DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 1.02 MB)
Avraham Aveenu Performed All The Mitzvot Even Before The Torah Was Given

The Gemara teaches that Avraham Avinu observed the entire Torah despite the fact that it was given to Benei Yisrael only centuries later. Interestingly, the Gemara emphasizes that Avraham observed even the law of Eruv Tavshilin – setting aside food before Yom Tov to allow preparations on Yom Tov for Shabbat. The Halacha of Eruv Tavshilin was enacted by the Sages, and is not required according to Torah law. The Gemara thus emphasizes that Avraham observed not only Biblical commands, but Rabbinic enactments, as well.

Why would the Gemara specify the particular law of Eruv Tavshilin?

The Gaon of Vilna (Rabbi Eliyahu of Vilna, 1720-1797) suggested that the Gemara did not, in truth, mention Eruv Tavshilin in this context. It is possible, the Gaon claimed, that in the original texts of the Talmud this passage was written with the Rashei Teivot (acronym) "Ayin" - "Tav," which represented the words "Eruv Techumin." The term "Eruv Techumin" refers to the laws governing the distance one is allowed to walk outside his city on Shabbat. Copiers may have erroneously interpreted the acronym as referring to Eruv Tavshilin, rather than Eruv Techumin, and this erroneous reading became the standard text in published editions of the Talmud. The Gaon explained that the Sages inferred Avraham's observance of Eruv Techumin from the verse (Bereishit 26:5), "Eikev Asher Shama Avraham Be'koli" – "Since Avraham heeded My voice." The word "Eikev" ("since") can also mean "heel," and this verse thus perhaps alludes to Avraham's strict observance of a Mitzva relevant to walking, namely, Eruv Techumin.

The Da'at Zekeinim Mi'Ba'alei Ha'Tosafot (a compilation of Torah commentaries by the Tosafists) suggests a different approach, claiming that the Gemara uses the term "Eruv Tavshilin," which literally means "mixture of foods," in reference to the prohibition of milk and meat. The Gemara emphasizes that Avraham observed all laws in the Torah, including the prohibition against partaking of milk and meat.

If so, the question arises as to how Avraham allowed himself to serve both milk and meat to his visitors, as the Torah explicitly tells in the Book of Bereishit (18:8). If, indeed, he observed even the prohibition of milk and meat, why would he serve milk and meat together to his guests?

Some have explained that the prohibition of placing milk and meat together on the same table stems from the concern that one might eat them together. Therefore, if there is another person present watching to ensure that the individual does not mix the milk and meat, the prohibition against serving them together at the table does not apply. Now since, as the Torah tells in the aforementioned verse, Avraham stood over the visitors as they ate, there was no concern that they would eat the two kinds of foods together, and he was therefore allowed to serve meat and milk together at the same table.

Finally, the question arises as to why Avraham did not observe the Mitzva of Berit Mila (circumcision) until God commanded him to do so (Bereishit 17). If he observed all the Mitzvot, he should have circumcised himself and his son even before receiving an explicit divine command.

One answer, perhaps, is that without a divine command to perform circumcision, it would be forbidden on the grounds of Chabala – inflicting a wound in oneself. The Torah forbids causing oneself bodily harm and injury, and thus Avraham was not entitled to voluntarily perform circumcision. Only after God commanded him with regard to this Mitzva was the prohibition of Chabala overridden by the Mitzva.

A simpler answer, however, is that Avraham preferred to wait because of the principle that a "Metzuveh Ve'oseh" – one who performs a Mitzva regarding which he bears an obligation – receives more reward than a "She'eino Metzuveh Ve'oseh – one who performs a Mitzva regarding which he is under no obligation. When it came to all other Mitzvot, Avraham could perform them on a voluntarily basis and then, when the command is issued, observe them in fulfillment of his obligation. The Mitzva of Berit Mila, contrast, can be performed only once. Avraham therefore preferred to wait until he received the divine command, so that he would receive the great reward of a "Metzuveh Ve'oseh," rather than the lesser reward of a "She'eino Metzuveh Ve'oseh."

This discussion of Avraham's strict observance of Halacha even before Matan Torah should serve as a reminder to us of the immense importance of observing Halacha, in all its details. If the patriarchs ensured to comply with the dictates of Halacha even before they became obligatory, then certainly we, who were given the Torah, bear the responsibility to carefully fulfill each and every detail of Halacha.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Can Eliyahu HaNavee Come On Shabbat?
Is It Permissible To Have A Seuda Inside A Bet Kennesset
Is It Permissible To Change Biblical Verses from Singular to Plural Form
Is It Required To Repeat The Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit If Removing The Talit For Just A Short While
Is It Required To Make The Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit Again If The 1st Talit Was Found To Be Pasul (Improper)
Is One Required To Stand For An Elderly Lady or Scholarly Woman
Is It Permissible To Simply Answer Amen and Rely On Another's Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit
Granting Precedence to a Jew When Hiring
Is It Permissible To Give A Non-Kosher Turkey To A Goy For Their Holiday
Yichud- 1) Must An Onen Follow The Laws of Yichud, 2) War and Yichud
Yichud- Is It Permissible For A Man To Be Alone With A Lady On An Express Elevator In A Skyscraper
Yichud- Is It Permissible to Be Alone with Mother, Father, Daughter, Son, Brother, or Sister
Tzineeut and The Proper and Improper Ways Of Socializing With Friends
How Could We Pray To G-d That Korbanot Be Accepted, When Today We Do Not Have Korbanot?
Some Laws Regarding Visiting or Seeing a Cemetery
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found