In last weekās column, we saw how one feature of Abrahamās life was his confusion about Godās plan. In this weekās Torah portion, Vayeira (Genesis 18:1-22:24), we encounter numerous examples of this phenomenon. One such episode is the narrative of Sodom and Gomorrah.
God told Abraham that he planned to destroy these wicked cities, which led to the longest sustained prayer in the Torah. Abraham pleaded and argued with God, trying to reverse the decree. When all was said and done, the answer to Abrahamās prayers was a resounding āNo.ā Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed.
All this begs the question. Why did God tell Abraham that He planned to destroy these cities? God knew that no prayer from Abraham was going to change His mind. What was the point of telling Abraham and causing him to pray, only to ignore his prayers?
Just before God told Abraham about his decision to destroy Sodom and Gomorrah, the Bible tells us why God told Abraham his plan. While the Bible is filled with scenes of God speaking to people, it almost never reveals why God spoke to a particular person, or why He decided to say what He said. Yet here God does exactly that.
This passage is confusing. In justifying why God told Abraham about His plans, God reiterates Abrahamās covenantal mission to transform the world, bringing blessing to all nations on earth through the teaching of righteousness and justice. But what does this have to do with the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah? How does Abrahamās awareness of the impending destruction serve His mission? Was God setting up Abraham, causing him to pray to save these cities only to destroy them?
Later in the story, on the morning after the destruction, we find Abraham returning to the place where he had prayed.
Here, we find Abraham faced with the reality that Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed. Imagine what was going through his mind as he stood there surveying the destruction, watching as his prayers literally went up in smoke.
But the very next verse tells us that God did, in fact, answer Abrahamās prayers, even if Abraham himself was completely unaware.
At first glance, this seems like a minor concession to Abraham. After all, Abraham never once mentioned Lot in his prayers to save Sodom and Gomorrah. The decree to destroy the cities would not be reversed, but Lot, Abrahamās nephew, would be spared. Was this the answer to Abrahamās prayers?
The Bible goes on to tell us that Lot fled from the city with his family. His wife was killed along the way, having become a pillar of salt as she hesitated and looked back at the overturned city. Lot escaped with only his two daughters to a nearby cave. There, Lotās daughters got him drunk and had relations with him on successive nights. Both daughters became pregnant. Both gave birth to boys.
The nations of Ammon and Moab would become enemies of Israel. How is this an answer to Abrahamās prayers? How is this a sign that God āremembered Abrahamā during the destruction?
Although Ammon and Moab became enemies of Israel, many generations later the nation of Moab would produce a young woman named Ruth. Ruth the Moabite would selflessly join the nation of Israel after relocating to Bethlehem with her impoverished mother-in-law Naomi. Ruth eventually married Boaz and became the great-grandmother of none other than King David.
King David, of course, was the beginning of the royal Davidic line that would ultimately produce the Messiah, the savior not only of Israel but of the entire world.
Remember Godās explanation for why He told Abraham about His plans to destroy Sodom and Gomorrah?
Abraham will surely become a great and powerful nation, and all nations on earth will be blessed through him. For I have chosen him, so that he will direct his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord by doing what is right and just, so that the Lord will bring about for Abraham what he has promised him.ā
Now it all makes sense. Abrahamās prayer to save Sodom and Gomorrah was motivated by his love and concern for all people. It was exactly this prayer that led to the birth of Moab, and eventually the Messiah himself.
We have all had the experience of praying fervently for something specific only to see our prayers rejected. It can seem to us that God is not even listening. Many people have a crisis of faith when they experience their prayers being “rejected.” But we must always remember what the Bible tells us:
From Abrahamās perspective, he tried to save Sodom and Gomorrah and failed. As far as he could see, the answer to his prayers was āno.ā But beyond Abrahamās limited vision, his prayer was so powerful, and so successful, that it saved the entire world, even if Abraham himself had no idea.
Rabbi Pesach Wolicki serves as Executive Director of Ohr Torah Stoneās Center for Jewish-Christian Understanding and Cooperation and is cohost of the Shoulder to Shoulder podcast