G-d Striking Back, Part II
Chapter 5, Mishna 11(b)
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"Pestilence comes to the world for death penalties mentioned in the
Torah
which are not in the hands of the courts [to administer] and for [the
forbidden use of] Sabbatical year produce. The sword comes to the world
for the delay of justice, the perversion of justice, and for those who
expound the Torah not in accordance with Jewish law. Wild beasts come to
the world for false oaths and the desecration of G-d's Name. Exile comes
to the world for idolatry, adultery, murder, and the working of the earth
on the Sabbatical year."
Last week we began discussing the punishment of pestilence. We raised the
issue of how a G-d of infinite justice could wield a rod of chastisement
such as pestilence. Don't plagues strike entire populations -- sweeping
away the innocent together with the guilty?
To explain (at least partially), we defined the concept knows as G-d's
slowness to anger (erech apayim). Many people -- basically all of us --
have done acts at one time or another for which G-d -- if He would only
look so closely -- would find us sorely wanting. (And since we could not
pretend to understand such a topic without the wisdom of Kaballah, we must
add that a person may be wanting from sins of a past life. Reincarnation --
though not more than hinted to in the Talmud -- is a well-established
notion in Kabbalistic thought.) G-d, however, in His mercy and patience,
does not take the "effort" to look so closely at our faults. He patiently
waits for us to make amends for our sins and return to Him. If, however,
such a person finds himself in a "high-risk" situation -- everyone around
him is succumbing to a contagious disease or is being swept away by
hurricane -- G-d may not go out of His way, so to speak, to save such a
person.
To the above we asked: Even if there is justice to the killing of
"innocents" in a time of plague, why would G-d bring such a punishment in
the first place? Why break forth and strike at so many people at once --
endangering innocents whose sin seems to be nothing more than being at the
wrong place at the wrong time? Why would a G-d of infinite justice strike
at anyone other than the true sinners -- the ones whose wickedness was
heinous enough to test G-d's patience, "forcing" G-d's attention upon
them? It is almost as if the transgressions of mankind made G-d burst
forth in anger, striking indiscriminately at everything and everyone
around -- almost as a furious person waves his fists or bangs on the
table, venting his anger on anything in reach.
Let us look more closely at the sins of our mishna. They hold the key. The
first case was sins for which human courts have no recourse (such as when
there is insufficient evidence to incriminate the defendant, or in times
and places in which Jewish courts are not functional). This applies to a
wide range of transgressions -- any of the many sins listed in the Torah as
punishable by death. What could the common theme behind so many distinct
transgressions be?
The answer is that a serious sin was committed and nothing changed. The
world went on. No compensation, no ramifications, no pressing for charges.
A sin went unpunished. Life -- the family, friends, neighbors of the
sinner, even the courts -- went on as if nothing happened. G-d and all He
stands for were ignored.
Similarly, if someone treats seventh year produce as if nothing is
different about it -- he sells it as usual to willing buyers, passing off
the sacred as mundane -- the sanctity of the world has been ignored.
Nobody cared enough to notice. G-d was basically forgotten, and the world
went on.
My teacher R. Yochanan Zweig (www.talmudicu.edu) explained that when such
sins occur -- when G-d's existence is ignored -- G-d strikes back: He
*makes* Himself noticed. When a person feels he is ignored or not
appreciated, he may respond by making himself known -- hopefully in a
productive way by making a positive, noticeable difference to others, but
sometimes in a destructive way -- hurting others, physically or
emotionally, as an "easy way out" means of feeling his own importance. G-d
responds likewise. If the evil of the world is a lack of recognition of G-
d, G-d responds by making His Presence noticed. He does not appease His
wrath through subtle, inconspicuous acts of retribution. He shows mankind
just Who's in charge. There are forces in this world -- great forces --
which G-d can unleash at any moment at His whim. G-d demonstrates His
control of the world in grand and public fashion. He strikes out not at
the perpetrator alone but much farther and wider. The world will be made
to learn just Whom it was ignoring.
This principle, however, is not a "destructive" one alone. It has saved the
Jewish People more than once. If G-d's primary reason for punishing so
publicly is more for the show, so to speak, than to actually wipe out large
populations, He does not need to strike at people at all. When Israel
became deserving of destruction in the time of the First Temple, the
Midrash writes that G-d instead "poured out His wrath on sticks and
stones" -- destroying the Temple edifice rather than the nation (Eichah
Rabbah 4:11). How does G-d "appease His wrath" on inanimate objects?
Doesn't G-d's anger result from sin, and can't it only be appeased by
bringing the wicked to justice?
The answer is that when the message the world must see is G-d's existence,
G-d can achieve the same effect via other means. When the Temple stood but
Israel was not truly cognizant of G-d's Presence, G-d was able to chastise
us through the Temple's destruction. The nation was preserved, beaten and
exiled, but destined to survive for future generations.
We have not been blessed with the Temple for many years, but we too are
allowed occasional glimpses of G-d's benevolence. When a car bomb is
planted by murderous terrorists in front of an *elementary school
building* but detonates at the wrong time -- directly hurting no one (this
happened here in Israel a few years ago), G-d is also showing Himself --
teaching us the lesson of His reality. He is showing that it is He who
protects us, and that our enemies will never be able to harm us so long as
we are praying and G-d is watching.
(Unfortunately, the failed terrorist attempts -- though far more miraculous
than the successful ones -- do not command the same international media
attention. It's almost laughable here in Israel reading the number of
terrorists who blew themselves up in "work accidents" -- while preparing
explosives, or because their explosives mysteriously exploded while they
were on their way to an attack, etc. One day I'll have to go over and thank
the angel in Heaven who's in charge of premature detonations. ;-)
Perhaps we will be granted more "good" opportunities to recognize G-d's
providence -- before He finds need to bring the more destructive type. May
we merit to see G-d through His visible acts of kindness and providence --
to ourselves and to His nation -- and through this may the time come when
G-d's Presence is revealed to all mankind.
Text Copyright © 2006 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.