Chaye Sara

 

Then Lavan and Bethuel answered, “The matter was decreed by the Lord; we cannot speak to you bad or good.  Here is Rebecca before you; take her and go and let her be a wife to your master’s son, as the Lord has spoken.

24:50-51

 

 

What was such an expression of faith in God doing on the ips of such idolaters and heathens as Bethuel and Lavan?  Surely they were heathens and believers in good and evil omens!  The servant did not want to stress that a character test was involved and that the bride to be for Abraham’s son, one of the matriarchs of the chosen people was required to possess that quality of hospitableness and consideration for others that distinguished its progenitor.  But for her idolatrous, superstitious family it was sufficient to refer to the fulfillment of the omens that the servant was looking for.

Mayan Ganim (12th Century)

 

 

Rebecca is the only one of the matriarchs who is explicitly chosen by test and on the basis of character.  As such, her selection reminds us more of the emergence of Abraham than of Sarah, whom we come to know as already married to a patriarch.  This parallel to Abraham is reinforced later in our story when Rebecca stands up to another test, that of her family’s resistance….When called by God, she. Like Abraham, stands the test by choosing to follow the calling, and she ends up retracing the steps of his journey from Aram-naharayim to Canaan.

Joseph Reimer (Contemporary)

Rebecca’s eagerness to be kind and helpful to a passing stranger is what convinces Eliezer that she will be the best wife for Isaac; enabling the troubled son to become a patriarch, enabling the new couple to build the first home in which the ideals and lifestyle of Abraham and Sarah will be practiced and bequeathed to future generations.

Pinchas Peli (Contemporary)

 

Why did Bethuel say “we cannot say good or bad, since the matter originated with God?”  Since when has heavenly intervention prevented repentance, or robbed anyone of his free choice?  …the term good and evil in relation to man are only used when equal opportunities in either direction exist…This is why Eliezer had stated if you will do the kindness to my master, tell me.  He refers to “lovingkindness” and “truth.”…Whenever the opportunities which confront one are not equal, the use of the term “truth,” for doing what is right is more appropriate than the word “good.”…

Akedat Yitzchak (15th Century)

 

Deep inside each of us is something that, in Paul Tillich’s words, is an “ultimate concern.”  Discovering and identifying it satisfies the basic human need for a coherence that binds everything we do, something that links every day to the previous one and the next, a common denominator of our existence.  From this essential point flows all those things in our world:  love, compassion, frustration, desire, commitment, anger.  In a world where the number of options grows exponentially every day, this core belief gives us the strength and ability to choose between right and wrong.  From it emanates the integrity ever so elusive in society.

Shlomo Riskin (Contemporary)