The Never-Ending Story

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Parashat Vayechi, Genesis 47:28–50:26

Dr. Vered Hillel, Netanya, Israel

 

We all like a good story. Stories are an integral part of our lives. They are part of our culture, our family values, and our faith. Bible stories are known as narratives. We’ve all heard the term biblical narrative, or canonical narrative, or the patriarchal narratives. Why are these biblical stories called narratives? The answer lies in the distinction between a story and a narrative. A story has a distinct beginning, middle and end. The tension in a story is resolved before the last page, and once the story is resolved, it is more or less over. On the other hand, a narrative is a collection or system of stories that together paint a larger narrative. Episodes or stories within a narrative may be resolved, but the narrative itself continues. The power of a narrative lies in the connection between the stories contained within it.  

Take, for example, the biblical narrative (Genesis–Revelation). It starts at creation; continues with Hashem’s election of, and interactions with, Israel through Moshe, Joshua, the judges, the kings and the prophets; and looks to a future eschatological era, which Yeshua proclaims and initiates through his teaching and actions but does not fully actualize. Thus, the biblical narrative has not reached a resolution and closure, but continues to look forward to a future age. We see the same in the Patriarchal narratives. Hashem promises Abraham that he will inherit the Land (Gen 12:7; 15:7; 15:18–21) and reaffirms this with Jacob (Gen 28:13), but by the end of the Torah the promise has not yet been fulfilled; the Children of Israel are still on the other side of the Jordan River.  

The Book of Genesis draws to a close in this week’s Torah portion, Vayechi. In this final parasha of Genesis, three distinct narratives converge: the patriarchal period (Abraham, Isaac and Jacob), the Jacob narrative, and the Joseph biography. The patriarchal narrative begins with the calling of Abraham and the divine promise of nationhood (Gen 12:2), which is passed on to the twelve tribes of Israel at the end of Jacob’s farewell words to his sons in Genesis 49:28. The Jacob narrative also commences with a promise from Hashem that Jacob would have numerous offspring (Gen 28:14) and fittingly concludes with the death-bed scene of the dying Jacob surrounded by his sons and grandsons passing on this promise to them (Gen 49:1–33).  

Joseph’s narrative begins and ends with the complicated relationship between him and his brothers. The story progresses from Joseph’s bad reports to his father about the sons of the concubines (Gen 37:2), to his brother’s hatred and selling him into slavery (Gen 37:4, 18–38), to his promotion to viceroy of Egypt (Gen 41:41) and his interactions with his brothers there (Gen 42:3–44:33), to the revelation of his identity (Gen 45:1–5) and their reconciliation after Jacob’s death (Gen 50:16–21). Though Joseph’s story will end at his death, the narrative continues. On his deathbed Joseph expresses his firm belief to his brothers that God will fulfill the promises given to Abraham and Jacob that their descendants will return to the land of Canaan, and he makes them promise to take his bones with them when they return. Joseph dies, is embalmed and the people mourn, but he remains in Egypt for another 360 years before he is finally buried in the Promised Land. While the Book of Genesis closes with the death of Joseph, the narrative continues, looking forward to the future resolution of promises and unresolved issues.  

These three narratives in Vayechi are replete with connections that tie the biblical narrative together and move it forward. In addition to those mentioned above, Jacob’s choice of Ephraim over Manasseh is another important connection. The prominence of the second son over the first is a literary convention that runs through the biblical narrative. Adam had two sons, Cain and Abel; the younger’s sacrifice is accepted. Abraham had two sons, Ishmael and Isaac; the second is the son of promise. Isaac had two sons, Esau and Jacob; Jacob is the father of the twelve tribes that became the nation of Israel. Jacob’s younger son Joseph had two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim, whom Jacob adopted as his own; the younger receives the primary blessing. By the time of the Judges the name Ephraim is synonymous with the Northern Kingdom of Israel.  

The prominence of the second son brings to mind a parable told by Yeshua: “A man had two sons” (Luke 15:11). A man with two sons recalls the stories of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph, where the second or younger is the recipient of the greater blessing. Can you imagine the shock of the original listeners when Yeshua relates that the younger son is the one who strayed? When the younger son returns and is warmly greeted by his father, he acknowledges his sin. Joseph’s brothers, on the other hand, do not seek forgiveness but remain silent when Joseph reveals his identity to them (Gen 45:1–5). When Jacob, whom the brothers see as their protection, is about to die, the family cohesion falls apart and the brothers anticipate Joseph’s revenge. Yet, Joseph initiates reconciliation and forgiveness, telling them that God intended everything that happened to him for good, for the survival of many people. As with Jacob’s sons, the relationship between the older and younger brother in the parable is strained and the family cohesion is falling apart. Unlike Jacob’s sons, the parable does not complete the story. Did the brothers reconcile? Did the older son choose reconciliation like Joseph? The parable is left open- ended for the audience to resolve from their own lives. Joseph’s actions and interactions with his brothers demonstrate an excellent resolution to the parable. 

Our lives are narratives. We do not know how they will end, but the decisions we make along the way and how we interpret those events influence the future. Our narrative will continue long past our physical lives have ended, intertwined with the lives of others and with the larger biblical narrative of the Kingdom of Heaven. Let’s be like Joseph and choose forgiveness, reconciliation, love, and God’s will over silence.

 

Russ Resnik