And Israel said to Joseph, āAre not your brothers pasturing the flock at Shechem? Come, I will send you to them.ā And he said to him, āHere I am.ā
Genesis 37:13
āHere I amā isĀ hineni, a contraction of two words:Ā hinehĀ (here or behold) andĀ aniĀ (I).Ā
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hinneĢh
hin-nay'
Prolonged forĀ H2005;Ā lo!: - behold, lo, see.
Even though the word āHineniā literally meansĀ behold me, orĀ here I am,Ā itās so much more than a statement of location. Itās more a statement of spiritual and emotional presence. Itās the active posture of one who will shāma (listen and do) the voice of another. It means being fully attentive and open to another, being emotionally and physically available in the moment. I picture a nursing mother responding to her babyās cries of hunger. Itās an attitude and response of complete availability.Ā Ā
Abraham lived this word (Genesis 22 and the binding of Isaac); Moses proclaimed it at that set apart bush (Exodus 3:4); young Samuel responded to the voice of God (1 Samuel 3:4); Isaiah said āhere I am, send meā to Godās request (Isaiah 6:8). And Joseph responded to his father, to seek the whereabouts of his brothers on that fateful journey which led him to Egypt. (Genesis 37:13)
In the Garden God asked Adam āwhere are youā? We know that wasnāt a physical question but an existential one.Ā Where are you spiritually and emotionally right now?Ā Why are you not alongside me where you belong?Ā Donāt you love that the Creator of the Universe cares enough to ask that question of each of us? I love how Abraham Heschel puts it:
Ā āTo the Biblical mind man is not only a creature who is constantly in search of himself but alsoĀ a creatureĀ GodĀ is constantlyĀ in search of.Ā Ā Man is a creature in search of meaning because there is a meaning in search of him, because there is Godās beseeching question, āWhere art thou?āāĀ
The only proper answer to Godās call isĀ hineni, but sometimes we, like Adam, need a lot of help to get us āthere.ā
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