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 Orchard of Delights                                                          Vayeilech
 we forcefully arouse ourselves from below to proclaim the following   £They Went Both of Them TogetherThey Went Both of Them TogetherThey Went Both of Them Together
 three verses at the end of Neilah:  ££
 Hear O Israel, God our God, God is One.

 Blessed is His Kingdom forever and ever.  When Isaac and Abraham walked to the place where the offering
            was to take place the  Torah states that “they went (vayeilchu,
 God – He is God.
            from the same root as the name of this portion, Vayeilech) both of
 All our prayers are lifted to the heights of heaven by Yom Kippur’s   them together” (Genesis 22:6). The Torah recounts that when Isaac
 final shofar blast, even those prayers which we cannot manage to   noticed that his father had a knife and wood but no offering, he asked
 express in words. May we all experience God “raining down” His   where the offering was. Abraham responded: “God will provide for
 grace upon us from above.  Himself an offering, my son, and they went both of them together”
            (Genesis 22:8). The commentators point out that Isaac understood
            his father’s subtle hint, “God will provide the offering – my son”; the
            offering would in fact be Isaac. Despite this, the Torah emphasizes
 £The Existential State The Existential State
 ££The Existential State   that both were wholly committed to carrying out God’s command
            by immediately repeating the words “and they went both of them
 of Being Alone
 of Being Aloneof Being Alone  together.”
               The phrase “he went” (Vayeilech) appears in our portion twice.
            Once at the beginning, as discussed in the previous section, and once
 “God alone leads them,  and there  is no foreign god with Him”   when Moses went with Joshua to stand by the Tabernacle where
 (Deuteronomy 32:12). The literal sense, the peshat, of the first part   God revealed Himself to them. As they stood there, God revealed
 of  this verse teaches  that Israel’s fate is not determined  by the   to them that the Jewish people would rebel in the future, and He
 stars (astrological  predictions)  but by God alone, as the  Talmud   taught them the song Ha’azinu, the contents of which make up the
 reiterates:  “There  are  no  predetermined  heavenly  influences  upon   next portion.
 Israel” (Shabbat 156a; see too “Why God Took Abraham Outside”   Earlier in Vayeilech, Moses once again publicly embraced Joshua
 in Lech Lecha). The second part of the verse repeats a theme found   as his successor and invested him with the full authority that had
 throughout the Torah: God is one and unique and there are no other   been his own for  over forty years. There  is a beautiful parallel
 gods.
            between the united stance of Abraham and Isaac at the Akeidah,
 When the punctuation of the first part of the verse is altered slightly,   notwithstanding the difficult challenge ahead, and the way Moses
 it can be read as follows: “God is alone, He leads them.” This reading   embraced Joshua, even though Joshua was replacing him. Indeed,
 of the text allows the first part of the verse to complement the second   the Torah emphasizes Moses and Joshua’s unity by employing the
 part, as both emphasize God’s uniqueness and “aloneness,” in the   singular form of the verb “went” in the phrase “they went.”
 sense of God being essentially above and beyond any comparison or   The mutual respect and affection Moses and Joshua shared also
 description that the human mind can grasp.
            provides us with another important lesson about leadership. Most
 In the next and concluding portion of the Torah, Vezot Haberachah,   leaders openly or secretly resent giving up the reigns of power and
 there is another verse that contains the exact same Hebrew word for   have a difficult time stepping out of the limelight. Likewise, many


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