Honoring Teachers
Vayetzei
By :
David Levy 91快播 Alum (Rabbinical School, List College)
Posted On Nov 26, 2011 / 5772 | Midrash: Between the Lines
讘专讗砖讬转 驻专拽 讻讞 驻住讜拽 讬讙
讜职讛执谞值旨讛 讬职讛止讜指讛 谞执爪指旨讘 注指诇指讬讜 讜址讬止旨讗诪址专 讗植谞执讬 讬职讛止讜指讛 讗直诇止讛值讬 讗址讘职专指讛指诐 讗指讘执讬讱指 讜值讗诇止讛值讬 讬执爪职讞指拽 讛指讗指专侄抓 讗植砖侄讈专 讗址转指旨讛 砖止讈讻值讘 注指诇侄讬讛指 诇职讱指 讗侄转职旨谞侄谞指旨讛 讜旨诇职讝址专职注侄讱指:
诪讚专砖 讛讘讗讜专
讜讛诇讗 讬爪讞拽 讗讘讬讜? 讗诇讗 讘砖讘讬诇 砖诇诪讚讜 转讜专讛 拽专讗讜 讗讘讬讜 诇诇诪讚讱 砖讻诪讜 砖讛讘谉 诪讻讘讚 讗转 讗讘讬讜 讻讱 讛转诇诪讬讚 诪讻讘讚 讗转 专讘讜
This little midrash carries big significance for us as modern readers. Picking up on the surprising mention of Abraham as Jacob’s father, we learn an important lesson about the roles different people can play in our lives. Each of us who has been taught by someone is obliged to honor him/her as we would our parents. And the extension of this teaching is that each of us has the potential to play this important role in someone else’s life. No matter our family situation, each of us has a job to do in “parenting” the next generation. We all need to find ways to share our gifts and teach others so that they may lead in the future. In that way our legacies live on regardless of how many children we have, and even if we have none at all.
The extension of this is found at the end of the pasuk. God tells Jacob that he will give the land to his offspring. Of course, we could contort this text to mean that only those who are direct descendants of Jacob have a share in the covenant. However, by understanding Abraham, who is not Jacob’s father, to be his father by virtue of teaching him, we create room for all those who wish to join the covenant. The covenant can be entered by learning, and this tradition is beautifully carried on today by Jews by choice, who call themselves in Hebrew ben/bat Avraham Avinu (son/daughter of Abraham our father). Abraham is their father in the sense that in converting they have studied his lessons and joined in his destiny.
May it be our blessing that we all rear students, and remember, Abraham is father to all of us because we have learned from him to be in covenant with God.