Don’t Be Quarrelsome On The Way
Joseph’s warning
to his brothers not to quarrel on their way instructs us as well in our
relationships with our families and the larger Jewish community.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
In Parashat VaYigash, Joseph finally reveals his true
identity to his brothers. He loads them
with all sorts of riches from Egypt and tells them to return with their
families so they can settle in Egypt and survive the famine under Joseph's
supervision.
In the midst of their newfound wealth and security, Joseph
gives them a strange piece of instruction. "Do not be quarrelsome along
the way." Why would Joseph say that?
And why, especially, in the midst of a joyous reunion, amidst unexpected
wealth and success?
Rashi suggests that each brother would blame the others for
having sold Joseph into slavery.
Joseph, understanding how guilt and denial operate, anticipated his
brothers' need to blame each other, and he therefore instructs them not to
engage in recriminations about the past. In effect, Joseph tells his brothers
that they will never agree about the past, but they can still live in harmony
despite that disagreement. That advice
is no less precious today.
Conflicts within families are often magnified by our human
propensity to remember the past in a way that makes us look best. As a result, two loving relatives end up not
only disagreeing about the meaning of what happened, but even about the facts
themselves. By focusing on those areas
of disagreement, we lose sight of a shared desire to be part of each other's
life.
Joseph's advice still rings true--in such times, it may be
best simply to agree to overlook the past, to start afresh in the present. A
second possibility, also raised by Rashi, is that Joseph instructs his brothers
"not to engage in arguments of Jewish law (divrei halakhah), lest the road become unsteady for you."
We Jews have always argued about our beliefs, and we have
always mined out sacred traditions to articulate our visions of how the world
is structured, and how we should live our lives.
According to Rashi's second understanding, Joseph's
brothers, like Jews throughout time, would spend their time on the road arguing
about questions of Halakhah (Jewish
law). Caught up in the passions of
their discussions, they would lose their way religiously as well as
geographically.
Our Jewish obsession with ideas contains a potential
danger--that we will become so excited by the ideas themselves that we will
lose any sense of a connection to reality.
The ideas will justify themselves, regardless of how they work in the
world, regardless of whether or not they conform to what we know of reality.
Judaism has always reflected this tension--adherence to
timeless standards, but always renewing those standards in the light of
developing communal understandings and ongoing social need. We must take care never to stop our passion
for ideas, but we must also be on our guard, lest our ideas cease referring
back to reality, to questions of how to live a more moral, more holy, more
fully human life.
A third possible reading of Joseph's warning is that Joseph
sees that his brothers are now wealthy because of his gifts. And wealth brings tensions that are often
unexpected. Worried that his brothers
might feel the pressures of their wealth and therefore begin to quarrel about
how they live together, Joseph urges his brothers not to allow money to divide
them.
We, too, face that challenge. American Jewry is a comfortable community. As one consequence of our wealth, we have
raised up a large number of different organizations, movements and
institutions, all vying for our attention, our energy and our resources.
Can we see those different movements and institutions as
complementing one another, contributing to a communal life that is
multi-layered and profound? Or will
those movements and institutions perceive each other as competitors, in which
case a great deal of energy will be wasted on trying to impede the growth and
health of each other's ways of being Jewish?
As we travel on the road, we do well to remember Joseph's
advice: "Do not be quarrelsome on the way!"
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.