7/02/2026

Parashat 11 Portion 44 (Va yigash) Gen 46:28-47:31 Zech 10:6-12 + 11:4-11

 Blessed are You, YHVH our Elohim, Creator of the universe, who desires covenantal intimacy with Your called-out ones – blessed are those whom You have called and chosen and have given a heart that longs for and sincerely seeks Your covenantal life.  Please, YHVH, our Elohim, sweeten the words of Your Torah in our hearts and in the hearts of Your people, the family of Israel. May we and our offspring and the offspring of Your people, the house of Jacob – all of us – know Your Name and study Your Torah empowering us to sincerely love one another and to love You above all. Please uncover our eyes and open our hearts that we may carefully examine and understand the marvels and mysteries of Your Torah. Blessed are You, YHVH, who has created and established Your Torah for the set apart ones of Israel – through Yahshua our Messiah - Amein.

Joseph Brings His Family to Egypt – vs 1-27

 To better understand this ‘’shiur’’ (teaching of this Torah portion) let us first ‘’take a trip down memory lane’’ – to see how Jacob and his family land up in Egypt.

The first time YHVH explicitly promised the land of Canaan (Israel) to His people as an inheritance was given in Genesis 12:7, shortly after Abraham (then called Abram) arrived there.

 YHVH repeated and expanded this promise several times:

 Genesis 13:14-17 – YHVH tells Abram to look in all directions: “All the land that you see I will give to you and your offspring forever.”

Genesis 15:18-21 - During a covenant ceremony, YHVH specifies the borders: “To your descendants I give this land, from the Wadi of Egypt to the great river, the Euphrates,” listing the peoples whose land it would include. This is a formal, unconditional covenant.

 “Greater Israel” or the full Abrahamic Covenant land will be 10 – 20 times larger than it is today.

The full Abrahamic promise covers a vast territory including:

·         Modern Israel + Palestinian territories

·         All of Lebanon

·         Most or all of Jordan

·         Significant parts of Syria

·         Parts of northern Saudi Arabia / Sinai (Egypt)

·         Western Iraq (up to the Euphrates)

 Genesis 17:8 - YHVH reaffirms it as an “everlasting possession” to Abraham and his descendants.

The promise was later confirmed to Isaac (Genesis 26:3-4) and Jacob (whose name was changed to Israel; Genesis 28:13), and the Israelites eventually took possession under Joshua.

 Under the Mosaic law the land is possessed and enjoyed conditionally based on obedience to the ‘’Covenant’’ YHVH recorded in the Torah. Israel can be blessed and prosper in the land if obedient, but disobedience leads to curses, expulsion, or exile (Leviticus 26; Deuteronomy 28). However, this does not cancel the Abrahamic promise—exile is temporary, and YHVH will ultimately restore them to the land because of His earlier oath to the fathers (Abraham, Isaac, Jacob). Deuteronomy 30 emphasizes future restoration after judgment

 The Mosaic Covenant was added 430 years after the Abrahamic Covenant (Galatians 3:17) and does not annul it.

Gal 3:17  Now this I say, Torah, that came four hundred and thirty years later, does not annul a covenant previously confirmed by Elohim in Messiah, so as to do away with the promise. 

Gal 3:18  For if the inheritance is by Torah, it is no longer by promise, but Elohim gave it to Araham through a promise. Is 1:9 Rom 9:29

 A covenant is a formal, solemn, and binding agreement between two or more parties – in other words the Torah states the terms and conditions of YHVH’s promise – confirmed and established by Messiah.

 Gen 46:1  And Yisra’ěl set out with all that he had, and came to Be’ěrshea, and slaughtered slaughterings to the Elohim of his father Yitsaq. 

Gen 46:2  And Elohim spoke to Yisra’ěl in the visions of the night, and said, “Ya‛aqo, Ya‛aqo!” And he said, “Here I am.” 

Gen 46:3  And He said, “I am the Ěl, Elohim of your father. Do not be afraid to go down to Mitsrayim, for I shall make you there into a great nation. 

Gen 46:4  “I Myself am going down with you to Mitsrayim and I Myself shall certainly bring you up again. And let Yosěph put his hand on your eyes.” 

Gen 46:5  And Ya‛aqo rose up from Be’ěrshea. And the sons of Yisra’ěl brought their father Ya‛aqo, and their little ones, and their wives, in the wagons which Pharaoh had sent to transport him. 

Gen 46:6  And they took their livestock and their property which they had acquired in the land of Kena‛an, and came into Mitsrayim, Ya‛aqo and all his seed with him. 

Gen 46:7  His sons and his sons’ sons, his daughters and his sons’ daughters, and all his seed he brought with him to Mitsrayim. 

Gen 46:8  And these were the names of the children of Yisra’ěl, Ya‛aqo and his sons, who came into Mitsrayim: Re’uěn was Ya‛aqo’s first-born. 

Gen 46:9  And the sons of Re’uěn: ano, and Pallu, and etsron, and Karmi. 

Gen 46:10  And the sons of Shim‛on: Yemu’ěl, and Yamin, and Oha, and Yain, and Tsoar, and Sha’ul, son of a Kena‛anite woman. 

Gen 46:11  And the sons of Lěwi: Gěrshon, Qehath, and Merari. 

Gen 46:12  And the sons of Yehuah: Ěr, and Onan, and Shělah, and Perets, and Zera – but Ěr and Onan died in the land of Kena‛an. And the sons of Perets were etsron and amul. 

Gen 46:13  And the sons of Yissasar: Tola, and Puw‛ah, and Yo, and Shimron. 

Gen 46:14  And the sons of Zeulun: Sere, and Ělon, and Yale’ěl. 

Gen 46:15  These were the sons of Lě’ah, whom she bore to Ya‛aqo in Paddan Aram, with his daughter Dinah. All the beings, his sons and his daughters, were thirty-three. 

Gen 46:16  And the sons of Ga: Tsiphyon and aggi, Shuni and Etsbon, Ěri and Aroi, and Arěli. 

Gen 46:17  And the sons of Ashěr: Yimnah, and Yishwah, and Yishwi, and Beri‛ah, and Sera, their sister. And the sons of Beri‛ah: eer and Malki’ěl. 

Gen 46:18  These were the sons of Zilpah, whom Laan gave to Lě’ah his daughter. And these she bore to Ya‛aqo: sixteen beings. 

Gen 46:19  The sons of Raěl, Ya‛aqo’s wife: Yosěph and Binyamin. 

Gen 46:20  And to Yosěph in the land of Mitsrayim were born Menashsheh and Ephrayim, whom Asenath, the daughter of Poti-Pherah priest of On, bore to him. 

Gen 46:21  And the sons of Binyamin: Belah, and Beer, and Ashběl, Gěra and Na‛aman, Ěi and Rosh, Muppim and uppim, and Ard. 

Gen 46:22  These were the sons of Raěl who were born to Ya‛aqo: fourteen beings in all. 

Gen 46:23  And the son of Dan: ushim. 

Gen 46:24  And the sons of Naphtali: Yatse’ěl, and Guni, and Yětser, and Shillěm. 

Gen 46:25  These were the sons of Bilhah, whom Laan gave to Raěl his daughter, and she bore these to Ya‛aqo: seven beings in all. 

Gen 46:26  All the beings who went with Ya‛aqo to Mitsrayim, who came from his body, besides Ya‛aqo’s sons’ wives, were sixty-six beings in all. 

Gen 46:27  And the sons of Yosěph who were born to him in Mitsrayim were two beings. All the beings of the house of Ya‛aqo who went to Mitsrayim were seventy. 

 ואת־יהודה

Jacob and Joseph Reunited

Gen 46:28  And (Jacob) he sent Yehuah before him to Yosěph, to point out before him the way to Goshen. And they came to the land of Goshen. 

 Jacob sends his son Judah ahead of the group to Joseph - to inform Joseph of their arrival and to get directions/guidance to the region of Goshen, where Joseph had arranged for them to settle (a good land for shepherds, separate from the main Egyptian population).

 Gen 46:29  And Yosěph made ready his chariot and went up to Goshen to meet his father Yisra’ěl. And he appeared to him, and fell on his neck and wept on his neck a long time. 

Gen 46:30  And Yisra’ěl said to Yosěph, “Now let me die, since I have seen your face, that you are still alive.” 

Gen 46:31  And Yosěph said to his brothers and to his father’s household, “I am going up to inform Pharaoh, and say to him, ‘My brothers and those of my father’s house, who were in the land of Kena‛an, have come to me. 

Gen 46:32  And the men are shepherds, that they have been men of livestock, and they have brought their flocks and their herds, and all that they have.’ 

Gen 46:33  “And it shall be, when Pharaoh calls you and says, ‘What is your occupation?’ 

Gen 46:34  that you shall say, ‘Your servants have been men of livestock from our youth even till now, both we and also our fathers,’ so that you dwell in the land of Goshen, for every shepherd is an abomination to the Mitsrites.” 

 The Scriptures do not explicitly explain why Egyptians viewed shepherds this way. However, historical and cultural context from ancient Egypt and biblical scholarship provides several likely reasons:

 Egyptians were a highly civilized, settled, agricultural society cantered around the Nile. Shepherds were often seen as nomadic, uncivilized, or lower-class. Their lifestyle (wandering with flocks, living in tents) contrasted with Egyptian urban and farming ideals. Shepherding was viewed as a lowly, dirty occupation.

 Egyptians worshipped many animal gods (e.g., ram-headed Khnum, the Apis bull, Hathor as a cow goddess). Hebrews, as shepherds, raised, sacrificed, and ate animals (like sheep, goats, and cattle) that Egyptians considered sacred or associated with deities. Killing and eating such animals would have been deeply offensive or “abominable” to Egyptians.

 Joseph used this known prejudice strategically. By highlighting their occupation, he ensured Pharaoh would allow (or direct) them to live separately in the fertile land of Goshen away from the main Egyptian population — preserving their family identity and avoiding assimilation or conflict.

 Jacob's Family Settles in Goshen

Gen 47:1  Then Yosěph went and spoke to Pharaoh, and said, “My father and my brothers, their flocks and their herds and all that they possess, have come from the land of Kena‛an. And see, they are in the land of Goshen.” 

Gen 47:2  And he took five men from among his brothers and presented them to Pharaoh. 

Gen 47:3  And Pharaoh said to his brothers, “What is your occupation?” And they said to Pharaoh, “Your servants are shepherds, both we and also our fathers.” 

Gen 47:4  And they said to Pharaoh, “We have come to dwell in the land, because there is no pasture for your servants’ flocks, for the scarcity of food is severe in the land of Kena‛an. And now, please let your servants dwell in the land of Goshen.” 

Gen 47:5  And Pharaoh spoke to Yosěph, saying, “Your father and your brothers have come to you. 

Gen 47:6  “The land of Mitsrayim is before you. Settle your father and brothers in the best of the land, let them dwell in the land of Goshen. And if you know of capable men among them, then make them chief herdsmen over my livestock.” 

Gen 47:7  And Yosěph brought in his father Ya‛aqo and set him before Pharaoh. And Ya‛aqo blessed Pharaoh. 

 By blessing Pharaoh, Jacob acted as YHVH’s representative. The greater (the one with YHVH’s blessing) blesses the lesser (Hebrews 7:7). Even though Pharaoh was the most powerful ruler on earth, Jacob as a patriarch chosen by YHVH — held superior standing.

 Gen 47:8  And Pharaoh said to Ya‛aqo, “How old are you?” 

Gen 47:9  And Ya‛aqo said to Pharaoh, “The days of the years of my sojournings are one hundred and thirty years. Few and evil have been the days of the years of my life, and they have not reached the days of the years of the life of my fathers in the days of their sojournings.” 

Gen 47:10  And Ya‛aqo blessed Pharaoh and went out from before Pharaoh. 

Gen 47:11  So Yosěph settled his father and his brothers and gave them a possession in the land of Mitsrayim, in the best of the land, in the land of Ra‛meses, as Pharaoh had commanded. 

Gen 47:12  And Yosěph provided his father, and his brothers, and all his father’s household with bread for the mouth of the little ones. 

 Hebrew idiom (literally "according to the mouth of the little ones")

 Joseph and the Famine

Gen 47:13  Now there was no bread in all the land, because the scarcity of food was very severe, and the land of Mitsrayim and all the land of Kena‛an became exhausted from the scarcity of food. 

Gen 47:14  And Yosěph gathered up all the silver that was found in the land of Mitsrayim and in the land of Kena‛an, for the grain which they bought. And Yosěph brought the silver into Pharaoh’s house. 

 Rev 13:16  And he causes all, both small and great, and rich and poor, and free and slave, to be given a mark upon their right hand or upon their foreheads, 

Rev 13:17  and that no one should be able to buy or sell except he that has the mark or the name of the beast, or the number of his name. 

 Similarities people note apply to the end times:

 Total economic control - In Genesis, survival (food) required full dependence on Pharaoh’s system. In Revelation, buying/selling (economic participation) requires allegiance to the Beast.

 Crisis leading to loss of autonomy - A severe famine forced the Egyptians to surrender ownership. In the end times, tribulation, scarcity, and global chaos could force people to accept the Antichrist’s mark for survival.

 Centralized power - Pharaoh became the virtual owner of everything. The Antichrist will exercise global economic and religious control.

 Joseph as a type of Messiah (a common view) — Joseph saved the world from famine but centralized power under Pharaoh. Some see this as contrasting with the true Messiah, while the Antichrist will mimic false “salvation” through control.

 WEF (World Economic Forum) slogan “You’ll own nothing and be happy” - The phrase comes from a 2016 essay by Danish politician Ida Auken (titled “Welcome to 2030. I Own Nothing, Have No Privacy, and Life Has Never Been Better”), which was promoted by the World Economic Forum

 ‘’It envisions a future (by 2030) where people rent everything (housing, cars, appliances, etc.) instead of owning it, with goods shared via subscription models, and digital systems tracking usage. The idea is framed as leading to greater sustainability, efficiency, and happiness by reducing materialism and environmental impact.

Critics (especially in conservative and conspiracy-oriented circles) interpret it as a soft form of technocratic socialism or neo-feudalism, where a small elite class (governments + corporations) controls most resources, and ordinary people have little real ownership or privacy.’’

 Gen 47:15  And when the silver was all spent in the land of Mitsrayim and in the land of Kena‛an, all the Mitsrites came to Yosěph and said, “Give us bread, for why should we die in your presence? For the silver is gone!” 

Gen 47:16  And Yosěph said, “Give your livestock, and I give you bread for your livestock, if the silver is gone.” 

Gen 47:17  So they brought their livestock to Yosěph, and Yosěph gave them bread in exchange for the horses, and for the flocks they owned, and for the herds they owned, and for the donkeys. Thus he fed them with bread in exchange for all their livestock that year. 

Gen 47:18  And when that year had ended, they came to him the next year and said to him, “We do not hide from my master that our silver is all spent, and my master also has the livestock we owned. There has not been left any before my master but our bodies and our lands. 

Gen 47:19  “Why should we die before your eyes, both we and our land? Buy us and our land for bread, and let us and our land be servants of Pharaoh. And give us seed, and let us live and not die, and let the land not lie waste.” 

Gen 47:20  And Yosěph bought the entire land of Mitsrayim for Pharaoh, because every man of the Mitsrites sold his field, because the scarcity of food was severe upon them. And the land came to be Pharaoh’s. 

Gen 47:21  And as for the people, he moved them into the cities, from one end of the borders of Mitsrayim to the other end. 

 Gen 47:22  Only the ground of the priests he did not buy, for the priests had from what Pharaoh gave them by law, and they ate that which Pharaoh gave them by law. Therefore they did not sell their ground. 

 Some prophecy scholars predict that this represents a false religious system – a one world religion – that will protect and promote a one world government.

 Gen 47:23  And Yosěph said to the people, “Look, I have bought you and your land today for Pharaoh. Look, here is seed for you, and you shall sow the land. 

Gen 47:24  “And it shall be that in the harvest you shall give one-fifth to Pharaoh. And four-fifths is your own, as seed for the field and for your food, for those of your households and as food for your little ones.” 

Gen 47:25  And they said, “You have saved our lives. Let us find favour in the eyes of my master, and we shall become Pharaoh’s servants.” 

Gen 47:26  And Yosěph made it a law over the land of Mitsrayim to this day, that Pharaoh should have one-fifth, except for the ground of the priests only, which did not become Pharaoh’s. 

Gen 47:27  And Yisra’ěl dwelt in the land of Mitsrayim, in the land of Goshen. (the camp of the righteous) And they had possessions there and were fruitful and increased exceedingly.

 Gen 47:28  And Ya‛aqo lived in the land of Mitsrayim seventeen years. So, `the length of Ya‛aqo’s life was one hundred and forty-seven years. 

 Gen 47:29  And the time for Yisra’ěl to die drew near, and he called his son Yosěph and said to him, “Now if I have found favour in your eyes, please put your hand under my thigh, (Yarek oath) and show loving-commitment and truth to me. Please do not bury me in Mitsrayim, 

 The “thigh” (yarek) was considered the seat of procreative power and strength (related to the idea of descendants and the covenant line). Touching it while swearing invoked the most sacred aspects of life, lineage, and YHVH’s specific promises – given to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

It was the ancient equivalent of swearing on the Bible or raising your right hand — a deeply personal and covenantal gesture – the promises given to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob would be protected and passed on from generation to generation.

 Gen 47:30  but I shall lie with my fathers, and you shall take me up out of Mitsrayim and bury me in their burial-place.” And he said, “I do as you have said.” 

Gen 47:31  And he said, “Swear to me.” And he swore to him, and Yisra’ěl bowed himself on the head of the bed. 

 Heb 11:21  By belief, Ya‛aqo, when he was dying, blessed each of the sons of Yosěph, and did reverence on the top of his staff. 

 Even while dying in a foreign land (Egypt), Jacob believed YHVH’s promises.

Leaning on his staff became a beautiful picture of dependence on YHVH rather than on his own strength.

 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 – Amein.

Additional Commentary of a Returning Grated in Gentile Aliyah.

  • Messianic and Hebraic Roots teachers (e.g., some associated with organizations focused on Aliyah) see the Joseph narrative as a prototype for end-time regathering, where both Jews and grafted-in Gentiles (believers) participate in the return to the land.
  • Typological interpreters (common in some dispensational circles) note that just as Jacob’s family found physical salvation in Egypt under Joseph, in the last days a remnant of Israel (and possibly Gentile believers) will find refuge and ultimately return to the Promised Land under Messiah’s protection (often linked to places like Petra or divine protection during the Great Tribulation — Revelation 12).
  • Some connect this to prophecies of a second exodus (Isaiah 11:11-12, Jeremiah 16:14-15, Micah 7:15), which is greater than the first, involving a regathering from all nations.

Gentile Believers and Aliyah in the Last Days

  • The idea that Gentile believers (grafted into Israel - Romans 11) might participate in a form of Aliyah (return to Israel) during the Tribulation is promoted in certain Messianic Jewish and Christian Zionist teachings.
  • They often cite prophecies like:
    • Isaiah 49:22 -Gentiles helping carry Israel’s sons and daughters back.
    • Isaiah 60–61 and Zechariah 8 - Nations coming to Israel and assisting in her restoration.
  • During the Tribulation, many expect a massive turning of Jews to Messiah (“all Israel will be saved” - Romans 11:26) and a regathering. Some extend this to include Gentile believers finding refuge or playing a role in the land.

Comfort for God's People

Isa 40:1  “Comfort, comfort My people!” says your Elohim. 

Isa 40:2  “Speak to the heart of Yerushalayim, and cry out to her, that her hard service is completed, that her crookedness is pardoned, that she has received from the hand of יהוה double for all her sins.” 

Isa 40:3  The voice of one crying in the wilderness, “Prepare the way of יהוה; make straight in the desert a highway for our Elohim. 

Isa 40:4  “Let every valley be raised, and every mountain and hill made low. And the steep ground shall become level, and the rough places smooth. 

Isa 40:5  “And the esteem of יהוה shall be revealed, and all flesh together shall see it. For the mouth of יהוה has spoken.” 

Isa 40:27  Why do you say, O Ya‛aqo, and speak, O Yisra’ěl, “My way is hidden from יהוה, and my rights are overlooked by my Elohim”? 

Isa 40:28  Did you not know? Have you not heard? The everlasting Elohim, יהוה, the Creator of the ends of the earth, neither faints nor is weary. His understanding is unsearchable. 

Isa 40:29  He gives power to the faint, and to those who have no might He increases strength. 

Isa 40:30  Even youths shall faint and be weary, and young men stumble and fall, 

Isa 40:31  but those who wait on יהוה renew their strength, they raise up the wing like eagles, they run and are not weary, they walk and do not faint. 

 

Ameyn.