Kaplan
John
1:1-18 - Yeshua's Origins and the Renewal
of All Creation
The intense mystery of John 1:1-18 causes many a
reader to pass over its depths as a hovercraft skims the sea's waves, barely
rippling the water. Yet this prologue also draws the reader to cleave to its
increasing parallelism; each verse builds on a word from the previous line.
When the reader is lulled into contemplation, he or she is struck by its
forthrightness.
The reader acquainted with the words of Torah, will
immediately recognize the glaring similarities of theme between this week's besora
reading and Parashat Bereshit. In fact, the rewriting of Genesis was
common in this period. The book of Jubilees (2nd c. B.C.) also rewrites Genesis
and parts of Exodus, portraying Abraham and the ancestors as observers of
Mosaic Law.
The first three words of John's besora harken
back to those of Genesis. "In the beginning" recalls God's work of forming our
universe and all that is in it. However, at the pinnacle of the Torah portion,
the humans created by God have chosen to disobey his voice and at the end of
this week's portion God regrets his work of creation.
So the Lord, said, "I will destroy man whom I have created
from the face of the earth, both man and beast, creeping thing and birds of the
air, for I am sorry that I have made them."
Genesis 6:7
At this point things would have been simpler if God
had inserted John's prologue right here after Genesis 6:7. Noah would not have
had to build his ark and the flood waters could have been withheld. Why?
Because the words in the prologue offer a deliberate parallel and a renewal (or
even reversal) of the events in Genesis 1-3. Many themes are repeated. The
theme of light, God's first creation in Genesis, is found here in John as
emblematic of Yeshua, "the true light which gives light to every man who comes
into the world" (v. 9). As God created life, so in John "In him [Yeshua] was life,
and the life was the light of men" (v. 4). Here, darkness, which causes the
downfall of humans in the Bible's first chapters, cannot overcome this new
light (v. 5).
Later themes in John also indicate a kind of
reversal of events in Genesis. With Yeshua's arrival, humans regain entrance to
the tree of life by eating the bread of life (John 6). They can now "eat and
live forever" (Genesis 3:22)
partaking in eternal life as offered to them by God living among them. Eternal
life is knowing the Father, as seen when Yeshua prays to the Father in John 17,
"And this is eternal life, that they may know you, the only true God and Yeshua
the Messiah whom you have sent."
Yeshua is the light, the life of human beings, and
the conqueror of darkness for one reason alone. Yeshua's origins belie his
power. Matthew and Luke's prefaces move Yeshua back to his conception, whereas
John takes the story back to Yeshua's heavenly origins. Verse one portrays
Yeshua as the Word, which was with God and was himself God. Verse 18
acknowledges that no one, including Moses, has seen God, only the Son has
declared him. Crucially, this Word, this Son, (v. 14) becomes the localized
presence of God on earth, as occurred in history with the tabernacle, or the
Temple, yet this time as human flesh. "He dwelt (skenoun) among us," is
the Greek equivalent of the Hebrew that means "to tabernacle," and is similar
to the rabbinic concept of Shekhina, God's glory that dwells among
humans. God is now present in the human sphere, and the God who walked in the
midst of the Garden is again living among humans. And he does not regret
renewing his creation.
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- PARASHAT NOACH
Genesis 6:9-11:32
Isaiah 54:1-55:5
Matthew 1:18-25
UPCOMING YACHAD NETWORK EVENTS
4th Annual Young Leaders Shabbaton
New
York City ●
June 2008
7th Annual Young Messianic Jewish
Scholars Conference
New
York City ●
June 2008
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