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Parashat Vayera – The Akeida: A Hero’s Journey

Parashat Vayera – The Akeida: A Hero’s Journey

Schneider, Sarah Yehudit
November 14, 2024

This essay, based on Rabbi Dr. Yehuda Gellman’s interpretation of the Mei HaShiloach, explores the deeper meaning of the Akeida as a test not only of Avraham’s obedience but of his inner alignment with HaShem’s will.

The story begins with God commanding Avraham through *Elokim*, a name reflecting a harsh and constricted mode of communication, which creates ambiguity. Avraham is torn because this command seems to contradict God’s previous promises that Yitzchak would be his heir. Despite his inner conflict and the temptation to rationalize that he misunderstood, Avraham proceeds, choosing to trust the command.

The climax comes when an angel stops Avraham at the last moment, revealing that HaShem’s true intention was not for Yitzchak to be sacrificed but simply to be “raised up” as an offering. The test was for Avraham to discern this through his own inner clarity, proving his complete alignment with HaShem’s will.



This essay, based on Rabbi Dr. Yehuda Gellman’s interpretation of the teachings of the Mei HaShiloach (Ishbitzer Rebbe), explores the deeper meaning behind the story of the Akeida (the Binding of Isaac) and its profound implications for faith, obedience, and spiritual growth.

The Akeida is one of the most challenging episodes in the Torah, where God seemingly commands Avraham to sacrifice his beloved son Yitzchak. The story is often seen as a test of Avraham’s faith, pushing him to sacrifice everything he holds dear: his son, his values, and his life’s mission of teaching the world about a compassionate God who rejects human sacrifice.

The Layers of Avraham’s Test:

  • Initial Call from God:

    • The story begins with God testing Avraham. HaShem has different faces which are different channels of connection with creation. The Mei HaShiloach notes that Elokim is the name that refers to HaShem’s more constricted, harsh, fearful modality. Communications that come through that channel are dim compared to the lucid prophesies emanating from the face of Havaya.
  • Conflicting Messages:

    • The command to sacrifice Yitzchak creates internal conflict for Avraham. It directly contradicts God’s previous promises that Yitzchak would be his heir and continue his lineage. It also goes against Avraham’s fundamental belief in a God who forbids murder and human sacrifice. Yet, despite these contradictions, Avraham proceeds, not because he fully understands, but because he chooses to trust God’s wisdom beyond his own comprehension.
  • Avraham’s Inner Struggle:

    • Given all these contradictions, Avraham had every reason to doubt whether he heard the message correctly. The natural temptation was to believe that God’s true will could not contradict His own principles and past promises. However, if Avraham had chosen this route, he would have failed the test. The whole point of the test was for Avraham to sacrifice all ego attachments, even the most noble of them. His challenge was to withhold absolutely nothing from G-d.  And if Avraham could succeed he would create a devekut—a core to core merger with the Divine—that would be the legacy of his lineage (and its foundation stone).
  • The Moment of Revelation:  

    • Hashem, through an angelic emissary, stays Avraham’s hand. Rambam defines an angel as the means by which a force exerts itself at a distance—spiritual, mental, emotional, or physical. These angels are akin to inner impulses, like the yetzer tov (good inclination) and yetzer hara (bad inclination), which drive actions. When Avraham demonstrates his readiness to withhold nothing from Hashem, he reaches the level of Yechida, the deepest part of the soul that connects directly with Divine essence.  At that moment, a deep certainty arises: “No, I cannot proceed; my chelek Elokai forbids me.” This inner voice, aligned with Hashem’s will, stays Avraham’s hand. Hashem’s true intention was never for Yitzchak to be sacrificed but only to be “raised up” on the altar. Once Avraham reaches this realization from within himself, it becomes clear: “When I said to take your son, it was not to slaughter him, only to raise him up. Now that you have done so, take him down.” The test was for Avraham to discern this on his own, without explicit instruction, achieving complete alignment with Hashem’s will.

NOTE:
The above is a summary of the original content.