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Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary The Benjamin and Rose Berger CJF Torah To-Go Series Shavuot 5776
Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary The Benjamin and Rose Berger CJF Torah To-Go Series Shavuot 5776
Is Adam something,yesh,ornothing,
ayin? Chassidus, and Torah in
general, take a dialectical approach to
address this issue. On the one hand,
man is great. People are like angels,
sometimes even greater than angels.
The whole world is created for people.
The heavens, sun, moon, and stars
were all created for man to be able
to serve God. God spent six days
preparing a gorgeous hotel that we call
earth. People are great, so Hashem
wanted the world to be great for them.
People are the goal and crown of all of
creation.
On the other hand, our importance
fades when contrasted with the
Creator of it all. When faced with
God, man seems to be practically
worthless. As David wrote in
Tehillim 8, What is man that you
pay attention to him? Our planet
Earth is not even a speck in the
universe. The stars appear to us as
mere specks of light in the skies,
but we know how big they really
are. Someone standing on a planet
in another galaxy would barely see
our sun, and certainly would never
see Earth. The Milky Way itself is a
relatively small galaxy compared to
others. Our sun is a relatively small
star, and our planet is relatively small
in comparison to the rest of the solar
system. On our planet, we humans
are smaller than the oceans and the
mountains, the elephants, whales and
trees and many other beings. When
compared to Hashems vastness and
infinity, we are truly nothing.
On the one hand, Adam and Chava
are direct creations of God and
the whole world is created to serve
them. On the other hand, they are
meaningless and infinitesimal.
Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary The Benjamin and Rose Berger CJF Torah To-Go Series Shavuot 5776
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Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary The Benjamin and Rose Berger CJF Torah To-Go Series Shavuot 5776