Parshat Bereshit — Genesis 1:1-6:8

Efrat, Israel – And God saw everything that He had made and behold it was very good. (Genesis 1:31)

A sensitive reading of the biblical description of the creation of the world forces the reader to come to some understanding of the relationship between Judaism and scientific discovery. Contrary to popular opinion, Judaism does not balk at modernity, especially if it furthers God’s honor. For example, the invention of the printing press more than 500 years ago changed the nature of reading and literary transmission. The rabbinic leadership at the time welcomed it as a way to make sacred texts available to everyone. Now we’re living in the midst of another communications revolution, and many Jews are involved in the development of the computer and Internet, allowing almost instantaneous call-up of a specific passage in the Talmud or a difficult area of medical ethics in our Responsa literature. The challenge is not to reject inventions but to refine them, not to censor modernity, but to sanctify it.

Commenting on the opening verse of Genesis, ‘In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth,’ the Seforno demonstrates how to place Torah insights into the context of scientific developments. He points out that the word shamayim, (usually translated as ‘heavens’) is the plural of the Hebrew sham, meaning ‘there’ or ‘two theres,’ and writes: ‘therefore the word ha-shamayim indicates a distant object in relation to us, the distance being equal from each side, which cannot be unless it is situated in a wheel that is revolving in a completely circular fashion.’ Thus every point on the planet is equidistant from the heavens (ha-shamayim) and for this phenomenon to be true, the world must be moving in a spherical pattern. Two ‘far-aways’ that are the same distance can only exist if the planet is a revolving sphere.

Interestingly, Seforno lived approximately at the same time as Copernicus (1473–1543), the famed astronomer who spent considerable time in Italy pursuing his studies before returning to his native Poland. Before Copernicus, the center of the universe was the earth; his new scientific theory, suggesting that the earth revolves around the sun, clearly demotes the earth from its formerly exalted position as the center of divine concern. 

It stands to reason that a rabbi of Seforno’s stature, who was also a doctor by profession and a respected intellectual of his day, had heard of Copernicus’ theories and had apparently accepted his vision of an earth revolving around the sun. But especially noteworthy for us is how Seforno interprets the ramifications of a scientific theory rejected as blasphemous by most Christian theologians of the period. Not only does Seforno accept the Copernican position, which we now know to be scientifically accurate; he deduces a crucial moral lesson from an earth constantly revolving on its own axis, as it revolves around the sun. This lesson is that the human being is placed squarely at the center of the earth, equidistant from the two ‘theres’ or ‘far-aways’ of the heavens, which can only happen if the earth is constantly revolving.

Hence the medieval sages speak of four levels of creation: the inanimate level of earth and rock, the vegetative level of plants and trees, the locomotive level of roaming animals and beasts, and finally the communicative level of humans who speak. Each level receives its sustenance from the previous level: vegetation depends on earth and water, animals receive sustenance from the vegetation, and humans gather food, drink, garments and tent-skins from the animals. If the human being communicates both horizontally and vertically with the world and with God, he has the capacity to uplift and ennoble the world, to redeem the earth; if he short-circuits his relationship to the divine, if he poisons rather than perfects the physical environment all around him, the entire earth will fall and fail with him.

With this in mind, the human being stands at the center of the universe. Only the human being has the gift of free choice. Our planet earth depends on proper human exercise of his free choice if it is to be redeemed and not destroyed. This is what I believe Seforno meant to extract from a constantly revolving earth. Interestingly enough, Rashi deduces a similar lesson from a later verse. At the end of our portion of Bereshit, after human conduct disappointed the Divine Creator, the Bible states:

“And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth…. And God said, I will blot out the human being whom I have created…both human and beast, and creeping thing, and fowl of the air…” Gen. 6:5-7

The obvious question asked is, why blot out the innocent animals and the silent beasts if the sin belongs to human beings? Rashi explains:

“Everything was created for the human being, and if he is to be destroyed, what need is there for the rest?!”

Rashi on Gen. 6:7

So what does most of the human being do to redeem himself together with the world?: The Bible teaches us this truth as well! A central biblical dictum proclaims that ‘human beings must walk in God’s ways.’ Yet, how do we determine God’s ways? When Moses requested of God: ‘Now therefore I pray Thee, if I have found grace in Your eyes, show me now Your ways, that I may know You…’ [Ex. 33:13], God’s answer is that Moses cannot hope to see Him completely, but can receive a partial glimpse into the divine — His back, as it were: ‘And God passed by before him, and proclaimed: The Lord, the Lord, God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth’ [Ex. 34:6]. Maimonides insists that God is not merely informing us of a description of His conceivable essence, but He is presenting us with a divine injunction as to how we humans ought to live:

Just as He is gracious, so ought you to be gracious; just as He is compassionate, so ought you to be compassionate; just as He is called holy, so ought you to be called holy. (Laws of Knowledge 1:6)

This divine description, as it were, is not as significant for its theology as it is for its anthropology; it is less a definition of God and more a guide for human morality. Once again, humanity is the central concern even of a definition of the divine!

After each creation, there is a biblical value judgment, ‘And God saw that it was good.’ There is but one exception: the creation of the human being, after which the Bible does not give its usual afterword, ‘And God saw that it was good.’ Seforno explains the reason: the human being is not functional but moral. Whether or not his creation will turn out to have been good depends on his free choice. This is the sense in which the human being stands smack at the center of the earth. Will he sanctify and redeem it, or plunder and destroy it? Will he realize his potential to act in God’s image, placing God’s attributes as the measure of all things and thereby perfect the world, or will he idealize his own frailty and ultimately drown in his weakness, bringing the entire world down with him? The jury has not yet come in with the final verdict. Until that time, the human being remains at center stage, to a great extent holding the whole world in his hands and in the grip of his free will.

Shabbat Shalom

Rabbi Shlomo Riskin

Founder & Rosh Yeshiva, 

Ohr Torah Stone

Founding Rabbi of Efrat