An exploration of Parashat Vayeishev by Rabbi Paul Bloom.
Parashat Vayeishev opens with one of the most perplexing decisions
in Sefer Bereishit: Yaakov sends Yosef—alone, on foot—on a dangerous journey
from Chevron to Shechem. Even in our day, the area is known for its volatility;
certainly, in the ancient world, such a trek carried great risk. Yet unlike
Eliezer, who traveled with ten camels and a protective escort, Yosef receives
no assistance, no animals, and no clear mission beyond the vague instruction:
“לֶךְ־נָא
רְאֵה אֶת־שְׁלוֹם אַחֶיך”
“Go now, see how your brothers are faring…”
(Bereishit 37:14)
What was Yaakov thinking? How could he send the son he loved most
into such danger seemingly for nothing?
This decision becomes the opening movement in a parashah filled with human mistakes—misjudgments by Yaakov, Yosef, the brothers, and even Yehudah. And yet, beneath the surface of these errors, there lies an unmistakable divine orchestration guiding the Jewish people toward its destiny.
Chevron as a Code Word
The Torah states that Yaakov sent Yosef “מֵעֵמֶק
חֶבְרוֹן”—“from the Valley of Chevron.” But, as
Rashi notes, Chevron sits on a mountain, not in a valley. Chazal interpret this
as a remez, a signal: Chevron here alludes to the deep, ancient prophecy
rooted in the city—the Brit Bein HaBesarim, where Hashem declared:
גֵר יִהְיֶה זַרְעֲךָ ... וַעֲבָדוּם, וְעִנּוּ אֹתָם
“Your descendants will be strangers… they will be enslaved and oppressed.” (Bereishit 15:13)
Thus Yosef’s mission “from Chevron” is not simply geographic; it is
prophetic. It is the moment the ancient decree of exile begins to unfold.
The Anonymous Man Who Finds Yosef
On the way, Yosef becomes lost: וַיִּמְצָאֵהוּ
אִיש — “A man found him”
(Bereishit 37:15).
The Torah’s phrasing is striking: not that Yosef found a man, but that a man found him. Chazal identify this ish as מלאך גבריאל. This seemingly incidental encounter becomes the fulcrum of Jewish history. Instead of giving up and returning home after failing to find his brothers in Shechem, Yosef is redirected by this heavenly messenger. The angel asks him: מַה־תְּבַקֵּש (“What do you seek?”) This is not merely a request for information. As the Malbim explains, bakashah in Hebrew refers not to a need but to an ultimate aspiration. This question is existential: “What do you truly seek in life? What is your mission?” Yosef answers with remarkable vulnerability and sincerity: אֶת אַחַי אָנֹכִי מְבַקֵּש (“I seek my brothers”, Bereishit 37:16).
Despite their hostility, despite the pain of being rejected,
Yosef’s deepest yearning is for connection and unity. In this moment, we
glimpse Yosef’s essence.
Human Error Filling the Parashah
Vayeishev is a tapestry of human mistakes:
Yaakov’s errors:
●
He
displays open favoritism: וְיִשְׂרָאֵל אָהַב אֶת־יוֹסֵף מִכָּל־בָּנָיו (Bereishit 37:3)
●
He gives
Yosef the כְּתֹנֶת פַּסִּים,
a distinct garment marking him as different.
Yosef’s errors:
●
He
recounts his dreams of dominance without sensitivity.
●
He seems
unaware of how his behavior affects his brothers.
The brothers’ errors:
●
They
misjudge Yosef’s intentions.
●
Jealousy
blinds them to the bonds of brotherhood.
Yehudah’s errors:
●
His
involvement in selling Yosef.
●
His
misjudgment of Tamar, later admitted with the words צָדְקָה
מִמֶּנִּי (Bereishit 38:26).
No other parashah contains such a concentration of missteps by so
many central figures. Yet the Ramban reminds us, citing Mishlei 19:21:
רַבּוֹת מַחֲשָׁבוֹת בְּלֶב-אִישׁ וַעֲצַת יְהוָה, הִיא תָקוּם
"Man proposes many thoughts, but the counsel of Hashem is what prevails.”
Through flawed human decisions, Hashem guides the story toward its
destined outcome: Yosef will descend to Egypt, rise to power, and prepare the
way for the Jewish people’s survival.
“Saru Mizeh” — A Warning from the Angel
When Yosef asks where his brothers have gone, the angel replies: נָסְעוּ מִזֶּה (“They have traveled away from here”, Bereishit 37:17). Rashi interprets this as meaning סרו מן האחוה — They have turned away from brotherhood. The angel’s words carry a chilling double meaning: the physical direction and the spiritual rupture.
Yosef’s Moral Tests
Yosef faces two defining spiritual tests in this parashah:
1. The Test of Purpose —מַה־תְּבַקֵּש
He responds with his true mission: “I seek my brothers”. His heart yearns for unity even when others
push him away.
2. The Test of Temptation — Aishet Potiphar
Yosef refuses with the unforgettable words: וְאֵיךְ אֶעֱשֶׂה הָרָעָה הַגְּדוֹלָה הַזֹּאת וְחָטָאתִי לֵאלֹהִים
(“How can I do this great evil and sin against
God?”, Bereishit 39:9). He invokes both ethics (betraying Potiphar) and
spirituality (sinning against Hashem). This dual consciousness is what earns
him the title יוסף הצדיק.
The Larger Theme: Divine Providence in Human Error
Despite all the mistakes made by Yaakov, Yosef, the brothers, and
Yehuda, the parasha demonstrates a profound theological truth:
●
Human
beings make flawed decisions.
●
Our
judgment is limited.
●
Our plans
often go astray.
And yet—
Hashem’s hidden providence guides every step.
Missteps themselves become tools of redemption. Yosef’s sale leads
to his rise in Egypt. Yehuda’s failure with Tamar leads to the birth of Peretz,
the ancestor of King David.
The message is not that mistakes are unimportant, but that they can
be transformed into instruments of divine purpose.
Conclusion: “Mah Tevakesh?” — The Question of Life
Parashat Vayeishev centers around a single, piercing question: מַה־תְּבַקֵּש— What do you seek? This is
the question every human being must face.
Yosef’s answer —אֶת אַחַי
אָנֹכִי מְבַקֵּש — reveals a soul striving for unity,
purpose, and moral clarity. Even in the
midst of mistakes and misunderstandings, Yosef’s inner compass points true.
And so it is with us: We strive, we falter, we rise again — but
beneath all human frailty, אֲצַת ה' הִיא תָקוּם
— the plan of Hashem endures.

