PARASHAT
VAYETZE
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In
memory of Szore Rivkah Kitay of Lakewood, New
Jersey, whose yahrzeit will be on Kislev 6. - from those
who remember her.
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The yeshiva
wishes a very warm mazal tov to our Rosh Yeshiva Harav Aharon Lichtenstein and
his wife Dr. Tovah Lichtenstein on the birth of their granddaughter Tamah,
daughter to Oded and Tony Mittelman. May they be zocheh to raise her le-Torah,
le-chuppa, u-le-maasim tovim!
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The Dream of the Ladder
By Rav Tamir Granot
The opening section of Parashat Vayetze, known as "The Dream of
the Ladder," actually contains two distinct subjects, to each of which the Torah
accords importance:
1.
the dream itself, in terms of its
content
2.
the place where the dream takes place, and
that which is destined to happen there
The
dream itself may be divided into three parts
a.
The vision: "Behold, a ladder was standing on
the ground, with its head reaching to the heavens, and behold angels of God
were ascending and descending on it."
b.
The bestowing of the blessing of the
forefathers upon Yaakov: "I am the Lord God of Avraham your father, and the God
of Yitzchak; the land
." This blessing contains a clear repetition of the
blessings given to Avraham as he left Charan and on the east of Beit El, the
blessings given with the name YKVK.
c.
A personal promise: "Behold, I am with you"
a promise that is apparently meant not only in the general sense (protection,
etc.) but that the Divine Presence will accompany Yaakov. This is seemingly a reference to
revelation and prayer, which God promises will be available to Yaakov wherever
he goes.
"And
I will guard you wherever you go" protection against personal harm (Eisav) as
well as monetary loss (Lavan),
"And
I shall return you to this land" the tangible fulfillment of the promise to
Avraham, to be realized not only by his descendants, but by him himself. This is
a return to the mission entrusted to him by Rivka to escape from Eisav, and a
promise that ultimately her efforts and actions will bear fruit. It is also a
return to the mission given to him by Yitzchak, its purpose being marriage, in
accordance with the prototype established by Avraham: "Only do not take my son
back there."
"For
I shall not leave you until I have performed all that I have spoken to you" a
concluding phrase of summary and reinforcement, defining the horizon of the
promise, and returning to the introduction "with you" (Until when? Until I
have performed
).
When
Yaakov awakens, he addresses both aspects of the dream.
The
vision of the ladder: "How awesome is this place; this can only be the house of
God, and this is the gateway to heaven." This, apparently, is the simple
explanation of the vision of the ladder, supplied by Yaakov himself; this must
be the gateway to heaven because it is here that the ladder reaching to heaven
stands, and therefore the place itself has special significance. The placement
of the monument thereafter, and the oath to establish a house for God along
with giving the place a name all demonstrate that the revelation of the
importance of the place is central in Yaakov's eyes.
The personal promise: "If God will be with me
" An examination of
Yaakov's statement here shows that he addresses God's promise directly, and
turns His unconditional promise into a conditional one:
|
God's Promise |
Yaakov's Version |
|
Behold,
I am with you |
If
God will be with me |
|
And
I shall guard you wherever you go |
And
guard me ON THIS ROAD which I am taking |
|
|
AND
GIVE ME BREAD TO EAT AND A GARMENT TO WEAR |
|
And
I shall return you to this land |
And
I return in peace TO MY FATHER'S HOUSE |
|
For
I shall not leave you until I have fulfilled that which I have spoken to
you |
|
|
|
Result
1: "The Lord will be my God |
|
|
Result
2: and this stone which I have placed as a monument will be a house of
God |
|
|
Result
3: And all that You give me I shall surely tithe to
You. |
A
comparison between Yaakov's oath and God's promise shows that Yaakov repeats
God's words as noted above as a condition for his oath, although he also
alters a few details. Yaakov in no way addresses the blessings of Avraham which
have just been bestowed upon him, and it appears that the changes that he
introduces in his repetition of God's promise to guard him personally reflect a
similar perception.
God's
promise to Yaakov, in fact, complements the bestowing of the blessing upon
Avraham. The first part is uttered with the pathos and style reminiscent of the
previous occasions of blessing. But the unique context of the present blessing
Yaakov's flight from his home demands an addition, with God promising Yaakov
that He will protect him so that he will be able, in the future, to receive
Avraham's blessing. Indeed, the conclusion of God's words testifies to this
intention:
"For
I shall not leave you until I have fulfilled that which I have spoken to you."
This clause, which is the purpose and cause of God's promise, is missing
from Yaakov's words. Yaakov fails to make the connection between the individual
promise and the general one. His oath is that of a man in trouble, who prays for
deliverance and for success on his way. This is further evidenced both by his
addition, "And give me bread to eat and clothes to wear" an individual,
practical request, and by the change that he introduces, "And protect me on this
road which I am walking" in other words, the prayer is concrete and directed
towards Divine protection on this journey/flight. God tells him, "I shall
protect you wherever you go" in other words, He gives him a promise of
perpetual protection that is bound up with the national blessing that is being
passed down to him from Avraham. Furthermore, God says, "I shall return you to
this land" meaning that He will ensure the essential conditions for the
fulfillment of Avraham's blessing for Yaakov. Yaakov, on the other hand,
concludes his condition, "And I return in peace to my father's house." It is not
the national promise of the land that is his principal concern, but rather the
success of his personal endeavor to be able to return home in peace, despite
Eisav.
Yaakov's changes obviously arouse our surprise: why does Yaakov have a
problem with accepting the Divine promise in full? Even more problematically
why does Yaakov need to make a promise, given to him directly from God by
prophecy, into a conditional oath? Clearly, a person who is in trouble promises
to bring a sacrifice, etc., because he cannot be assured of God's help. But
surely someone who has received God's word has no need for all of this?!
Moreover,
the result of the oath is three-fold:
a.
"The Lord will be my God"
b.
establishment of a house for God from the
monument
c.
a tithe
The
latter two promises seem logical. The second speaks of revealing the importance
of the site; the third is the essence of the oath the promise to give
something to God.
But the first promise is difficult to understand as several of the
commentators note. Can acceptance of the Lord as God be presented as the result
of fulfillment of a condition? Does Yaakov perhaps heaven forefend not
accept the Lord as God? Is the previous revelation not sufficient; must
acceptance of God be made conditional?
It seems that these questions require that we re-think the essence of
Yaakov's dream.
There can be no doubt that the central part of the dream is the conveying
of Avraham's blessing. If God were to reveal Himself and convey only that
blessing, there would be no difficulty as indeed was the case with both
Avraham and Yitzchak. The vision of the ladder and the private promise are
exceptional and require explanation. It appears that the dream must be
understood against the background of the national perception of Divinity that
was prevalent in ancient times. Yaakov, heading away from his home, knows that
in Charan there are other gods. Will he be forced to accept their divinity? If
this were a journey for a limited time only, the question would not arise. But
Yaakov is going to live somewhere else for an undefined period. The crux of the
private promise is that God will protect him outside of the land, too - not only
in Eretz Yisrael. In other words, Yaakov is not obligated to the gods of
the land in which he finds himself, but only to the God of Israel. Thus, the
purpose of the revelation is two-fold:
a.
To teach Yaakov that the gateway to heaven is
in Eretz Yisrael Beit-El (literally, the "House of
God").
b.
To teach Yaakov that God's Providence extends
not only throughout the Land of Israel, but that it exists everywhere; Yaakov is
protected wherever he goes. Thus, God directs Yaakov by means of the dream
to regard his journey as temporary.
Hence,
the essence of the significance of the dream straddles two dialectical
foundations:
a.
The house of God and the gateway to heaven
are here, in Canaan.
b.
God's Providence and His Divinity extend
everywhere.
How
does Yaakov relate to these messages?
Yaakov undoubtedly understood what he was being told after all, he
repeats God's words. But why does he not accept them unreservedly?
In order to answer this question we must turn our attention to the nature
of the experience that Yaakov undergoes. He dreams a dream. We know that Yosef's
dreams, which occur later on in Chapter 37, are greeted with ambivalence on
Yaakov's part. Is there truth in a dream? In other words, is a dream the
manifestation of the innermost thoughts of the dreamer, or is it a medium for
Divine revelation? It appears that Yaakov is uncertain. It must be remembered
that at this stage Yaakov is still a prophetical "novice"; he has never before
experienced prophecy. In wake of the dream he asks himself whether it is God who
showed him a ladder, or whether it was an invention of his own mind. Did God
speak to him in a dream, telling him everything that he heard, or did he just
dream it?
There is no doubt that Yaakov understood his dream to be a prophetical
experience: "Indeed, God exists in this place." But, like other prophets, he is
not convinced of the full significance of his experience. Yaakov's reaction
testifies to this uncertainty. "If God will be with me" in other words, if
indeed that which God has said is realized, then I will know God really spoke
with me. Thus, Yaakov turns God's promise into a condition not because he
casts doubt on God's reliability, but because he has some doubt that God in fact
spoke to him and told him these things. If it is all realized in the future, he
will know that it was God's word that was revealed to him.
An example of a similar process is to be found, for example, in the case
of Yirmiyahu:
Yirmiyahu
said: God's word came to me, saying,
"Behold,
Hanamel, son of Shalum, your uncle, will come to you, saying, 'Purchase my field
which is in Anatot, for you have the right of redemption, to buy it.'"
And
Hanamel, my uncle's son, came to me as God had spoken to the courtyard of
the guard, and said to me, "Please buy my field which is in Anatot, in the land
of Binyamin, for you have the right of inheritance; you can redeem it. Buy it
for yourself." THEN I KNEW THAT IT HAD BEEN GOD'S WORD. (Yirmiyahu
32:6-8)
Yirmiyahu
describes a prophecy that he had, whose content was very strange. Why was God
commanding him to buy a field, and why in the midst of the siege, a moment
before the destruction? But, when his cousin indeed approaches him, as promised
in the prophecy, then he reports, "I knew that it had been God's word." In other
words, beforehand, he had not been certain that God had indeed spoken these
words to him; the reality verified the prophecy.
In light of the above, let us now examine Yaakov's promises:
"Then the Lord will be my God" - If God indeed protects me, even outside
of Eretz Yisrael, then I shall know that He is not only the God of this
Land, but that He is God everywhere apparently also in the sense of the God of
the family and, in the future, the God of the nation. This is a very important
stage in the development of faith among the forefathers. Yitzchak is forbidden
to leave the Land, while Avraham tells his servant, "only do not take my son
back to there" meaning that Divine service can take place only in the Land.
Avraham's journey to Eretz Yisrael should be viewed in the same light.
God commands him to leave Babylon/Aram Naharayim and go to Eretz Yisrael,
because that is the place of His Divinity. One may ask: why does the God of
another Land appear to a person in his homeland (Avraham is a Semite, not a
Canaanite) and promise to bless him in His land? The answer is undoubtedly
related to what we have said above: God chooses Avraham to be his God in the
personal sense and not only in the territorial sense. Attention should be paid
to the fact that the idea of Divinity is garbed in a dual and dialectic
garment:
-
There is a God of place
-
There is a God of
person/family/nation.
In
general, these two dimensions coincide. The god of the land of Babylon (as its
inhabitants see it) is also the god of the Babylonians. But in the case of our
forefathers, a split was created, for the people in question were not living in
their Land; and it is for this reason, of course, that God sends Avraham away
from his country so as to rule over him and fulfill His promises to him in his
proper place.
When Yaakov flees to Charan, the opposite occurs. He is forced to do what
his father Yitzchak never did, and what his grandfather Avraham had warned
his servant not to do: to leave the Land for a protracted period. From the point
of view of the ancient religions, this meant entering the realm of a foreign
divinity. This appears to be the principal significance of God's personal
promise to Yaakov.
·
The general promise says that Yaakov and his
descendants will rule over God's Land.
·
The personal promise means that the Lord will
be the God of Yaakov and of his descendants in the personal sense, too; i.e.,
even outside of the Land of Israel. This is a development of great importance in
the perception of faith.
Yaakov
answers and says: If God will indeed protect me even outside of the land, and
will fulfill His word to me, then "the Lord will be my God." Meaning, I will
accept Him as my God in the absolute, personal sense, too - not only as the God
of the Land, but as my God and the God of my descendants for all generations.
The emphasis is on the word "my." I know that the Lord is the God of the Land,
but if His word is fulfilled then He will be MY God, in the absolute sense,
everywhere.
Indeed, further on in the parasha the Torah tells us that Yaakov
discovers in Charan that God's Providence watches over him there, too in the
form of prophecy, and in the form of protection.
"Behold
I am with you" in prophecy:
"God
said to Yaakov: Return to the land of your forefathers and to your birthplace,
and I shall be with you."
In
this verse we find an echo of the command to Avraham, "Go forth from your land
and from your birthplace and from your father's house." To Yaakov, God adds,
"And I shall be with you," which is clearly connected to the words in His
original promise, "Behold I am with you."
What about the promise of protection: "I shall guard you wherever you
go
"; "and [God] gives me bread to eat and a garment to wear"?
We
find explicitly in the verses:
"Your
father has deceived me and changed my wages ten times, but God has not allowed
him to harm me.
If
he said, "Your wages will be the speckled ones" then all the sheep bore
speckled young; if he said, "Your wages will be your wages" then all the sheep
bore speckled.
Thus
God took your father's cattle and gave it to me." (Bereishit 31:7-9)
Then
evidence of prophecy, once again:
"An
angel of God said to me in a dream, 'Yaakov!' and I said, 'Here I am.'
He
said, 'Lift up your eyes and see: all the rams arising over the herd are
streaked, speckled and grizzled for I have seen everything that Lavan is doing
to you.
I
am the God of Beit-El, where you anointed a monument and swore an oath to Me;
now, arise, leave this land, and return to the land of your birthplace.'"
(11-13)
And
once again protection:
God
came to Lavan the Aramean in a dream at night, and said to him: "Take heed not
to speak to Yaakov either good or bad." (24)
Let
us now return to Yaakov's oath:
The second part of the oath brings us back to the first principle: the
territorial aspect. If indeed it turns out that God's word as I dreamed it was
true, and that the vision that I experienced was a genuine one, then I shall
make of this monument a House of God. In other words, the place where I dreamed
about God will be like a gateway to heaven a place of Divine service.
Attention should be paid to the fact that it is only when Yaakov comes to
fulfill his promise in Beit-El, upon his return from Charan, that he commands
his children and the members of his household to rid themselves of their foreign
gods. These are the idols of Lavan's house, which are certainly foreign. But
until this point Yaakov had not accepted the Lord as God in the absolute sense,
over himself and his household. In other words, it is possible that other forms
of divine worship would also take place at that site. The acceptance of the Lord
as God as he promised in his oath required the removal of any trace of
paganism. Indeed, Yaakov does this; he goes to Beit-El and builds an altar,
thereby fulfilling his promise to make Beit-El a place of Divine worship.
Yaakov is the first among the forefathers who swears, "the Lord will be
my God." Why do we find no similar commitment uttered by Avraham or Yitzchak?
Why does this promise arise only from Yaakov?
Avraham and Yitzchak did not face the test of exile. Admittedly, Avraham
had to go to Egypt, but this was a temporary measure. Yaakov left the Land of
Israel with the intention of settling in Charan. Hence, it is Yaakov who
establishes the possibility of Jewish existence even outside of the Land of
Israel. Later on, he himself returns to exile to Egypt. The twenty years he
spends in Charan and his seventeen final years in Egypt become, in fact, the
framework of his life and the crux of its message. Yaakov's unique religious
contribution is the possibility of existence in exile, and the understanding
that God's Providence over him and his descendants is universal. Eretz
Yisrael is the focal point from which he and we emanate, and to which we
return, but the service of God and the acceptance of His Kingship are not
dependent upon it.
By fulfilling his promise and oath, Yaakov makes God for all future
generations not only the God of the Land of Israel, but also the God of Am
Yisrael, wherever they may find themselves.
"And
God will be King over all the earth; on that day God will be One, and His Name
will be One."
Translated
by Kaeren Fish