Pawns
in Divine Hands
Parshas Miketz
Posted on December 5, 2018 (5779) By Rabbi Berel Wein
| Series: Rabbi Wein | Level: Beginner
In this
week’s Torah reading, we read of the dreams of the Pharaoh of Egypt. The Torah
does not identify who this Pharaoh was. We know nothing about him, we know
nothing as to how he became the Pharaoh. He is a complete mystery, yet he is
the catalyst for everything that will happen. He will be the one who has Joseph
released from prison. He is the one that will make Joseph the viceroy of Egypt.
In that regard, and because of the dreams that he had, the famine comes to the
entire area of the middle east and Joseph and his brothers enact the final
drama of their relationship and of the building of the people of Israel.
It is
interesting to note that throughout the Bible there are characters who are
central to the story but who are basically anonymous. We do not know who they
are and why they act as they do. We do not know if they are aware of the
central role that they are playing in the history of civilization and of the
Jewish people. From everything that we can read and understand, it seems that
they are oblivious as to their role. They are behaving as ordinary human beings
in what they think are ordinary circumstances and are unaware that somehow
cosmic events are occurring because of them.
The Pharaoh
simply wants to have a bad dream interpreted. He is not interested and may not
even know, regarding the house of Jacob in the land of Israel, nor of the fact
that there is a young Hebrew that is a prisoner in one of his dungeons. All he
wants is to have his anxieties relieved by having some sort of interpretation
of his frightening dream. Here we have a glimpse into how Heaven, so to speak,
interferes and guides – without notice – the events of human beings and of
civilization.
This is
the nature of human life. We always concentrate on the trees and most of the
time we’re not even aware that there is a forest. What looks to us to be small
and insignificant choices are really magnified because of their effect upon
others and upon history. The Pharaoh of Egypt does not realize that he is the
center of a drama that will remain cogent and important for thirty-seven
hundred years. He is not aware as to what his true role in the matter is. So,
he just acts as a normal human being. Nevertheless, it is noteworthy to see how
quickly he raises Joseph. He could just have said, “Well, thank you for the
interpretation of the dream.” He could have just, if he wanted to be
magnanimous, freed Joseph from jail.
But here,
he elevates him. He makes him second in command of the Egyptian empire. He
believes that Joseph is so talented and that the dream is so real that he must
act in order to implement it. This, already, is the hand of Heaven. This points
out to us how the divine will, so to speak, pushes human beings into behavior
that is not quite logical, but that, in retrospect, is important, eventful, and
meaningful. And that is really an important lesson that all of us should take
to heart because there are no inconsequential actions of human beings.
Everything that we do, everything that we say, counts and is recorded for good
or for better.
Shabbat
shalom.
Rabbi Berel Wein
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