CHUMASH CANDESCENCE
 PARASHA TOLEDOT
GENESIS   25:19-28:09
RABBI  ARTHUR   SEGAL
RABBI DR ARTHUR SEGAL
 www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.com/books   www.FaceBook.com/Arthur.L.Segal   www.FaceBook.com/RabbiArthurSegalJewishSpiritualRenewal   www.RabbiArthurSegal.blogspot.com 
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish   Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Hilton Head Island, SC; Bluffton, SC;   Savannah, GA
"We Are Family; Come on   Everybody, Let's Sing"
SYNOPTIC ABSTRACT:
Rebecca   and Isaac give birth to two sons, Jacob and Esau. Esau sells
Jacob his   birthright for some bean chili. Isaac moves to Philistia due to
famine. King   Abimelech desires Rebecca. Isaac reopens the wells that
Abraham dug that the   Philistines then closed. Esau marries two Hittite
women. Isaac decides to   bless Esau, but Rebecca schemes with Jacob to
have Jacob blessed instead.   Esau now hates Isaac and swears to kill him.
Jacob flees to his uncle Laban's   home. Esau marries for a third time. He
chooses Ishmael's daughter. For an   in-depth view of the Torah's "Family
Feud," please read on.
Our   parasha (Torah portion) deals with different people's various needs.
Many   times these people think that their needs conflict with others'
needs. Some   of our characters in the parasha deal with these needs
assertively and may   appear therefore to be "needy." Most of them,
however, use manipulation and   deceit. They refuse to admit their needs.
This makes them appear on the   outside to be "strong" when in reality
they are the weak. Their lack of   assertiveness leads them to sin and
dysfunction which, as we will read in   later chapters of the Bible, has
disastrous effects on our people's   history.
Our parasha's two main characters begin to show their different   needs
while in their mother's womb. Rebecca felt Esau and Jacob   "agitated
within her"(Gen. 25:22). God told her that "two nations" were   inside of
her, and that the "elder shall serve the younger"(Gen. 25:23).   
Note   that the text says that "God said to her"(Gen. 25:23). Rebecca has a need   not
to displease Isaac. Therefore, the Midrash says, she kept this news   from
Isaac. As we will read at the end of this parasha, because Rebecca   did
not tell Isaac what God told her about their sons, Isaac is never able   to
imagine Esau as not being equal to the task of receiving his   birthright.
Rebecca cannot vocalize her fears of being abandoned by   Isaac, because
she is afraid that he will assume that she is a sinner for   having
warring twins in her womb ( as posited by the Maharal--Rabbi   Yehudah
Loewe of 16th-century Prague). She has to conspire later to steal   Esau's
birthright and give it to Jacob. From the moment Rebecca finds out   about
what is growing in her womb, and decides not to tell Isaac,   her
relationship with her husband becomes one of deceit.
Isaac's   favorite son is Esau. Rebecca's favorite son is Jacob. What if
Rebecca, who   was brought to Isaac when she was three years old, was able
to say that she   had to be honest with her husband and tell him what God
told her, but was   afraid to because she had fears of abandonment?
 We know Isaac's history. Isaac saw firsthand how   his father Abraham abandoned
Hagar and Ishmael, his half-brother. Isaac saw   how Abraham was ready to
take Isaac's own life. If Rebecca was living in a   society that allowed
her to voice her fears, do we think tender Isaac would   have scoffed at
her and rejected her? 
Jacob and Esau were contenders   at birth, each with different needs and
personalities. Jacob spent time in   "tents" (Gen. 25:27) which the Midrash
interprets as "schools." Esau loved   hunting. Jacob, their father loved
Esau, because Esau brought Isaac fresh   "game for his mouth, but Rebecca
loved Jacob" (Gen. 25:28). 
The   Torah records that when Jacob was cooking
a red stew of lentils, Esau came in   from the field and demanded some.
Jacob said he would give him some chili if   Esau would sell Jacob his
birthright. Esau agreed, as he thought he was   "going to die"(Gen. 25:32).
The Talmud in Tractate Bava Batra 16B says that   Jacob was cooking this
stew as it was the shiva meal to comfort his father   Isaac, who just
buried Abraham. Ramban (Nachmanides of 13th-century Spain)   says that Esau
thought his life was almost over, as he had a hunting accident   that day.
These two brothers did not communicate well. Isaac wanted nothing   to do
with Esau's hunting. Esau wanted nothing to do with Isaac's studying.   If
they spoke assertively to each other about their likes and dislikes ,   as
well as their strengths and weaknesses, an arrangement might have   been
reached. Two of Jacob's sons, years later, reached such an   agreement.
Zebulun agrees to be a merchant seaman, allowing Issachar to   remain home
and study.
Does it not seem reasonable that Jacob could   have accepted the spiritual
birthright of Isaac, while Esau accepted the   material birthright? Could
not a sharing have taken place? The Torah paints   Esau literally red and
calls him Edom (red in Hebrew). The sages paint Esau   bloody red and say
he is pure evil. But the Torah does not say this. Isaac   loved Esau. Could
Esau have been all that bad? Was Isaac, the son of Abraham,   such a
glutton that he would overlook evil in his own tent just for a meal   of
meat? Of course not. Hence we have another situation where two   people
did not express their needs to each other, and instead of relating   to
each other as people, they related to each other as objects.
Some   time later, Isaac has dealings with the Philistine king, Abimelech.
This is   the same king with whom Abraham made a treaty. Abraham was given
permission   to dig wells in Philistia. Isaac goes to Philistia, as there
is a famine in   Canaan. During this time, Isaac became "great and kept
becoming greater until   he was very great" (Gen. 26:13). "The Philistines
envied him"(Gen. 26: 14).   Instead of the Philistines discussing their
concerns with Isaac, they   aggressively clog up the wells. Isaac digs two
new wells, but the Philistines   protest and say "the water is ours"(Gen.
26:20). Isaac names these two wells,   "contention" (Esek) and enmity
(Sitnah). Isaac digs a third well, which they   do not contest. Isaac calls
this well "Rehoboth" (Gen. 26:22). Rehoboth means   "spaciousness." 
Both Isaac and Abimelech are powerful men, yet they toy   with each other
like children in a kindergarten sand box. If Abimelech had   said to Isaac
that he was envious of Isaac's wealth and wanted to learn   Isaac's herding
secrets, would not have Isaac shared them with Abimelech? If   Abraham was
able to work out a treaty with Abimelech, could not have Isaac   also? Here
is a case of another two people who have it-it relationships.   Abimelech 
sees Isaac only as a potential commercial threat. Isaac sees   Abimelech
only as a land owner that he will use until the famine in Canaan   is
ended. Both of their tribes could have worked out a mutually   beneficial
commercial agreement, just as the descendents of Isaac, the   children of
Israel, will hopefully soon be able to work out with the   nominal
descendents of the Philistines.
The parasha's denouement comes   with Rebecca's scheme to deceive her
husband, Isaac, and steal from Esau.   Again, instead of having an honest
talk with her husband about her needs, she   plots for Jacob to dress up
as Esau and steal Esau's blessing from blinded   Isaac. The ruse works,
but only for a few moments. Esau and Isaac uncover the   plot too late.
Esau swears that he will kill Jacob (Gen. 27:41). Jacob   escapes to his
uncle Laban's home. Years of two brothers and two spouses not   being able
to talk, share, or express their needs, boils over into an ugly   scene.
The ramifications are enormous. 
As we will read next week,   Laban also treats Jacob like an object. He
tricks Jacob into marrying Leah   when Jacob wants Rachel. Years later,
Jacob favors Rachel's son Joseph over   Leah's sons, who are older than
Joseph. What happens? Joseph is sold into   slavery in Egypt. Jacob and his
other sons travel to Egypt and stay there   because Joseph is Viceroy.
Within a generation or so, the Children of Jacob   become slaves in Egypt.
The Talmud says this is why we say on Passover that   an "Aramean (Laban)
sought to kill our father." The rabbis blame Laban for   the switching of
his daughters. They blame Laban for the aftermath of Joseph   becoming the
favorite son, causing the eventual slavery in Egypt.
I   posit that the blame goes back further. If Rebecca lived in an
atmosphere   were she felt she could express her need of wanting
reassurance of her bond   with Isaac, she could have spoken with Isaac
honestly. She could tell Isaac   that God told her about the warring twins
in her womb, without Isaac   abandoning her. They would have been able, as
two parents working as a   communicating team, to raise Jacob and Esau in
such a way so that each of   these sons would have had their needs met. If
they were loving brothers, able   to feel love equally from each parent,
Jacob would have been glad to offer   Esau some lunch without the fee of
the birthright. Esau would have   acknowledged his skills and weakness, and
accepted Isaac as the spiritual   leader. Isaac could have accepted Esau as
the commercial leader. There would   have been no need to for Jacob to
steal Esau's blessing. There would have   been no need for Jacob to run to
uncle Laban. There would have been no need   for Jacob and his sons to go
down to Egypt where they end up as slaves.   Jacob's descendants and the
Philistines possible descendants, who are called   Palestinians, could have lived
together in peace in the Middle East, and not   be taking up so much
headline space today. But as the Yiddish saying teaches,   "if my bubbie
had a moustache, she would be my zadie."
Too many   vulnerable Jews in too many areas of the world hesitate to look
at their   temples to assist them in their hour of need. No amount of
resolutions or   statements can change this reality. Only action can. Every
one of us is   vulnerable at one time or another. Everyone of us will have
an hour of need.   We are supposed to emulate God. God clothed naked Adam
and Eve. He consoled   Hagar, Sarah, and so many others. He fed the
Israelites manna, and even   quail, in the wilderness of Sinai. God buried
Moses. 
Abraham does   acts of loving kindness continually. He never said that his
nephew Lot was   "needy." Abraham even interrupted his conversation with
God Almighty to "run"   in the "heat of the day" to take care of the needs
of three strangers. He did   not even let his pain from his recent
circumcision slow him. When we call   someone "needy" we are really saying
that we are too involved with our own   lives to take the time to tend to
this person's needs. It is easy to help   someone with a simple need that
we can handle with a quick phone call.   Afterward, we can feel so
self-important that we did a mitzvah. But the real   mitzvah is developing
an I-Thou relationship with someone in need. It is easy   to do good deeds
for strangers. There is no emotional expense involved. It is   having a 
temporary, I-it relationship. It is only a step away from   checkbook
Judaism.
Martin Buber discussed his theory of relationships   in his book "I-Thou."
I-Thou relationships are the mutual relationships of   love and caring. It
is the type of relationship that we should strive for   with God and with
loved ones. Buber acknowledges that most people have to   struggle to
master I-Thou relationships with spouses and family members. Most   of the
world relates to each other as objects, which Buber calls   I-It
relationships. New writers have called this Win-Loose relations,   while
I-Thou relations have been called Win-Win. In transactional   therapeutic
terms an I-Thou relationship is defined as Adult-Adult or "I'm   Ok. You're
Ok." 
Stanford University psychiatrist Dr. David Spiegel   has done research on
the difference that sincere social support can make on   living with
illness. Dr. Spiegel created psychosocial support groups for   women with
metastatic breast cancer. All of the women eventually died, as   their
cancers were aggressive. But the women who had attended the   support
groups lived twice as long as the women who did not attend the   groups.
Caring I-Thou relationships can save lives.
Each Shabbat, we   pray to God to give us or someone we know "healing of
body and renewal of   spirit." We know that "God helps those that help
themselves." We have the   power in our Temples to transform people's
well-being. Studies have shown how   frequent attendance at religious
services, where there is true   fellowship, was linked to greater health in
people with   diseases ranging from cardiovascular problems to cancers.
Another study   showed that religious commitment cut blood pressure, even
in men who smoke   cigarettes.
Dr. Herbert Benson in his book "The Relaxation Response,"   determined that
meditation evokes a state of relaxation in the body. It   affects
respiration, heart rate, blood pressure, muscle tension and   brain
function. Other studies have shown that meditation in a group is   more
effective that meditation alone. Other studies have shown that   communal
prayer, with what we, in Judaism, call kavenah (concentrated   attention)
produces a similar effect. All of these studies also show   that
individuals in these groups must relate to each other openly   and
lovingly. If there is no sense of security, one cannot achieve   the
relaxation response in meditation, or kavenah in   prayer.
Psychiatrist Victor Frankel writes about the importance of   meaning in our
lives. Other philosophers write about how connections in our   lives give
it meaning. When we feel connected to the Godhead, in a state   of
spirituality, we do not feel alone. When we feel connected to a   group,
like fellow congregants in our temples, we achieve an enhanced ability   to
cope and to heal. Wellness can be maintained when one feels connected   to
something larger that oneself, writes Rabbi Amy Eilberg, whose ideas   are
sprinkled throughout this D'var Torah. When we feel connected to a   loving
community, to truth, to history, and to God, our needs and fears   seem
smaller.
Religion may act as a placebo but we should not negate   the power of a
placebo or the power of the mind to heal. Dr. Kevin Pauza and   others have
shown that merely believing a treatment will work helps alleviate   an
array of symptoms. Patients with back pain were told they needed   back
surgery. Half had the surgery under anesthesia. The other half,   were
anesthetized, but just had the incision made in their back and did   not
have the surgery. Yet both groups were told they did have the   back
surgery. Thirty percent of the patients who had the placebo surgery   got
better. Our convictions that we are connected to Jewish people   presently
and throughout history really may strengthen us.
Judaism   presently has a rich armamentarium of resources to strengthen our
spirit when   life brings us challenges. The soothing words of the Psalms
are an excellent   example. Rituals such as Tashlich (casting our sins upon
the water in the   form of bread on Rosh Hashanah), Shabbat candle
lighting, and doing mitzvah   are ways that we can symbolically cast away
unhealthy habits, look for   sources of light and hope, and help those
that have needs greater than ours.   The sages knew that visiting the ill
(bikur cholem) can make a difference in   another's experience of illness.
But the sages said that the visitor brings   his own experiences to the ill
person. The visitor has to open up and bring   his own hopes and fears, as
well as 100% of his capacity for love and   compassion in order to make a
difference.
Many congregations presently   have healing services. Some congregations
actively visit people in hospitals.   One congregation, Beth Shalom in San
Francisco, adopted a local hospital and   sends volunteers regularly. But
our temples can do much more. We can actually   prevent illness. In their
book, "Successful Aging," Drs. John Rowe and Robert   Kahn state that
socially-connected people live longer and are sick less   often. They say
that connections mean sincere I-Thou relationships. People   without strong
connections to groups, such as synagogues, were four to six   times more
apt to die, regardless of race, wealth, activity or healthcare.   True love
helps prevent pain and illness. People who said they did not get   displays
of affection from their friends were 20 times more likely to   develop
chest pain than those people who had friends that demonstrated   affection
and caring.
"All Israel is responsible for one another," the   rabbis teach. As our
Torah portion's title suggests, we are all the   "offspring" (toledot) of
God. We are all family. All of us have needs.   Expressing these needs and
having others listen to them is healthy for both   the listener and the
speaker. It reminds us that we are connected. It gives   us all a chance
to do mitzvoth to help each other as well as reminds us that   we are part
of a community that will help us when our time of need   arrives.
Disregarding someone in their time of need is something we cannot   imagine
Abraham doing. It is a core value of Judaism to help those in need.   Some
of these needs seem enormous, others much smaller. None of us is   immune
to having needs. The aim of our religion and our temples is to   allow
people to expand their relationships and grow emotionally   and
spiritually. Our synagogues can be true sanctuaries from life's   travails.
Our Haftarah this week is from the Book of Malachi. A few verse   after
this portion, the prophet writes: "Have we all not one father? Hath   not
one God created us all? Why do we deal treacherously every man   against
his brother, profaning the covenant of our fathers?" (Mal.   2:10).
Certainly our congregations are far from being a place like   Malachi
describes. We are blessed to have a congregations the world over that   are
caring and compassionate. We are blessed to have    rabbis leading us in
this righteous path. If yours is lacking, lead the   way. The Mishna tells us, that ''in a place
 where there are no leaders, be a leader''. Let   us strive to continue this good work and even
perhaps do better. As we do   Tikkun Olam (repair of the world), we will
hopefully come to the day, as   Malachi says (3:12), when "all nations
shall call us 'happy;' for we shall be   a delightful land."
Shabbat Shalom,
RABBI ARTHUR L.   SEGAL
 
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Hilton Head Island, SC; Bluffton, SC; Savannah, GA
If visiting SC's Low Country, contact us for a Shabbat meal, in our home by the sea, our beth yam.
Maker of Shalom (Oseh Shalom) help make us deserving of Shalom beyond all human comprehension!
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Hilton Head Island, SC; Bluffton, SC; Savannah, GA







