Ep. 35 - Abraham's Impossible War
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Four mighty kings wage war against five. They crush armies, wipe out giants, conquer cities. When the fighting ends, Lot has been taken captive.
A fugitive named Og brings Abraham the news. Abraham has hundreds of students in his study hall. He shuts it down and prepares for war. But when he asks the traditional pre-battle questions—Are you newly married? Built a house? Planted a vineyard? Afraid you've sinned?—every single student says yes. They all decline to fight.
Abraham heads into battle with just his servant Eliezer. Two men against the armies that defeated giants.
Rabbi Epstein reveals how Abraham won: he threw sand and dirt, and G-d turned it into arrows and spears. But the episode explores something deeper. Abraham was doing the right thing by rescuing his nephew. So why was he later rebuked for this mission? And how did that rebuke lead directly to 400 years of slavery in Egypt?
You'll discover why Abraham stopped his pursuit at the city of Dan, what vision drained his strength so completely he couldn't continue, and why the Talmud says this battle happened on Passover night. The miraculous night was split in two: half spent rescuing Lot, half reserved for the future Exodus from Egypt.
Which raises the most haunting question of all: What made Lot worth saving? He'd chosen wealth over righteousness, pitched his tent toward Sodom, and wasn't even part of the Jewish people. Why spend half a miraculous night on him?
This is about impossible battles, divine intervention, and the hidden consequences when we do the right thing the wrong way.