Man and Bread
Our Parsha declares that “man is the tree of the field.” Our sages comment that the fruit of the tree is man’s primary sustenance. Though our diet contains many foods that are entirely unrelated to the tree, the Torah insists that only “bread can fully satiate the heart of man.” (Psalm 104) We do in fact eat all kinds of foods but hunger is never fully satisfied without bread, which grows from the ground, as does the tree.
Four Elements
All of creation can be divided into four elements.
This hierarchy raises a question. Why is man sustained by that which is lower than he is? Does logic not dictate that lower life forms be sustained by higher life forms? Conversely, does the higher life form not somehow compromise its purity by receiving life energy from a lower life form?
A Converse Hierarchy
This question forces us to reevaluate the face value of the world as it appears to us. Kabbalah teaches that, creatures, which appear lower on the totem pole, originate on a level that is in fact higher. Its lofty origins enable it to journey forth to so low and distant a state because a stronger source is capable of sending its offspring much further than a weaker source.
When we view the hierarchy from this perspective we discover that the origin of vegetation is in fact greater then that of man. Man is not sustained by the bread’s substance, which is lower than he is, but by G-d’s energy within it, which comprises the spiritual origin of the bread.


