Not
Enough Time
Parshas Vayeitzei
Posted on December 2, 2022 (5783) By Rabbi
Yaakov Menken | Series: Lifeline | Level: Beginner
This week’s reading
provides what seems, in an initial, superficial view, to be a romantic account.
When Yaakov (Jacob) sees Rachel, he gains superhuman strength, single-handedly
rolling away the cover of a well, a stone that ordinarily took a team of shepherds
to move, in order to water her father Lavan’s flock (Gen. 29:10). He kisses
her, and, overwhelmed with emotion, he cries.
But when we look more
deeply, we realize that some elements of the story don’t seem to fit.
Yaakov only approaches
Rachel after he waters the flock, prioritizing the sheep over his intended
bride. And later, when he and Lavan arrange that he will work for seven years
for the privilege of marrying Lavan’s daughter, the Torah records that those
seven years seemed to Yaakov “like individual days, due to his love for her”
(29:20). Seven years passed by in a hurry, as if they were only a few days.
That, of course, is simply
not how the story is supposed to go. When you are waiting for your wedding day,
or any big event, you want the big day to arrive—a few days are more likely to
feel like seven years than vice-versa. So any romantic tale would have had the
protagonist at the limits of his endurance, agonizing over the time separated
from his bride to be. Why, in reality, did Yaakov perceive the seven long years
as if they were just a few days?
All of us have, at various
points, prepared for tests. And we all know that when you aren’t done studying,
the time remaining feels too short. We might have two weeks to prepare for
finals, but they seem like just a few days if we don’t feel we know the
material well enough.
Yaakov knew that he was
going to become the third of the patriarchs. He had purchased the right of the
firstborn, and received the blessings of his father. Now, he was going to marry
his bride and begin building the Jewish nation. He spent those seven years
preparing himself, working on himself. He was not merely waiting to be married,
but preparing for a momentous opportunity and obligation. And that is why the
years flew by.
The truth is that every
parent should look at child-rearing as the tremendous opportunity and
obligation that it actually is. Yaakov modeled this for us, simply with his
attitude. To him, seven years of preparing for this critical role felt like a
few days, as he prepared to be the father he was destined to be.
That
Fallen Tree
Parshas Vayeitzei
Posted on December 2, 2022 (5783) By Rabbi Label
Lam | Series: Dvar
Torah| Level: Beginner
And Yaakov left
Beer-Sheva, and he went to Charan. (Brieshis 28:10)
And Yaakov left: Scripture
had only to write: “And Yaakov went to Charan.” Why did it mention his
departure? But this tells [us] that the departure of a righteous man from a
place makes an impression, for while the righteous man is in the city, he is
its beauty, he is its splendor, he is its majesty. When he departs from there,
its beauty has departed, its splendor has departed, its majesty has departed… Rashi
There seems to be an
obvious oddity in this explanation of Rashi. Why is
the departure of the Tzadik emphasized? Why not highlight and showcase the time
that he was actually there? Let us try on a few approaches.
My visceral response to
this question sends me way back to the old song by Joni Mitchel from so many
years ago. Whatever she was singing about is one thing, and it may not be
scripture but there may be a kernel of the eternal in her words. “You don’t
know what you’ve got till it’s gone. They paved paradise and put up a parking
lot.” There she said it.
Sometimes we only realize
the value of someone or something when it is no longer. How often is that the
case, with loved ones, health, youth, and many other transient aspects of
life!? So, when the Tzadik leaves, the impression is felt. The citizens of that
locale wake up to the realization of who they had in their midst.
The Talmud tells
us about a fascinating conundrum, a spiritual law of life. If someone runs
after honor then honor will run away from him, and if someone runs away from
honor then honor will pursue him. Of course, there is the famous story of the
person who came to his Rabbi with a question about the efficacy of this
principle. He said, “Rabbi, all my life I am running from honor but honor
never runs after me.” The Rabbi answered, “The problem is that you are busy
looking over your shoulder to see if it’s running after you!” There is a
requirement for authenticity in this arena. The Brisker Rav observed that in either case, it would seem
that a person cannot get honor.
If he is chasing honor, it
is running away and if he is running away from honor and it is chasing him, he
keeps running away. He said that the answer is, the difference is after he
passes from the world. If he was chasing it then it runs away leaving without a
trace, without a memory. If he was fleeing from honor then after his life, when
he cannot run away any more, then it will catch up with him.
How many great people have
become even greater since their departure from this world!? King Solomon
writes, “Pri Tzadik Eitz Chaim” – the fruit of the Tzadik is a tree of life.
Some great people leave behind Seforim/Holy writings, and others leave a legacy
of children, a living Torah dynasty of scholars and leaders, while others leave
behind Yeshivas and Torah institutions that last in perpetuity. In a few rare
cases there are those who leave behind all three.
In some very rare cases
there are Tzadikim that leave behind none of the above but their greatness only
grows after they are no more. One of the most visited places here in Monsey is
the Kever of the Ribnitzer Rebbe. He had no children.
He wrote no Seforim. He struggled to cobble together a Minyan. He
built no institutions in his lifetime, but he served HASHEM and
helped Jewish People with self-sacrifice and devotion beyond description. Yet
now, decades later his grave has become the address for people seeking Yeshuos.
The numbers and stories of results only grow. I pass by every day and I slow
down, and I must, because there is so much traffic there.
Shraga Silverstein wrote
in a book of original Musar aphorism entitled, “A Candle by Day” a phrase that
caught my attention many years ago and I think it has direct application to
this question of the Tzadik making an impression at the time of his departure
from a place. He wrote, “It is easy to make your presence felt, but it is
hard to make your absence felt!” Some can make noise and headlines like
a huge storm and there’s a sense of relief when he has passed but rare is the
individual who humbly does his job and only when he’s gone, people begin to
realize the scope of the shade provided by and the true scale of that fallen
tree.
No comments:
Post a Comment