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torah man
Sunday, the first day of the week.

It's now 17 years later and Yaakov is approaching the end of his life. Yaakov makes Yosef promise to bury him in Eretz Yisroel, and not in Egypt. He knows that Yosef was not pleased that Yaakov had not buried Rochel in Eretz Yisroel and he explains this to Yosef.

Nearing the end, Yosef brings his two sons to Yaakov for a blessing. Yaakov makes these two like his other sons as regards inheriting the land when they return. Lots of esoteric things go on during this exchange where Yaakov sees certain decendants of Yosef's sons who would not be ok, etc.

Lots of questions can be raised at this point, let's see if any come up.
sheet4brain
The old switching of birth order came into play again. As early as 48:5 Jacob has done so by mentioning Ephraim before Manasseh. Do you see this as Jacob trying to justify his taking over of Esau's right as the firstborn?

Even further, the Book of Genesis closes on yet another younger-son-is-favored-over-elder-son routine. Does this seem to balance (creating some sort of symmetry) the early part of the Book when Abel was favored over Cain?
torah man
QUOTE (sheet4brain @ Dec 15 2002, 09:51 PM)
The old switching of birth order came into play again. As early as 48:5 Jacob has done so by mentioning Ephraim before Manasseh. Do you see this as Jacob trying to justify his taking over of Esau's right as the firstborn?

Even further, the Book of Genesis closes on yet another younger-son-is-favored-over-elder-son routine. Does this seem to balance (creating some sort of symmetry) the early part of the Book when Abel was favored over Cain?

If everything else was equal, then someone could definitely pretend there was some kind of younger over older brother thing here.

But in each case, there other circumstances and behaviors of the people involved that causes the apparant favoring you speak of.

Cain did not offer of his best to Hashem while Abel did.

Esau scorned the service of Hashem and Yaakov was righteous. This was from the womb where Rivkah had trouble during pregnency with the two of them.

The difference between Ephraim and Menasha is in the future and who will come from them and not in their current state. Yaakov was a prophet and could see the future.

Avraham, Yitzhok, and Yaakov where considered chariots of Hashem and only did and said what Hashem directed them to do and say. Looking for human explainations for their behavior, does not serve in understanding what is really going on.
torah man
sorry again, i was busy running my mother around to doctors on Monday.

Monday, second day. it is short so i will bring it all here:
QUOTE
Chapter 48
10. Now Israel's eyes had become heavy with age, [to the extent that] he could not see. So he drew them near to him, and he kissed them and embraced them. 11. And Israel said to Joseph, "I had not expected to see [even] your face, and behold, God has shown me your children too." 12. And Joseph took them out from upon his [Jacob's] knees, and he prostrated himself to the ground. 13. And Joseph took them both, Ephraim at his right, from Israel's left, and Manasseh at his left, from Israel's right, and he brought [them] near to him. 14. But Israel stretched out his right hand and placed [it] on Ephraim's head, although he was the younger, and his left hand [he placed] on Manasseh's head. He guided his hands deliberately, for Manasseh was the firstborn. 15. And he blessed Joseph and said, "God, before Whom my fathers, Abraham and Isaac, walked, God Who sustained me as long as I am alive, until this day, 16. may the angel who redeemed me from all harm bless the youths, and may they be called by my name and the name of my fathers, Abraham and Isaac, and may they multiply abundantly like fish, in the midst of the land."


again we are favoring Ephraim over Manasseh.

Rashi expains the blessing in verse 16:
QUOTE
and may they multiply…like fish. [Just] like fish, which proliferate and multiply, and are unaffected by the evil eye. — [from Onkelos and Gen. Rabbah 97:3]
torah man
Tuesday, the third day. This is also short so in total:

QUOTE
Chapter 48
17. And Joseph saw that his father was placing his right hand on Ephraim's head, and it displeased him. So he held up his father's hand to remove it from upon Ephraim's head [to place it] on Manasseh's head. 18. And Joseph said to his father, "Not so, Father, for this one is the firstborn; put your right hand on his head." 19. But his father refused, and he said, "I know, my son, I know; he too will become a people, and he too will be great. But his younger brother will be greater than he, and his children['s fame] will fill the nations." 20. So he blessed them on that day, saying, "With you, Israel will bless, saying, 'May God make you like Ephraim and like Manasseh,' " and he placed Ephraim before Manasseh. 21. And Israel said to Joseph, "Behold, I am going to die, and God will be with you, and He will return you to the land of your forefathers. 22. And I have given you one portion over your brothers, which I took from the hand of the Amorite with my sword and with my bow."


Rashi give us the reason for blessing Ephraim first:
QUOTE
19.  I know, my son, I know. that he is the firstborn. he too will become a people, etc.. for Gideon is destined to be descended from him. [Gideon] through whom the Holy One, blessed be He, will perform a miracle. — [from Midrash Tanchuma Vayechi 7] But his younger brother will be greater than he. for Joshua is destined to be descended from him, [and Joshua is] the one who will distribute the inheritances of the land and teach Torah to Israel. — [from Midrash Tanchuma Vayechi 7] and his children[’s fame] will fill the nations. The whole world will be filled when his fame and his name are spread when he stops the sun in Gibeon and the moon in the Valley of Ajalon. — [from Abodah Zarah 25a]


Rashi on verse 20:
QUOTE
20.  With you, Israel will bless. Whoever wishes to bless his sons, will bless them with their blessing (with a blessing related to them), and a man will say to his son, “May God make you like Ephraim and like Manasseh.” - [from Sifrei Nasso 18]

On Yom Kippur we bless our sons before the holiday starts with this blessing.
torah man
Wednesday and Thursday, the fourth and fifth days. Chapter 49:1-26.

Yaakov, near his death, has gathered his sons and begins to individually bless them. This process continues through both days and into Friday, where Binyamin is blessed.

Lots of meat in here; lets give an example:
QUOTE
8. Judah, [as for] you, your brothers will acknowledge you. Your hand will be at the nape of your enemies, [and] your father's sons will prostrate themselves to you.

With the explaination from Rashi:
QUOTE
8.  Judah, [as for] you, your brothers will acknowledge you. Since he reproved the first ones (Reuben, Simeon, and Levi) with reproach, Judah began retreating backwards [so that he (Jacob) would not reprove him for the deed involving Tamar (Gen. 38:16 ff). So Jacob called him with words of appeasement, “Judah, you are not like them.” - [From Shitah Chadashah] Your hand will be at the nape of your enemies. In the time of David: “And of my enemies-you have given me the back of their necks” (II Sam. 22:41). - [From Gen. Rabbah 98:9] [ your father’s sons. Since they were [born] from many wives, he did not say, “your mother’s sons,” after the manner that Isaac said (Gen. 27:29). - [From Gen. Rabbah 98:6]


I just picked one to demonstrate depth.

sheet4brain
The scepter shall not depart from Judah,
Nor a lawgiver from between his feet,
Until Shiloh comes'
And to Him shall be the obedience of the people.
(49:10)

The above verse and also 11-12 for us Christians point to the coming of Jesus Christ (our Messiah). I'm interested to learn the significance of those verses (prophecies) from the Jewish perspective. Take it away, torah man.
torah man
QUOTE (sheet4brain @ Dec 19 2002, 10:07 PM)
The scepter shall not depart from Judah,
Nor a lawgiver from between his feet,
Until Shiloh comes'
And to Him shall be the obedience of the people.
(49:10)

The above verse and also 11-12 for us Christians point to the coming of Jesus Christ (our Messiah). I'm interested to learn the significance of those verses (prophecies) from the Jewish perspective. Take it away, torah man.

Rashi on that verse:
QUOTE
10.  The scepter shall not depart from Judah. from David and thereafter. These (who bear the scepter after the termination of the kingdom) are the exilarchs (princes) in Babylon, who ruled over the people with a scepter, [and] who were appointed by royal mandate. — [From Sanh. 5a] nor the student of the law from between his feet. Students. These are the princes of the land of Israel. — [From Sanh. 5a] until Shiloh comes. [This refers to] the King Messiah, to whom the kingdom belongs (שֶׁלוֹ) , and so did Onkelos render it: [until the Messiah comes, to whom the kingdom belongs].


Definitely talking about the coming of Moshiach (Messiah). The king if Israel is always descended from Yehudah.

Moshiach and Messiah refer to annointed which all of the Kings of Israel were annointed. simply put, you and I disagree about whether your person was the Messiah or not. From my point of view, he did not qualify on many levels and in many areas.
torah man
Friday, the sixth day.

As mentioned before, the last blessing goes to Binyamin.

Yaakov again asks to be buried in the burial plot in Chevron, which Avraham had bought before. This is repeated many times.

Then the text says:
QUOTE
." 33. And Jacob concluded commanding his sons, and he drew his legs [up] into the bed, and expired and was brought in to his people.


Rashi says:
QUOTE
and expired and was brought in. But no mention is made of death in his regard, and our Rabbis of blessed memory said: Our father Jacob did not die. — [From Ta’anith 5b]


More detail from the Talmud:
QUOTE
And when Jacob had made an end of commanding his sons, he gathered up his feet into the bed, and expired, and was gathered to his people (49:33)

Rav Nachman said to Rav Yitzchak: "So said Rabbi Jochanan: Our father Jacob did not die."

Asked Rav Yitzchak: "Was it for no reason that the eulogizers eulogized, the embalmers embalmed and the buriers buried?"

Replied Rav Nachman: "I am only citing a verse. It is written (Jeremiah 30:10): 'And you, my servant Jacob, fear not, says the L-rd, and do not tremble, O Israel. For behold, I shall save you from afar, and your progeny from the land of their captivity.' The verse equates Jacob with his progeny: just as his progeny are alive, he, too, is alive."

(Talmud, Taanit 5b)



Then the funeral procession to Eretz Israel is described in detail.

Then Yosef's brothers are concerned for their safety, thinking that only Yaakov being alive has protected them from Yosef's retribution. Yosef assures them that he has no ill will toward them.

Good Eruv Shabbos to all.
torah man
Some Chassidic depth to the above issue of Yaakov's death:

This is long because depth means deep.

QUOTE

Life, Death and Reality
Based on the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson  


QUOTE

Jacob concluded commanding his sons. He gathered his feet into the bed, and expired, and was gathered to his people.

Genesis 49:33


In describing Jacob's expiration, the Torah pointedly avoids the use of the word vayamat, "and he died," a word it employs with all the other deaths it relates, including Abraham's (Genesis 25:8) and Isaac's (35:29). Instead, it uses the euphemisms "he expired" and "he was gathered to his people." Hence, concludes talmudic sage Rabbi Jochanan, "Our father Jacob did not die."

The Talmud (Taanit 5b) records the following exchange between Rav Nachman and Rav Yitzchak:

Rav Nachman said to Rav Yitzchak: "So said Rabbi Jochanan: Our father Jacob did not die."

Asked Rav Yitzchak: "Was it for no reason that the eulogizers eulogized, the embalmers embalmed and the buriers buried?"

Responded Rav Nachman: "I am only citing a verse. It is written, 'And you, my servant Jacob, fear not, says the L-rd, and do not tremble, O Israel. For behold, I shall save you from afar, and your descendants from the land of their captivity' (Jeremiah 30:10). The verse equates Jacob with his descendants: just as his descendants are alive, he, too, is alive."

Spiritually or Literally

There are two ways in which this exchange can be understood. One approach, adapted by several of the Talmudic commentaries, is that the statement "Jacob did not die" is not meant in the literal/physical sense -- after all, as Rav Yitzchak points out, Jacob was eulogized, embalmed and buried -- but in the conceptual/spiritual sense: Jacob is alive because his influence lives on (See Maharsha on Talmud, ibid.; Rashba on Ein Yaakov, ibid.). This, then, is the meaning of Rav Nachman's deduction from the verse in Jeremiah that "just as his descendants are alive, he, too, is alive": as long as his descendants disseminate his teachings and carry on his work, Jacob lives.

However, this interpretation fails to explain the uniqueness of Jacob's eternity: the same can be, and is, said of all righteous individuals whose children or disciples perpetuate their lives. In the words of the Zohar, "when a tzaddik (righteous person) departs, he is present in all worlds even more than he was in his lifetime." Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi explains: "The life of a tzaddik is not a fleshly life but a spiritual life, consisting wholly of faith, awe, and love of G-d... While the tzaddik was alive on earth, these three attributes were contained in their physical vessel and garment (i.e. the body) on the plane of physical space... His disciples received but a reflection of these attributes, a ray radiating beyond this vessel by means of his holy utterances and thoughts... But after his passing... whoever is close to him can receive a [far loftier dimension] of these three attributes, since they are no longer confined within a [material] vessel, nor bounded by physical space..." (Tanya, Igeret Hakodesh 27).

In other words, for a person to whom life means the pursuit and attainment of material gains, life indeed ceases when his soul departs from his body. But one for whom life is defined in terms of his positive influence upon others is no less alive after physical death, since his positive influence upon others continues for as long as his teachings are studied, his directives are followed and his deeds are emulated. Indeed, he is even more alive than before, as his soul now relates to his disciples free of the physical constraints of time and space.

But this is true of all who live "not a fleshly life but a spiritual life." Yet it is only in the case of Jacob that the Torah refuses to say "he died." It is only of Jacob that the Talmud unequivocally states "Our father Jacob did not die." Rabbi Jochanan and Rav Nachman seem to be implying more than the conventional truism that a righteous person's life is eternal in the non-corporeal sense.

Indeed, Rashi understands the Talmud's meaning in the most literal sense. In his commentary on the above-quoted passage, he writes: "Our father Jacob did not die, but lives forever... the fact that the 'embalmers embalmed' was only because they thought he had died." According to Rashi, Rabbi Nachman's proof from the verse in Jeremiah that "just as his descendants are alive, he, too, is alive" is not to be understood in the sense that Jacob lives on in the lives of his descendants, but that "just as when [G-d] gathers the people of Israel from the land of their captivity, He is gathering the living, for it is they who are in captivity -- the dead are not in captivity -- so, too, he (Jacob) is alive, and G-d will bring him along to the exile and redeem his children before his eyes. The fact that the embalmers embalmed was only because to them it seemed that he was dead, but in truth he was alive."

Reality in Two Dimensions

We thus have two perspectives on reality: the reality defined by Torah, in which Jacob does not die, and the reality of the "eulogizers, embalmers and buriers," who perceived a lifeless Jacob. What distinguishes these two perspectives? That would depend on how we understand the Talmud's words. According to the first interpretation of the dialogue between Rav Nachman and Rav Yitzchak, the difference lies in whether we view reality in spiritual or physical terms: if "life" is a spiritual state, Jacob's life is unaffected by his bodily demise; if life is defined by physical criteria, Jacob is indeed not alive.

According to Rashi's interpretation, both perspectives relate to the physical reality: while to the "eulogizers, embalmers and buriers" Jacob's body was a body from which life had departed, the Torah attests that there exists a higher, truer plane of reality, a reality in which Jacob remains physically alive.

Why is Jacob unique in this regard? Because Jacob is the embodiment of the attribute of "truth", and truth -- in the ultimate and absolute sense of the term -- tolerates no equivocations. A life confined to the spiritual realm may be true enough for other righteous men and women of history, but in the truth of Jacob -- the essence and epitome of truth -- there are no partial or relative truths. To say that Jacob's life is spiritually eternal but not physically so, to say that his physical life extended for so many years and then ceased, is to detract from its truth -- and everything about Jacob is wholly and utterly true.

According to this, we can better understand Rav Yitzchak's question, "Was it for no reason that the eulogizers eulogized, the embalmers embalmed and the buriers buried?" Indeed, what does he mean by asking, Was it for no reason that these things were done? Ought not the question to have been, How could the eulogizers have eulogized etc.?

But Rav Yitzchak is not bothered by the fact that Jacob's body seemed dead to Joseph's Egyptian servants, or even to Jacob's sons. The fact that they failed to perceive him as physically alive in no way detracts from the Torah's attestation that Jacob did not die, neither spiritually nor physically. Torah is the foundation and essence of creation, and the supreme arbiter of reality; if mortal eyes and minds fail to corroborate what Torah establishes as fact, this in no way diminishes the truth of Torah's description of reality. Rather, Rav Yitzchak's challenge to Rav Nachman is from the fact that the Torah itself reports the expiration, mourning and burial of Jacob. Was the death of Jacob an event of no significance? Were the burial arrangements unnecessary? Was he mourned for no reason? But the Torah describes these events as having occurred, and in a manner that implies that Joseph and his brothers acted as they ought to have acted when they perceived Jacob's soul as having departed his body.

Rav Nachman's response is that, all this notwithstanding, the Torah clearly regards Jacob as alive, and alive in the same sense that his descendants are alive -- as souls residing in physical bodies. So while Jacob's children's response to his death was the correct response according to Torah -- Torah law mandated that Jacob be mourned and buried -- this is only because Torah relates to and instructs reality on all levels, including the level on which Jacob's physical life is perceived to have ceased. At the same time, the Torah attests to the existence of the higher reality in which the truth and eternity of Jacob is never compromised, neither in the spiritual level nor on the physical level.

Possibling the Impossible

What are we to make of all this? What implications are there here for those of us who inhabit a reality defined by our five senses and the laws of nature -- a reality in which physical life inevitably yields to the eulogizer and the grave-digger?

The Talmud relates that when Moses ascended to heaven to receive the Torah, the angels objected. The Torah had best be left where it is, they argued, here in the spiritual realm. Moses responded:

What is written in the Torah? "I am the L-rd Your G-d who has taken you out from the land of Egypt." Have you been descended to Egypt? Have you been enslaved to Pharaoh? What else does it say? "You shall have no alien gods." Do you dwell amongst idol-worshiping nations? "Remember the day of Shabbat." Do you work? "Do not swear falsely." Do you do business? "Honor your father and your mother." Do you have parents? "Do not kill," "Do not commit adultery," "Do not steal"--Is there jealousy between you? Do you have an evil inclination?

The Torah, we are repeatedly told, is not in heaven, nor was it given to angels; it is a document communicated to mortal man to guide and sanctify physical life. Virtually all the Torah's commandments are physical activities: giving a coin to charity, binding tefillin on one's arm and head, eating matzah on Passover. Even the more spiritual mitzvot -- Torah study, prayer, love and awe of G-d -- are deeds performed by the physical brain, heart and lips. Intrinsic to the nature of the mitzvah is that it is to be performed by natural means, and in the most natural manner possible.

But there are two ways of viewing the Torah's delegation to the natural realm:

(a) Since G-d intended that the Torah serve as a guide to physical life, He designed it to conform to its rules and norms. Thus, Torah is subject to the laws of nature and cannot, or may not, supersede them.

(B) Torah, as the divine wisdom and will, precedes and transcends creation itself and is not subservient to natural law. Nature is merely its modus operandi: Torah confines itself to the natural realm because its function is to develop the physical reality, not to escape it or overturn it.

The distinction between (a) and (B) may seem merely semantic -- the bottom line, after all, is that Torah operates within the confines of nature. But when applied to the business of daily living, it translates into all the difference in the world. What happens when Torah demands the impossible? When it expects a tiny nation to live for four thousand years as "a lamb in the midst of seventy wolves" and not only survive but civilize the seventy wolves? When it tells us to rise above the pain and mortality of the physical state and imbue it with light, joy and eternity? --And to achieve this all with our humanly finite faculties and resources?

One who sees nature's laws as the basis upon which the Divine blueprint for life is predicated, can only reiterate that the impossible is impossible. If the constraints of our empirical reality do not allow it, he maintains, then Torah, which is bound by these constraints, certainly does not expect it of us. Perhaps these are hypothetical goals to strive towards as we "do the best we can" with the tools at our disposal. But this is the world we live in, and its laws are what define and govern our mission in life.

But one who knows that "our father Jacob did not die" -- that the Torah truth that Jacob embodies is not subject to the mortalities of the physical condition -- knows that no law or norm can restrict the full and unequivocal implementation of the Torah's vision of reality. True, the same Torah recounts, lends credence to and instructs the behavior of those who perceived Jacob to have died, for Torah operates within the physical reality, within, even, finite man's perception of the physical reality; but at the same time, Torah is utterly free of its limits and conventions.

Torah is neither subject to the natural reality nor divorced from it. It embraces both the natural and the supernatural, transcending nature even as it pervades and defines it, making real the impossible even as it employs only the most naturally possible means to do so.
torah man
shabbos, saturday, the seventh day.

a short day so I will include
QUOTE
Chapter 50
21. So now do not fear. I will sustain you and your small children." And he comforted them and spoke to their hearts. 22. So Joseph dwelt in Egypt, he and his father's household, and Joseph lived a hundred and ten years. 23. Joseph saw children of a third generation [born] to Ephraim; also the sons of Machir the son of Manasseh were born on Joseph's knees. 24. Joseph said to his brothers, "I am going to die; God will surely remember you and take you up out of this land to the land that He swore to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob." 25. And Joseph adjured the children of Israel, saying, "God will surely remember you, and you shall take up my bones out of here." 26. And Joseph died at the age of one hundred ten years, and they embalmed him and he was placed into the coffin in Egypt.


From Rashi on verse 21:
QUOTE
21.  and spoke to their hearts. Convincing words. Before you came down here, they (the Egyptians) were spreading rumors about me that I was a slave. Through you, it became known that I am a free man. Now if I kill you, what will people say?“He (Joseph) saw a group of young men and glorified himself through them by saying, ‘They are my brothers’ and at the end he killed them. Is there such a thing as a brother who kills his brothers” (Gen. Rabbah 100:9)?


this concludes the book of Bereishis (Genesis)

next week we start the book of Shmos (Exodus)
sheet4brain
Back up a bit to Jacob's deathbed, tm.

...By the hands of the Mighty God of Jacob.
From there is the Shepherd, the Stone of Israel,
By the God of your father who will help you,
And by the Almighty who will bless you...
(49:24-25)

Was Jacob simply being poetic in his deathbed or did he receive some sort of revelatory insight into the nature of his Creator before he went up there to meet Him ? The names of God above (except for Almighty) are 'new', not found in any of the earlier 48 chapters of Genesis.
torah man
QUOTE (sheet4brain @ Dec 22 2002, 07:27 PM)
Back up a bit to Jacob's deathbed, tm.

...By the hands of the Mighty God of Jacob.
From there is the Shepherd, the Stone of Israel,
By the God of your father who will help you,
And by the Almighty who will bless you...
(49:24-25)

Was Jacob simply being poetic in his deathbed or did he receive some sort of revelatory insight into the nature of his Creator before he went up there to meet Him ? The names of God above (except for Almighty) are 'new', not found in any of the earlier 48 chapters of Genesis.

Text:
QUOTE
24. But his bow was strongly established, and his arms were gilded from the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob; from there he sustained the rock of Israel, 25. from the God of your father, and He will help you, and with the Almighty, and He will bless you [with] the blessings of the heavens above, the blessings of the deep, lying below, the blessings of father and mother.


Rashi on those verses (your translation is a little off mine as discussed before)
QUOTE
24.  But his bow was strongly established. It became strongly established. his bow. Heb. קַשְׁתּוֹ, his strength. and his arms were gilded. Heb. וַיָּפֹזּוּ. This refers to the placing of the signet ring on his (Joseph’s) hand, an expression similar to“glittering gold (זָהָב מוּפָז)” (I Kings 10:18). This [elevation] came to him from the hands of the Holy One, blessed be He, who is the Mighty One of Jacob. From there he (Joseph) was elevated to be the sustainer of the rock of Israel, the mainstay of Israel, [Be’er Yizchak] an expression of“the initial stone (הָאֶבֶן הָרֹאשָׁה)” (Zech. 4:7), [which is] an expression of royalty. [Jacob, the Patriarch, was considered a royal personality.] Onkelos, too, rendered it in this way, [i.e., that וַיָּפֹזוּ is derived from פָּז, fine gold]. He rendered וַתֵּשֶׁב as וְתָבַת בְּהוֹן נְבִיאוּתֵיהּ, [meaning] his prophecy returned [and was fulfilled] upon them [thus rendering וַתֵּשֶׁב as “returning” rather than as“being established.” This refers to] the dreams he dreamed about them, עַל דְקַייֵם אוֹרַיְתָא בְּסִתְרָא, because he observed the Torah in secret. This is an addendum, and is not derived from the Hebrew of the verse. וְשַׁוִּי בְּתוּקְפָּא רוּחִצָנֵיהּ, and he placed his trust in the Mighty One. [This is] the Aramaic translation of וַתֵּשֶׁב בְּאֵיתָן קַשְׁתּוֹ, and this is how the language of the Targum follows the Hebrew: His prophecy returned because the might of the Holy One, blessed be He, was his bow and his trust. עַל דְּרָעוֹהִי בְּכֵן יִתְרְמָא דְּהַב therefore,“his arms were gilded (וַיָּפֹזוּ) ,” an expression of“fine gold (פָּז).” the rock of Israel. A contraction of אָב וּבֵן, father and son, [which Onkelos renders as אַבְהָן וּבְנִין], fathers and sons. 25.  from the God of your father. This befell you, and He will help you. and with the Almighty. And your heart was with the Holy One, blessed be He, when you did not heed your mistress’s orders, and [because of this] He shall bless you. the blessings of father and mother. Heb. בִּרְכֹת שָׁדַיִם וָרָחַם [Onkelos renders:] בִּרְכָתָא דְאַבָּא וּדְאִמָּא, blessings of father and mother. That is to say that the ones who beget the children and the ones who bear the children will be blessed. The males will impregnate with a drop of semen that is fit for conception, and the females will not lose what is in their womb and miscarry their fetuses. father. Heb. שָׁדַיִם. [How does שָׁדַיִם come to mean father?]“He shall be cast down (יָרֹה יִיָּרֶה)” (Exod. 19:13) is translated by the Targum as אִשְׁתְּדָאָה יִשְׁתְּדֵי Here too, [שָׁדַיִם means the father] because semen shoots (יוֹרֶה) like an arrow.


Hope that helps.
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