4/10/2026

Parashat 8 Portion 32 ‘’Va yishlach’’ Gen 33:18 – 35:8 Nahum 1:12-2:6,14

Blessed are You, YHVH our Elohim, Creator of the universe, You have set us apart with Your commandments and You have called us to internalize the words of the Torah. Please, YHVH, our Elohim, sweeten the words of Your Torah in our mouths and in the mouths of Your people, the family of Israel. May we and our offspring and the offspring of Your people, the house of Israel – all of us – know Your Name and study Your Torah for its own sake. Please uncover our eyes and open our hearts that we may carefully examine and receive the marvels and mysteries of Your Torah. Blessed are You, YHVH, who teaches Torah to His people Israel.

ויבא

  ויבא יעקב שׁלם עיר שׁכם אשׁר בארץ כנען

Gen 33:18  And Ya‛aqo came safely to the city of Sheem,  (modern day Nablus) which is in the land of Kena‛an, when he came from Paddan Aram. (also called Haran or the region in northern Mesopotamia/Aram where he lived with Laban) And he pitched his tent before the city. (modern day Nablus –(800 km journey lasting about 3 -4 years, which included an approximate stopover in Succoth of 18 to 36 months)

 

‘’The name "Shechem" specifically carries the connotation of a "shoulder" or "upper back," highlighting the city's geographical placement as a, representing a site of heavy, often crucial responsibility’’ (we see a similar patterns of departure from Egypt and from Paddam Aram, will we see a similar pattern for an end time called out people? – we are called out of an idolatrous world system – find shelter – Succoth – in the wilderness – Petra- after 42 months invited by Messiah into his kingdom)

 

Mat 11:29  “Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am meek and humble in heart, and you shall find rest for your beings.d Footnote: d Jer_6:16. Mat 11:30 Is 2:3) “For My yoke is gentle and My burden is light.” 

 

 "Yoke of the Torah," "yoke of the commandments," or "yoke of the Kingdom of Heaven" was a common rabbinic term and metaphor for submission to YHVH's authority and obedience to the Torah.

 

Shechem makes its first appearance in Scripture when Abraham enters the land of Canaan from Haran: (threshold covenant – entrance into the promised land is by invitation ONLY)

 

In Genesis 12:6–7, Abram travels “through the land as far as the site of the great tree of Moreh at Shechem” (also called the oak or terebinth of Moreh (אלון מורה) – a place of divine encounter and covenant confirmation) At that time, the Canaanites were still in the land.

 

There, YHVH appears to Abram for the first time in Canaan and gives the foundational promise: “To your offspring I will give this land.”

 

In response, Abraham builds an altar to YHVH—the first altar mentioned in the Promised Land – and enters a threshold covenant, common in ANE cultures) see Jn 3:5 – ‘’shvi shel Pesach’’)

This event marks Shechem as the initial entry point and a place of divine encounter and covenant confirmation right at the start of Abraham’s journey of faith in the land.

 

Jacob (Israel) at Shechem (where this weeks Torah portion begins)

About 200 years later (after Gen 12:6,7 -chronologically in the narrative), Jacob arrives at Shechem after his long exile in Paddan Aram and his ‘’reconciliation’’ with Esau.

 

In Genesis 33:18, Jacob “came safely to the city of Shechem, which is in the land of Canaan,” pitches his tent before (or near) the city, and buys a parcel of land from the sons of Hamor (father of Shechem) for 100 pieces of silver/money.

 

He erects an altar there and names it El-Elohe-Israel (“The mighty El, the El of Israel”), deliberately echoing and continuing the worship tradition begun by his grandfather Abraham at the same location.

Jacob’s purchase represents one of the earliest recorded acquisitions of land in Canaan by the patriarchs (the other major one being Abraham’s purchase of the cave of Machpelah in Hebron for a burial site). It signals an intent to settle.

 

The bones of Joseph (Jacob’s favoured son) are eventually buried at Shechem in the very plot of ground Jacob had purchased- Josh 24:32

 

‘’Oak trees generally live for 100 to 300 years, though many species commonly survive for 600 years or more in ideal conditions. Some, like the English oak, can live over 1,000 years, while clonal colonies like the Jurupa Oak are estimated to be over 13,000 years old.’’) oak wood was extensively used to make ploughs in ancient times)

 

Under Joshua, the Israelites gather at Shechem for covenant renewal, where Joshua challenges the people: “Choose this day whom you will serve” (Joshua 24). He sets up a stone as a witness under the oak, and the bones of Joseph are buried there—tying back to patriarchal roots.

 

It later becomes a city of refuge, a Levitical city, and plays roles in the period of the Judges (e.g., the story of Abimelech) and the divided monarchy.

 

And much later it became a meeting place for an encounter between the Messiah and a Samaritan woman – John 4 - This is believed to be the  first, most direct, and explicit declaration by Yahshua that He is the Messiah (the Anointed One) to any individual – to a ‘’sinful’’ rejected gentile woman. (about 1500 years after burial of Joseph)

 

Gen 33:19  And he bought the portion of the field where he had pitched his tent, from the children of amor, Sheem’s father, for one hundred qesitah.a Footnote: aA monetary unit of uncertain value, perhaps in the form of a lamb. 

Gen 33:20  And he set up a slaughter-place there and called it Ěl Elohě Yisra’ěl. 

 

The Defiling of Dinah - The story remains one of the most ethically complex in the Torah.

 

Gen 34:1  And Dinah, the daughter of Lě’ah, whom she had borne to Ya‛aqo, went out to see the daughters of the land. 

Gen 34:2  And Sheem, son of amor the iwwite, prince of the land, saw her and took her and lay with her, and humbled her. 

 

Gen 34:3  And his being clung to Dinah the daughter of Ya‛aqo, and he loved the girl and spoke kindly to the girl. 

Gen 34:4  And Sheem spoke to his father amor, saying, “Take this girl for me for a wife.” 

Gen 34:5  And Ya‛aqo heard that he had defiled Dinah his daughter. Now his sons were with his livestock in the field, so Ya‛aqo kept silent until they came. 

Gen 34:6  And amor, the father of Sheem, went out to Ya‛aqo to speak with him. 

Gen 34:7  And the sons of Ya‛aqo came in from the field when they heard it. And the men were grieved and very wroth, because he had done a senseless deed in Yisra’ěl by lying with Ya‛aqo’s daughter, which should not be done. 

Gen 34:8  But amor spoke with them, saying, “My son Sheem’s being longs for your daughter. Please give her to him for a wife. 

Gen 34:9  “And intermarry with us, give us your daughters and take our daughters for yourselves, 

Gen 34:10  and dwell with us, and let the land be before you. Dwell and move about in it, and have possessions in it.” 

Gen 34:11  And Sheem said to her father and her brothers, “Let me find favour in your eyes, and whatever you say to me I give. 

Gen 34:12  “Ask of me a bride price and gift ever so high, and I give according to what you say to me, but give me the girl for a wife.” (maybe Chamor was a ‘’good’’ Hivvite)

Gen 34:13  But the sons of Ya‛aqo answered Sheem and amor his father, and spoke with deceit, because he had defiled Dinah their sister. 

Gen 34:14  And they said to them, “We are not able to do this matter, to give our sister to one who is uncircumcised, for that would be a reproach to us. 

Gen 34:15  “Only on this condition would we agree to you: If you become as we are, to have every male of you circumcised, 

Gen 34:16  then we shall give our daughters to you, and take your daughters to us. And we shall dwell with you, and shall become one people. 

Gen 34:17  “But if you do not listen to us and be circumcised, we shall take our daughter and go.” 

Gen 34:18  And their words pleased amor and Sheem, amor’s son. 

Gen 34:19  And the young man did not delay to do this because he delighted in Ya‛aqo’s daughter. Now he was more respected than all the household of his father. 

Gen 34:20  And amor and Sheem his son came to the gate of their city, and spoke with the men of their city, saying, 

Gen 34:21  “These men are at peace with us, so let them dwell in the land and move about in it. And see, the land is large enough for them. Let us take their daughters for us for wives, and let us give them our daughters. 

Gen 34:22  “Only on this condition would the men agree to dwell with us, to be one people: if every male among us is circumcised as they are circumcised. 

Gen 34:23  “Their herds and their possessions, and all their beasts, should they not be ours? Only let us agree with them, and let them dwell with us.” (was this deceitful?)

Gen 34:24  And all who went out of the gate of his city listened to amor and Sheem his son; every male was circumcised, all who went out of the gate of his city. 

Gen 34:25  And it came to be on the third day, when they were in pain, that two of the sons of Ya‛aqo, Shim‛on and Lěwi, Dinah’s brothers, each took his sword and came boldly upon the city and killed all the males. 

Gen 34:26  And they killed amor and Sheem his son with the edge of the sword, and took Dinah from Sheem’s house, and went out. 

Gen 34:27  The sons of Ya‛aqo came upon the slain, and plundered the city, because they had defiled their sister. 

Gen 34:28  They took their flocks and their herds, and their donkeys, and that which was in the city and that which was in the field, 

 

According to Genesis 49:5-6, Jacob’s sons Simeon and Levi hamstrung bulls (or oxen) during their vengeful attack on the men of Shechem. This act of crippling animals was done in anger following the rape of their sister, Dinah, and was condemned by their father, Jacob, as a reckless act of violence and wanton destruction. 

 

Gen 34:28  They took their flocks and their herds, and their donkeys, and that which was in the city and that which was in the field, 

Gen 34:29  and all their wealth. And all their little ones and their wives they took captive, and they plundered all that was in the houses. 

Gen 34:30  And Ya‛aqo said to Shim‛on and Lěwi, “You have troubled me by making me a stench among the inhabitants of the land, among the Kena‛anites and the Perizzites. And I am few in number, they shall gather themselves against me and shall strike me, and I shall be destroyed, my household and I.” 

Gen 34:31  But they said, “Should he treat our sister like a whore?” 

 

Many midrashim and commentators defend the brothers’ zeal: Shechem committed a capital crime (rape of an Israelite woman), and the entire city was complicit by not protesting or judging the wrong (a form of collective responsibility under Noahide laws, according to some views).

Rashi on 34:25 notes they are called “Dinah’s brothers” specifically because they risked their lives for her honor.

Some sources (e.g., in Jubilees, which influences some rabbinic thought) portray Simeon and Levi’s action more positively, as righteous zeal.

 

Later Consequences and Broader Themes

Jacob’s deathbed rebuke (Genesis 49:5–7): “Simeon and Levi are brothers; instruments of violence are their swords... Cursed be their anger... I will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel.” The sages connect this directly to the Shechem incident — their uncontrolled zeal led to tribal dispersion (Levi became scattered as priests; Simeon’s territory was absorbed into Judah)

Some midrashim add positive or redemptive elements: e.g., Dinah later married Job, or bore a daughter Asenath (who married Joseph and became mother of Ephraim and Manasseh). These fill in Dinah’s otherwise silent story.

Overall theme: The story warns against intermarriage and assimilation with Canaanites, stresses the danger of “going out” unprotected into foreign culture, and grapples with balancing justice/zeal versus prudence and peace. It also shows family dysfunction and the cost of unchecked anger.

 

The question scholars have is ‘’was this incident commanded by YHVH or was it mans effort to attempt to solve a serious transgression and to seek justice, or simply an act of revenge’’?

 

Why would Mose later pass a law that the Hivites were to be exterminated? – Midrash!

 

Deu 7:1  “When יהוה your Elohim brings you into the land which you go to possess, He shall also clear away many nations before you: the ittites and the Girgashites and the Amorites and the Kenaanites and the Perizzites and the iwwites and the Yeusites, seven nations greater and mightier than you. 

Deu 7:2  “And when יהוה your Elohim gives them over to you, you shall strike them and put them under the ban, completely. Make no covenant with them, and show them no favour. 

Deu 7:3  “And do not intermarry with them – you do not give your daughter to his son, and you do not take his daughter for your son, 

Deu 7:4  for he turns your sons away from following Me, to serve other mighty ones. Then the displeasure of יהוה shall burn against you and promptly destroy you. 

Deu 7:5  “But this is what you do to them: Break down their slaughter-places, and smash their pillars, and cut down their Ashěrim, and burn their carved images with fire. 

Deu 7:6  “For you are a set-apart people to יהוה your Elohim. יהוה your Elohim has chosen you to be a people for Himself, a treasured possession above all the peoples on the face of the earth. 

 

YHVH Blesses and Renames Jacob

Gen 35:1  And Elohim said to Ya‛aqo, “Arise, go up to Běyth Ěl and dwell there. And make a slaughter-place there to Ěl who appeared to you when you fled from the face of Ěsaw your brother.” 

Gen 35:2  And Ya‛aqo said to his household and to all who were with him, “Put away the foreign mighty ones that are among you, and cleanse yourselves, and change your garments. 

Gen 35:3  “And let us arise and go up to Běyth Ěl, and let me make there a slaughter-place to Ěl, who answered me in the day of my distress, and has been with me in the way which I have gone.” 

Gen 35:4  So they gave Ya‛aqo all the foreign mighty ones which were in their hands, and all their earrings which were in their ears. And Ya‛aqo hid them under the terebinth tree which was near Sheem. 

Gen 35:5  And they departed, and the fear of Elohim was upon the cities that were all around them, and they did not pursue the sons of Ya‛aqo

Gen 35:6  And Ya‛aqo came to Luz, that is Běyth Ěl, which is in the land of Kena‛an, he and all the people who were with him. 

Gen 35:7  And he built there a slaughter-place and called the place El Běyth Ěl, because there Elohim appeared to him when he fled from the face of his brother. 

 

Bethel (or El-beth-el) in Genesis 35:7 is not Jerusalem, nor is the altar Jacob built there located on the future Temple Mount. (Jacob's Ladder is a dream recorded in Genesis 28:10-22)

Biblical Bethel lay approximately 10–12 miles north of Jerusalem.

The very same Bethel from Genesis 35:7 (Jacob's altar site) later became one of the two primary symbols of idolatry for the ten northern tribes. Its strategic location made it a convenient alternative to Jerusalem, but the Bible portrays this as a great spiritual failure that contributed to the northern kingdom's eventual downfall. The patriarchal “House of YHVH” ironically turned into a house of rival, calf-based worship.’’

 

What Happened at Bethel

‘’After King Solomon's death (around 931 BC), the kingdom split. The ten northern tribes followed Jeroboam I as their king, while Judah and Benjamin remained loyal to Rehoboam in the south (with the Temple in Jerusalem).

Jeroboam feared that if his people continued traveling south to worship at the Jerusalem Temple, their loyalty might shift back to the Davidic line. To prevent this, he established two rival worship centers:

One at Dan (in the far north)

One at Bethel (near the southern border of his kingdom, about 12 miles north of Jerusalem)

He made two golden calves, placing one in each location, and declared: “Here are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt.” He also appointed non-Levitical priests, built an altar, and instituted new festivals’’ (Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?)

 

The prophets strongly condemned it:

Amos (who ministered in the north) denounced the altar and rituals at Bethel (Amos 3:14; 4:4; 5:5–6), calling the people to seek YHVH instead of relying on the shrine.

Hosea referred to it critically, sometimes playing on the name as “Beth-aven” (“House of Wickedness” or “House of Evil”) instead of “Bethel” (“House of YHVH”) due to the idolatry there (Hosea 4:15; 5:8; 10:5, 15).

 

Gen 35:8  And Deorah, Riqah’s nurse, died, and she was buried below Běyth Ěl under the terebinth tree. So the name of it was called Allon Bauth.

 

Rabbi Shmuel bar Naman (in Genesis Rabbah 81:5) explains that “allon” in Greek means “another.” While Jacob was still mourning Deborah, news arrived of his mother Rebekah’s death. Thus, the place became “Allon-bacuth” “the oak of another weeping.”

Jacob never saw his mother again after fleeing from Esau, and the Torah never explicitly records Rebekah’s death or burial (why?) The sages say the family kept her death relatively quiet (to avoid public embarrassment involving Esau, “the one who came forth from her womb”). Because of this, Scripture alludes to it indirectly through the mourning for Deborah’’

 

Maybe ‘’another’’ meaning of Allon Bauth would point to how the 10 northern tribes of Israel would be dispersed among the nations and even ‘’divorced’’ by YHVH for their unrepented of idolatry. (Jer 3:8) Not an oak where a covenant was made but an oak where the covenant was broken.

 

Perhaps this points to another important message this Torah portion teaches us:

 

‘’From the garden to the grave’’ mankind’s idolatry (doing what is right in your own eyes) has produced enormous suffering and death on earth – and in these last days it will become so out of control that YHVH will almost have to totally destroy mankind on earth.

 

The survivors of this apocalyptic destruction along with the resurrected set apart ones will rule the earth with Messiah for 1000 years – where no form of idolatry will be allowed or tolerated.

 

Blessed are you YHVH, our Elohim, King of the Universe, you have given us your Torah of truth and have planted everlasting life within our midst. Blessed are you, YHVH giver of the Torah –

Additional Midrash on suffering:

Why is life so hard? Why do YHVH’s children suffer so much?

Joh 16:33  “These words I have spoken to you, that in Me you might have peace. In the world you have pressure,( Thlipsis- θλίψις) but take courage, I have overcome the world.” 

meaning θλίψις -Literal Meaning: It refers to a physical pressing together or narrowing (like a narrow place that "hems someone in").

Figurative Meaning: It refers to the internal pressure that causes someone to feel confined, burdened, or without options.

Acts 14:22 - YHVH’s people have their trials.( θλίψις) It was never designed by YHVH, when he chose his people, that they should be an untried people. They were chosen in the furnace of affliction; they were never chosen to worldly peace and earthly joy. Freedom from sickness and the pains of mortality was never promised them.

Heb 5:8  though being a Son, He learned obedience by what He suffered. 

"Made Perfect" (Teleioo): This Greek term means to complete a task, achieve a goal, or bring to maturity—not to fix a moral defect.

Experiential Obedience: He learned what obedience costs by obeying YHVH under extreme suffering, making Him a sympathetic High Priest.

Why many called few chosen – Mat 22:14

The verse is Isaiah 48:10, which reads: "Behold, I have refined you, but not as silver; I have tested [or chosen] you in the furnace of affliction" It signifies that YHVH refines and selects His people through trials, hardships, and suffering, treating affliction as a purifying process. 

Isa 53:7  He was oppressed and He was afflicted, but He did not open His mouth. He was led as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before its shearers is silent, but He did not open His mouth. 

How well do you and I suffer?

2Co 4:7  And we have this treasure in earthen vessels, so that the excellence of the power might be of Elohim, and not of us – 

2Co 4:8  being hard pressed on every side,b but not crushed; being perplexed, but not in despair; Footnote: bSee 1Co_1:8

2Co 4:9  being persecuted, but not forsaken; being thrown down, but not destroyed; 

2Co 4:10  always bearing about in the body the dying of the Master יהושע, that the life of יהושע might also be manifested in our body. 

2Co 4:11  For we, the living, are always delivered to death for the sake of יהושע, that the life of יהושע might also be manifested in our mortal flesh, 

2Co 4:12  so that death indeed is working in us, but the life in you.

2Co 4:16  Therefore we do not lose heart, but even if our outward man is perishing, the inward man is being renewed day by day. 

2Co 4:17  For this slight momentary pressure is working for us a far more exceeding and everlasting weight of esteem. 

2Co 4:18  We are not looking on what is seen, but on what is not seen. For what is seen passes away, but what is not seen is everlasting.c Footnote: cSee 2Co_5:7, Rom_8:24, Heb_11:1 and Heb_11:13