Halakhah su Esodo 6:32
Contemporary Halakhic Problems, Vol VI
In both of those guises the blessing oseh ma'aseh bereshit is designed to underscore the notion that there is no sharp distinction between the miraculous and the natural. Nes, or miracle, and teva, or nature, are two sides of the same coin. Ramban, in numerous passages in his Commentary on the Pentateuch,13See, for example, Genesis 7:17, 35:13 and 46:15; Exodus 6:12; Leviticus 18:29 and 26:11; and Deuteronomy 11:13. eloquently formulates a distinction between a nes nistar, or a hidden miracle, and a nes nigleh, or an open miracle. The miraculous nature of hidden miracles is obscured by virtue of the fact that to the beholder the result appears simply as the manifestation of natural occurrences. Open miracles are perceived as the suspension of the natural order. Perhaps even more emphatic are the comments of R. Meir Simchah of Dvinsk, Meshekh Hokhmah, Parasḥat Beḥukotai. Meshekh Hokhmah comments that miracles are not designed as ends in themselves; on the contrary, a nes is entirely instrumental. Miracles are designed to impress upon us that all of teva is a nes; nature is miraculous; the natural order is the greatest of all miracles. The temporary suspension of that order is designed to make us realize that the order and regularity of nature is born of divine decree and subject to divine will. The problem for mankind is that we have become desensitized. Every day the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. We take that for granted, with the result that such phenomena no longer strike us as wondrous. From time to time it is necessary for us to be jolted out of our intellectual complacency. Observation of an extraordinary phenomenon is an occasion to be reminded that miracles are built into the principles governing the universe as variations in the regularity that is the hallmark of nature.14See Avot 5:6; Bereshit Rabbah 5:4; and Shemot Rabbah 21:16. See also Rambam, Commentary on the Mishneh, Avot 5:6; idem, Guide to the Perplexed, Part II, chaps. 25 and 29; and Ḥasdai Crescas, Or ha-Shem, Part II, p. 5. Miracles are designed to impress upon us that, in reality, teva is the greatest of all miracles. That is why, declares Meshekh Hokhmah, "one who recites hallel ha-gadol every day commits blasphemy" (Shabbat 118b). If a person recites hallel every day it is because he feels he must give thanks for what he perceives as miracles performed on his behalf on a daily basis. But God does not perform overt miracles on a daily basis; He does not disturb the laws of nature with any frequency. To presume that He does so is a form of blasphemy. But at the same time we are charged with recognizing that nature itself is miraculous. That is why, explains Meshekh Hokhmah, a person who recites ashrei thrice daily is assured of a share in the World to Come (Berakhot 4b). The omnipotence, grandeur and majesty of God is manifest in the ordinary, but regular and ongoing, phenomena described in ashrei: "You give them their food in due season. You open your hand and satiate every living creature with favor" (Psalms 145:15-16). Recitation of ashrei serves to acknowledge that the phenomena we regard as natural, ordinary and run of the mill are really miracles wrought by God.
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