Rav
Simcha Bunim
zt”l of Peshischa on Parshat Bereishit
(from
Kol Simcha Parshat Bereishit #10)
Adam's Vegetarianism
Two verses following man's creation (Bereishit 1:29-30) outline man's and animal's
vegetarian diets.
29: "Said G-d, 'Behold I have given you all the seed-bearing vegetation on the
face of the earth, along with every tree that has seed bearing fruit. They will
be for you for food. 30: "'And to all the animals of the earth and to all the
birds of the heavens and to all those that crawl on the ground that have a living
soul, [I have given] all green vegetation for food.' And it was so."
These verses, notes Rav Simcha Bunim, present a number of difficulties:
- Instead of, "Behold I have given you . . .
They will be for you to eat," it should have said, "Behold I have given you
. . . to eat." "They will be for you," seems superfluous.
- "And it was so," in the second verse also seems
superfluous.
- Even without the expression "I have given you,"
the verse would still have read smoothly. Why is it there?
- One can infer from this verse a prohibition
against eating meat; if so, why is it not mentioned along with the prohibition
to eat of the Tree of Knowledge?
- It is curious that along with the sins of the
generation of the Flood, who seemed to break every other rule in the book,
eating meat is not mentioned.
- According to the Ramban, the fruit of trees
was restricted to man. Animals could only eat other vegetation. If so, there
seems to also be a prohibition against animals eating fruit. How is it possible
to speak of a command to the animals?
Making one basic assumption, says Rav Simcha Bunim,
we can answer all of the above questions. Before G-d made this declaration nothing,
even fruit or vegetables, was edible. It was only through this declaration
that fruits and vegetables became edible to man and vegetation to animals.
Meat was never prohibited to man and the fruit of trees were not prohibited
to animals; they were simply not edible. Man's only prohibition was not
to eat of the Tree of Knowledge and no command of any kind was ever given to
the animals. The generation of the Flood, even had they wanted to, could not
have eaten meat!
The seemingly superfluous expressions (questions 1-3) now take on significance
and both verses read clearly. G-d is now giving man and animals food
through His declaration. From the declaration on, they will be food; hence,
the expression, "They will be for you to eat." And when the declaration
was finished it was now appropriate for the Torah's narration to say, at the
end of verse 30, "And it was so." And it was that the fruits, vegetables
and grasses now became transformed into food for man and animals.
[prepared
by Eliezer Kwass]
from
Classic Divrei Torah on Parshat Shavua
Print Version of http://www.darchenoam.org/articles/web/parsha/ar_bereshit.htm
Copyright 2003 Darche
Noam Institutions
