Emunah:
Keeping the Faith
Parshas Lech
Lecha
Posted on November 1, 2022 (5783) By Rabbi Osher
Chaim Levene | Series: The
Living Law | Level: Beginner
The Mitzvah:
The first of the Ten
Commandments is emunah, the belief and faith in G-d and His Torah, which lies
at the very core of Judaism. It is obvious how without a firm conviction of
G-d’s All-transcendent Reality, a commitment to Torah and mitzvah observance is
impossible.
The emergence of the Avos,
the patriarchs, begins with Avraham.
Avraham’s life was the
epitome of emunah, “faith in G-d”. He bravely challenged the pagan beliefs of
his times and championed belief in the existence of One Supreme G-d. Nimrod had
him cast into the fiery furnace for not renouncing his beliefs, only to witness
Avraham miraculous escape unscathed. Throughout Avraham’s life, he journeyed
declaring the name of G- d to all he encountered and attracting thousands of
converts.
The Jewish nation, his
descendants, is lovingly called mamanim bnei mamanim, “believers the children
of believers”.
The concept of emunah is
the foundation of Jewish life – so much so that the Rambam lists the belief in
G-d as the first mitzvah, the springboard to observing all the other
commandments.
(Other Rabbis disagree
asserting that emunah is the precursor to all the precepts but not a mitzvah in
itself). In condensing the principles of Torah, the gemara draws it back to one
statement “The righteous [man] lives with his faith” (See Makos 24a).
The Rambam famously
established the 13 principles of faith upon which Judaism rests. The Sefer
HaIkkarim (1:4) subdivides faith into 3 main components – belief in the
existence of G-d, in His providence for reward and punishment, and the heavenly
origins of Torah.
The definition of emunah
– related to word ne’eman – is “loyalty”, or “faithfulness” to G-d and to the
sacred principles of our faith practiced by the Jewish people throughout the
ages.
It is not a blind “leap of
faith” in something that has no basis, experience or track record. Jewish
faithfulness is the affirmation to uphold the beliefs of our ancestors. It is a
loyalty to and trust of an established system. Seeing ourselves as part of the
greater historic picture – where past, present and future coalesce -we are
forever conscious of the Torah legacy that has forever guided the Jewish
nation. The quality of emunah is implanted into the Jewish spiritual genetic
makeup – an inheritance from Avraham.
Accordingly, a Jew seeks
to preserve and perpetuate the rich lineage and heritage from his forbearers in
the Torah, which is faithfully transmitted from father to son. He is the next
link in the chain uniting generations. This is testimony of how far emunah
reflects the Judaic concept of mesorah, tradition. The Oral Law of Torah was,
after all, verbally transmitted by mouth down the ages until the redaction of
the Mishnah.
What emunah connotes is
the basis for the soul’s relationship to spirituality.
One who lives with emunah
is one who sees his existence firmly rooted in the divine. It is the end all
and be all. It is his lifeline. Without his faith, he has no spiritual
existence – even for a short period; it is as if his air supply has been cut
off.
Starved of a relationship
to G-d, the Jew loses meaning to his life. In the innermost recesses of his
being, he has a natural pull towards G-d. That is where his neshama, “soul”
longs to attach itself.
The faith of the Jew is
the universal Jewish response in good times and in bad times. It flows deeply
in his veins. It is the proclamation of emunah in the saying of Shema or
singing the Ani Maamin, “I Believe” with which the Jewish nation have weathered
the storm. That is because the existence and outlook of a Jew is forever
focused upon how to serve G-d in my set of circumstances.
This unique perspective
permeates every movement and action in the life of a Jew – to the extent that
the Psalmist sang “All your commandments are emunah” (Tehillim 119), an
expression of our faith that translates in mitzvah observance.
The chosen nation is proud
of their title as mamanim bnei mamanim, “believers the children of believers”.
Their affirmation to preserve and continue the lifestyle and ideals of our
ancestors is all about “keeping the faith”. The course material is presented by
Osher Chaim Levene, author of “Set in Stone: The Meaning of Mitzvah Observance”
(Targum/Feldheim), a writer and educator in London.
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