"Fear Not For I Am With You": Complete Tanach)
"Fear Not For I Am With You": Complete Tanach)
"Fear Not For I Am With You": Complete Tanach)
And the L-rd appeared to him (Yitzhak) on that night and said, I am the G-d of
Abraham, your father. Fear not (al tira), for I am with you, and I will bless you
and multiply your seed for the sake of Abraham, My servant. (Sefer Bereishit
26:24, Parashat Toldot, this and all Bible translations, The Judaica Press
Complete Tanach)
Fear is not an emotion that we commonly associate with the Avot (Patriarchs) and
Emahot (Matriarchs). Yet, just as Hashem declared to Yitzhak al tira (do not be
afraid) in our pasuk (verse), do did He with Avraham and Yaakov. (See Sefer Bereishit
15:1, and 46:3-4 respectively) Based upon the peshat (direct reading) of our pasuk, it
appears that Yitzhak was existentially agitated on two accounts: the fear that G-d might
abandon him, and the fear that the Almighty might not bless him with many children.
Thus, the Holy One Blessed be He reassured him regarding both of these fears: Fear not,
for I am with you, and I will bless you and multiply your seed Our verse, therefore,
clearly provides us with insight into the content of Yitzhaks consternation. What we do
not know, however, is exactly why he was afraid.
In sum, the Ramban maintained that Yitzhaks fears stemmed from his strategic military
disadvantage and the likelihood of an impending attack by the Philistines. Thus, when
Abimelech had declared Yitzhak to be much stronger than we, this was an assessment
of his wealth, rather than Yitzhaks ability to protect himself and his family.
Consequently, the Holy One Blessed be He promised him that he should not be afraid of
them, even though he felt singularly vulnerable at this time.
Further support for the Rambans position may be derived from the wording of the
pasukim (verses) that were addressed to each of the Avot. Each of these prophetic
encounters present Hashem speaking to the Avot as Anochi rather than the usual term,
Ani. While both are translated in English as, I, they have two very different
connotations. The great Torah scholar Rav Meir Lob ben Yechiel Michel Weiser (18091879), known to the world as the Malbim, persuasively presented the distinction
between these two terms in a gloss on our parasha:
There is a difference between Ani and Anochi. In every instance wherein [the Torah]
states Anochi, this connotes [the concept of] I in my very being and focuses upon the
essence of the speaker. [In contrast,] when [the Torah] says, Ani, this is not a statement
[regarding the fundamental identity of the speaker,] rather, it refers to descriptions of, or
actions regarding, the speaker. (Sefer Bereishit, Parashat Toldot, 27:18-19, see as well,
Sefer Shemot, Parashat Yitro, 20:2-3, translation and brackets my own)
The Malbims analysis provides us with a cogent rationale as to why the collective fears
of Yitzhak and the other Avot were so quickly laid to rest. When the Almighty spoke to
them in the persona of Anochi, He, so to speak, firmly placed Himself on the line and
declared, with His essence and being, that each of the Patriarchs had nothing to fear.
Clearly, no more reassuring words could ever be spoken.
Since we are mystically connected to the Avot, by virtue of being their descendants, we
can legitimately look to Hashems inspiring and comforting words to each of them as
being addressed to us as well. The Holy One Blessed be He is with us, and has always
been with us, even when we have felt His presence eclipsed by the darkness of mans
relentless inhumanity. We longingly await the ultimate geulah shlaimah (complete
Redemption), the coming of Mashiach Tzidkanu (the righteous Messiah), when the entire
world will stand shoulder to shoulder in recognizing Hashem. May this time come soon
and in our days, bringing peace for the Jewish people and the entire world. Vchane yihi
ratzon.
Shabbat Shalom,
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