Torah. The Pentateuch of Moses in weekly chapters, in poetic form - страница 8

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Putting Binyamin in the cup and ‘making’ him guilty by detaining him accordingly,
As punishment, making his younger brother his slave, Binyamin fell into a trap.

The Book of Being

Weekly Chapter: Vayigash #11

Yehuda begs Yosef to free his younger brother Binyamin and offers,
To remain in slavery in his place, by his devotion Yosef has defeated him.
Convinced of his brothers’ unity, Yosef reveals himself to them,
‘Is my father Yaakov still alive?’ – ‘Is my father Yaakov still alive?
The brothers are hurt, ashamed and remorseful for what they have done against their brother,
‘G-d sent me to Egypt to save my family,’ Yosef comforted them.
The brothers returned to their father with good news, and Yaakov, rejoicing more than ever,
Goes to Egypt to his son, accompanied by seventy souls of relatives.
On the way, Yaakov is favoured and instructed by G-d:
‘Do not be afraid to go down to Egypt, for there I will make your people great,
– I will raise you up from there again,’ which gave Yisrael encouragement,
Pharaoh allotted the land of Goshen to Ya’akov and he and his family lived there safely.

Book of Being

Weekly chapter: Vaechi #12

After seventeen years in Egypt, Yaakov takes an oath from Yosef before his death,
that he will bury him in the Holy Land.
Yaakov blesses Yosef’s sons Menashe and Ephraim as his guardians,
He fails to reveal the End of Days and dies on his deathbed.
Yosef fulfils his promise to his father before his death,
Yaakov is buried in the Holy Land, in Hebron, in the cave of Machpelah.
Yosef himself dies at the age of one hundred and ten, having given his brothers and sons a parting covenant:
To remember G-d’s promise to ‘raise up the Jews in the Land,’ no matter how bitter the portion.

Book: Exodus

Weekly chapter: Shmoth #13

The new Pharaoh was afraid that the Jews had multiplied greatly,
And in case of war might join Egypt’s enemies.
He ordered newborn Hebrew boys to be slaughtered with malice aforethought,
To enslave the Jewish people with exorbitant labour.
Levi’s daughter, wishing to save her son from certain death,
put him in a tarred basket and left him in the reeds.
Pharaoh’s daughter adopted the child, and he was called Moshe,
He grew and lived in Pharaoh’s palace and was honoured and profitable.
But the blood of the Jews in him, it seems, was aroused,