Talmud on Shabbat: The Mystery and Miracle of Elijah

Published: April 23, 2022, 5 p.m.

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The prophet Elijah, whom we last encountered at our seders, poses a conundrum.

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Elijah has this favored slot in Jewish history: the harbinger of hope and redemption. At the seder, we sing Eliyahu ha\\u2019navi as we move along the trajectory from darkness to light. At your son or grandson\\u2019s brit milah, the chair of Elijah invites the prophet into our lives at our choicest family moments. We bring Elijah into every Shabbat and Hag service in the blessings after the Haftarah and Havdalah. We bring Elijah into grace after meals every time we bench.

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Of all the protagonists in the Jewish canon, Elijah is by far the most recurrent presence in Jewish ritual: more than Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Sarah, Rebecca, Leah, Rachel, Moses, Aaron, Saul, David or Solomon.

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Why so much Elijah? If you read the biblical story, this role is not only unexpected. It is a shocker. Elijah would be the last figure to get this job as harbinger of redemption.

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Fact 1: Elijah\\u2019s last act as prophet is to be the Butcher of Mt. Carmel. He slaughters 450 prophets of Ba\\u2019al. A war crime. An atrocity. And that is not just a modern read. Leading to fact 2.

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Fact 2: God fires Elijah for being only a zealot, and not being open to any other moves but hot zealotry. That is why God tells Elijah to appoint his successor, the gentler and more nuanced prophet Elisha.

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So why exactly do we invite the Butcher of Mt. Carmel, fired by God, to our seders, to our britot, to our Shabbat prayers, to our grace after meals, as the harbinger of redemption?

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We are going to be doing a four-part series to answer this question based upon a great new book that just came out, Daniel C. Matt, Becoming Elijah: Prophet of Transformation (Yale University Press, March, 2022).

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