Genesis 44:18-47:27 – Ezekiel 37:15-28 – John 4:5-26
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Vayyigash
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Parashat Vayyigash
1. Who is Joseph according to this week's parasha? What spiritual lessons can we
learn from Joseph's example?
David Nichol
In our parasha, after the reconciliation
between Joseph and his brothers, we find Jacob setting out toward Egypt to be reunited with his long-lost son Joseph and
escape the famine that is starving his home of Canaan and the rest of the region. As he leaves, God appears to him in a
dream and gives him a message:
"Jacob! Jacob!" He answered, "Here." He said, "I am God, the
God of your father. Fear not to go down to Egypt,
for I will make you there into a great nation. I myself will go down with you
to Egypt, and I
myself will also bring you back; and Joseph's hand shall close your eyes."
Genesis
46:2-4
This vision raises some
questions. First, we know that Jacob in fact dies in Egypt. Is God's promise to bring him back referring to
his burial in Canaan beside his fathers (50:7-14) or is it referring to
when his descendants, the nation of Israel, are brought back four hundred years later? Along
these lines, Nehama Leibowitz (New
Studies in Genesis, 500), following Abarbanel, points out that before God
says, "Fear not," we have no reason to believe that Jacob is afraid at all. He
is going to see his beloved son, who he has just found out to be still living.
Moreover, Joseph is vice-regent of all Egypt (outranked only by Pharoah himself!), so the
family's material needs will be provided for. Why should he be afraid? Leibowitz quotes the Ha‘emek Davar:
Jacob was afraid that his
seed would be absorbed by the Egyptian nation. Only in the land of Israel could the unique Jewish spark be preserved down the ages. It was on this
score the Almighty reassured him: "Fear not, for there I shall make of thee a
great nation." Our Sages interpreted the phrase "great nation" to imply that
the Jews would preserve their national identity, and not be absorbed into Egypt.
quoted in Leibowitz,
507
The Sages take very seriously the danger that Israel
would be absorbed into Egypt
and lose their distinctiveness as a nation. They credit the children of Israel
with much spiritual endurance to maintain their identity for four hundred years
in a hostile ("narrow") place. Similarly, Abraham and Isaac had taken steps to
prevent their sons from intermarrying with the Canaanites, and even Jacob
apparently discouraged intermarriage with the neighboring peoples (Exodus
34:8-11). Joseph even acted to keep his relatives isolated in the region of
Goshen when he advised his brothers to report their occupation to Pharaoh as
shepherds, an occupation "abhorrent" to the Egyptians (Genesis 46:34).
The life of Joseph is instructive in this matter.
Why does Joseph, ostensibly the hero of the story, not have a tribe named after
him among the tribes of Israel?
We are reminded of the interesting scene where the brothers have lunch in
Joseph's house. Because the Egyptians will not eat with the Hebrews (Genesis
43:32), Joseph eats by himself, his Egyptian associates by themselves, and his
brothers by themselves. Joseph finds himself between the Israelite and Egyptian
worlds, but not deeply part of either. By adopting an Egyptian name (41:43), an
Egyptian wife, and Egyptian dress (42:8), has he given up or forfeited his
Jewish identity? Were Jacob's tears on his neck partially tears of sadness,
because his son looked like a foreigner (46:29; Ramban and Rashi disagree on
whether it is Jacob or Joseph who is weeping)?
The narrative answers this question with a qualified
"no." While there may remain some
emotional, or perhaps cultural, distance between Joseph and his brothers (see
Genesis 50:15), and he does not live with them in Goshen,
his sons, Ephraim and Menasheh, have Hebrew names, and Joseph is, in the end,
buried in Canaan (Exodus 13:19).
So Joseph, a key part of God's providential working
to forge a nation out of the 70 of Jacob's family who went down to Egypt,
appears up close as a somewhat conflicted character, maintaining identities in
two disparate worlds. In this way, he
reflects a struggle that is common to all Jews. Perhaps this is especially true
of those of us living in the galut,
or outside of Eretz Yisrael, but even
in the Land we know that there is a galut
that encompasses the whole world, and from which we will not be gathered until
our Mashiach gathers us into complete redemption. May we, like Joseph did in
the end, find our way back to our home one day.
2. Jewish tradition talks about two Messiahs: Mashiach ben
David, the royal Messiah, and Mashiach ben Yosef, the suffering Messiah (b. Sukka 52a). How does the life of
Joseph foreshadow the life of Messiah?
Nick Amic
In Jewish tradition the "sufferings" of Mashiach ben
Yosef occur in three stages: 1. rejection; 2. humiliation & degradation; 3.
assumption of others' wrongs. These three stages are followed by a fourth stage
which culminates them all - exaltation. With the fourth stage, we come to the
"second" Messianic personage - Mashiach ben David. How is Joseph's life a
picture of each aspect of suffering of the Messiah?
Let's begin first with a brief recounting of the
story. Our story opens up with the Torah's immediate connection of Joseph to
Jacob: "These are the generations of Jacob: when Joseph was seventeen years
old" (Genesis 37:2). It is quite clear that Joseph is favored and thus also
given prophecy. He shares this prophecy with his brothers who immediately
conspire to kill him. Although, there are those who speak out in his defense
(37:21-22), they place him in a pit and leave him to die. He was then taken, placed
in prison and numbered among the transgressors. Every step along the way Joseph
encounters unwarranted suffering. On the subject of Joseph's suffering Rabbi
Hillel Shklover, the grand-nephew and disciple of the famous Vilna Gaon offers
an amazing insight from a section of Qol
Hator listing 156 aspects of Mashiach ben Yosef:
Yosef
recognized his brothers, but they did not recognize him -- This is one of the
traits of Yosef not only in his own generation, but in every generation, i.e.,
that Mashiach ben Yosef recognizes his brothers, but they do not recognize him.
This is the work of Satan, who hides the characteristics of Mashiach ben Yosef
so that the footsteps of the Mashiach are not recognized and are even belittled
because of our many sins. Otherwise, our troubles would already have ended.
Were Israel to recognize Yosef, that is, the footsteps of ben Yosef
the Mashiach which is the ingathering of the exiles etc., then we would already
have been redeemed with a complete redemption.
Qol Hator,
Chapter 2, Aspect #39
It is obvious that Joseph was degraded and left to
be "slain" (b. Sukka 52a). Yet, there
is an additional aspect that has heretofore not been considered-the actions of
Mashiach ben Yosef himself. It is on a deeper level that Joseph and Mashiach
ben Yosef are connected. Joseph's descent into Egypt
can be likened unto the descent of of Messiah. Like Joseph, he took "the form
of a bond-servant" and "humbled himself" (Philippians 2:7-8). Both Joseph and
Yeshua ben Joseph came to be exalted - one over all of Egypt,
the other over all of creation (Philippians 2:9).
Andrea Hoffrichter
John 4:5-26 – The True Substance of
Worship
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- PARASHAT VAYYECHI
Genesis 47:28-50:26
1 Kings 2:1-12
John 6:30-51
UPCOMING YACHAD NETWORK EVENTS
4th Annual Young Leaders Shabbaton
New
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June 2008
7th Annual Young Messianic Jewish
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June 2008
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