To See the Good • Torah.org
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 he 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!
Hashem Peeking From Behind the Curtain
Posted on
November 21, 2013 (5774) By Rabbi Naftali Reich | Series: Legacy |
Level: Beginner
What a stirring saga! Yosef is betrayed and conspired against
by his brothers and then thrown into a dark pit where he is doomed to die. At
the last moment, the brothers pull him out. Broken in body and spirit, he
endures the additional humiliation of being sold as a common slave to a passing trading caravan. What could possibly
be more devastating?
How utterly hopeless Yosef’s plight appears to be!
In the midst of this hellish scene, the Torah tells us, G-d
lightened Yosef’s suffering by arranging for his journey down to Egypt to be in
a fragrant, scented environment. The caravan of traders that had purchased him
were carrying fine perfumes and spices. A pleasant fragrance wafted through the
air around him as he made his way down to Egypt.
What are we to make of this information? Here Yosef is being
sold into slavery with no prospects of ever being freed. Betrayed by his
brothers, he is at the mercy of lawless people who could abuse and exploit him
at will. At such a harrowing time, would he be likely to notice the scent
around him? And if he did, what difference would it make to him in his pain and misery?
Yet, we must bear in mind that the Torah informs us about the
spices in the caravan for a reason. Embedded in this dire and painful event was
a secret note from Hashem to Yosef: ‘Don’t worry Yosef, I love you and I will
spare you whatever suffering I can. Look, even
here, in your miserable and wretched condition I will show you that I am
peaking out from behind the curtain by sending you this little ray of positive
encouragement. If only you can decipher my message of caring and love!”
Our lives are a long chain of challenges and
difficulties. Although these hardships may be divinely ordained to tone up our
spiritual muscles and help us grow, it is often difficult to recognize them as
such.
Yet, if we are attuned, we can pinpoint moments in our lives
when Hashem demonstrates that he is watching from behind the curtain. All of us
can be grateful for the seemingly small but infinitely valuable daily gifts and
special messages with which Hashem lets us know that He is taking care of us.
Be it with the blessings of good health, our precious
children, beloved family and friends or the innumerable other gifts we enjoy,
we are constantly graced with Hashem’s loving beneficence.
By training our emotions to always operate in thankful mode,
we can weather life’s disappointments. However, if we allow ourselves to fall
into the mode of “entitlement,” as if we
are owed life’s blessings and luxuries, we will inevitably suffer a spiritual
and emotional setback.
— Rabbi Naftali Reich
Text Copyright © 2013 by Rabbi Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
Rabbi Reich is on the faculty of the Ohr Somayach
Tanenbaum Education Center.
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Drama Director • Torah.org
Posted on
December 20, 2019 (5780) By Rabbi Berel Wein | Series: Rabbi
Wein | Level: Beginner
In this great emotional drama that will consume the balance of the sections of this book of the
Torah, we are witness to a very difficult family situation and the dynamic
consequences that it creates. The Torah itself testifies to the love and
favoritism that Jacob shows towards his son Joseph. We can well understand this
relationship of Jacob to Joseph, since Joseph strongly resembled his father
physically, was extremely talented and precocious, and was the son of Jacob’s
beloved wife, Rachel. However Jewish tradition raised
objections to the overt favoritism shown to Joseph by Jacob when he bestowed
upon him the special garment that signified their bond and love for one
another.
We can also understand why Joseph himself felt so special,
and justified in lording it over his
brothers, by telling them of his dreams and ambitions. Again, the traditional
commentaries to the Torah found fault in Joseph’s youthful arrogance and lack
of judgment. And, finally, we can also
appreciate how hurt the brothers were by the actions of their father and brother.
They were so hurt that they felt that Joseph was an
existential threat to their very survival
as a family and future nation. So, we are faced with a situation where
all the leading people involved in the story are both right and wrong at the
very same time. We can appreciate the feelings of each of the parties to the
story, and, yet we are aware of the disaster and trauma that could result.
There is an over-arching drama that is being enacted here in
the story of Joseph and his brothers. Jewish tradition teaches us that we are
all somehow mere actors in the great
drama of human civilization, presented on the stage of Jewish history.
Even though each of the individuals involved in the narrative presented in this
week’s Torah reading apparently acts on his own volition, the sum total of
their actions will result in the descent of the Jewish people into Egyptian slavery and the
eventual redemption and acceptance of the Torah at Sinai.
We recite in our daily prayers that there are many thoughts
and intentions in the hearts of human beings, but that eventually it is the
guidance of Heaven that will prevail. Nowhere is this basic understanding of
the pattern of Jewish history more evident than it is in the story of Joseph
and his brothers. Everyone involved seemingly follows their own individual course of action, but the result is a
historic change in the dynamics of the family and the trajectory of Jewish
history. Only if we step back and view the entire chain of events in its
totality can we begin to see this emerging pattern as the will of Heaven
guiding the family of Jacob and the
Jewish people.
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Shabbat shalom Rabbi Berel Wein
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