Echo Scripture

Genesis Rabbah 9

“God saw everything that He had made, and, behold, it was very good. It was evening and it was morning, the sixth day” (Genesis 1:31). “God saw everything that He had made…” – Rabbi Levi began: “The glory of God is concealing a matter, but the glory of kings is investigating a matter” (Proverbs 25:2) – Rabbi Levi said in the name of Rabbi Ḥama bar Ḥanina: From the beginning of the book until here, it is “the glory of God,” [calling for] “concealing a matter.” From here on, “the glory of kings is investigating a matter” – the glory of the words of the Torah that are likened to kings, as it is stated: “Through me kings reign” (Proverbs 8:15), [calling for] investigating a matter. Another matter, “God saw everything that He had made, and, behold, it was very good” –Rabbi Tanḥuma began: “He made everything beautiful in its time” (Ecclesiastes 3:11) – Rabbi Tanḥuma said: The world was created at its proper time; the world was not fit to be created before then. Rabbi Abbahu said: From here we learn that the Holy One blessed be He continuously created worlds and destroyed them, until He created the current ones, and said: This one pleases me, those did not please Me. Rabbi Pinḥas said: Rabbi Abbahu’s source: “God saw everything that He had made, and, behold, it was very good” – this pleases me, those did not please Me. “God saw everything that He had made, and, behold, it was very good” – Rabbi Yoḥanan said: When a flesh-and-blood king builds a palace, he looks at the upper levels in one glance and at the lower levels in another glance. But the Holy One blessed be He looks at the supernal and the earthly all in one glance. Rabbi Shimon ben Lakish said: “Behold, it was very good” – this is this world. “And, behold, it was very good” – this is the World to Come. The Holy One blessed be He looked at this world and the World to Come in one glance. Rabbi Shimon ben Lakish said in the name of Rabbi Elazar ben Azarya: “Alas! My Lord God, behold, You made the heavens and the earth with Your great power and with Your outstretched arm; there is nothing that is obscured from You” (Jeremiah 32:17). From that moment on, there is nothing that is obscured from You. Rabbi Ḥagai said in the name of Rabbi Yitzḥak: “And you, Solomon my son, know the God of your father and serve Him wholeheartedly and with a willing mind, for the Lord seeks all hearts, and understands all inclinations of thoughts. If you seek Him, He will be accessible to you, but if you forsake Him, He will abandon you forever” (I Chronicles 28:9). Even before a thought is formed in a person’s heart, it is already revealed before Him. Rabbi Yudan said in the name of Rabbi Yitzḥak: Before a creature is created, his thought is already revealed before Him. Rabbi Yudan himself said: “Even when there is no speech on my tongue, behold, Lord, You know it all” (Psalms 139:4) – even before one’s tongue utters a word, already, “behold, Lord, You know it all.” Rabbi Ḥama bar Ḥanina and Rabbi Yonatan, Rabbi Ḥama bar Ḥanina said: This is analogous to a king who built a palace. He saw it and it pleased him. He said: ‘Palace, palace, if only you could always find favor before me just as you have found favor before me at this moment.’ So, the Holy One blessed be He said to His world: ‘My world, My world, if only you could always find favor before Me just as you have found favor before Me at this moment.’ Rabbi Yonatan said: This is analogous to a king who was marrying off his daughter, and he made her a bridal canopy and chamber, whitewashed it, embossed it, and painted it. He saw it and it pleased him. He said: ‘My daughter, if only this bridal chamber could always find favor before me just as it has found favor before me at this moment.’ So, the Holy One blessed be He said to His world: ‘My world, My world, if only you could always find favor before Me just as you have found favor before Me at this moment.’ In Rabbi Meir’s Torah they found written: “And, behold, it was very [ me’od ] good” – and, behold, death [ mot ] is good. Rabbi Meir had written mot . Rabbi Shmuel bar Naḥman said: I was once riding on the shoulders of my grandfather, going up from his city to Kefar Ḥanan via Beit She’an, and I heard Rabbi Shimon ben Elazar sitting and expounding in the name of Rabbi Meir: “And, behold, it was very good” – and, behold, death is good. Rabbi Ḥama bar Ḥanina and Rabbi Yonatan, Rabbi Ḥama bar Ḥanina said: Adam the first man was worthy not to have tasted the taste of death. Why, then, was he penalized with mortality? It is because the Holy One blessed be He foresaw that [his descendants] Nebuchadnezzar and Ḥiram king of Tyre were destined to render themselves deities. That is why he was penalized with mortality. That is what is written [concerning Ḥiram]: “You were in Eden, the Garden of God” (Ezekiel 28:13). Now, was Ḥiram actually in the Garden of Eden? This is a rhetorical question. Rather, He was saying to him: ‘It is you who caused the one in the Garden of Eden to die.’ Rabbi Ḥiyya, son of Rabbi Berekhya’s daughter, said in the name of Rabbi Berekhya: “You were a great cherub” (Ezekiel 28:14) – it is you [Ḥiram] who caused that cherub [Adam] to die. Rabbi Yonatan said to him: If so, let Him decree death for the wicked and not decree death for the righteous. The reason [He didn’t do this] is that it was so that the wicked should not feign repentance, so that the wicked should not say: ‘Do the righteous not live because they accumulate mitzvot and good deeds? We, too, will accumulate mitzvot and good deeds.’ The result would be acting [virtuously] for insincere motives. Rabbi Yoḥanan and Rabbi Shimon ben Lakish, Rabbi Yoḥanan said: Why was death decreed for the wicked? The answer is that as long as the wicked are alive, they anger the Holy One blessed be He. That is what is written: “You wearied the Lord with your words” (Malachi 2:17). But once they die, they stop angering the Holy One blessed be He, as it is stated: “There anger has ceased for the wicked” (Job 3:17) – there they stop angering the Lord. And why was death decreed for the righteous? The answer is that as long as the righteous are alive, they engage in battle against their evil inclination, and when they die, they rest. That is what is written: “There rest those whose strength is sapped” (Job 3:17) – [those who say:] ‘We have toiled enough.’ Rabbi Shimon ben Lakish said: It is to give these [the righteous] a double reward and to exact double retribution against those [the wicked]. It is to give reward to the righteous who were worthy of never tasting the taste of death. That is why, “therefore, they will inherit a double portion in their land” (Isaiah 61:7). And to exact retribution against the wicked, as the righteous were worthy of never tasting the taste of death, and it was only due to them [the wicked] that they accepted death upon themselves. They will therefore inherit double of what they have earned. Rabbi Shimon ben Elazar said: “And behold it was very good” – and behold sleep is good. Is sleep, then, very good? This is a rhetorical question. Did we not learn: Wine and sleep are beneficial for them [the wicked] and beneficial for the whole world? 5:5. However, as a result of a person sleeping a bit, he can get up and toil extensively in the Torah. Rabbi Naḥman bar Shmuel bar Naḥman said in the name of Rav Shmuel bar Naḥman: “Behold it was very good” – this is the good inclination; “and behold it was very good” – this is the evil inclination. Is the evil inclination, then, very good? This is a rhetorical question. Rather, were it not for the evil inclination, a man would never build a house, would never marry a wife, would never beget children, and would never engage in commerce. Likewise, Solomon says: “[And I have considered all toil and all excelling in work,] that it is each man’s envy of his counterpart” (Ecclesiastes 4:4). Rav Huna said: “Behold it was very good” – this refers to experiencing good fortune; “and behold it was very good” – this refers to experiencing suffering. Is the experiencing of suffering, then, “very good”? This is a rhetorical question. It is, rather, that through it, people come to attain life in the World to Come. Likewise, Solomon says: “Rebukes of admonition is the way toward life” (Proverbs 6:23). You must say: Go out and see, which path is it that leads a person towards life in the World to Come? This is the experiencing of suffering. Rabbi Ze’eira said: “Behold it was very good” – this is the Garden of Eden; “and behold it was very good” – this is Gehenna. Is Gehenna, then, very good? This is a rhetorical question. This is analogous to a king who had an orchard. He stationed laborers there and he built a storage house at its entrance. He said: ‘Anyone who performs successfully in the labor of the orchard, he may enter its treasury; anyone who does not perform successfully in the labor of the orchard, he may not enter its treasury.’ So, too, anyone who amasses mitzvot and good deeds, here is the Garden of Eden. Anyone who does not amass mitzvot and good deeds, here is Gehenna. Rabbi Shmuel bar Yitzḥak said: “Behold it was very good” – this is the angel of life; “and behold it was very good” – this is the angel of death. Is the angel of death, then, “very good”? This is a rhetorical question. Rather, it is analogous to a king who prepared a feast, invited the guests and brought before them a serving dish filled with all kinds of delicacies. He said: ‘Anyone who eats and blesses the king, let him eat and enjoy himself, but anyone who eats and does not bless the king, his head shall be severed with a sword.’ So, too, anyone who amasses mitzvot and good deeds, here is the angel of life, and anyone who does not amass mitzvot and good deeds, here is the angel of death. Rabbi Shimon bar Abba said: “Behold it was very good [ tov me’od ]” – this is the [divine] attribute of benevolence [ midat tov ], “and behold it was very good” – this is the [divine] attribute of strict punishment. Is the attribute of strict punishment, then, “very good”? Rather, He works conscientiously on the punishment, in which manner to bring it. Rabbi Simon said in the name of Rabbi Shimon bar Abba: All the [original divine] measures are now void, but the [principle of] measure for measure has not been voided. Rav Huna said in the name of Rabbi Yosei: From the beginning of the creation of the world, the Holy One blessed be He foresaw [the principle] that in accordance with the measure that a person metes out for others, so is it meted out for him. That is why the Sages said: “And behold it was very good” – this is the attribute of beneficence. The Rabbis said it in the name of Rabbi Ḥanina bar Idi, Rabbi Pinḥas, and Rabbi Ḥilkiya: “Very [ me’od ]” and “man [ adam ]” are identical; the letters of this word are the same as letters of that one. That is what is written: “God saw everything that He had made, and, behold, it was very good” – this refers to man. Rabbi Shimon ben Lakish said: “Behold it was very good” – this is the kingdom of Heaven; “and behold it was very good” – this is the kingdom on earth. Is the kingdom on earth, then, “very good”? This is a rhetorical question. Rather, [it is good] because it addresses people’s grievances, as it is stated: “I made the earth and created man upon it” (Isaiah 45:12). “It was evening and it was morning, the sixth day, [and heaven and earth were finished…]” (Genesis 1:31–2:1) – Rabbi Yudan said: This is the additional hour [late Friday afternoon] that one takes away from the profane and adds to the sacred [Shabbat], during which the labor of the world was completed. That is why “the sixth [day, and heaven and earth were finished]” is written. Rabbi Simon ben Marta said: Until this point, one reckons [the days] according to the count of the world, from here on, one reckons according to a different count.

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