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From the Chassidic Masters
The Prostration of the Shepherds



And Joseph was the ruler of the land; he was the supplier of food to all its people.

And Joseph's brothers came and prostrated themselves to him ... and Joseph remembered the dreams he had dreamed about them...

Genesis 42:6-9

Twenty years earlier, Joseph had dreamed two dreams which foretold the events of that day. In the first dream, "we were binding sheaves in the field, when suddenly my sheaf arose and stood upright. And behold, your sheaves stood round it and bowed down to my sheaf." In the second, Joseph saw "the sun, the moon and eleven stars bowing down to me."

Joseph's brothers, who were already jealous of their father's special affection for him, "hated him even more for his dreams and his words." Jacob was well aware of this, yet "he kept the matter in mind and awaited and anticipated its fulfillment" (Genesis 37:7; Rashi, ibid.).

For that to happen, Jacob had to mourn the loss of his beloved son for twenty-two years, and Joseph had to experience slavery and incarceration, and his brothers, anguished remorse, for that same period. Twenty-two painful years so that the sons of Jacob might prostrate themselves before the viceroy of Egypt, who, unbeknownst to them, was the very dreamer they had sold into slavery. Why was it so important that this submission take place? Why did Jacob await and anticipate the fulfillment of Joseph's dreams, despite his realization of the terrible animosity they provoked among his children?

The New Jew

Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were shepherds, as were the sons of Jacob. They chose this vocation because they found the life of the shepherd -- a life of seclusion, communion with nature, and distance from the tumult and vanities of society -- most conducive to their spiritual pursuits. Tending their sheep in the valleys and on the hills of Canaan, they could turn their backs on the mundane affairs of man, contemplate the majesty of the Creator, and serve Him with a clear mind and tranquil heart.

Joseph was different. He was a man of the world, a "fortuitous achiever" in commerce and politics. Sold into slavery, he was soon chief manager of his master's affairs. Thrown into jail, he was soon a high-ranking member of the prison administration. He went on to become viceroy of Egypt, second only to Pharaoh in the most powerful nation on earth, and sole supplier of food for the entire region.

Yet none of this touched him. He remained the righteous Joseph who had studied Torah at the feet of his father. Slave, prisoner, ruler of millions, controller of an empire's wealth -- it made no difference: the same Joseph who had meditated in the hills and valleys of Canaan walked the streets of depraved Egypt. His spiritual and moral self derived utterly from within and was totally unaffected by his society, environment, or the occupation that claimed his involvement twenty-four hours a day.

The conflict between Joseph and his brothers ran deeper than a multi-colored coat or a favorite son's share of his father's affections. It was a conflict between a spiritual tradition and a new worldliness, between a community of shepherds and a politician. The brothers could not accept that a person can lead a worldly existence without becoming worldly, that a person can remain one with G-d while inhabiting the palaces and government halls of pagan Egypt.

For the first two hundred years of Jewish history, the shepherd's credo held sway. But Jacob knew that if his descendants were to survive the Egyptian galut (exile) -- and the millennia of Babylonian, Greek, Roman, Eastern, Western, economic, religious and cultural galuyot that history held in store for them -- this must be subordinated to the credo of Joseph. If the children of Israel are to pass through every social convulsion of the next four thousand years and persevere as G-d's people, they must become subjects of Joseph.


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Based on the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Originally published in "Week in Review"
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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Mar 20, 2009
Joseph
Dear Friend,

Right! Is isolationism is not the only way to live.

Like Joseph, Daniel also lived a pure life as a statesman of a foreign land in the midst of corrupt courts.

Keep up the good work.
Posted By tyrone ferrara, providence, RI

Posted: Dec 21, 2007
Every morning during our prayers we ask G-d “not to bring us to a trying situation.” Even though when we walk out victorious, we are stronger for it, we still would rather not have been places in such a situation in the first place.

While Joseph was able to make it through Egypt unscathed, there were a few very close calls.

If the brothers would have tried Joseph’s path, they would have failed – as do so may today as they try to juggle two worlds at once.

The only way to survive both worlds is by making them one. Bring holiness into the workplace and it too is a holy place. Say a Bracha before eating and your lunch is a sacrifice to G-d. Recognize that there is only one reality and the struggle disappears.

Do not be a Jew at home and American at work; be an American Jew all over!
Posted By george

Posted: Dec 6, 2007
This leads to the obvoius question: What does this say about the split between today's observant communities? Those who live more modern lives could be likened to Joseph, while the people who choose to live more separated from mainstream society could be likened to the brothers.
I find myself agreeing with Yosef, that this "one foot in each of two worlds" is a very difficult way to live, but also the only viable choice.
Posted By Sarah Masha, west bloomfield, mi usa
via baischabad.com



 


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