From Pride Comes Loneliness
Joseph’s
experience in prison teaches him, and us, that we succeed and flourish when we
support those around us.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
In the development of Joseph's character and the events of
his life, the Torah portrays a bittersweet lesson about the loneliness of
pride. On the surface, there is no reason for Joseph to be lonely. He is, after
all, the favorite child of his father, surrounded by 11 brothers, in the midst
of a bustling and energetic family.
Joseph has the potential to fill his life with friendship,
family and love. Yet his need to be preeminent, his need to belittle the gifts
and experiences of this family in order to glorify his own talents, isolate him
from his own kin. We get a clue about the extent of Joseph's pride from the
very start.
The Torah tells us that
"Joseph, being seventeen years old, was still a lad." The Rabbis of Bereishit Rabbah, the ancient midrash on
the Book of Genesis, struggle with that sentence. After all, if he is
seventeen, he is no longer a mere lad! They suggest that the Torah is telling
us that "he behaved like a boy, penciling his eyes, curling his hair and
lifting his heel."
Like many people today, Joseph
thinks he must invent a false and glamorous image in order to show his worth to
himself and the world. As if that weren't sufficiently pitiful, he also feels
compelled to put others down in order to be noticed and appreciated.
His desire to be better than
everyone else expresses itself even in his dreams. Twice, Joseph dreams about
his family bowing down before him. And twice he tells his family about his
visions of his own superiority. The brothers, hurt and enraged by their
sibling's arrogance, sell Joseph into slavery.
Joseph experiences the depths of
despair as an Egyptian slave and as a prisoner in an Egyptian jail. In that
prison, Joseph learns how to sympathize. He learns that prisoners at the bottom
are still human beings, and that one can excel without having to minimize the
talents or interests of other people. In prison, Joseph accepts a basic
principle of Jewish living: kol Yisrael
areivim zeh ba-zeh--all of us are responsible for each other.
In prison, Joseph shows an
interest in the dreams of a deposed butler and baker, and in caring for such
"lowly people," he in fact plants the seeds of his own restoration
and future glory. Joseph learns that his own talent can thrive best with other
people's well being.
Far from being a threat, the
happiness of acquaintances, friends, and relatives form a supportive
environment in which each of us can blossom. Arrogance isolates, not skill.
Ruthlessness, not drive, leads to loneliness. By living in a community, we can
support each other to be the best that we can be. And in that way, we all serve
to hasten the rule of God on earth.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit
Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the University
of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is the
author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill). For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary,
please send an email request to bartson@uj.edu.