To See
the Good
Parshas Vayeishev
Posted on December 19, 2019 (5780) By Rabbi
Label Lam | Series: Dvar
Torah| Level: Beginner
Now it came to pass when
Yosef came to his brothers, that they stripped Yosef of his shirt, of the fine
woolen coat which was upon him. And they took him and cast him into the pit;
now the pit was empty there was no water in it. (Breishis 37:23-24)
…now the pit was
empty-there was no water in it: Since it says: “now the pit was empty,” do I
not know that there was no water in it? For what purpose did the Torah write,
“…there was no water in it”? To inform us that there was no water in it, but
there were snakes and scorpions in it. – Rashi
So Yosef’s master took him
and put him into prison, the place where the king’s prisoners were imprisoned,
and he was there in the prison. (Breishis 39:20)
It baffles my imagination!
How in the world was Yosef HaTzadik able to endure the suffering that he was
subjected to and not only rise to the heights of political power he would later
attain but to remain a Tzadik!? How did not just crawl up into a ball and
withdraw after being thrown into a pit by his brothers, and sold to Egypt, only
to be cast into prison, in a foreign country, on totally made-up charges!? How
did he do it? What was his secret? How does one remain so ferociously
resilient!?
Years ago my wife and I
went to visit Rabbi Mordechai Schwab ztl, the Tzadik of Monsey, with a concern
that we had. After listening carefully he declared multiple times with great
enthusiasm, “Reish Lamed – Shulchan Aruch! Reish Lamed – Shulchan Aruch!” Then
he opened up a Mishne Breurah – Shulachan Aruch to Reish Lamed – Chapter 230
and he showed me inside the words, Ragel Adam Lomer – ‘Kol Ma D’Avid Rachmana
L’Tav Avid!’” A person should accustom himself to say, ‘Everything that the
Merciful One does, He does for the good!’”
Two footnotes are required
here! 1) The requirement is to be in the habit of saying the words even if at
the time one does not feel it is so. 2) One should say these words for himself,
affirming that truth for himself. One should not say it to another who is
currently suffering!
Then he told me a very big
secret that I don’t mind sharing. He said, “There is a promise that if one says
this, he will live to see the good that comes out of that situation!” It was
deeply soothing and calming for me to hear his words. I only regret not having
the presence of mind at the time to ask him at that moment what is the source
of this promise. Years later and whenever I shared this encounter, I would find
myself wondering where that promise is recorded.
Now it occurs to me that
we might have the primary source right here with Yosef HaTzadik. I don’t have
any real evidence of what he was reciting at the bottom of the pit when his
brothers threw him into a mix of scorpions and snakes, but the Prophet Habbakuk
declares, “Tzadik B’Emunaso Yichyah!” – The Tzadik lives by his Emunah- his
loyalty to and trust in HASHEM! Even if he was not
reciting these exact words, , “Ragel Adam Lomer – ‘Kol Ma D’Avid Rachmana L’Tav
Avid!’” A person should accustom himself to say, ‘Everything that the
Merciful One does, He does for the good!’” He must have been saying something
like that!
Then when he was sold into
slavery and taken to a foreign land, on the way down he must have been cogitating
on just such a concept. When he was hauled off to prison in Egypt on false
charges, he must have been soothing is emotions with words that can be
summarized by, “Everything the Merciful One does, He does for the good!” Well,
Yosef HaTzadik remained a Tzadik through it all, and ultimately, miraculously,
in the end, he did live to see the good!
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