This short, practical Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App
Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy this Dvar adapted from
AlephBeta.org...
Sefer Bereishit is full of stories about Avraham and Yakov, but there are
very few stories exclusively about Yitzchak (the Akeida is really Avraham’s
story, and Yakov tricking Yitzchak over the blessings is really about
Yakov). This week’s Parsha, Toldot, does include one story about Yitzchak,
and it’s a strange one that requires analysis: There’s a famine in the
land, Yitzchak wants to go to Egypt but G-d tells him to “sojourn in this
land (Gerar), and I’ll bless you.” (26:3) G-d blesses him by making the
land produces 100-fold, to the point where the locals become uncomfortable
with his success, and ask Yitzchak to leave. So he moves to the valley,
unplugs a well that Avraham initially dug up, and the locals claimed it as
theirs (on his way out he names the well Asek, or “contention”). He moves
to a second well, unplugs it, and the locals claim that one as well (on his
way out he names that well Sitnah, or “hatred”). He moves to a third well,
unplugs it, and gets no resistance from the locals (and names the well
Rechovot, or “expansion.”) Why did the locals suddenly leave Yitzchak
alone? Also, generally, what is the point of this seemingly superfluous
Yitzchak story?
Imu Shalev and David Block of AlephBeta.org suggest an interesting and
insightful answer: When Avraham is blessed with wealth, he pitches tents
and maintains temporary residence, for the intent purpose of not showing
off. When Yitzchak was gifted with wealth, G-d asked him to do the same,
instructing him to sojourn in the land, rather than to settle down.
Yitzchak settled down, which made the locals jealous, prompting him to
leave. When he dug up the wells, he once again provoked jealousy, and was
challenged. However, for the third well Yitzchak first “removes himself
from there” (26:22) before digging the well. Ironically, removing himself
from the land, or becoming a journeyman, allowed him to keep the well he
dug, and inspired him to call the well “expansion” – freeing himself of a
home base allowed him to expand. This leads to a beautiful discovery that
Yitzchak made: If you free your mind of earthly possessions, your world
suddenly expands. While physical possessions are important and sometimes
powerful tools, they should be used to expand our experiences, not burden
them.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"Don't let your possessions possess you."
This short, practical Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App
Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy this Dvar adapted from
AlephBeta.org...
_______________________________________________
Sefer Bereishit is full of stories about Avraham and Yakov, but there are
very few stories exclusively about Yitzchak (the Akeida is really Avraham’s
story, and Yakov tricking Yitzchak over the blessings is really about
Yakov). This week’s Parsha, Toldot, does include one story about Yitzchak,
and it’s a strange one that requires analysis: There’s a famine in the
land, Yitzchak wants to go to Egypt but G-d tells him to “sojourn in this
land (Gerar), and I’ll bless you.” (26:3) G-d blesses him by making the
land produces 100-fold, to the point where the locals become uncomfortable
with his success, and ask Yitzchak to leave. So he moves to the valley,
unplugs a well that Avraham initially dug up, and the locals claimed it as
theirs (on his way out he names the well Asek, or “contention”). He moves
to a second well, unplugs it, and the locals claim that one as well (on his
way out he names that well Sitnah, or “hatred”). He moves to a third well,
unplugs it, and gets no resistance from the locals (and names the well
Rechovot, or “expansion.”) Why did the locals suddenly leave Yitzchak
alone? Also, generally, what is the point of this seemingly superfluous
Yitzchak story?
Imu Shalev and David Block of AlephBeta.org suggest an interesting and
insightful answer: When Avraham is blessed with wealth, he pitches tents
and maintains temporary residence, for the intent purpose of not showing
off. When Yitzchak was gifted with wealth, G-d asked him to do the same,
instructing him to sojourn in the land, rather than to settle down.
Yitzchak settled down, which made the locals jealous, prompting him to
leave. When he dug up the wells, he once again provoked jealousy, and was
challenged. However, for the third well Yitzchak first “removes himself
from there” (26:22) before digging the well. Ironically, removing himself
from the land, or becoming a journeyman, allowed him to keep the well he
dug, and inspired him to call the well “expansion” – freeing himself of a
home base allowed him to expand. This leads to a beautiful discovery that
Yitzchak made: If you free your mind of earthly possessions, your world
suddenly expands. While physical possessions are important and sometimes
powerful tools, they should be used to expand our experiences, not burden
them.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"Don't let your possessions possess you."