How the Light Gets In (Vayetse 5776), Rabbi Jonathan Sacks
Why Jacob? That is the question we find ourselves asking repeatedly as we read the narratives of Genesis. Jacob is not what Noah was: righteous, perfect in his generations, one who walked with God. He did not, like Abraham, leave his land, his birthplace and his father’s house in response to a Divine call. He did not, like Isaac, offer himself up as a sacrifice. Nor did he have the burning sense of justice and willingness to intervene that we see in the vignettes of Moses’ early life. Yet we are defined for all time as the descendants of Jacob, the children of Israel. Hence the force of the question: Why Jacob?
The answer, it seems to me, is intimated in the beginning of this
week’s parsha. Jacob was in the middle of a journey from one danger to
another. He had left home because Esau had vowed to kill him when Isaac
died. He was about to enter the household of his uncle Laban, which
would itself present other dangers. Far from home, alone, he was at a
point of maximum vulnerability. The sun set. Night fell. Jacob lay down
to sleep, and then saw this majestic vision:
He dreamed and, look, there was a
ladder set on the earth, with its top reaching heaven; and, look, angels
of God were ascending and descending on it. And,
look, the Lord stood beside him and said, “I am the Lord, the God of
Abraham your father and the God of Isaac; the land on which you lie I
will give to you and to your offspring; and your offspring shall be like
the dust of the earth, and you shall spread forth to the west and to
the east and to the north and to the south; and all the families of the
earth shall be blessed through you and through your offspring. And
look, I am with you and will keep you wherever you go, and will bring
you back to this land; for I will not leave you until I have done what I
have promised you.” Then Jacob woke from
his sleep and said, “Surely the Lord is in this place—and I did not know
it!” And he was afraid, and said, “How awesome is this place! This is
none other than the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven.” (Gen.
28:12-17)
Note the fourfold “and look,” in Hebrew ve-hinei, an
expression of surprise. Nothing has prepared Jacob for this encounter, a
point emphasized in his own words when he says, “the Lord is in this
place – and I did not know it.” The very verb used at the beginning of
the passage, “He came upon a place,” in Hebrew vayifga ba-makom, also means an unexpected encounter. Later, in rabbinic Hebrew, the word ha-Makom, “the Place,” came to mean “God.” Hence in a poetic way the phrase vayifga ba-makom could be read as, “Jacob happened on, had an unexpected encounter with, God.”
Add to this Jacob’s night-time wrestling match with the angel in next week’s parsha and we have an answer to our question. Jacob is the man who has his deepest spiritual experiences alone, at night, in the face of danger and far from home.
He is the man who meets God when he least expects to, when his mind is
on other things, when he is in a state of fear and possibly on the brink
of despair. Jacob is the man who, in liminal space, in the middle of
the journey, discovers that “Surely the Lord is in this place—and I did
not know it!”
Jacob thus became the father of the people who had their closest
encounter with God in what Moses was later to describe as “the howling
wasteland of a wilderness” (Deut. 32:10). Uniquely, Jews survived a
whole series of exiles, and though at first they said, “How can we sing
the Lord’s song in a strange land?” they discovered that the Shekhinah,
the Divine presence, was still with them. Though they had lost
everything else, they had not lost contact with God. They could still
discover that “the Lord is in this place—and I did not know it!”
Abraham gave Jews the courage to challenge the idols of the age.
Isaac gave them the capacity for self-sacrifice. Moses taught them to be
passionate fighters for justice. But Jacob gave them the knowledge that
precisely when you feel most alone, God is still with you, giving you
the courage to hope and the strength to dream.
The man who gave the most profound poetic expression to this was
undoubtedly David in the book of Psalms. Time and again he calls to God
from the heart of darkness, afflicted, alone, pained, afraid:
Save me, O God,
for the floodwaters are up to my neck.
Deeper and deeper I sink into the mire;
I can’t find a foothold.
I am in deep water,
and the floods overwhelm me. (Ps. 69:2-3)
From the depths, O Lord,
I call for your help. (Ps. 130:1)
Sometimes our deepest spiritual experiences come when we least expect
them, when we are closest to despair. It is then that the masks we wear
are stripped away. We are at our point of maximum vulnerability – and
it is when we are most fully open to God that God is most fully open to
us. “The Lord is close to the broken-hearted and saves those who are
crushed in spirit” (Ps.34:18). “My sacrifice, O God, is a broken spirit;
a broken and contrite heart you, God, will not despise”(Ps. 51:17). God
“heals the broken-hearted and binds up their wounds” (Ps. 147:3).
Rav Nahman of Bratslav used to say; “A person needs to cry to his
Father in heaven with a powerful voice from the depths of his heart.
Then God will listen to his voice and turn to his cry. And it may be
that from this act itself, all doubts and obstacles that are keeping him
back from true service of Hashem will fall from him and be completely
nullified.”[1]
We find God not only in holy or familiar places but also in the midst
of a journey, alone at night. “Though I walk through the valley of the
shadow of death I will fear no evil for You are with me.” The most
profound of all spiritual experiences, the base of all others, is the
knowledge that we are not alone. God is holding us by the hand,
sheltering us, lifting us when we fall, forgiving us when we fail,
healing the wounds in our soul through the power of His love.
My late father of blessed memory was not a learned Jew. He did not
have the chance to become one. He came to Britain as a child and a
refugee. He had to leave school young, and besides, the possibilities of
Jewish education in those days were limited. Merely surviving took up
most of the family’s time. But I saw him walk tall as a Jew, unafraid,
even defiant at times, because when he prayed or read the Psalms he felt
intensely that God was with him. That simple faith gave him immense
dignity and strength of mind.
That was his heritage from Jacob, as it is ours. Though we may fall,
we fall into the arms of God. Though others may lose faith in us, and
though we may even lose faith in ourselves, God never loses faith in us.
And though we may feel utterly alone, we are not. God is there, beside
us, within us, urging us to stand and move on, for there is a task to do
that we have not yet done and that we were created to fulfil. A singer
of our time wrote, “There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light
gets in.” The broken heart lets in the light of God, and becomes the
gate of heaven.
[1] Likkutei Maharan 2:46.