10-30-2025 Lech l’chah
שאלו שלום ירושלים
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem
Parashat Lech L’chah moves us from what Biblical scholars call “pre-history” to actual “history.” Found in Genesis 12:1-17:2, this week’s parashah is a long section that deals not only with Abraham’s entrance into the “Land of Israel,” but also provides us with deep insights into Abraham’s character and personality, and in so doing the parashah also challenges us.
The section begins with a beautiful Hebrew play-on words: “Lech-l’chah” can mean either “Go forth” or “Go toward yourself/Go forward for your own sake.” From a practical point of view, this is the reason that Abraham leaves the comfort of his parents’ home and sets out for a new land and a new life. From a psychological perspective we need to ask ourselves if this command was G-d’s way of teaching Abraham that to fulfil his potential he needed to leave his past behind and move on with life? How many of us are stuck in what we do and are afraid to move on with our lives? It is never easy to be a pioneer. In Abraham’s case his life was comfortable in Ur and difficult in this new land. Abraham’s journey to the Land of Israel is not only the beginning of Jewish history and peoplehood; it is also Abraham’s personal journey into maturity.
Lech L’chah is more than the story of one man. It is a lesson of personal growth. In that sense, Abraham’s journey is our journey. His journey teaches us that having the courage to leave the familiar, the comfortable, and face a future, is never easy or predictable. Lech L’chah teaches us that greatness comes from the willingness to take calculated risks and to understand that to risk nothing is to stagnate in life.
We can read about Abraham’s journey from many perspectives. Reading about Abraham’s journey from a national level, his journey to Israel was a journey that would give us our national territory. It is in the land of Israel where we would create one of the world’s greatest and oldest civilizations. On a spiritual level, this story is universal and belongs to all of us. From that perspective it is the story or leaving failures and disappointments behind and having the faith to risk, to build, and if need be, to start again. On a personal level, Abraham’s journey is symbolic of each of us. Reading Lech L’chah from that perspective the text teaches us that life is filled with opportunities and disappointments, and the mark of an adult is facing these disappointments and moving on with life. Abraham understood that his friends and family could assist him only to a certain point, but then he had to be willing to trust G-d and himself, and to take responsibility for his life if he were going to enter the promised land of adult maturity rather than eternal childhood.
These untranslatable words, Lech L’chah, remind us that faith is never passive but active. It is our job, just as it was Abraham’s task, not to sit back, but to go forward, not to call something G-d’s will but to become G-d’s partner in transforming our dreams into reality. Where are you in your personal journey? Do the words “Lech L’chah” resonate in your life or are you afraid to face the future?
YouTubes for the week
Three songs from the last war
Am Yisrael Chai
A nation composed of superheroes
Shalom, I am back home
Please pray for Israel’s soldiers and the safe return of all of the remaining hostages.