VAYECHI
By Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
Torah Reading: VAYECHI Gen. 47:28-50:26. Haftara: I Kings 2:1-12.
AND
JACOB LIVED.
"And Jacob lived in
the land of Egypt
seventeen years" (Gen. 47:28). These were "good" years (17 is
the gematria of TOV = "good") as opposed to
the first one hundred and thirty years of Jacob's 147-year life. The first
hundred and thirty years were riddled with suffering. Through the suffering
Jacob endured while struggling to build his family, the House of Israel, he
rectified Adam's 130 years of separation from Eve (see Rashi on Genesis 4:25),
during which Adam wasted his seed and created demons, instead of peopling the
world with Bney Adam.
G-d's first command to
Adam was "Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and conquer it"
(Gen. 1:28). As explained by Rabbi Nachman (Likutey Moharan II:7), this commandment is fulfilled not by
producing anthropoid monsters but by giving birth to, raising and educating
true Children of Adam, who bear the TZURAH ("form") of ADAM, who was
made "in the image of G-d".
Ever since Adam and Eve
ate the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, their generations were
flawed. Cain killed Abel, Canaan sodomized Noah, the Sodomites wanted to
sodomize the angels, the kings of Egypt and of the Philistines and
the crown prince of Shechem kidnapped women, Ishmael
lived by the sword, Esau was a rapist.
Only Jacob was SHALEM,
"Whole" or "Perfect" (Gen. 32:18): Jacob bore the true
TZURAH of ADAM, of whom it is said: "And upon the likeness of the throne
was a likeness having the appearance of ADAM upon it from above" (Ezekiel
1:26). When man perfects himself, G-d shines through him and is thus revealed
in the world.
Jacob is sometimes called
Yaakov, sometimes Yisrael. Yaakov is
"small" ("Yaakov her SMALL son" Gen. 27:15; "How will
Yaakov rise, for he is SMALL" Amos 7:5). In his "small" aspect
-- his time of struggle and suffering (MOCHIN D'KATNUS, "constricted
consciousness") -- Jacob signifies that the revelation of G-d is as yet
incomplete and is still proceeding in stages. But Yisrael, Israel,
is Jacob's name of greatness -- "for you have struggled with G-d and with
men and you have prevailed" (Gen. 32:29).In his "great" aspect
(MOCHIN D'GADLUS, "expanded consciousness") Jacob -- Israel --
signifies that G-d's greatness is revealed and manifest in the world.
This was the case at the
time of the Exodus from Egypt
and the Giving of the Torah, when the entire world shook with G-d's
self-revelation. It was the case during the reigns of King David and his son
Solomon, who built the Holy Temple in Jerusalem.
And it will be the case again in the near future, when G-d's House of Prayer
for All the Nations will stand in the center of the world on Mount Moriah
in the Holy City of Jerusalem. [The intensity of the hatred in much of the
world today for all that goes by the name of Israel signifies how far the world
is from HaShem. But "the people that go in darkness will see great light
and those who dwell in the land of the shadow of death, light has shone upon
them" (Isaiah 9:11).]
Our parshah of VAYECHI
puts the seal on the first of the Five Books of Moses, the book of Genesis (Bereishis), portraying Jacob, the rectified Adam, in his
"good" years at the end of his life. They are good years, because
Jacob is now reunited with Joseph, who is in his place of true glory ruling
over Egypt.
Jacob's main love was essentially for Rachel. It was for her that he served
Laban, and it was because Joseph was Rachel's firstborn that "Israel loved
Joseph out of all his sons" (Gen. 37:3). While Leah signifies the
"hidden realm", Rachel signifies G-d's glory revealed in and through
this world. This comes about when Jacob-Israel (=ADAM, the Soul complete with
its Nefesh, Ru'ach and Neshamah levels) conquers Esau (=the Serpent, ASIYAH, the
realm of material activity), using this world to build a sanctuary for G-d.
Our parshah of VAYECHI
also contains a number of specific allusions to the Temple
in Jerusalem, as in Jacob's blessing to Judah (Gen.
49:11) and especially his blessing to Benjamin (ibid. v. 27). The Temple Altar
stood in the territory
of Benjamin, son of
Rachel. Thus in Jacob's funeral procession, his twelve sons carried him up to
the Land of Israel in the same positions in which their descendents the twelve
tribes encamped around the Sanctuary in the Wilderness. Jacob and his sons, the
House of Israel, are the Sanctuary in which G-d dwells in the world. "And
I will dwell within them" (Exodus 25:8).
* * *
HEAR O ISRAEL!
Jacob spent the final
"good" years of his life fulfilling the commandment to be spiritually
fruitful -- by educating the young, especially his grandson Ephraim (see Rashi
on Gen. 48:1: "Ephraim was habitually with Jacob learning"). Jacob'sfinal blessings, will and
testament to his sons, with their harsh chastisements, were also intended to be
educational.
According to tradition,
"At the time when Jacob our father assembled his sons in Egypt at the hour
of his death, he commanded and spurred them on in the unification of the name
of G-d and that they should follow the path of HaShem that Abraham and Isaac
his father walked. He asked them and said, 'My sons, maybe someone among you is
flawed and does not stand with me in the Unification of the Name.?'
They all answered and said, 'Hear Israel HaShem our G-d HaShem is One' -- that is, 'Hear from us, our father Israel, HaShem
our G-d HaShem is one'. The old man answered 'Blessed be
the Name of the Glory of His Kingship for ever and ever!' And this is why all Israel has the custom of repeating the
expression of the praise used by Israel when he was an old man after
this verse". (Rambam, Laws of Recital of Shema Ch. 1:4).
* * *
JACOB'S
BLESSINGS
Jacob's death-bed
blessings to his sons contain some of the most beautiful flights of Biblical
poetry. It is noteworthy that Onkelos, author of the best-known
Aramaic Targum (= "translation") of the
Five Books of Moses, departs here from his usual practice of giving the
simplest, clearest PSHAT (= "simple meaning") of the Biblical text
except where DRUSH, Midrash, "searching out" beneath the surface is
absolutely indispensable. However here, as in the case of some other highly
poetic passages (the Song at the Sea, Bilaam's blessings, the Song of Moses --
HA-AZINU -- and his final blessings), Onkelos felt
obliged to introduce MIDRASH into his Targum in order
to bring out the essential meaning of the text, which contains allusions to all
historical periods and especially the time of Mashiach.
Thus it is Onkelos who informs us that SHILOH
(Gen. 49:10) is Mashiach. The Tribes are compared to various animals. Judah is a
lion, Issachar is a wide-boned donkey, Dan is a
serpent, Naftali a gracious hind, Benjamin a preying
fox. In the case of Jacob's children, the animal qualities are elevated in
order to destroy the wicked and give the victory to G-d. Thus Onkelos translates Gen. 49:14-15 as: "Yissachar will be wealthy in possessions and his
inheritance is between the boundaries. And he saw that his share is good and
that the land produces fruits. And he conquered the territories of the nations
and destroyed their inhabitants and those who remain of them will serve him and
pay him taxes." Onkelos translates the blessing
of Benjamin (v. 49:27: "Benjamin is a preying fox, in the morning he
devours the prey, in the evening he divides the prey") as: "In the
land of Benjamin the Shechinah will dwell (= TISHREI) and in his inheritance
the Holy Temple will be built, in the morning and in the afternoon the priests
will offer sacrifices and in the evening they will divide the rest of their
portions from the other offerings".
Onkelos himself was a GER TZEDEK
("righteous convert"). He was the son of the sister of the Roman
Emperor Titus." It is said that before Onkelos
converted, he raised the spirits of Titus, Balaam, and Yeshu
from hell in order to find out the truth. All three confirmed that the nation
of Israel
is held in the highest repute in the world to come (Gittin
56b, 57a). Onkelos learned Torah from Rabbi Eliezer ben Hyrcanus ("Rabbi Eliezer
the Great") and Rabbi Yehoshua, who were outstanding students of Rabban Yochanan ben Zakkai and were also the
teacher-partners of Rabbi Akiva. Onkelos'
Targum is the first and most authoritative
"commentary" on the Torah.
* * *
AND THE
DWELLER OF THE LAND OF THE CANAANITE SAW.
When Joseph went up with
his brothers to bury Jacob, "they came to the threshing floor of Atad (= bramble)" (Gen. 50:10). According to Rashi,
"It was surrounded by brambles. All the kings of Canaan and princes of
Ishmael came to war, but when they saw the crown of Joseph hung on Jacob's ARON
(= Ark), they
all stood and hung their crowns and surrounded him with crowns from the
threshing-floor which was surrounded by a fence of brambles.
The kings and Canaan and princes of Ishmael were confounded by the
ARON, the holy ark of Jacob, crowned with the crown of Joseph.
According to tradition,
this took place on during Chanukah-time. Jacob's HISTALKUS (ascent) was on 15th
Tishri, the first night of Succos. The Egyptians wept
for him seventy days, upon which Joseph and his brothers went up to Israel to bury
him. The seventieth day after 15th of Tishri is 25th Kislev, the first day of
Chanukah. The initial letters of the four Hebrew words in the verse "and
the dweller of the land of the Canaanite saw" are the permutation of the
name of HaShem that holds sway in the month of Kislev (see Kavanos
of Rosh Chodesh Musaf
prayers).
There is an integral
conceptual connection between Jacob's funeral procession and Chanukah, which is
the time of the inauguration of the Temple.
Jacob's twelve sons, the holy House of Israel, under the leadership of Joseph
the Tzaddik, were taking Jacob -- the archetypal House-Builder -- to his final,
eternal house and home in the Cave of Machpelah, the
resting place of Adam and Eve as well as the patriarchs and matriarchs.
The funeral procession
was a "rehearsal" for the formation in which the twelve tribes would would bring the Ark of the
Covenant up from the wilderness and into the Holy Land.
This is paradigmatic of the building of the Holy Temple,
the House of G-d on the spot where Jacob had his dream of the ladder:
"This is none other than the House of G-d and this is the Gate of
Heaven" (Gen. 28:17). That place is alluded to in the opening word of the
Torah, BEREISHIS, the letters of which, when re-arranged, spell out BAYIS ROSH,
the House that is Head (=Tefilin shel
Rosh). It was to that place that Joseph promised his brothers that they would
return from Egypt:
"G-d will surely redeem you and bring you up from this land to the Land
which He swore to Abraham, to Isaac and to Jacob" (Gen. 50:24).
CHAZAK! CHAZAK!
VE-NIS-CHAZEK!
"Be strong! Be strong -- and we will be strong!"
Shabbat Shalom!
Avraham Yehoshua Greenbaum