Blessings From a Deathbed

Vayehi By :  Charles Savenor 91快播 Alum (Rabbinical School) Posted On Nov 22, 2007 / 5768 | Torah Commentary

Laying on his deathbed, Jacob beckons for his grandchildren, Ephraim and Manasseh. He wants to bless the sons of his beloved Joseph even before his own children, affirming the covenant of Abraham with the next generation.

Joseph brings in his sons and places them in their birth order to receive their blessings. Creating a scene reenacted every Shabbat, Jacob places his hands on these boys and commences his words of prayer.

The Torah reads: 鈥淏ut Israel stretched out his right hand and laid it on Ephraim鈥檚 head, though he was the younger, and his left hand on Manasseh鈥檚 head鈥攖hus crossing his hands鈥攁lthough Manasseh was the first born鈥 (Etz Hayim, Gen. 48:14).

Joseph urgently points out that Jacob has seemingly misplaced his hands by laying his right hand, the prominent hand, on the younger son. Joseph鈥檚 correction echoes Laban鈥檚 words to Jacob when he sought to marry Rachel before her older sister, Leah. Laban says, 鈥淚t is not the practice in our place to marry off the younger before the older鈥 (Etz Hayim, Gen. 29:26). Similarly, common practice dictates that the oldest son receives the first, and perhaps the best, blessing.

One might speculate that Jacob鈥檚 actions are related to his failing eyesight. We recall that this was one reason that Jacob himself was able to acquire the birthright blessing from Isaac. However, it would be myopic to understand this awkward moment tied to bad eyesight, when Jacob says: 鈥淚 know, my son, I know. He [Manasseh] too shall become a people, and he too shall be great. Yet his younger brother shall be greater than he, and his offspring shall be plentiful enough for nations鈥 (Etz Hayim, Gen. 48:19). The Midrash relates that Jacob鈥檚 actions are connected to a sudden prophetic encounter foreseeing the greater actions of Ephraim鈥檚 descendents than Manasseh鈥檚.

This exchange between Jacob and Joseph is more than a family struggle about authority. Repeated words, even letters, in the Torah inform us that more is taking place within our sacred text than meets the eye. In the aforementioned verse, when setting Joseph straight, Jacob says: 鈥Yadati beni yadati,鈥 which translates as 鈥淚 know, my son, I know.鈥 From the rest of the verse we comprehend this dying patriarch is explicitly aware of his action and the players around him. Yet he could have communicated this without saying 鈥淚 know鈥 twice.

This seemingly unnecessary repetition begs the question: why did Jacob say 鈥yadati鈥 twice? Furthermore, since yadati means 鈥淚 know,鈥 what does Jacob know that he wants to share with his family?

In our physical, mortal world, natural laws鈥攑hysics, time, and even family birth orders鈥攎atter. In the ancient world, and even in many cultures today, birth order determines one鈥檚 familial and societal rights and obligations. Similarly, in Judaism the bachor (the first born) occupies an esteemed position. When the Temple stood, first-born fruits and animals were considered the best sacrifices. Moreover, before the installation of the tribe of Levi as the caretakers of the Tabernacle, the firstborns had been originally intended to serve in this role.

By blessing the younger child first, Jacob teaches future generations a valuable lesson. On one level, Jacob imparts that one鈥檚 actions and character matter more than birth order in achieving success and determining one鈥檚 blessings in life. Not even their being blessed first guarantees their future success, for this episode is not limited to striving for a meritocracy.

Jacob鈥檚 first yadati (I know) refers to his firsthand knowledge and experience that life does not always unfold along a linear trajectory. As the psalmist proclaims, God鈥檚 greatness is ein heker, beyond our comprehension (Psalm 145). We see this pattern evidenced repeatedly in Genesis. Abraham, the youngest of three, receives the call from God. Isaac inherits the birthright over his older half brother, Ishmael. Jacob himself receives the birthright over his older twin brother, Esau. And Joseph, the son of the second wife, Rachel, is at the helm of the family, literally lording over his brothers, including Reuven, Jacob鈥檚 oldest son.

When dealing with faith and the covenant with the children of Abraham, human birth order and the normal rules of nature are not applicable. In other words, one鈥檚 birthright is not determined by one鈥檚 birth order. This represents the fundamental message of the entire Torah on familial and national levels.

That Jacob utters 鈥测补诲补迟颈鈥&苍产蝉辫;twice also signals to his descendants that the covenant of Abraham has entered a new phase. Earlier in Genesis, we find Abram鈥攃hildless at that time鈥攂eing addressed by God: 鈥淎nd He said to him, 鈥楰now well that your offspring shall be strangers in a land not theirs, and they shall be enslaved and oppressed four hundred years鈥欌 (Etz Hayim, Gen. 15:13). It is important to note that the expression 鈥渒now well鈥 actually appears as two words, 鈥yado鈥檃 tayda, in the Hebrew text. In both this verse and the one in Parshat Va-y鈥檋i,the Hebrew word for 鈥渒now鈥 appears twice when once would have sufficed.

The second yadati serves as a segue into the next chapter for the burgeoning Israelite nation. What Jacob knows is that the path ahead will be filled with hardship, slavery, and affliction, but salvation lies beyond that. Who could ever imagine that a slave people could leave, let alone be liberated from, their masters, the world鈥檚 superpower of the era? Yet the covenant of Abraham does not operate by the ordinary rules of political science.

In his 1898 essay 鈥淐oncerning the Jews,鈥 Mark Twain affirms this observation:

The Egyptian, the Babylonian, and the Persian rose, filled the planet with sound and splendor, then . . . passed away. The Greek and the Roman followed. The Jew saw them all, beat them all, and is now what he always was, exhibiting no decadence, no infirmities of age, no weakening of his parts . . . All things are mortal but the Jew; all other forces pass, but he remains. What is the secret of his immortality?

Two thousand years after Jacob鈥檚 deathbed scene, Twain marvels at the unfathomable sustained presence of the Jewish people, despite our tragedies and travails. Fifty years later, with the founding of the State of Israel, David Ben Gurion provides an answer to Twain鈥檚 query: 鈥淚n Israel, in order to be a realist, you must believe in miracles.鈥

Every Friday night, as Jewish parents reenact this ancient scene by embracing and blessing their children, they communicate that our deeds will shape the blessings we receive. Equally important, they share our patriarch Jacob鈥檚 knowledge that the covenant of Abraham means that the unexpected can happen at any time and bring salvation to our people and the whole world.

The publication and distribution of the 91快播 Commentary are made possible by a generous grant from Rita Dee and Harold (z鈥漧) Hassenfeld.