We understand why “tzadikim” is written chaseir in Hashem’s
response, but why does it appear that way in the entire parsha, even in Avraham’s
pleading?
The gemara (Ta’anis 21b) writes that there was once a plague
that affected all the towns except for that of Rav. The townsfolk had a dream in which it was
revealed that the miracle of the town being spared was not due to Rav’s merit,
but rather due to a certain person who would lend out shovels to help in
burial. The gemara says further that there
was a fire that harmed a bunch of towns except for that of R’ Huna. Again, the townsfolk had a dream in which it
was revealed that the town was not spared in Rav Huna’s merit, but rather in
the merit of a certain lady who would light the stove in the morning from
which her neighbors then lit their own fires.
The Maharasha asks: isn’t bichlal masayim manah? If the merit of small acts of kindness was enough
to save these towns, they certainly would have been spared in
Rav or Rav Huna’s merit! Why do Chazal
seem to go out of their way not only to credit the little people, but also to
stress that it was not Rav or Rav Huna’s merit that caused the miracle?
The Sefas Emes on that gemara has an incredible hesber. We know that sometimes punishment can be so
harsh that it strikes indiscriminately at both tzadikim and reshaim. “Keivan she’nitan reshus
l’mashchis aino mavchin…” – once the power of destruction is unleashed, anyone in its path gets harmed, even tzadikim.
There is, however, an exception for what I am going to call super
tzadikim. These righteous-of-the-righteous
are so outside the bounds of reality that even when the mashchis is on the prowl,
even when destruction is wreaking havoc on all, they are spared. The upside is clear, but there is also a
downside. Because these super-tzadikim stand
as individuals outside of any relation to what is happening around them, their
zechuyos cannot help spare anyone other than themselves.
Rav and Rav Huna were outside the boundaries
of the world; they were on a different plane than anyone else living around
them. They would not be harmed by a
plague or a fire, but their zechuyos would not help those who surrounded them
either. Davka those smaller acts of
kindness, davka tzadikim who lived on the same plane as everyone else, amidst
their brethren, and still managed to still maintain a certain degree of righteousness,
were the ones whose merit could be counted among the deeds of their brethren to tip the scale in favor of their all being saved.
This, writes the Sefas Emes, explains Avraham's tefilos. Avraham was not looking for super-tzadikim in Sdom –
individual merit of that kind was so outside the plane of reality the rest of
Sdom was living on that it would serve only to spare those isolated individuals. Avraham was looking for the little tzadikim, people
whose small acts of kindness and goodness, even as they lived the same day to
day struggle as their peers, made them stand out as worthy. Such people, tzadikim who were “b’toch ha’ir”
(see the Meshech Chochma), were the ones whose merit might have tipped the
balance in favor of the entire city being spared.
Nice. Sfas Emes al haShas or al HaTorah?
ReplyDeleteSefas Emes on shas in Ta'anis
ReplyDelete