The last time Superman flew across the movie screen the
world was calling for him to step down or go back home to Krypton. The last time the Avengers fought against the
forces of evil, the US government sought to rein them in as a result of
unintended tragic consequences of their battle.
When Batman last faced the joker and faced criticism, district attorney
Harvey Dent said, “Well, I guess you either die a hero or you live long
enough to see yourself become the villain.”
Our ancestor Jacob appears this week in our Torah in
a similar way, though it’s not the first time we see him in this light. So many times Jacob accomplishes objectives
by literally keeping others in the dark – which makes me think of the title of
the Batman movie quoted above, ‘The Dark Knight’. There are times that Bruce Wayne must act in a way that casts the guilt
lens on himself in order to maintain the good image of another like Harvey
Dent, but Jacob appears to pursue his goals primarily for his own good and at
the expense of others.
He purchases the birthright from his brother Esau
when his brother is exhausted and famished after the hunt. For sure, he never says to Esau, are you sure
you want to sell this to me? Do you know
what it means for you to sell the birthright?
And now, with Rebecca’s help he dresses up like his
brother, and together they deceive and defraud both Esau and Isaac in one
stroke. We might say, Jacob already
purchased the birthright in which case he’s entitled to the better blessing,
but we can also say with assurance that the birthright wasn’t Esau’s to sell in
the first place, kind of like the Brookly Bridge, although I hear it’s going
for a great price this weekend in honor of TBEMC’s 100th
anniversary.
The darkness continues here as we retell the story
of Jacob lying to his aged father who is blind.
We recall the instruction in Leviticus, Lifnay ee’vair lo titen michshol. Do not put a stumbling block
before the blind. Jacob, the one who as
our tradition explains, stays in the camp studying Torah, clearly missed that
key teaching. Isaac is not as passive
though as we might think. The Mahari
puts us inside Isaac’s mind as though Isaac says to himself, “Due to the fact
that I’m doubtful about who is the person in front of me, I’m going to lengthen
the conversation so that I can better know the voice and know who it is.” But the Mahari also points out that Jacob is
clever, and so he only answers in one word ‘Ani’ making Isaac’s job almost
impossible.
The intention of portraying the superheroes as
flawed makes them more like us, so we can better relate to them. Jacob though he is our ancestor is out for
his own interests, and we feel empathy for Esau as our Rabbis also did despite
their criticisms of Esau and the way they connected him to Rome, the evil
empire.
Just one example, a midrash tells us, “Esau shed 3
tears, one from the right eye, one from the left, and one down the middle of
his forehead that was suspended between his eyes. If that tear had fallen, the Jewish people
would not ever have been redeemed from under Esau’s hands (Esau here as the
embodiment of that later evil empire)…Due to those tears Esau inherited the
fertile Mount Se’ir, and the Jewish people must, in their own tears that
resulted from Jacob’s actions, request God to have mercy upon them.”(Yalkut)
How then do we read today’s Torah portion? As an indictment of our ancestor, meant to
encourage us today to hold ourselves accountable for the decisions we
make? Or do we read it simply as the
mysterious unfolding of God’s plan that goes forward despite the pain of those
who suffer in its wake?
One other way we may read the story is by
re-focusing our attention to redeem Esau in the hopes of restoring his image and
integrity, the same way that the superheroes strive to redeem themselves when
they cause harm. Let’s remember how Esau
redeems himself when he embraces his brother years later, and his only
interested is greeting his brother and he has no interest in the gifts Jacob
brings out of fear.
Esau surmounts and surpasses his brother in that
moment. God must redeem and liberate us,
but Esau finds it within himself. That
power, to find hope, to find the possibility of transformation within
ourselves, is a superpower that we all have.
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