2. Earlier in the week I asked why the Midrash needs to provide other
excuses like “Maybe I will be selected to be a korban… Maybe I will receive nevuah in the middle of
the night,” for why Yosef refused the advanced of Eishes Potifar. The Torah itself says he refused because it
would not be right for him to breach the trust Potifar placed in him. Besides which, the simple fact that it was an
aveira should have been reason enough.
Josh M. suggested that the Midrash is highlighting the degree to
which one must calculate schar mitzvah and hefsed aveira. Even though the excuses suggested by the
Midrash may seem far fetched, they enter into the equation.
The Rambam writes at the end of Hil Issurei Bi’ah regarding avoiding the yetzer for arayos:
The Rambam is teaching us that when it comes to fighting the
yetzer ha’ra, “Just say no,” is not enough of a strategy. There has to be some positive good – the Rambam
speaks of a positive expression of love – that the desire aroused by the yezter
can be channeled into. I’ll give a crude
example: imagine you have a ba’al teshuvah who has been eating McDonalds his
whole life. Yom Kippur, when everyone is
starving, is probably not a good day to try to impress upon him the importance
of mitzvas kashrus. Come over to the
same guy in the middle of the Shabbos kiddush, when his plate is overflowing
with kugel and kishke and cholent, and then talk to him about the
McDonalds. His response then is going to
be, “Who needs McDonalds when you have this?”
That’s how to fight the yetzer ha’ra.
“Vayima’ein” was the “just say no” strategy. It was followed up by a justification of what
would be lost by violating the trust of Potifar. But Chazal knew that there had to be more to
Yosef’s victory of the yetzer than that – there had to be positive energy involved
as well. There had to be the “ayeles
ahavim” for G-d that the Rambam speaks about.
So Chazal added these other considerations to the picture. They tell us that Yosef reflected on his
being worthy of prophecy, of his being so close to G-d that he could even be
selected as a korban. Those feelings of closeness
with G-d, love of G-d, were what enabled him to achieve victory over the
yetzer.
3. Yesterday I suggested that Yosef’s reliance on the Sar haMashkim was
inappropriate because it was for a selfish end, but Bitya bas Pharoah was not
criticized for acting on long odds and trying to save baby Moshe because it was
on behalf of another. Rav Shach in Rosh
Amanah cites the gemara in Chulin (and there are many Midrashim to the same
extent) that interprets the Sar haMashkim’s dreams as being a portent of the
birth of Moshe, Aharon and Miriam, a hint to shalosh regalim, and other such
signs that point to the growth and flourishing of Am Yisrael. (The Netziv writes that “Vayachalmu chalom
sheneihen” (39:5) is not referring to the Sar haMashkim and Sar haOfim, but
rather “sheneihem” refers to Yosef and the Sar haHashkim/Ofim. He sees this as the source for Chazal finding
a message meant for Yosef and Klal Yisrael in the dreams.)
Rav Shach suggests that had Yosef’s concern been limited to the
fulfillment of the Sar haMashkim’s dreams for Klal Yisrael, then his making
every desperate effort to get out of jail and bring them to fruition would have
been not only warranted, but would have been a mitzvah. Yosef’s error was
saying, “z’chartani… v’hizkartani,” allowing consideration of his personal
plight to enter into the equation. I
think this idea fits nicely with the chiluk I suggested.
4. Lastly, something to think about: many if not most people have a
very simplistic view of emunah and think that if you do the right thing by G-d,
G-d will in turn do good for you. Sometimes
it works that way, but often it does not.
After Yosef haTzadik passes the unbelievable test of resisting Eishes
Potiphar (the Shomer Emunin writes that when someone is faced with temptation
and overcomes it, that moment is an eis ratzon!) instead of being instantly
rewarded, he instead loses his position and is tossed in prison. Things
seem to take a turn to the worse for him, not for the better. Why davka after rising to such great heights
of tzidkus does Yosef suffer punishment and disgrace? How can that be the reward for his
righteousness? Something to ponder... maybe more next week on this.
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