John Wayne Meets Jacob
Jacob inspires us
to overcome our Esau-like desires for instant gratification and physical power.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
Esau is surely one of the most tragic figures of the
Bible. He is a simple man, whose robust
nature leads him to exult in his own health, strength and energy. Esau loves to hunt. He revels in the
outdoors and in bursting limits. Esau is a man of impulse. Like Rambo or John Wayne, Esau thrives on
his tremendous power, his physical courage and his own inner drives.
Modern America admires that. We distrust the intellectual.
Someone who thinks too much, or who is too sensitive to the feelings of
others (or to his own feelings) is held in disdain. We prefer a man who can impose his own will through a show of
determination and strength, someone who doesn't plan in advance, someone who
can relish the moment and trust his own passions.
America accepts the romantic notion that the truest and best
expression of who we are lies in the unbridled release of our feelings. Therefore, our feelings are not--and should
not be--subject to control.
The Torah asserts, to the contrary, that every aspect of
being human--heart, mind and soul--needs constant training, direction and
restraint.
The story of Esau and Jacob is the story of these two
conflicting approaches to being human. Esau comes home after a day of hunting
and he wants to eat. Meanwhile, Jacob
has prepared a pot of lentil stew.
Here, the man of action meets the man of forethought. Acting on impulse, Esau demands to be
fed.
Responding with calculation, Jacob agrees to sell his stew
in exchange for Esau's birthright. Living in the present, Esau sees no benefit
in his birthright. After all, it
doesn't satisfy his hunger, so his parting with his birthright represents no
real loss.
Jacob, on the other hand, lives with one foot in the
future. Less powerful than his burly
brother, Jacob compensates by using his mind and by weighing the
consequences. He prefers to skip a meal
if that means he will acquire the birthright of the covenant.
What makes the Torah's story so powerful is that we can
easily understand Esau's motivation. As
Americans, we are taught from earliest childhood to admire unrestrained
expressions of feelings, to treat our emotions as somehow beyond our own
control, as somehow sacred. Ultimately, what makes us human is precisely that
willingness and ability to control and channel our deepest drives.
The Mishna asks, "Who is powerful?" It answers, "One who conquers his own
impulse." Jacob's ability to control his own drives, to manipulate the
present in order to thrive in the future, his ability to restrain himself now
in order to benefit later, is profoundly out of touch with mainstream American
values. And it is precisely that trait that lifts a person above the moment and
makes the future possible. A fitting trait for the Eternal People.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit
Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the University
of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is the
author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill). For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary,
please send an email request to bartson@uj.edu.