Rabbi Stillman writes of Jacob’s legitimate fear of Esau, considering the unjustness of his treatment towards his older brother. Yet, when they encounter each other, they reaffirm their humanity and their relation of the divine.
Rabbi Stillman writes of Jacob’s legitimate fear of Esau, considering the unjustness of his treatment towards his older brother. Yet, when they encounter each other, they reaffirm their humanity and their relation of the divine.