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June 30, 1994Jason Aronson, 1994
By Morris B. Margolies
Women's League Outlook, Vol. 64, Iss. 4, p. 1
Be forewarned: The celestial forces in Morris B. Margolies' A Gathering
of Angels do not guide sleepy drivers safely home and then gently nudge
them awake so they can turn off their ignitions. Nor will they whiz alongside
imperiled skiers to save them from certain disaster on alpine slopes. They
will, however, take readers on a panoramic guided tour, stopping wherever
their kind are in evidence, from the Garden of Eden to Jacob's ladder, from
Auschwitz to the netherreaches of the imagination of Franz Kafka or Isaac
Bashevis Singer. Demons, it turns out, are angels, too. So ubiquitous is
the presence of angels in Jewish writing that the occasion of assembling
an angel compendium also becomes a highly accessible short-course in Jewish
history, theology and lore. Given that the author is a professor of Jewish
History at the University of Kansas and a retired congregational rabbi,
this assuredly is no accident. Engaging the excitement of even the least
willing high school student in the labyrinth of Jewish learning is a skill
Rabbi Margolies has honed over a number of years. This reviewer confesses
to having learned this firsthand, as a member of his Confirmation Class
of 1965.
Margolies draws on the Hebrew Bible, the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, the
Dead Sea Scrolls, the Talmud, the Zohar, the Kabbalah, the Sefer Hasidim
and late twentieth-century Jewish literature to examine the subject of angels
from a Jewish rationalist's perspective. That is, he does not view them
literally as mystical forces which take human form and appear on earth to
stage wrestling matches on ladders or to stay the hand of a father about
to slay his son. Rather, Margolies sees incorporeal metaphors for the most
basic of human drives and emotions. Through this device, the impulses to
love, hate, envy, lust, malice, greed, generosity, acts of charity, sadism,
delusion, vision, despair, fear, and hope can be brought to consciousness.
Angels, then, are simply symbols of the forces that operate within every
person. In Margolies' view, such an interpretation reconciles the existence
of these wondrous, not-always-winged creatures of Jewish literature who
help narrow the gap between humanity and God, with the teachings of a monotheistic
faith. It makes evident why they must never become objects of adoration,
worship or prayer. Even when taken literally, the author explains, angels
never represent an independent force; they are simply God's agents, not
even His sworn deputies. This holds true, too, for Satan, the fallen angel,
who is as dependent on God's will as are his better-natured counterparts.
Margolies describes the figure of Satan as God's loyal opposition, "the
celestial prosecuting attorney" who investigates charges of earthly
aberrations and misdeeds on assignment from his "divine employer."
The book touches on every aspect of the genre, from the distinctions between
cherubim and seraphim to the long queue of divine messengers whose purpose
it was to enlighten, guide, tempt, or confront. The author revisits all
the familiar parables and many of the more obscure. We meet the angels of
Joshua, Gideon and Manoah's wife, as well as those of Sarah, Samson, Daniel,
Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah. We learn about the proliferation of angels
of personal salvation in the Dead Sea Scrolls and the angelic elite of the
first book of Enoch. Later, come the efforts of the rabbis of the Talmud
to downplay the role of angels as they attempted to distance Judaism from
the trinitarian concepts of Christianity.
Rabbi Margolies also introduces the legions of dybbuks and demons and explores
the repeated appearance of the Angel of Death. He takes discussion of Lilith
from her intensely evil description in the Talmud and third-century Testament
of Solomon to the most feminist of modern-day interpretations.
In the book, we also meet the archangels: Michael, the angel commander-in
chief; Gabriel, not just a trumpeter, but a master of courage; Raphael,
the little-known angel of healing; Uriel, the angel of light; and finally,
Elijah, the angel-cum-prophet-cum-zealot-cum-legend, God's instrument for
humanity's redemption.
Margolies grounds his work in scripture, rabbinic interpretation and literary
scholarship, taking pains to distinguish the Jewish concept from the currently
popular revival of interest in angels as instruments of individualistic
salvation. In a recent issue of Time magazine, for example, a survey showed
that 69 percent of those polled believed in the existence of angels, which,
most agreed, could be described as "higher spiritual beings created
by God with special powers to act as His agents on earth." Only 18
percent considered angels to be an important, but merely symbolic, religious
idea -- a viewpoint closer to the one espoused in Margolies' very readable
work.
A book about angels would not be complete without personal testament. Rabbi
Margolies makes his point with poignant retelling of three personal angelic
encounters: first, fleeing gunfire in Kiryat Moshe in 1929; then, on an
airplane, accompanying his mother's casket to Jerusalem; and yet again as
an Army chaplain in the Korean War. The stories recall super-but-natural
moments, all.
-- Brooke Kroeger
Article copyright Women's League for Conservative Judaism. |
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