Author Topic: Joseph the Dreamer, Yosef HaTzadik  (Read 2487 times)

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Offline muman613

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Joseph the Dreamer, Yosef HaTzadik
« on: December 17, 2009, 11:31:05 PM »
I really love this weekends Torah portion. There is so much meaning, simple and hidden, in the portions we have been reading recently. The story of Yosef HaTzadik, son of Yaakov who is hated by his brothers. This week Joseph, after spending 12 years in prison for a crime he did not commit, he had been accused of attempting to rape his master Potiphars wife, he has been called out of prison because his ability to interpret dreams had become legendary.

Joseph had had many dreams himself, the Torah discusses his two dreams both of which are interpreted to mean that Joseph would rule over his brothers, and even his father. While in prison two of his cellmates had dreams which Joseph interprets correctly, the Pharoahs Baker and his Wine steward... Because of his ability to correctly interpret these dreams the Wine steward remembers Joseph when Pharoah has a troubling dream.

Because of Josephs correct interpretation of Pharoahs dream Pharoah gives Joseph a position of power. Joseph is made into the second in command of Egypt and he implements a plan which will save Egypt, and some say the entire world, from the seven year famine which devastated the world in that time. Because of Josephs interpretation Egypt had stockpiled food and supplies during the seven fat years.

It is because of this famine that Yaakov sent his sons down to Egypt to obtain food. And lo and behold who do the sons of Yaakov have to ask for food? None other than Joseph himself. Those very brothers who betrayed Joseph, those very murderers would would have him die in a pit full of scorpions and poisonous snakes, and no water, they were there to ask Joseph to give them food. And those brothers did not recognize Joseph.

I think the following article on A7 expresses some of the ideas which I find interesting in this parasha.



http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/9206

Miketz: On Wisdom & the Menorah
Kislev 30, 5770, 17 December 09 11:52
by Rabbi Dr. Tzvi Hersh Weinreb


(Israelnationalnews.com) Wisdom is the rarest of all important human qualities. Observers of the contemporary state of affairs often remark that wisdom, which is especially necessary in this day and age, is now particularly lacking.

Yet, at the same time, we are told that there is an age in life when most of us finally do obtain wisdom. Erik Erikson, the famous psychologist and thinker, believes that the course of the lifespan is marked by a series of developmental stages. At each stage of life, we master different developmental tasks. In late middle age, about age sixty, one begins to achieve wisdom. Erikson's book, Childhood and Society, devotes an entire chapter to defining wisdom and to detailing the process by which one achieves it, or fails to achieve it.

What is wisdom from a Jewish perspective? And what does wisdom have to do with this week's Chanukah theme?

The search for wisdom is a frequent Biblical theme. King Solomon was once assured by the Almighty that he would be granted the fulfillment of one wish. He wished for wisdom, obtained it, and is therefore termed in our tradition the wisest of all men.

Reading this story of Solomon and other sacred texts leads to the conclusion that there are at least two components to wisdom. There is a knowledge base; mastery of the facts and its data. There is also, however, the essential ability to select from this database those bits of knowledge which apply to the situation at hand.

There is the mastery of material, and there is the ability to advance that material and make it relevant.

One of the early 20th century masterpieces in the field of Jewish ethics is a book by Rabbi Joseph Hurvitz of Novardok, entitled Madregas Ha'Adam ("Man's Stature"). Torah wisdom is one of Rabbi Joseph's themes. He insists that mastery of the corpus of Jewish law in and of itself does not constitute wisdom. Knowledge in "matters of the world" is also necessary; abstract knowledge must be interrelated with concrete reality.

The symbol of the Chanukah festival is, of course, the Menorah. The original Menorah in the holy Temple was situated at the southern end of the inner Temple shrine and consisted of seven branches.

The Menorah symbolizes the light of wisdom; and its seven branches, the seven classical areas of wisdom, which include not only knowledge of the Divine, but also mathematics and music.

Combining the wisdom symbolized by the Menorah with Rabbi Joseph's insights, we begin to appreciate the complexity of the concept of wisdom. It encompasses theoretical and practical knowledge, and it involves the seven major areas of human inquiry.

It is in this week's Torah portion, Miketz, that we encounter the first man to be known as wise, to be recognized as a fount of wisdom. That man is the Biblical Joseph, and it is the Pharaoh of Egypt who calls him wise.

You know the story. The Pharaoh has his dreams, Joseph interprets them and suggests a plan of action. Pharaoh is pleased by the plan and says to his courtiers, "Could we find another like him, a man in whom is the Spirit of God?" And he continues and says to Joseph, "Since God has made all this known to you, there is none so discerning and wise as you."

The Pharaoh recognizes that wisdom is not only mastery of facts and the ability to apply them; it is more than familiarity with the seven branches of worldly wisdom, and it is even more than life experience. Besides all that, it is a gift of God.

I have had the good fortune of meeting several wise people in my life and I am sure that most of you have as well. Whenever I have met such people, I have been struck by how their words seemed to come from a higher place. Their insights reflect that they have access to a source beyond my ken.

This was Pharaoh's experience when he heard Joseph's interpretation. He realized that no course of study - no training, no mastery of expertise - was sufficient to account for the good counsel that he was hearing. He knew that the man in front of him was blessed with the Spirit of God.

There is no better time than this Shabbat, as we celebrate the second Shabbat Chanukah and read the story of Joseph, to reflect upon the quality of human wisdom and to fully appreciate this lesson. Whatever else wisdom comprises, it has one indispensable ingredient: it is ultimately the inspiration of the One Above.
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14