Patriarchs

3,059 texts · Page 186 of 340

Explore 3,059 Jewish texts related to the theme of Patriarchs, drawn from Midrash, Kabbalah, Apocrypha, and classical Jewish literature.

Rabbi Abbahu and Creation

Midrash Rabbah Midrash Rabbah

Specifically, Bereshit Rabbah 70 wrestles with a tricky part of Jacob's story. After his dream of the ladder, Jacob makes a vow, saying, "If God will be with me, and will keep me i...

Abraham's Legacy and Jacob

Midrash Rabbah Midrash Rabbah

Rabbi Yehoshua of Sikhnin, quoting Rabbi Levi, shares a profound idea: God took the conversations of the patriarchs – Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob – and transformed them into the very...

Jacob's Vision and Meir

Midrash Rabbah Midrash Rabbah

Seems straightforward. But a curious question arises, a question that leads us into a fascinating rabbinic debate found in Bereshit Rabbah 70. The scene opens with an idolater tryi...

Jacob: Moses and Creation

Midrash Rabbah Midrash Rabbah

There's something to that. In fact, the rabbis saw that connection way back when. We find ourselves in Genesis 29:1, where it says, "Jacob lifted his feet, and went to the land of ...

Jacob in Battle and Rachel

Midrash Rabbah Midrash Rabbah

Take the story of Jacob meeting Rachel at the well. It seems straightforward: boy meets girl, asks about her family, gets the scoop. But according to Bereshit Rabbah, ancient rabbi...

Jacob's Miracle and Rachel

Midrash Rabbah Midrash Rabbah

The Torah is full of moments that, on the surface, might seem straightforward, but when we delve deeper, we uncover layers of meaning and significance. Take, for instance, the stor...

Laban: Jacob and Creation

Midrash Rabbah Midrash Rabbah

Take the meeting of Jacob and Rachel at the well. We read in Genesis 29:12, "Jacob told Rachel that he was her father’s brother, and that he was Rebecca’s son, and she ran and told...

Laban: Jacob and the Origins of the World

Midrash Rabbah Midrash Rabbah

We see that play out in the story of Jacob and Laban. In Genesis 29:14, we read, "Laban said to him: Indeed, you are my bone and my flesh, and he stayed with him a month’s time." B...

Leah: Laban at the Dawn of Creation

Midrash Rabbah Midrash Rabbah

We often think of the big players – kings, prophets, warriors – as isolated figures. But Jewish tradition reminds us that even the mightiest oak grows from the smallest acorn, and ...