God Will Gather All of Jacob at the End of Days

Curated by Maggid·Edited by Arthur Sabintsev·

"I will assemble Jacob, all of you; I will bring together the remnant of Israel" (Micah 2:12). The end of Aggadat Bereshit's prophetic arc arrives here: not the death of Jacob, not the descent into Egypt, but the final ingathering, the moment when every scattered piece of Israel, across every exile, is brought home together.

(Genesis 49:2) says: "Assemble and listen." The midrash reads this as a precondition for redemption. When Israel gathers, when it assembles in the deep sense, not just physically in one place but spiritually unified in purpose, that is the moment redemption becomes possible. The assembly is not the effect of the redemption. It is its cause. "Gather yourself together.. that the kingdom come to you" (Micah 4:8), the kingdom does not arrive and then produce unity. Unity produces the conditions for the kingdom's arrival.

Jacob's deathbed assembly of the twelve tribes is the template: twelve sons, each different, each carrying their own destiny, gathered into one room to hear a single blessing from a single father. The unity is not homogeneity, the twelve remain twelve. But they are gathered. In the messianic reading, the final ingathering replicates this: every tribe, every exile, every fragment of Israel, gathered not into uniformity but into the single room of the covenant. Set like sheep in a fold, like a flock in its pasture. A noisy multitude. Still one people.

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