Abraham's Simplicity
Chapter 5, Mishna 4
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
Dedicated to the refuah shleimah (speedy and complete recovery) of
Tharmendran ben Theresa.
"Our forefather Abraham was tested with ten trials and withstood all of
them. This demonstrates how beloved our forefather Abraham of blessed memory was [to G-d]."
Throughout Jewish literature, the Sages make frequent reference to the ten
trials of Abraham. Through them Abraham was accorded special status as
servant of G-d and progenitor of the Jewish People. It's not entirely
clear, however, exactly what the ten trials were. Many, of course, are
evident from Scriptures -- Abraham's exile from his homeland for the Land
of Israel, his willingness to sacrifice his beloved son Isaac. Others are
a matter of dispute among the commentators. Below I list a total of 11
trials -- a combination of the opinions of Maimonides and Rabbeinu Yonah
in their commentaries to our mishna, noting those trials which are a
matter of dispute.
(1) Abraham's allowing himself to be cast into a fiery furnace by Nimrod
for opposing the idolatry of his day. (Rabbeinu Yonah only.)
(2) Abraham, on G-d's instruction, leaving his family and homeland for the
Land of Israel (Genesis 12:1).
(3) Abraham's forced exile to Egypt shortly after arriving in Israel as
result of famine (ibid., v. 10). Rabbeinu Yonah explains that even though
G-d promised Abraham blessings for moving to Israel -- and Abraham instead
suffered hardship -- he bore no ill will towards G-d -- even in his heart.
(4) Sarah's abduction into Pharaoh's palace (ibid., v. 15).
(5) Abraham's battle against "the four kings" (Genesis 14). Abraham and
his students battled the mightiest armies of the time for the sake of G-
d's honor and in order to rescue his nephew Lot.
(6) Abraham's taking Hagar, Sarah's maidservant, as concubine after
failing to have children with Sarah for so many years (16:1-3).
(Maimonides only.)
(7) Abraham's being commanded to circumcise himself, in spite of his
advanced age (ch. 17).
(8) Sarah's abduction into Avimelech's palace (20:2).
(9) Abraham's expelling of Hagar and Ishmael from his home -- on Sarah's
instructions and G-d's sanction (21:9-14). Ishmael proved to be a wicked
son who would have exerted a harmful influence on Isaac. As the Torah
there attests, the incident was terribly distressing to Abraham, in part
because he had to send his elder son away and in part because of the
realization of his elder son's failings. (Maimonides lists the banishing
of Hagar and Ishmael as two separate trials.)
(10) The binding and near slaughter of Isaac on Mount Moriah (22:1-19).
(11) Abraham's purchase of a burial plot for Sarah (ch. 23). After G-d
many times promised Abraham the Land of Israel, he was forced to spend an
exorbitant amount in purchase of a plot to bury his wife. (Rabbeinu Yonah
only.)
There is a fascinating unifying thread running through many of the tests
of Abraham. To some degree, each time the issue wasn't just the physical
inconvenience -- traveling to Egypt, purchasing a burial plot, etc. It was
the sense that it ran contrary to everything G-d had promised Abraham --
and everything Abraham might well have expected for being G-d's trusted
servant. Abraham and Sarah dedicated their lives and very beings to the
teaching of G-d's reality to mankind. G-d in turn promised them success,
recognition, children, and the Land of Israel. Yet none of these blessings
were realized until years later, if at all in their lifetimes.
It's quite natural for someone to feel that if he or she is serving G-d
properly, the *least* G-d could do is respond with health, success and
honor. And Abraham and Sarah were as justified as anyone in this regard.
Yet their lives were far from serene -- often on account of their beliefs:
Nimrod's attempt at Abraham's life, Sarah's abductions, Abraham and
Sarah's years of childlessness. The L-rd *is* a G-d of reward and
punishment, isn't He? That's certainly what Abraham and Sarah had been
teaching the rest of the world! So why had they not received their own due?
Yet such complaints were never heard from Abraham's lips -- nor even
expressed in his heart. If G-d's will were that Abraham and Sarah serve
Him through suffering and exile -- or that they return the one son G-d had
blessed them with -- they would do so without any sense of hurt or
betrayal. G-d's will was their will. None other existed. Their devotion to
G-d was complete. They were in it for G-d, with no thought of their own
personal goals or agendas.
Thus, in passing G-d's trials, Abraham demonstrated that he was not
serving G-d with even the slightest consideration of personal gain -- nor
even because teaching the world about G-d was what he *liked* doing. Had
that been the case, he was certainly prepared to sacrifice it all along
with the sacrifice of his son. The binding of Isaac -- the most difficult
and (according to most) final test of Abraham -- would have ruined
Abraham's life -- not only through the loss of his beloved son but in that
it would have flown in the face of everything he and Sarah had spent their
lives preaching. After devoting his life teaching of a just and moral G-d -
- rather than -- as much of the world then believed -- an angry god who
must be appeased with human sacrifice -- how could he ever continue his
works after apparently lapsing and offering a human himself? But Abraham
was willing to give up everything -- his sacred life's works along with
the entire unborn Jewish People -- for the simple yet profound reason that
it was G-d's will.
We can now understand many other statements of the Sages regarding
Abraham. The Sages many times state that Abraham's merit stands with us
till this day. Why did Abraham's deeds achieve such timelessness and
immortality? The answer is that had Abraham served G-d with any personal
motives in mind -- because he *enjoyed* serving G-d or in the hope of
receiving his due, his deeds, however great, would have been no more than
*personal* acts of greatness. They would not have carried over to future
generations. As it were, Abraham's achievements were wholly pure and
devoid of self -- and so, achieved immortality.
And so it would be with his descendants. Generations of Jews, men and
women possessing no more than Abraham and Sarah's "simple" faith, would be
able to accept G-d's yoke and mission in spite of discrimination,
suffering and hardship -- even though G-d's promises of plenty and
fulfillment were anywhere to be seen. We serve G-d not because we expect
immediate gratification or even to make sense of G-d's inscrutable ways.
We serve Him because we know that ours is to proclaim G-d's Name and that
ultimately an all-loving G-d will not forever forsake His children. Such
selfless and unquestioning dedication to an infinite G-d became the
hallmark of Abraham and Sarah, and through it their descendants would grow
to become the Jewish Nation.
Text Copyright © 2005 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.