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Chasidut sobre Génesis 18:2

וַיִּשָּׂ֤א עֵינָיו֙ וַיַּ֔רְא וְהִנֵּה֙ שְׁלֹשָׁ֣ה אֲנָשִׁ֔ים נִצָּבִ֖ים עָלָ֑יו וַיַּ֗רְא וַיָּ֤רָץ לִקְרָאתָם֙ מִפֶּ֣תַח הָאֹ֔הֶל וַיִּשְׁתַּ֖חוּ אָֽרְצָה׃

Y alzó sus ojos y miró, y he aquí tres varones que estaban junto á él:  y cuando los vió, salió corriendo de la puerta de su tienda á recibirlos, é inclinóse hacia la tierra,

Kedushat Levi

Genesis ‎18,2. “when he looked out, here three men were standing ‎practically on top of him.” The Zohar I, 98, identifies these ‎three “men” as “Avraham, Yitzchok, and Yaakov.” Clearly, we ‎must try and understand what the Zohar meant by this, ‎since the same “Avraham” is reported in the very same verse as ‎running to meet these three “men”.
We have explained ‎earlier that normally Avraham served the Lord from feelings of ‎love, whereas in submitting to the circumcision, he had switched ‎to serving G’d from feelings of ‎יראה‎, awe, i.e. by totally negating ‎the interests of his earthbound personality. By destroying his ‎foreskin, a symbol of limitations and hindrance to spiritual ‎development, known generally as ‎קליפה‎, “husk,” in kabbalistic ‎parlance, (compare writings of Ari z’al) he had attained a ‎new and higher level of spirituality. He had now mastered both ‎the ability to serve the Lord on two levels, ‎אהבה‎ (attribute of ‎חסד‎) ‎and ‎יראה‎, attribute of ‎גבורה‎). The latter attribute is the one that ‎his son Yitzchok would symbolize for us in the future.
It is ‎part of our tradition that whenever the attributes of ‎אהבה‎ and ‎יראה‎, i.e. ‎אש‎, and ‎מים‎, “fire and water,” in terms of our terrestrial ‎part of the universe, are present simultaneously, due to the fact ‎that these two attributes are opposites of one another, we require ‎the presence of a third attribute one that harmonizes between ‎these two opposite attributes. This third attribute is known as ‎תפארת‎, harmony; the third of our patriarchs, Yaakov, is perceived ‎by our sages as having characterized the attribute “harmony.” It ‎follows that at the time of Avraham’s circumcision this third ‎attribute had been present also, i.e. it had a part to play in the ‎performance of that commandment. When the Torah speaks of ‎what Avraham “saw,” it referred to Avraham’s having become ‎aware at that moment that these three attributes, all of which ‎can be part of ‎מצוה‎ performance, had had a part in his having ‎circumcised himself at the command of G’d. The word: ‎נצבים‎, ‎describes the “presence” of all these three attributes during ‎Avraham’s recovery from the physical effects of the circumcision.‎
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Kedushat Levi

Genesis ‎18,2. “when he saw, he ran towards them;” Avraham had ‎still been suffering from the pains of his circumcision. A sick or ‎ailing person is usually the recipient of the loving concern of the ‎attribute of Mercy; Avraham, instead of indulging himself was ‎overcome with the attribute of ‎גבורה‎, overpowering courageous ‎energy, so that he was able to run to meet these men. He was ‎suddenly possessed of the characteristic (the author has “soul,”) ‎that would distinguish his not yet conceived son, Yitzchok. We ‎explained in the previous paragraph that this resulted in his also ‎being endowed with the attribute ‎תפארת‎, harmony, so that he ‎combined all the three characteristics that distinguished the ‎three patriarchs.
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Kedushat Levi

Genesis 26,28. “we have taken due note of the fact ‎that the Lord has been with you, etc.;” based on what we ‎explained (18,2) in connection with ‎וירא וירץ לקראתם‎, (page 88) ‎that when a person looks at a righteous person, his own powers ‎of perception are enhanced by the mere fact that he is within the ‎orbit of the tzaddik, our sages (Rosh Hashanah 16) have ‎stated that people must make a point of visiting their Rabbi or ‎other scholars on the festivals. They will benefit spiritually merely ‎by looking at their Rabbi. Avraham at the time had realized that ‎the three strangers who had appeared in front of him suddenly ‎were superior beings as his own powers of perception had been ‎sharpened by their arrival and his facing them. It was this ‎realization that his perceptive powers had been enhanced, that ‎prompted him at the time not only to walk toward these visitors ‎but to run in order to make them welcome.‎
The repetition by the Torah of the words ‎ראו ראינו‎ is to draw ‎our attention to both Avimelech and his entourage having ‎experienced these enhanced powers of perception. They had ‎become aware that their powers of “seeing” had not only been ‎improved quantitatively but also qualitatively, i.e. they had ‎experienced the awe of feeling in the presence of a spiritually ‎superior being. They realized now that the Presence of the Divine ‎Shechinah rested above the head of Yitzchok.‎
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