Blessings From Love

Vayehi By :  Joel Alter JTS Alum (Rabbinical School), Rabbi, Congregation Beth Israel Ner Tamid (Milwaukee, WI); Former Director of Admissions, The JTS Rabbinical School and H. L. Miller Cantorial School Posted On Dec 25, 2015 / 5776 | Torah Commentary
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Given all that鈥檚 come before in Genesis, the Torah鈥檚 notice that Israel鈥檚 days are nearing their end brings dread. This stems not from fear of death, but a dread of blessing. The passing of a patriarch means that a scene of generational blessing is imminent. Experience tells us that these transitions are neither easy nor clean. Abraham accedes to God鈥檚 elevation of Isaac over his firstborn, Ishmael. Even though Ishmael will also be great even by the measure of 鈥渒eeping up with the Jacobs鈥 (he, too, will father twelve nations), God explicitly rejects Ishmael鈥檚 inheritance of God鈥檚 blessing. Worse still, Ishmael and his mother, Hagar, are banished in an unforgettable episode of rupture and vulnerability. The imperative of Isaac鈥檚 destiny as heir to the blessing cannot be denied, even at great pain.

In like manner, Jacob twice takes for himself blessings ostensibly reserved for his older twin. That his rightful inheritance was already established when he and his brother wrestled in Rebecca鈥檚 womb reads as small comfort because Esau鈥檚 pain is so palpable and radiates outward, damaging his whole family. While I鈥檓 blurring the distinction between the household inheritance that Jacob ladles into his own bowl and the Abrahamic blessing that he claims as a wolf in sheep鈥檚 clothing, the fact is that the imperative of Jacob鈥檚 destiny sunders the bonds of family. Against the threat of fratricide, Jacob flees into a long exile. Isaac and Rebecca take sides vis-脿-vis their sons and Esau tries to regain love he hadn鈥檛 known he鈥檇 lost.

By the time we get to Jacob鈥檚 adult family鈥攈is wives, their maidservants, their sons, and their daughter, blessing as such is not even on the table. Rather, in this family,the blessing of rank and status gets established as an expression of irrational love. The rivalries, deceit, and violence that mark every turn of the story of Jacob and his sons are one miserably failed attempt after another at compelling love (Jacob鈥檚, by Leah and Rachel) or destroying a beloved that cannot be had (Joseph, by Potiphar鈥檚 wife) or denying a beloved to another (Joseph, by his brothers). How many times in a single story can Joseph die a death of sorts on the road to realizing his destiny? How many times can Jacob be bereft of a child over the error of loving one overmuch?

It鈥檚 no wonder, then, that the reader feels dread in our parashah when Jacob is nearing death and word is somehow dispatched to Joseph alone, who presents himself at his father鈥檚 bed with his two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim. Indeed, the scene goes forward in as inauspicious way as we have come to expect: The favored son again gains his father鈥檚 special attention as he always has. Joseph learns that Jacob will exercise his prerogative and elevate Joseph鈥檚 sons through adoption to the same status (vis-脿-vis inheritance) as Joseph and his brothers (Gen. 48:5鈥6). Joseph鈥檚 鈥渢ake鈥 relative to his brothers is now doubled.

What follows is confusing, as it seems that Jacob鈥攈aving just adopted the boys鈥攕eems not to know who they are. 鈥淲ho are these boys?鈥 he asks in verse 8, to which Joseph responds: 鈥淭hey鈥檙e my sons, whom God gave me in this place [Egypt].鈥 With the seeming confusion cleared up, Jacob says, 鈥淏ring them to me that I may bless them.鈥

Scholars explain that the bumpy sequence in our passage results from the Torah editing together two different tellings of the same story. The commentator Keli Yakar, though, understands Jacob鈥檚 hesitation differently. He reads Jacob鈥檚 words to be elliptical鈥攁n unfinished sentence that when expressed in full reads thus: 鈥淛oseph, who are you bringing forward for a blessing? These boys are unworthy.鈥 Jacob鈥檚 entire life has been about destiny and the struggle to protect it. He is also a prophet. His comment derives from his knowledge that Ephraim鈥檚 descendants will include the evil kings of Israel Jeroboam and Ahab. 鈥淗ow,鈥 Jacob is wondering, 鈥渃ould I possibly invoke God鈥檚 blessing on these boys, knowing as I do who will come from them?鈥滼oseph replies, 鈥淭hey are my children. Whatever else may be true about them and their descendants they are my children and from my perspective they merit blessing.鈥

Joseph brings as proof the fact that God blesses Isaac when God knows that Isaac鈥檚 son Esau will bear descendants who include idol worshipers. In the Keli Yakar鈥檚 interpretation, Joseph counters his father鈥檚 resistance to blessing his sons by referencing the moment when God saves Ishmael, the rejected son. Ishmael lies dying of thirst in the wilderness (because God himself endorsed his banishment)! In that moment, Ishmael is an innocent. God does not leave him to die but, seeing him 讘旨址讗植砖讈侄专 讛讜旨讗-砖讈指诐, as he is and where he is, reveals to Hagar a well of water at hand from which she might save her son鈥檚 life and her own. (Gen. 21:17鈥19) In our scene at Jacob鈥檚 deathbed, Joseph tells his father that he must bless the boys. 鈥淭hey are my children and from my perspective they merit blessing. When it comes to blessing, who one is and where he is now is the only thing that matters. For all creatures are blessed by God. So of course you should bless them.鈥

The penultimate scene in Parashat Vayehi, and with it the Book of Genesis, is a heartbreaking moment of reconciliation. Jacob has died and Joseph鈥檚 brothers fear that Joseph will finally feel free to retaliate against them for their long ago cruelties toward him. In their panic, they resort to a lie (well, I鈥檓 not certain they鈥檙e lying, but it sure feels like it). They say that before Jacob died he conveyed to them that Joseph must forgive them their wrongs. Joseph weeps. He recognizes that the destiny that has driven his life and riven his family from the very first was from God and was for the good. It has placed him in exactly the position of superiority of which he dreamt as an adolescent. But the damage wrought in realizing that destiny lingers still. Seeking yet again to heal its wound, Joseph reassures his family that the grand, generational trajectory of that destiny鈥攚hich secured the establishment of the clan that will become the Children of Israel, God鈥檚 covenanted people鈥攄oes not wipe away the filial bonds upon which it is built. In Genesis 50:20 he recognizes that he was destined to sustain a vast nation. But in the next verse he speaks to the individual people, his brothers, standing before him: 鈥淔ear not. I will sustain you and your children.鈥 The Torah adds that 鈥淗e comforted them and spoke to their hearts.鈥

The magnanimity and fundamental kindness that close the book of Genesis resolve with peace and love the colliding trajectories of national destiny and family integrity we have tracked since Abram first quarreled with Lot. What has been a continual tear in the fabric of Abraham鈥檚 family is finally mended.

Judaism calls on us to live in response to the great imperatives of the 绿帽社 People, mindful of our covenantal responsibilities that in varying ways transcend time, space, autonomy, nationality, and more. Our answer to that call sometimes yields a 鈥渘o鈥 to other imperatives, and sometimes at great pain. Yet that very 鈥渘o鈥 must sometimes be checked by Joseph鈥檚 rejoinder to his father, Jacob: 鈥淭hey are my children. From my perspective, they merit blessing. They are blessed by God. So you bless them, too.鈥

The publication and distribution of the JTS Parashah Commentary are made possible by a generous grant from Rita Dee (锄鈥漧) and Harold Hassenfeld (锄鈥漧).