Friday, December 4, 2015

Links in a Chain

Vayeshev 
Genesis 37:1 - 40:23

Précis: The story of Joseph begins with the words, “And Jacob dwelt (vayeshev) in the land of his father’s sojournings.” We learn that Joseph is Jacob’s favorite son. Joseph receives the famous coat of many colors, and dreams strange dreams and relates them to his brothers and father, creating additional concern (jealousy) on their part. The sons conspire to do away with Joseph, but before he dies, they sell him into slavery. Jacob is devastated when the sons present evidence of Joseph’s “death.” 
            We then have an intervening story about Judah. He marries off his first son to Tamar. The son soon dies, and, the next son is married to the widow (“levirate marriage.”) The second son (Onan) dies, and Judah is loath to offer the third son. The widow dresses as a harlot, seduces Judah, becomes pregnant, and reveals herself to Judah as a woman wronged. He acknowledges her as a rightful daughter.
           The scene shifts back to Joseph, who is now a servant in the household of Potiphar, an Egyptian official. Potiphar’s wife attempts to seduce Joseph but he refuses her advances. She accuses him nonetheless of attempted rape, and Joseph is tossed into prison. There, he meets jailed servants of Pharaoh, for whom he interprets dreams successfully. When the chief butler is restored to his post, he promises to “remember” Joseph, but the parasha ends with the words, “but he forgot him.”

Gen. 37:1-2 “Now Jacob was settled in the land of his father’s sojourning, the land of Canaan. At seventeen years of age, Joseph tended the flocks with his brothers, as a helper to the sons of his father’s wives Bilhah and Zilpah. And Joseph brought bad reports of them to their father.”

            Professor Arnold Eisen, JTS Chancellor, suggests (JTS Torah Commentary 12/12/09) that the text is telling us that Joseph’s story, the lengthiest exposition in the Bible, belongs to Jacob. Jacob’s other children are not mentioned in this genealogy, and as Eisen adds, “Something more than DNA alone is being transmitted from Jacob to Joseph.”
            One lesson we learn from this passage is that our stories don’t begin with us and they don’t end with us. We inhabit a place in a long chain of people, stretching to distant places and times both before and after us, whether through our children or through those we influence during our lifetimes.
            A second lesson we can glean from this parasha is that like Jacob, we who are blessed to live in America are truly settled in the “land of our fathers’ sojourning” a fact which marks our generation as exceptional. Jacob’s descendants had to endure centuries of enslavement in Egypt, where, remarkably, they maintained their cultural and spiritual identity.
            The irony is that there has never been a time nor place where Jews are more free to abandon their heritage than in 21st century America. Not only do we have the freedom “to” observe our faith and customs; we have (as Jews have rarely ever had) the right to seek freedom “from” what has made us and our ancestors distinct.
            Whether we choose to be part of a chain stretching back to Joseph and Jacob and add to those links in the future is perhaps the greatest test of freedom we face. It is also a challenge to remind ourselves about on the Shabbat just before the beginning of Chanukah.

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