VAYEISHEV
By Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
Torah
"FROM
THE DEPTH OF
"These are the
generations of Jacob. These are their dwellings and rollings
(GILGULIM) until they came to a state of habitation (YISHUV). The first cause
was that 'Joseph was seventeen years old.'
"
'And Jacob
dwelled.': Jacob wanted to dwell in tranquility, but the storm of Joseph sprang
upon him. The tzaddikim want to dwell in tranquility,
but the Holy One, blessed be He, says, 'Is it not enough for the tzaddikim that the World to Come is prepared for them, but
they want to dwell in tranquility in this world?' " (Rashi
on Gen. 37:2).
Now that the Torah has
completed the stories of Abraham and Isaac and that part of the story of Jacob
in which he is the chief actor, we now turn to the story of Jacob's children:
"These are the generations of Jacob". Their "dwellings and rollings" -- as recounted in the remaining four
parshiyos of Genesis, allude to all their future history, in the
The Children of Israel
are destined to be a Light to the Nations. As such, they must be at peace with
each other, for how can they shine to the nations when they are at war with one
another? But in our parshah of VAYEISHEV, the Children of Israel were unable to
make inner peace: ".And they could not speak to him [Joseph]
peaceably" (Gen. 37:4). Joseph exemplified the true leader -- "and he
was pasturing his brothers" (v. 2) -- but as yet his brothers could not
accept him. He was too saintly. The brothers were still out for themselves:
".They went only to pasture THEMSELVES"
(Rashi on Gen. 37:12). Their in-fighting turned into a hypocritical religious
war: "They said, Let us go to
Yet Jacob sent Joseph
into the middle of all this "from the depth (EMEK, valley) of
In other words, the
"deep plan" necessitated the sale of Joseph into slavery in
All the "rollings" and incarnations of the Children of Israel
from generation to generation refine and purify their souls in preparation for
the eventual state of YISHUV, "habitation", which depends on peace
among the Twelve Tribes. In the coming parshiyos, we will see how the wise
leader exemplified in Joseph skillfully manipulates everything to bring his
"exiled" brothers to repent of their fractiousness and enmity and
make peace with one another. Repentance is a recurrent theme of this and all
the remaining parshiyos in Genesis. Reuven repented
his "sin" (Gen 35:22; Rashi on 37:29);
The essential fissures
among the Children of Israel in their later history were between Benjamin vs.
the other tribes (Judges Ch. 19ff), and the House of Judah (representing
fidelity to the Oral Torah) vs. the House of Israel, the Ten Tribes, who
rebelled under the leadership of Jeraboam son of Nevat of the tribe of Ephraim = Joseph (representing
worldly success). (This is also the clash today between the
"religious" and "secular".) In the coming parshiyos we will
see how
The bond forged between
Judah and Benjamin exemplifies the concept that "all
The transformation of the
war between Joseph and Judah into a state of reconciliation and peace is
paradigmatic of the future reconciliation of the Jews (=
However, in our
parshiyos, all these hints of future history are contained in allusion only,
for prior to attaining the future state of YISHUV and MOCHIN DE-GADLUS --
"settled" and "expanded consciousness" -- the world is in a
state of BILBUL and MOCHIN DE-KATNUS, "confusion" and "limited
consciousness". Thus our parshah deals with negative feelings and
emotions: the hatred of the brothers for Joseph; their deception of Jacob with
the blood of the slaughtered goat; the deception of
The state of MOCHIN
DE-KATNUS is the state of exile. Thus in our parshah, the scene changes from
the
* * *
"AND
"The tribes were
busy with the sale of Joseph; Joseph was busy with his sack-cloth and fasting; Reuven was busy with his sack-cloth and fasting; Jacob was
busy with his sack-cloth and fasting;
Immediately after the
story of the sale of Joseph to Egypt (the beginning of the exile) the Torah
immediately tells us the story of Judah and Tamar, which culminates with the
birth of Peretz (Gen. 38:29) who was the ancestor of
King David, the Messianic King (Ruth 4:18-22).
The
story of Judah and Tamar ione of sexual sin and its
rectification.
Of the three cardinal sins, Abraham rectified that of Idolatry (fallen CHESSED)
while Isaac rectified the sin of Bloodshed (fallen GEVUROS). The mission of
Jacob and his sons was to rectify the sin of GILUI AROYOS, sexual immorality
(fallen TIFERET-Beauty), which is why the preceding parshiyos were preoccupied
with how Jacob built his House, with his Four Wives and the Twelve Tribes
arranged around his pure "bed", the Holy Sanctuary. Sexual immorality
was the main theme in the story of Dinah, recounted in last week's parshah of
VAYISHLACH. The theme continues in our parshah. Thus Joseph was "a
lad" -- "he was engaged in puerile behavior, he arranged his hair
carefully and smoothed his eyes in order to look beautiful" (Rashi on Gen.
37:2 and see Rashi on Gen. 39:6).
Sexual immorality was an
essential element in the original sin of Adam, which the rabbis conceptualized
as KERI, an "impure emission" of seed. Adam had been commanded to
"be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and conquer it and
rule." (Gen. 1:28). But in "eating the forbidden fruit" of the
Tree of Knowledge of good and evil, Adam fell into material lust. His seed, intended to produce future generations that would know
G-d, "fell" and became prey to the forces of unholy lust. Thus the
holy sparks became trapped in exile. This had to be rectified by Adam's
descendants, the Children of Israel, whose mission -- as mentioned above -- was
to rectify sexual immorality [see Kavanot of ARI,
Pesach]. However, Er, the firstborn of
According to the law of
Levirate marriage (YIBUM), Er's surviving brother Onan should have "raised up seed" in the name of
his dead brother (i.e. the dead brother would be reincarnated in order to
rectify his sin in a new life), but Onan was also
selfish, and spilled his seed (Gen. 38:7).
Only through the
resourcefulness of Tamar (who was the daughter of Shem = Malki-Tzedek,
the "Priest", symbol of moral purity, see Gen. 9:23) was the sin
rectified through the mystery of
Rabbi Nachman of Breslov
stated that the main task of Mashiach is to rectify the spilling of seed.
* * *
".AND
HE WAS A SUCCESSFUL MAN"
The reason why Joseph was
"a successful man" (Gen. 39:2) was precisely because "HaShem was
with Joseph" (ibid.) -- "the name of Heaven was regularly on his
mouth" (Rashi ad loc.). Joseph had the power to see and find G-d even in
As the key figure in the
"generations of Jacob", Joseph had the same mission as his father:
the building of the archetypal holy HOUSE, as discussed in connection with the preceeding parshiyos. At first, Joseph dreams of being in
the FIELD, where all his brother's sheaves prostrate to him. Later Joseph
strays in the FIELD (Gen. 37:15). Yet at length his dream comes true in
The Children of Israel
are not disembodied souls. They are IN the material world, their task being to
elevate and spiritualize it. This is done through turning the mundane material
house into a HOME, a Sanctuary of G-d -- "and I will dwell within them"
(Exodus 25:8).
It is the moral integrity
of Joseph -- who succeeds in finding G-d even in Egypt, constriction, the
"back-side" -- that is the key to this house-making. As we will see
in next week's parshah of MIKETZ, Joseph knows the secret of material, economic
success (as exemplified in his successful management of the Egyptian economy
even in times of famine). Through the story of Joseph, the Torah teaches us
that the foundation of genuine long-term material success is moral purity and
integrity. Even when Joseph was faced with the supreme moral test -- alone in
the house with his master's wife tempting him day after day -- he set the
unchangeable Law of G-d before him: adultery is forbidden. "How could I do
this great evil and sin against G-d?" (Gen. 39:9).
Joseph observed G-d's law
despite the fact that this led to his incarceration in the king's prison and
his disgrace in the eyes of sophisticated
And so may our Chanukah
Lights light up the darkness of night, heralding GEULAH SHELEMAH, complete
redemption with Ben David Melech HaMashiach quickly in our times. Amen!
Shabbat Shalom!
Avraham Yehoshua Greenbaum
