Seeing the Big Picture of Joseph’s Life

Vayiggash By :  Matthew Berkowitz Alum (RS), President of The Schechter Institutes, Inc., Former Director of Israel Programs, 91快播 Posted On Dec 19, 2012 / 5773

Over the past few weeks, we have been immersed in the story of Joseph, from the fateful gift of the striped robe, to his sale to the Ishmaelites and Midianites, to his imprisonment in Egypt, his meteoric rise, and finally the family reunion. Now we are witness to the emotional crescendo of the narrative with Joseph鈥檚 revelation to his brothers. He urges his brothers to come forward, and declares,

鈥淚 am your brother Joseph, he whom you sold into Egypt. Now, do not be distressed or reproach yourselves because you sold me hither; it was to save life that God sent me ahead of you . . . God has sent me ahead of you to ensure your survival on earth, and to save lives in an extraordinary deliverance. So it was not you who sent me here, but God.鈥 (Gen. 45:4鈥8)

In addition, Joseph urges his brothers to gather the family from Canaan and to come down to Egypt, where they will partake of the bounty of the land. What may we learn from Joseph鈥檚 moving revelation and his words to the brothers?

Everett Fox writes,

In revealing his true identity at last, Joseph makes two points: first, that it was all part of God鈥檚 plan; and second, that the family must immediately prepare for migration to Egypt. Thus the personal story is intertwined with the national one, and the text therefore gives limited time and space to psychological details. The motif of God鈥檚 plan is stressed by the repetition of 鈥淕od sent me鈥 (verses 5, 7 and 8), while the anticipated bounties of settling in Egypt are brought out by the threefold 鈥済ood things of Egypt鈥 (verses 18, 20 and 23) and by the repeated exhortation to 鈥渃ome鈥 (verses 18 and 19). (The Five Books of Moses, 212)

Fox is sensitive and masterful in interpreting the personal and national narratives. Joseph鈥檚 mature and deep reading of his life鈥檚 drama stands at the essence of our story: for it was God, not any human actor, who orchestrated the events that brought him down to Egypt. And more than that, it was not simply the descent of an individual. Now our eyes are opened to the real drama鈥攖he descent of a family and ultimately a nation. Egyptian bounty, we know well, will prove quite ephemeral. Those blessings will turn into bitterness as the Israelites become enslaved. Knowing the end that will result in freedom and a return to Israel is hatzi nechama, half comfort. Still, Joseph鈥檚 mature reading of his own life, combined with Everett Fox鈥檚 insight, allows the reader to stand back and see the big picture鈥攚ith deeper understanding of its piercing emotion and powerful context.

The publication and distribution of A Taste of Torah are made possible by a generous grant from Sam and Marilee Susi.