Our patriarch Abraham
is the epitome of the relation-ship between Israel and the Creator. He is the
chosen one for the covenant of both parts, the seal of this pact. We must bear
this in our minds, hearts and souls.
Abraham represents the higher consciousness that recognizes the
oneness and uniqueness of God, the individual who rejects all kinds of idolatry
as ego's fantasies and illusions. This higher consciousness knows that the one
and only true reality is God, His ways, His will, and His attributes.
God chooses Abraham as Israel to seal the eternal covenant with
which Israel proclaims and manifests God's presence in His creation. This is
Abraham's inheritance and Israel's legacy to the world. This covenant
delineates Israel's destiny in the material world, and determines our greatness
as the Jewish people.
“And I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you,
and I will aggrandize your name, and [you shall] be a blessing.” (Genesis 12:2)
This is Israel's identity through which we realize that God is the
greatest blessing, because all the blessings come from Him. In this awareness
Israel is blessed, and becomes God's blessing to be manifest in the world.
We as Israel are the recipients and bearers of the blessing to
reveal God's presence, to celebrate and rejoice in the realization that His
love is our essence, and also our redemption from the illusions, mirages and
fantasies that separate us from Him.
Love, as the material manifestation of God's love, is indeed our
redeeming spirit because love is the primordial sustenance of our life. Our
love is the blessing of God's love. Thus we realize that love does not cohabit
with anything different from its ways, means, and attributes.
This means that the blessings don't share time or space with
curses, because the goodness of love doesn't coexist with the badness of
wickedness. This is how we understand God's words in this context.
“And I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you
I will curse, and all the families of the earth shall be blessed in you.”
(12:3)
Goodness as well as all the traits, qualities, aspects and dimensions
of love's ways and attributes are the blessing in which everyone is blessed.
What a privilege and honor to be the bearers of the blessing to reveal God's
presence in the material world! We have heard that “privileges and honors imply
obligations and responsibilities”.
We don't necessarily have to understand it as some-thing forced
onto us to be and to have, but to assimilate it as an essential part of our
identity. In this way, we flow with the blessing in what we discern, think,
believe, feel, speak and act. This is the fundamental legacy of Abraham to us
(see in this blog our commentary on Parshat Lech Lecha: “Walking before the
Creator” of October 9, 2010).
Jewish oral tradition tells us that at an early age, Abraham
became aware of the futility inherent in ego's materialistic desires out of a
feeling or belief of lack in any of our consciousness' dimensions. He learned
that such illusory approach to life is the creator of idols we follow and obey,
falling down under their domain and servitude, making us ignore and even deny
our essence and true identity.
In this sense, the prerequisite to know and embrace God is the
rejection of ego's fantasies and illusions. This is how we understand what the
Torah refers to as idolatry. Abraham's total rejection of idolatry led him to
realize and recognize the Creator not only as the one and only God, but also
the one and only reality by which we must live as the blessing He is for us and
His creation.
We achieve this awareness by knowing His ways and attributes also
as ours in what we are and do (see our commentary in this blog, Lech lecha:
“The Blessings of our True Identity” of October 30, 2011).
This awareness is the inner land that He gives us to live eternally.
“For all the land that you see I will give to you and to your seed
to eternity.” (13:15)
As we live this blessing we assimilate its endlessness, because
His giver is endless and we don't have to fear the awe our consciousness experiences
because the blessing is also our shield.
This shield not only guards us from ego's illusions, but it is also
part of our identity because this shield identifies what we must become in this
world.
“(...) the word of the Lord came to Abram in a vision saying,
'Fear not, Abram; I am a Shield for you; [therefore] your reward is exceedingly
great'.” (15:1)
Here we understand this identity as a bond with God, because His
ways and attributes are our guide and destiny to live and experience in this
world. As we said before, these ways do not cohabit with any different to them,
because they are paths of goodness, righteousness, fairness and justice. In
this direction we find our abundance, prosperity, and happiness in excess.
“(…) and He said to him, 'I am the almighty God; walk before Me
and be wholehearted [righteous]. And I will place My covenant between Me and between
you, and I will multiply you very greatly'.” (17:1-2)
This first dialogue between God and Abraham also re-minds us to
eliminate all that is useless in our consciousness, that which we do not need
in our destiny to know the Creator and reveal His presence and glory in the
world... that which obstructs our path to redeem ourselves from all evil
through love's ways and attributes as our essence and true identity.
That is what the foreskin represents in our body and in our
consciousness.
“And you shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskin, and it shall
be as the sign of a covenant between Me and between you.” (17:11)
With this we seal our pact to pursue, live and rejoice in God's
ways.
“But you, Israel My servant, Jacob whom I have chosen, the seed of
Abraham, whom I love, whom I grasped from the ends of the earth, and from its
nobles I called you, and I said to you, 'You are My servant'; I chose you and I
did not despise you.” (Isaiah 41:8-9)
In this awareness all fantasies, mirages and illusions of the
material world dissipate because God's love strengthens our love to clear them
all.
“Behold I have made you a new grooved threshing-sledge, with sharp
points; you shall thresh the mountains and crush them fine, and you shall make
hills like chaff. You shall winnow them, and a wind shall carry them off, and a
tempest shall scatter them, and you shall rejoice with the Lord, with the holy one of Israel shall you praise yourself.” (41:15-16)
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