Controlling
Love
Joseph teaches us
to temper love with a sense of duty and a knowledge of right and wrong.
By Rabbi Shimon Felix
The following article is reprinted with permission from The Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
This week, we begin the story of Joseph and his brothers.
The story begins with what looks like an obvious error in parenting on the part
of Jacob--now named Israel--the father of at least 13 children. "And
Israel loved Joseph more than all his sons, for he was the child of his old
age, and he made for him a striped coat."
What happens next is to be expected--"And his brothers
saw that their father loved him more than all his brothers, and they hated him,
and could not speak peaceably to him." We all know how it turns out. The
brothers decide to kill the hated Joseph, but, in the end, due to the lobbying
of some of the brothers, they sell him to a caravan of traders, and he ends up
as a slave, in Egypt.
Jacob's love for Joseph, and its consequences, is similar to
something we have seen before in Genesis. It was Isaac's love for Esav, as
opposed to Jacob, which seems to have led to the rivalry and hatred between the
twin brothers. Jacob's love for one of his wives, Rachel, as opposed to his
other wife, Leah, was at the root of years of marital discord and rivalry. And,
here again, it is an act of love that sets into motion the horrible act of
brothers selling their brother into slavery.
It would seem that the Bible, while privileging and
celebrating the emotion of love, and recognizing it as a powerful and central
motivating force, also sees it as having the power to divide, to disrupt, to
lead to hate. The Torah seems to be warning us of the destructive power that
love can have, and how careful we therefore must be in expressing our love.
I think that what is arguably Joseph's first act of greatness would seem to
underscore this message. While he is a teenager, at home with his father and
brothers, Joseph is not so impressive. We are told that he informed his father
of some unnamed evil thing that his brothers had done. We are told of his
dreams of greatness, which only served to further anger his brothers. In fact,
it would seem that if Joseph loved anyone at this stage, it would have only
been himself.
After he is sold as a slave, and becomes the successful
steward of his master Potiphar's household, an interesting thing happens.
Joseph is approached by his master's wife, who asks him to "lie with
her." Joseph nobly refuses, citing his loyalty to her husband, his master,
and to God, as his reasons. In her anger--the classic anger of the 'spurned
woman'--she publicly accuses him of trying to rape her, and has him thrown in
jail. It is from prison that he ultimately rises to greatness, gaining an
audience with Pharaoh and then becoming his regent.
If Joseph got into trouble because of his father's inability to control his
love for him, to remember his duties as a father to his other children, and to
take their feelings and needs into account, it is by being aware of his duty,
and not allowing the emotions which are associated with love to run away with
him, that Joseph begins to redeem himself.
Faced with the option of a 'love affair' with the wife of
Potiphar on the one hand, and his loyalty and duty on the other, he chooses to
be loyal, and dutiful. In traditional thinking, Joseph is, in fact, celebrated
as the one who controlled himself, who, in an Egypt which is seen by the Rabbis
as a decadent and seductive society, managed to 'keep the covenant' (connected
with the circumcision--and therefore with sexuality), and remain faithful to
his God and his people.
The interplay of love and duty, of what we want to do and what we should do, is
central to the human experience. The Bible, while never for a moment rejecting
or demeaning the power of love, reminds us of the need to control and temper it
with a sense of right and wrong, of commitment to a wide circle of people who
depend on us, and thereby, hopefully, prevent the destructive possibilities
which love carries with it from coming to the fore.
(Note - The story of Yehuda and Tamar, which seemingly interrupts the Joseph
story at the point when he is sold as a slave, is a further illustration of the
interplay of these forces.)
Rabbi Shimon
Felix is the Israel Director of the Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
He lives with his family in Jerusalem, and has taught in a wide variety of
educational frameworks in Israel and abroad.