On the Particular and the Universal
Steven Kepnes, Colgate University
Wolfson's commentary on Genesis 18:1-8 puts into play
dynamic philosophical tensions between God's transcendence and immanence, and
the universal and the particular. In
doing so Wolfson admits that he is importing philosophical concepts that do not
appear in the text, yet which are nevertheless called upon to allow us to
explore more felicitously the myriad theological, philosophical, and ethical
issues that the text has given rise to in Jewish, Christian, and Muslim
traditions. Thus Wolfson takes the
theme of transcendence and immanence in Genesis 18 as an invitation to us to
move back and forth between "immanent" scriptural reasoning and more
abstract "transcendent" philosophical discourse. In what follows I will simply try to trace
out and then put a tug here and there on the dynamics of transcendence and
immanence, the universal and the particular, which Wolfson has set into
motion. What I will want to underscore
is Wolfson's conclusion that the transcendent and the immanent, the universal
and the particular, are not only connected in our monotheistic traditions but
that maintaining these dynamic connections are keys to the ethical imperatives
which stand at the heart of the three traditions.
Wolfson follows Rashi in suggesting
that the immediate context for the appearance of God to Abraham in Genesis 18
is the brit or covenant that God
makes with Abram in Genesis 17. The
connection is clear because the same verb,
vayera
(appear, cause to be seen), is used in both cases. And with this word, we already have the dynamic of immanence, or
following Wolfson, "incarnation," because the transcendent unseen God of the
universe is allowing himself to take a physical form and therefore "be seen" by
a lowly particular human being.
Genesis
17 reads, in the JPS translation, "The Lord appeared to him and said to him. I
am El Shaddai. Walk in my ways and be blameless. I will establish my covenant
between Me and you, and I will make you exceedingly numerous . . . As for Me,
this is My covenant with you: You shall be a father of a multitude of nations"
(17:1b, 2, 4). If we follow what Buber
called the leitworte, or leading
words, as the key to the text's own immanental form of reasoning, the words "I,
Me and You" (given often in Hebrew suffixes) jump out at us and call for
interpretation. What these words
suggest is that preliminary to the universal meaning of the Abrahamic covenant
is a very personal and particular relationship between God and Abraham. Furthermore, the beginning of 17:4 "As for
me" lets us know that the God of the universe has a "need" to enter into this
covenant. "As for Me " as if to
say "for my sake as well as yours I
make this brit." This suggests that there is a degree of
mutuality in the relationship and it tells us, furthermore, just how intimate
the brit with Abraham and God
is.
But the relationship does not end in the mysterious intimacy of God
and Abraham; rather the personal brit
between the two also has universal significance. This has been made clear earlier in Gen 12:4, where we learn that
"through (or in) Abraham, all the families of the world will be blessed." We can pause here and note the difference
between the language of philosophical ethics that speaks of universals and
agents and duties and the language of biblical ethics that speaks of names
(Abram/Abraham), families, nations, covenants, and commands. The very language suggests that biblical
ethics is tied to particularities. This
language of particularities is manifest in how the blessing for all the
families and nations is to be designated.
It is not by a concept but by a sign, a simultaneous mark in the flesh,
the circumcised penis, and a letter, the letter "heh" added to Abram's name.
This simultaneous act is certainly overdetermined. The personal brit
between God and Abraham, through which all nations are blessed, is
marked on the most personal and intimate place on Abraham's body and the
most personal reference to his being - his name.
God substitutes for the flesh of the
foreskin a letter and this letter comes from his, God's, own name, which he
inserts into Abraham's name!
Furthermore, this sublimated sexual act results in a kind of spiritual
procreation and abundance whereby a future of Abraham's descendents in
assured. For the brit is proclaimed a brit
olam, an everlasting covenant. So
to mark this a letter, a substitute for the flesh, is not only inserted into
Abram's name but the letters of the story are inscribed on a leather scroll and
handed down and told from generation to generation. Thus, the covenant of circumcision is a sublimation of sexual
desire into the letters of the Torah as the bridge to eternity and service to
humanity.
Rashi suggests that the change of name from Abram to Abraham
is a short code for the message that God wants to convey. Abraham is no longer to be simply "Av of
Aram" (24:10), father of his native country of Aram, but "Av of
hem," father of "them" plural, the many
nations. Thereafter, Abraham must serve
God through serving the cause of justice for all nations. So tsedek
or justice is the meaning of "walking
in the ways" (Gen. 17:1) of God. Thus
Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen. 18) provides a test to see if Abraham would speak for
justice for not only an "other" people but for a despicable people to which
Abraham was not related in the least.
But with all this, it is crucial that we understand that Abraham's
"universal" service - marked by the brit milah, the covenant of
circumcision - does not cut him off from his responsibilities to his own
family. The covenant of brit milah comes with the promise for a
son, Isaac, to provide an heir for Abraham's particular family. And Abraham is diligent to assure that when
the child is ready to marry he returns to his place and family of origin in
Aram to take a wife. So, as Wolfson
suggests at the end of his remarks, "it is not sufficient to say that the
universal comprehends the particular."
The universal ethical obligation to every individual and every family
and nation comes, not out of a universal and abstract philosophical nowhere,
but from particular persons molded by particular families and rituals and
ethical traditions which safeguard and teach and inculcate "universal" ethical
requirements to serve the cause of justice for all.
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