The Crimes in the Stories of Jacob and Joseph
A Catalog of Violations Against God’s Law
There is a long tradition in Christian and Jewish education of treating the patriarchal narratives as stories of heroes — men of faith whose missteps are either minimized or spiritualized into object lessons about grace. Jacob wrestles with God and is celebrated. Joseph is sold into slavery and becomes a type of Christ. The moral texture of what actually happened tends to fade behind the theological payoff.
But the Torah does not ask us to ignore what happened. It records these stories in unflinching detail, and it gives us a legal framework — the Mosaic covenant — that names what these actions were. Yes, the law came after the patriarchs. The anachronism is intentional. The Torah is not simply reporting history; it is interpreting it. When Moses receives the commandment against kidnapping and selling a fellow Israelite, the reader is meant to remember Joseph’s brothers. When the law condemns wage theft and contract fraud, Laban’s face is in the background.
This piece catalogs the specific violations in two episodes: Jacob’s years of labor under Laban, and the brothers’ trafficking of Joseph. In each case we will name the act, identify the applicable law, and let the text speak.

















