The Torah portion this Shabbat is one of the greats. Abrahamās origin storyāliterally. Sarah by his side. A nephew named Lot, a couple of camels, and a faith brave enough to start walking when the map is blank. I love this story; itās one of my favorites. But this week, for whatever reason, I couldnāt quite feel it.
Then I listened to Rabbi Elie Mischelās Bible Plus class on Abraham. It isnāt limited to this parsha (it stretches beyond), but it brought the whole story back to life for meāfresh, real, close. I want to share a small slice with you.
This Essay Reflects the Teachings from Rabbi Elie Mischel’s Bible Plus Course on Abraham:
Abraham: The Seeker Who Found God (Part 1)
What if Abraham didnāt begin as a spiritual giantābut as a child who refused to stop asking how the world holds together?
Rabbi Elie Mischel opens with a bold picture drawn from Maimonides: a young Abraham, weaned and wondering, staring at a sky that keeps perfect time and refusing the easy answers of his culture. No teacher. No Torah yet. Just a mind that wonāt let go of the question. Decade by decade he pushes past idols and fashionably āspiritualā shortcuts and arrivesāaloneāat the One.
Two Hebrew ideas reframe Abrahamās greatness:
- Nadiv lev ā a generous, moved heart. Not āchecking the religious box,ā but going all-in. Thatās the pilgrimās heart that walks to Jerusalem; thatās Abrahamās heart that walks away from everything familiar. Faith as motion.
- Eitan ā rock-strength. Rabbi Elie (via Rav Soloveitchik) describes Abrahamās inner granite: years of divine silence, public ridicule, and still he teaches, builds altars, and lives a new moral code. Not loud, not flashyāimmovable.
Seen this way, Abraham isnāt just āthe first Jewā; heās the prototype seeker. He discovers God through the world itself, then turns outwardāāmaking soulsā in įø¤aranāinviting men and women (with Sarah at his side) under the wings of Heaven. Passion plus steadiness. A burning heart with rock-solid legs.
And that gorgeous line from Song of SongsāāHow beautiful are your steps in sandals, O princeās daughterāāsuddenly isnāt romance; itās a map. We are the āprinceās children,ā walking after our fatherās footsteps. The beauty isnāt in the destinationāitās in the steps. In choosing, again and again, to move toward God.
Why does this matter for this weekās reading? Because when God finally speaks to a 75-year-old Abram and says Lech LechaāGo, it isnāt random. It crowns decades of unseen seeking. The public calling rides on a lifetime of private courage. Thatās the secret Rabbi Elie surfaces: the parsha begins in the middle, but the faith that makes the middle possible was forged long before.
If your own faith has felt a little quiet or distant lately, this first session gives you a handhold: start with a question, take a step, and keep walkingāheart moved, spirit steady.
Want to watch the whole course? Rabbi Elie Mischelās three-part course āAbraham & Sarahā on Bible Plus is thoughtful, text-rooted, and inspiringāperfect for Shabbat-week learning. Bible Plus is our online Bible-study platform with hundreds of hours of content across the entire TanakhāTorah, Prophets, and Writingsāwith new courses added every month. Dive in, pick a class, and learn at your own pace.