Laughing At Logic
The fates of
Avraham and Sarah as compared to Sodom teach us that ethics, not power,
determines the future.
By Rabbi Chaim Steinmetz
The following article
is reprinted with permission from the Orthodox Union.
Why do certain nations thrive, while others disappear?
Pundits and historians will tell you about political, economic and military
factors.
However, our Torah informs us that ethical factors are far
more consequential. Powerful nations fall if they are immoral, while weak ones
succeed if they maintain moral excellence.
The Hebrew word tzachak,
meaning to laugh, is employed several times in Parshas Vayeira, most notably in
relation to the birth and naming of our patriarch Yitzchak [Isaac]. The term is
also used when Lot tells his sons-in-law that their home city of Sodom is about
to be destroyed. They do not believe him, for his words are "like a joke (kimitzacheik) in their eyes."
To a social or political scientist, the possibility that a
wealthy superpower like Sodom will disappear, or that an elderly couple will
produce the future regional superpower seems ludicrous.
But this strange outcome is precisely what occurs. Avraham
and Sarah have a child, through whom they become the ancestors of Klal Yisrael (the people of Israel).
Meanwhile, the mighty city of Sodom is destroyed.
The double reference to laughter demonstrates that both
events are improbable to the point of being funny.
Why were Avraham and Sarah chosen and Sodom condemned? What
factor gave rise to one and led to the other’s destruction?
The Torah points to hospitality: Avraham invites nomads, who
turn out to be angels, into his home and is told of his future as the father of
the Jewish people. Lot, too, invites angels into his home and is saved from
destruction. But the people of Sodom, who sought to abuse Lot’s guests, are
destroyed. Even Lot's wife, who was halfhearted in her hospitality, does not
survive.
The citizens of Sodom not only act violently toward
strangers; they express contempt for justice as well. "Are you, the
stranger, going to judge us?" one of the Sodomites asks Lot.
Avraham, on the other hand, demonstrates his just behavior
by arguing with G-d over His decision to destroy Sodom.
Hospitality and justice elevate Avraham and Sarah to the
beginnings of a great nation, while intolerance and misanthropy destroy Sodom.
It is "not strength, not might, but G-d's spirit,"
in the words of the prophet Zachariah, that lifts and lowers nations. The moral
and spiritual course chosen by a people, and nothing else, determines its
future.
The Torah realizes that this sounds funny, but funny is also
the name of the first Jewish child, Yitzchak.
Rabbi Chaim Steinmetz is rabbi of Congregation Tifereth
Beth David Jerusalem in Quebec, Canada.