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Shabbat Shalom: Parshat Miketz Genesis 41:1-44:17
By Shlomo Riskin
Efrat, Israel -One of the strangest things about this week's portion of
MIKETZ is that it concludes right in the middle of one of the most
critical dialogues in the entire Torah. Benjamin, Rachel's youngest son,
has been accused by Joseph of stealing the Grand Vizier's silver goblet;
Judah rises to his brother's defense, but his argument is cut in half,
straddling his words between the end of MIKETZ and the beginning of
VAYIGASH. Is it simply a question of allowing the plot to thicken -stay
tuned till next week-or is there a far more significant reason why Judah's
defense is divided between two portions?
I would like to suggest that the splitting of the Judah/Joseph dialogue
reflects a new development in the on-going theological argument between the
brothers and Joseph. As we've noted in the past, the brothers were deeply
disturbed by Joseph's dream of sheaves of corn, his inner landscape linking
him to the agricultural landscape of Egypt rather than to the shepherding
landscape of Israel. Joseph's second dream about the sun, the moon, and
the stars, also stresses a universalism far removed from the confines of
the land of Israel, creating a stage where all the principals of this
cosmic drama bow down to Joseph.
They see him as a dangerous element, a threat to their traditional
occupation as shepherds, the occupation of the patriarchs. The life of the
shepherd allowed Abraham, Isaac and Jacob to serve G-d in prayer and
meditation, as well as transmit the traditions to the next generation. The
brothers' decision to do away with Joseph by selling him as a slave in
Egypt and telling their father that he had been torn by a wild beast was
based on the end justifying the means. After all, there was already a
precedent in the Torah for banishing troublesome brothers, whose life style
seemed not in accordance with the Abrahamic teachings. Why not-for the
sake of heaven-sell him as a slave! If their father seems blinded by his
love for Joseph - just as Isaac was blinded by his love for Esau - they had
to take G-d's work into their own hands and make certain that their
ego-centric Egypt-oriented brother not be given the mantle of future
leadership of the House of Israel. If their old father had to suffer grief
in the process - that too was an unfortunate but necessary price for the
"sake of heaven".
At the end of last week's portion of Miketz, the brothers are accused of
stealing the Grand Vizier's special silver goblet as part of a plot hatched
by Joseph. When his steward catches up with them, the brothers are so
convinced of their innocence they announce that if the goblet is found
amongst them, the thief shall be put to death and they shall be taken as
slaves.
Alas, the goblet is found in the knapsack of the youngest brother Benjamin,
casting a grim shadow on the brothers who tear their clothes in grief.
They return to the Grand Vizier, and in response to his accusation, Judah
utters a confession to another crime: "What shall we say unto my lord?
What shall we speak? Or how shall we clear ourselves? G-d has found out
our old guilt. Let us become your slaves, both we and he also in whose
hand the cup was found." (Genesis 44:16)
The 'old guilt' that Judah refers to is the sin of selling their brother
Joseph as a slave to the caravan of Ishmaelites. Judah accepts the truth
of Divine judgment; apparently, G-d was not pleased by what they did to
their brother. After all, ever since they arrived in Egypt seeking food,
something unusual has been going on. Accused of spying, Simon is held
hostage until they can prove the veracity of their history by bringing
their brother Benjamin to Egypt. And Simon was the ring-leader in the sale
of Joseph. Despite the risk to their father, they comply with the Grand
Vizier's command. Simon is released but with the discovery of the silver
goblet, the joyous reunion turns into a nightmare. For so much to go wrong
can only mean that G-d is punishing them for their earlier sin of selling
Joseph; 22 years later and the stain of blood on Joseph's coat is
apparently besmirching their hands. In beseeching the Grand Vizier to
enslave them all, we see how their minds are second-guessing G-d. Since
their sin was selling Joseph into slavery, they assume that what they must
do to make amends for their sin is for all of them to become slaves -
measure for measure.
Thus Judah addresses Joseph: "...G-d has found out the iniquity of your
servants. Behold we are my lord's slaves, both we and he in whose hand the
cup was found. (Genesis 44:16)." But Joseph doesn't care about the
'iniquity' of the brothers. Instead, "... the man in whose hand the goblet
is found, he shall be my slave; but as for you, get up in peace to your
father." (Genesis 44:17). The Grand Vizier is only interested in justice,
not revenge. The thief, and the thief alone, is to pay for his crime.
Our portion of Vayigash is not a simple continuation of Judah's plea,
divided into two portions for the purpose of suspense. Our Torah reading
begins with a dramatic shift in Judah's plea, more than justifying the
break between the portions. He foregoes the issue of enslaving the
brothers, concentrating instead on describing in pithy detail the events
that lead up to this moment. Now he stresses how his poor, old sick father
was made to suffer. "You asked if we still had a father or another brother.
We told you, we have a father who is very old." (Genesis 44:19) In the
next few verses, Judah uses the word 'father' fourteen times, the entire
speech to Joseph centering on the father.
Why has Judah switched tactics? If the Grand Vizier rejected enslavement
often brothers in favor of limited but strict judgement, why should he now
accept Judah's offer to be taken in place of Benjamin? Why does Judah
expect that Joseph will now let Benjamin go free? If Judah believes that
his descriptions of his old sick father can help, why didn't he mention
Jacob earlier? And when he initially declared that they would all be the
Grand Vizier's slaves, he obviously included Benjamin in the 'all.' Why
wasn't he worried about his sick old father then?
Once again, Judah was initially playing G-d when he began to speak and all
too often, individuals who believe they have a direct line to G-d take
things into their own hands in order to do what they know G-d wants
-without taking account the suffering they may be causing. In his
introduction to the Book of Genesis, Rav Zvi Yehuda Berlin (known as the
Netziv) writes that people can even commit wanton murder - and justify it
"for the sake of heaven". Hence despite the suffering which their old
father would once again experience were Benjamin not to return home, Judah
initially asks that they all be enslaved. He believes this is a necessary
punishment - "for the sake of heaven".
Fascinatingly enough, Joseph himself attempts never to second-guess G-d,
never to play the Divine. Indeed, his constant refrain is that "it's not
me, it's G-d!" He says it to his brothers and he says it to his fellow
prisoners.
When Judah, in last week's portion, speaks of slavery for all the brothers,
its because he has decided that G-d wants to punish them for the sake of
Joseph. Joseph's response is equally emphatic: no, don't second-guess G-d,
don't think you have all the answers. We must only operate in accord with
the due process of the law. Only the thief shall be enslaved. Joseph
understands that we must leave the ultimate punishment for past misdeeds to
G-d!
At the beginning of our portion, Judah now has learned his lesson. He too
has come to the realization that the collective guilt of the brothers must
be left to G-d. His major concern must be his father, and his filial
obligation to alleviate any future suffering. Therefore, instead of
offering all the brothers as slaves, he now offers only himself in exchange
for Benjamin. His case is built on facts-the history of how he personally
guaranteed Benjamin's safe return. And the tragedy of an old patriarch who
will lose both sons of his favorite wife if the Grand Vizier enslaves
Benjamin.
Let us not for a moment think that such a change of heart and attitude is
easy. After the death of Jacob, the brothers still fear Joseph, and they
make sure to tell him how before his death, their father Jacob left
instructions to Joseph. "Forgive I pray you now, the transgression of your
brethren and their sin." (Genesis 50:17) Joseph weeps and they weep, and
then they declare --in what turns out to be the final words they ever speak
to Joseph-- "Behold we are your slaves." (Genesis 50:18) If they seek
Joseph's forgiveness, why do they offer themselves as his slaves?
The Ohr Hachaim writes that 'lu' (in the verse 'lu yistamenu Yosef -" it
may be that Joseph will hate us") always means 'would that it would be,' I
wish it were so. I wish Joseph would hate us and punish us. We are eaten
up by guilt. Again they are playing G-d: they deserve to be punished. And
Joseph's answer encapsulates his vision of life: "Fear not, for I am not in
the place of G-d," (Genesis 50:20) I don't stand in G-d's place. We have
to do what's right, and what's just. We can't presume to cause pain for
the sake of heaven - not to our brothers, not to our father, and not even
to ourselves!
The fact is that Joseph was very different from his brothers, and should
not have been given the mantle of the first-born. Father Jacob came to
understand this: Judah receives the blessing of leadership, the sceptre of
Torah, the standard-bearer of the ingathering of the nations. But G-d has
a symphony - and in the Divine symphony, there is room for the political
and economic skills as well as the universalistic vision of a Joseph . He
will not be the conductor - but neither ought he be banished. And no one
dare take the law into his own hands "for the sake of heaven" without due
process.
Indeed, nothing leads more to the desecration of G-d's name than blind
fanaticism. According to the Netziv, the causeless hatred that destroyed
the Second Temple was the fact that everyone justified the most heinous
crimes "for the sake of heaven". Such an attitude makes one impervious to
change, blind to repentance. We dare not overlook fundamental laws of
brotherly love and filial piety in order to act as Cossacks of the
Almighty. First and foremost, G-d expects us to do that which is righteous
and good!
Shabbat Shalom.
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