Parshas Vayishlach
Maintaining Balance
By Rabbi Elly Broch
"No longer will it be said that your name is Yaakov/Jacob, but
Yisrael/Israel, for you have striven with the Divine and with man and have
overcome."(Beraishis/Genesis 32:29) Yaakov is described as one who has
excelled in his service of G-d, both in relation to his personal
relationship with the Divine and with his interpersonal behavior. Thus,
Yaakov warranted earning the additional name "Yisrael" that became the
collective name for the Jewish nation. From this point on, both the names
Yaakov and Yisrael are used in the narrative of the Torah.
The Talmud (Brachos 13a) questions this episode versus the renaming of
Avraham (Abraham) in which his old name "Avram" is no longer used in the
Torah after the renaming. Further, is there any system or logic explaining
why the Torah in some places uses the name Yaakov and in others Yisrael?
Rabbeinu Bachya (1) explains the Torah uses the name Yaakov for matters
pertaining to the physical while Yisrael appears for matters reflecting the
spiritual role of the patriarch. Kli Yakar (2), expounds on this principle,
inferring that although Yisrael is the main name as it refers to the
spiritual activities of the patriarch in the Torah, "Yaakov" was not
totally dismissed by G-d as the physical activities of Yaakov's life were
also considered important and worthy of attention. Netziv (3) further
elaborates that the name Yaakov is used during occurrences when our
forefather was going in the natural manner of the world. The name Yaakov
is derived from the Hebrew word for "heel", derived from the fact that
Yaakov was pulled out of his mother's womb while actively holding onto his
twin brother's heel. This symbolizes the fact that as human beings most of
us have to make valid attempts and utilize opportunities to achieve goals
in the physical world. The name Yisrael refers to the patriarch while
enjoying supernatural assistance. In every generation there will be those
who are recipients of miracles due to their righteousness. Thus, Netziv
proposes that not only do these two names refer to the life of Yaakov on a
microcosmic level, they also allude to the entire nation of Israel on a
macrocosmic level.
It is therefore evident that both the name Yaakov and Yisrael were
appropriate descriptions of our forefather. In contrast, Avraham's original
name "Avram" means "the father of one nation" whereas Avraham refers to him
as the father of nations. When Avraham only had his one son Yishmael (the
father of the Arab nations), then he was called Avram. But with the news
that Yitzchak (Isaac) would be born, G-d renamed him Avraham as he was now
the father of nations thus rendering his original name inappropriate and
obsolete.
Judaism embraces the ideal of utilizing the physical world in an
appropriate manner. The majority of our commandments require us to utilize
physical stimuli to stimulate and engender spiritual ideals, from the
tefillin (phylacteries) and tallis (prayer shawl) utilized in prayer, to
the lavish dinners that complement the Shabbos and holiday experience.
Rabbi Chaim Friedlander explains that the physical world provides man with
the test of actively exerting ourselves to earn a livelihood and live a
physical existence while simultaneously attributing our success to our G-d
and channeling these physical experience to achievement of our spiritual
life goals. This proves extremely difficult because we habitually relate
to the physical world exclusively on the physical plane, when, in truth,
it allows us to express and concretize our otherwise dormant inner
spiritual potential through doing acts which reflect the will of G-d. It
is our mission to synthesize the Yaakov and Yisrael within us all and to
gain the correct proportions of each.
Have a Good Shabbos!
(1) 1263-1340; author of a Biblical commentary containing all four modes of
interpretation: simple text definition, and midrashic, philosophical and
kabbalistic exegeses
(2) Rabbi Shlomo Ephraim Lunshitz; c.1550-1619; Rosh Yeshiva/Dean in
Lemberg
and Rabbi in Prague; a leader of Polish Jewry
(3) acronym of Rabbi Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin; 1817-1893; Rosh
Yeshiva/Dean of the famed Yeshiva of Volozhin and author of the biblical
commentary Haamek Davar
Text Copyright © 2004 by Rabbi Elly Broch
and Torah.org.
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