"ואהברהם זקן בא בימים וה' ברך את אברהם בכל - And Avraham became old of age and Hashem blessed Avraham with everything."
This
week's Parsha begins with Avraham Avinu setting out to bury his wife,
Sarah. Rav Eliyahu Dessler writes in Michtav M'Eliyahu that out of all
the challenging events in Avraham's life this episode was the most
troubling. He had just passed the test of the Akeidah, whereby he
intended and prepared himself to slaughter to his only son on God's
word, and now he hears that his beloved wife had passed away.
Avraham
set out to bury his wife in a spot in Hevron that we now call "Ma'arat
Hamachpela," in a manner that was befitting of such a righteous woman.
Unfortunately though, the people of Hevron, the Chitites, knew that
Hashem had given Avraham the land of Israel and did their best to
inflate the price. The leader, Efron, was a base man who at first told
Avraham that he would give the land away for nothing but when Avraham
told Efron that he wanted to pay for the burial plot, Efron raised the
price well over the acceptable rate. The Yalkut Lekach Tov notes that
Efron's name is composed of the root letters "עפר," - dust. Dust is
common and representative of the physical; exactly Efron's nature - all
he cared about was that which was physical. Efron's initial "polite"
refusal to accept any money was soon revealed to be a front for his true
nature. (Indeed, toward the end of this episode, the letter ו is
dropped from עפרון's name so that it spells "עפרן," which we may note
happens to be numerically equivalent to עין-רע; evil eye.)
In
the face of this, and despite his intense pain at his wife's passing,
Avraham remained calm, respectful and truly polite. He even bows twice
to the Chitites. His behaviour is a real lesson for us to learn - even
when in the most terribly depressing moment of his life, Avraham was
staunchly pious. While it would be hard for us to emulate him, we can
learn from his actions.
Later on in the Parsha,
we read, "ואהברהם זקן בא בימים וה' ברך את אברהם בכל - And Avraham became
old of age and Hashem blessed Avraham with everything." The word
everything seems a bit vague. What is intended? The stock answer is that
בכל has a gematria of 52. The word בן, son, also has a gematria of 52
and so we learn that Avraham's reward was his son, Yitzchak.
There's
a problem with this though - Yitzchak was born years ago! Another way
to read this word resolves our problem. בכל, "with everything," can
instead be replaced with בן, but not in the sense of a son. Rather we
can read it to mean "with the number 50." Without going too far into
things I don't understand myself, I have learned that Kaballah (Jewish
mysticism) teaches us that the number 50 has a special significance.
There are 50 levels of Kedushah, spiritual levels in which we may
ascend. For this reason, for example, we count 50 days until the
festival of Shavuot, each day ascending a spiritual level, so that we
may arrive at the pinnacle of holiness. Avraham's blessing here was not
merely that he was given a son, but also that he attained this fiftieth
level of holiness. In that sense, he was completed and we can say that
Hashem truly blessed Avraham בכל - with everything.
Wishing you a Shabbat Shalom!
Friday, November 09, 2012
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