Shabbat Table Topics – Parashat Vayishlach/0/en
Shabbat Table Topics – Parashat Vayishlach
Shimon and Levi on Trial
How do you evaluate Shimon and Levi's slaughter of the city of Shekhem? Should their actions be justified as an appropriate avenging of their sister's honor or be condemned as overly harsh and cruel?
- With which of the above do you agree? See Sin and Slaughter of Shekhem and debate the various possibilities at your Shabbat table.
- The story raises the question of the relative benefits of policies of restraint versus active deterrence, the morality of collective punishment versus targeted killings, and the appropriate response to the use of human shields. Discuss these issues with your family as they relate both to the actions of the brothers and to contemporary controversies.
Esav: Friend or Foe?
Parashat Vayishlach opens with Yaakov fearful that Esav is coming to attack with 400 men. When the two actually reunite, however, Esav greets him with a hug and kiss. Was the change of heart the result of Yaakov's efforts at appeasement, or is it possible that Yaakov's original evaluation of Esav's intent was erroneous and that Esav had already forgiven his brother? What is it that enables people to forgive and forget?
- Compare Radak and Rashbam's approaches. With whom do you agree?
- Rashbam claims that not only was Yaakov's fear of his brother unwarranted, but that his attempts to flee were punished. What textual support can you bring for such a position? See Wrestling With Angels and Men.
- Rashbam is consistent throughout his commentary on Bereshit in viewing Esav as a neutral, rather than wicked, figure. Do you agree with such a portrait, or do you find the evil Esav of the Midrash to be a more accurate depiction? See A Portrait of Esav for elaboration.
Wrestling with Angels and Men
One of the highlights of Parashat Vayishlakh is Yaakov's wrestling match with the enigmatic "איש". Was Yaakov's assailant a person or an angel? On one hand, he is called a "man" rather than a "מַלְאָךְ", suggesting that he was a mortal being.1 Yet, both he and Yaakov refer to him using the term "אֱלֹהִים", implying that he was some sort of Divine being.
- What other evidence can you bring to support either position? 2
- If the assailant was human, who sent him and for what purpose? If he was Divinely dispatched, why would Hashem desire that Yaakov be maimed? Many answer that this was Esav's guardian angel, acting for Esav's benefit. Does this imply that angels might have free will to act on their own?
- Explore various understandings of the episode in Wrestling With Angels and Men and see what you can glean from each commentator regarding their personal beliefs about angels.
Might There be a "Plan B"?
Often, readers of Tanakh assume that its characters always follow through on their original plans, forgetting the possibility that intervening events might affect their decisions, leading them to a "plan b." In many cases, such a hypothesis explains otherwise difficult aspects of the narrative.
- A case in point might be Yaakov's Dividing of his Camp. He speaks about doing so in Chapter 32, yet in Chapter 33 there is no evidence of two distinct camps. To explain the apparent contradiction, R. Avraham b. HaRambam asserts that intervening events caused Yaakov to actively changed his mind, while Rashbam suggests that they foiled his original plan.
- Challenge your family to think of other cases in Tanakh in which positing a change in plan could answer some textual difficulties or shed new light on a story.
- The Decalogue: See Rashbam who suggests that had it not been for the people's fear, they would have heard, not just the decalogue, but all 613 commandments directly from Hashem.
- The Spies in yericho: If Yericho was to be conquered via miracle, why send spies to scout the city?