Parshas Vayishlach
Yearning for Redemption
“No longer will you be called Ya'akov, but Yisroel, because you have
struggled with [an angel of] God, and with men, and have prevailed.”
(Bereishis 32:29)
This is such a defining parshah. It is the one in which we earn the name
Yisroel for the first time in history, as opposed to only Ya’akov, making
us, his descendants, first and foremost Bnei Yisroel—Children of Yisroel—as
opposed to only Bnei Ya’akov—Children of Ya’akov. It behooves us to know the
difference.
The starting point is recalling what Ya’akov means, a name that we take for
granted but which is really quite unusual:
His brother came out holding onto Eisav’s heel—Ayin-Kuf-Bais; he called him
“Ya’akov”—Yud-Ayin-Kuf-Bais. (Bereishis 25:26)
Hence, the ancestor of what would become the holiest nation on the face of
the earth, the nation destined to be God’s people, the intended light unto
the nations, derived his name based upon a seemingly incidental fact at the
time of birth. It was as if Yitzchak, their father, from birth built into
Ya’akov a sense of being only second best, of being a follower as opposed to
a leader. Dr. Spock would have had a field day with that one.
Actually, it was a warning. It was a built-in warning to Ya’akov Avinu that
has different as he may have considered himself to be from his twin brother
Eisav, in reality he wasn’t that different. Thousands of years of
assimilation prove the point only too well, especially when we recall that
some of the worst prosecutors of Jews during times like the Inquisition were
Jewish apostates.
Not only can Jews be as evil as Eisav can be, but they can sometimes be
worse. Some Nazis commented that Kapos often tortured their fellow Jews in
ways that even the Germans hadn’t thought of. Jewish self-hatred can run so
deep sometimes that it can surface as anti-Semitism that can rival the worst
of Jewish enemies through history, and can be even more dangerous sometimes
because of its Jewish origin.
Then there is the other side of Eisav that seems to attract Jews by the
droves, what is called the “Western Lifestyle.” It’s the nine-to-five
workday, all that time shopping, keeping up with the latest fads and
fashions, over-emphasis on physical appearance and too much devotion to
exercise and sports, etc. All of this may have something to contribute to a
Jewish lifestyle, but only up until it interferes with one’s devotion to
God, and for millions, it is exactly that.
It’s like following someone in a car with the belief that he is going to the
same place you are. He turns right, so you turn right. He turns left, so you
turn left. He pulls a U-turn, so you do as well, enjoying the ride until you
find out that the one leading you has a different destination in mind. All
of a sudden, you find yourself a long way from your intended destination,
and quite upset about it as well.
Eisav is not heading for the World-to-Come. Therefore, he can only put all
of his eggs in one basket: life in this world. He only has his present life
time, and even if he reincarnates, his life will always be about this world.
Unless his is a righteous gentile, he has nothing to look forward to after
death, only to what he can have and enjoy until death (Avodah Zarah 10b).
Ya’akov, on the other hand, is just passing through. For Ya’akov, and his
descendants, this world is but a corridor to the next world, which is
eternal and more pleasurable than we can imagine at this stage of history.
When he benefits in this world, it is not as any kind of reward, but as
Divine assistance so that he can perform more deeds that increase his reward
in the World-to-Come. Physical pleasure, for Ya’akov Avinu and his
descendants, is supposed to be a by-product of living in this world, not a
goal unto itself.
This is not an easy lesson to teach, absorb, and follow when you live
side-by-side in Eisav’s world. He knows, and has always known, how to
manipulate the physical for his pleasure, and has done a great job doing so.
And, he seems to have so much fun doing it as well, so who wouldn’t be
attracted to his lifestyle?
I remember once, while at an airport, watching some Chassidic boys watching
a football game on a television in the window of an electronics shop. They
probably had just been walking around when the scene from the t.v. caught
their eye, and caused them to stop and watch for a few moments. They
probably weren’t even aware of what they were doing for the first couple of
moments.
No doubt television was a foreign experience for them, as was the game being
played at the time. However, both had quite a seductive power of what seemed
to be too very pure religious teenagers, and breaking away from it did not
seem so easy. I could feel their struggle from 10 feet away, and it made me
think about what was really going on when spending so much time in Eisav’s
world.
Hence, when Ya’akov Avinu fought against the angel of Eisav that fateful
night, he was really fighting against the tendency within himself to be like
Eisav. And, even though the “stranger” seemed to have snuck up on him,
Ya’akov had actually sought out the confrontation, for, as the midrash
explains, he could have easily returned home to Be’er Sheva without crossing
Eisav’s path.
So, he fought with the angel all through the night, which our rabbis teach
symbolized exile, alluding to the fact that we too will have to contend with
our Eisav-like tendency all through exile. He only prevailed because he
continued that struggle until the sun came up, which we are told symbolized
the Final Redemption, at which time he earns the name Yisroel:
[The stranger] said, “Let me go! Dawn has arrived.”
He answered, “I won't let you go unless you bless me.”
He said to him, “What is your name?”
He answered, “Ya'akov.”
He told him, “No longer will you be called Ya'akov, but Yisroel, because you
have struggled with [an angel of] God, and with men, and have prevailed.”
(Bereishis 32:27-29)
In other words, it is the struggle to remain Ya’akov and different from
Eisav until the struggle ends that makes one a true Yisroel. And, the Malbim
has an interesting litmus test that allows a Jew to measure whether he is
achieving Yisroel status, or remains stuck on the Ya’akov level. On the
following verses:
For thus said Hashem: Sing, O Ya’akov, with gladness, exult on the peaks of
the nations; announce, laud [God], and say, “O Hashem, save Your people, the
remnant of Yisroel!” Behold, I will bring them from the land of the North
and gather them from the ends of the earth. Among them will be the blind and
the lame, the pregnant and birthing together; a great congregation will
return here. With weeping they will come and through supplications I will
bring them; I will guide them on streams of water, on a direct path in which
they will not stumble; for I have been a father to Israel, and Ephraim is My
firstborn. (Yirmiyahu 31:6-8)
the Malbim writes:
At the end of their exile, the oppression will be removed from them, and
they will be joyous because they will be on the peak of the nations. The
gentiles will give them honor and they will be their heads, instead of being
disgraced and lowered amongst them as they were at first. Ya’akov will be
the masses of the people, and the lesser amongst them; Yisroel are the great
ones. The joyousness from being at the peak of the nations will be Ya’akov’s
only, and not Yisroel’s, because they will want to return His Presence to
Tzion. However, at that time they will “announce” and publicly proclaim, and
“praise” Hashem when they say, “O Hashem, save Your [righteous] people, the
remnant of Yisroel,” because they will want the true salvation of the
ingathering of the exile and return to Tzion. Then it will be like that,
“that Hashem will return them: Behold, I will bring them . . .” (Malbim,
q.v. v’Tzahalu B’Rosh HaGoyim)
So, inasmuch as the name Yisroel is a flashback to our battles of
yesteryear, and to those we are still fighting, more importantly, it is an
allusion to the victories we will have achieved. Misery loves company, and
Eisav would love to take our minds off of our long term national goals,
first the Final Redemption, and eventually, our going to the World-to-Come,
two ultimate realities of which he has little or no part at all.
Oh, has he been successful to date, as Rabbi Yechezkel Levenstein, zt”l, the
Mashgiach Ruchani of the Mir and Ponovez yeshivos pointed out decades ago:
The Sefer Mitzvos Katan wrote in his explanation of the Positive Mitzvah, “I
am God, your God, Who took you out of Egypt,” that it means one must know
that He Who created Heaven and Earth alone controls above and below.
However, to this he added, “This is the basis of what the rabbis teach: At
the time of a person’s judgment after death, they ask him, ‘Did you
anticipate the redemption?’ (Shabbos 31a). Where is this mitzvah written? It
comes from this [same mitzvah], for just as, ‘I am God, your God, Who took
you out of Egypt,’ means that we must believe that God redeemed us from
Egypt, it also means, ‘. . . I also want you to believe that I, God your
God, will gather you in and redeem you in mercy a second time’.”
According to this, belief in the future redemption is part of our belief in,
“I am God, your God,” and thus included in the first of the Ten
Commandments. However, if we examine ourselves, it seems as if we are very
far from having faith in the future redemption . . . When it comes to the
arrival of Moshiach and the resurrection of the dead, we are quiet, as if we
are embarrassed to speak about them, as if we have given up on them
altogether. (Ohr Yechezkel, Emunas HaGeulah, 1960; p. 287)
The Ya’akov element of our people, perhaps, but not the Yisroel element,
which subscribes to this approach to Jewish history:
The exodus from Egypt liberated only one out of five Jews—and some say one
out of every fifty—because all those who were bound to Egypt and did not
want to depart died in the three days of darkness and were not privileged to
leave. That is, only those who desired redemption with all their hearts were
redeemed. The Final Redemption, likewise, depends upon our yearning. (Ohr
Yechezkel, Emunas HaGeulah, p. 288)
It’s the yearning for redemption, and all that it means, especially life in
Eretz Yisroel, that defines a Yisroel at the end of the struggle, and
history as well.
Text Copyright © 2012 by Rabbi Pinchas Winston and Torah.org.