The opening verses of this
Parasha reiterate what we have read recently in Parashat Va’yigash; namely, the
names of the sons of Yisrael who had gone down to Egypt . Compared to the first list (Gen.
46:8-25), this one is much more brief and 'basic.' It is these "names"
(“sh’mot”), which lend the title to the Parasha, as well as to the whole
book. The fruitfulness promised
to the Patriarchs is already starting to be evident. "And the children of Israel were fruitful
[of the root p.r.h for “fruit”], and increased [of the root sh.r.tz applied to
the animals in Gen. 1:20-21] abundantly, and multiplied - va’yirbu - and
became exceeding mighty – va’ya’atzmu; and the land was filled
with them” (Ex. 1: 7 italics added). This verse sums up one of the first phases
of the Israelites' stay in Egypt, while at the same time also echoing B’resheet
(Genesis) 47:27: "So Israel dwelt in the land of Egypt in the land of
Goshen; and they took a hold of it - va'ye'ach'zu - and
grew and multiplied exceedingly" (italics added). The above-mentioned verb
for “increase” – va’yishretzu – is not mentioned in the Genesis
47 scripture, and as we noted, it is generally applied to animals. Is this a
hint as to the condition of the Israelites at this point? Last week we noticed
how Ya'acov, whereupon bringing up the “land of Yisrael” in the course of
blessing Ephraim and Menashe, emphasized "achuzat olam" (48:4), the
"everlasting possession," or literally, the “everlasting hold."
But while the old Patriarch stressed "holding" or "grasping
tightly" on to the Land of Promise, his descendants seemed to be very
quick to "take hold" of foreign soil (as seen in the above quoted v.
27).
According to Nehama Leibowitz[1], by
their settling and establishing a foothold in Egypt , the Israelites committed a
sin. Thus, their new home turned into a place of exile and bondage, as the
Parasha clearly points out. The commentary goes on to say, however, that
suffering and exile also produced refining and purification (e.g. Deut. 4:20;
Jer. 11:4; Is. 48:10), had an educational value (e.g. Ex. 22:21; 23:9; Deut.
16:11-12), and motivated the humanitarian treatment of others (e.g. Lev.
25:38-43; Deut. 5:14-15). Slavery and bondage demand redemption, and according
to the commentary, such a redemption "serves as a spur for a religious
duty, imposing on every Israelite the duty to redeem his fellow being from
slavery." However, we cannot ignore the clear and somewhat inauspicious
prediction given to Avraham during his awesome vision in B’resheet (Genesis)
15, namely, "Your descendants will be strangers in a land that is not
theirs, and will serve them, and they will afflict them four hundred years. But
in the fourth generation they shall return here, for the iniquity of the
Amorites is not yet complete" (vs. 13, 16).
"The iniquity of the Amorites is not yet complete”; “yet” (in the
above quote) is "ad heh'na," literally "thus far."
In Vayikra (Leviticus) 18: 25 we read: "For the land is defiled; therefore
I visit the punishment of its iniquity upon it, and the land vomits out its
inhabitants." From the time YHVH made His declaration to Avraham it took
well over 600 years for the Amorites’ (a generic name for the Canaanite people
groups) iniquity to be "sha'lem," “complete.” The 'quota of their iniquity' is only made full
when the Children of Yisrael enter the Land of C’na ’an,
and thus the former are being "vomited out by the land." In this way, the four hundred years of
Egyptian exile, and another forty of wandering in the desert, were necessary
for the completion of Elohim’s objectives for the Israelites, while this time
capsule was also instrumental in fulfilling a larger and more global 'judicial
plan.' In the Divine economy, nothing is ever meaningless or lost. The Great
Economist is very precise, and is sovereign over time, events, and the
protagonists’ roles therein.
Let us return now to the present situation in Egypt . The rising of the new king
"who does not know Joseph" (1:8) introduces us to a new phase into
which Ya'acov's children are being thrust quite unawares. This king identifies
the Israelites as a Nation, or People - "am," which may also explain
the reference to them in singular person, rather than plural. "The people
of the sons of Israel ,"
he calls them, pointing out their multiplication and might. "Rav
ve'atzum" are the adjectives used here (v. 9), as in verse 7 above.
This multiplicity and might appear to constitute a threat to himself and to his
people, and so he describes this foreign race as being, "more numerous and
mightier than us"
(v. 9 italics added). It seems that exaggeration and bigotry play no small part
in these words, which are used to instigate a plan to solve the “Hebrew
problem” (compare the term “Jewish problem” used in Europe ,
which culminated in Hitler’s “final solution”). Interestingly, at the
very end of last week’s Parasha, Yoseph charged his brothers concerning taking his
bones back to the land, whenever YHVH would visit (pakod) them
(Gen. 50:25). In our Parasha, at the very beginning of the book of Sh’mot
(Exodus), we read about the “might” of the People of Yisrael. Both bone
and might share the same root of a.tz.m (ayin, tzadi, mem). This root
lends itself to several significant words, which we will examine more thoroughly
in Parashat
B’ha’a’lot’cha (Numbers 8-12). Suffice it
to say here that Yoseph’s bones “multiplied” greatly, in accordance with
the promise granted to his sons, although at present this blessing appears to
be causing severe adversity.
Thus, to counter this (hypothetical) threat of a population explosion,
the king ,takes a number of measures, all of which are expressed in verbs
denoting suffering, suppression and servitude, found in chapter 1:11-14. First
they "set over them" - “sa'rey measeem” - tax collecting
princes, to (literally) "afflict
them with suffering." However, "the more they afflicted them, the more they
multiplied and grew” (v. 12). The verb "grew" is "yifrotz,"
of the root p.r.tz. which we examined in Parashat Va’yeshev (Gen. 38:29), where
we noted that it means "to break forth." This caused the Egyptians "to loath" or "abhore"
(“va’yakutzu”) them, and in turn they made them do rigorous labor (“va'ya'vidu” - a.v.d. - labor, work;
while “eh’ved” is “slave”). "And they made their lives bitter with hard labor in mortar, in brick, and in all manner of work in the field. All their work in which they made them work
with rigor" (v. 14 italics
added). In verses 13-14 the root a.v.d (ayin, vet, dalet) - work, labor, slave
- occurs five times, impressing upon the reader the sense of perpetual toil.
The commentator Benno Jacob [2]
observes that the initiators of the acts of ritual enslavement are always
mentioned (in their acts of harassment) in the plural, whereas the Israelites
are referred to in the singular (in verses 10-12 each reference to the
Israelites reads "he," although not translated that way in English). The
commentator goes on to say, "Israel is pictured here as
characterless, faceless, bereft of leadership." Interestingly, the Parasha
opens with the names of the individuals whose descendants, in just a matter of
a few verses, are described as being submerged in a sea of suffering and
oblivion (although, as we have said above, the singular person could have also
been used because the Israelites were viewed as an “am” – a single nation, a
people).
The only two
characters singled out here are the midwives (who are mentioned by name). They
were assigned the heinous task of doing away with every Hebrew male newborn.
Their defiance of the king's edict (1:17) results in Yisrael
becoming even more numerous and mighy – rav and atzum
(the same term we looked at above, stemming from the root a.tz.m, v. 20b). These two Elohim-fearing women are a testimony to the full
involvement of Yisrael's Elohim with His People, even at a time when the Nation
was being forced into conditions of bondage and forgetfulness. However, whereas
"am Yisrael" as a whole was occupied with endless and huge building
projects for their taskmasters, it says about the midwives that Elohim
established their "batim" – 1:21 literally “homes,
houses" and also “families, dynasties” (translated
“households”)!
The subjugating process increasingly gathers momentum; taxing (1:11)
turns into hard labor (v. 11), then to enslavement (vs. 13, 14) and to
'limited' infanticide (v. 16), which finally becomes an imposition on the
entire Egyptian nation, compelling it to engage in a full-blown genocide by
exterminating every Hebrew male newborn (v. 22). Thus, the 22 verses, of
Sh’mot’s first chapter, span and recount a long and eventful period.
The next chapter reports a sudden development. Nehama Leibowitz comments,
"One family, father, mother, and daughter emerge from the gloom of this
faceless mass."[3] The
anonymity is only gradually broken, though, as the protagonists of this first
part of the chapter remain nameless, albeit distinct. The only specific name in
this narrative is the name that Par’oh's daughter gives the baby whom she
finds. It is to be Moshe, "because I drew him out of
the water" (2:10 emphasis added). And as we observed in Parashat Miketz
(Gen. 41-44:17), this name is probably an Egyptian one, as "mes" or
"mesu" in ancient Egyptian mean "child" or "son,"
[4] yet the Hebrew language adapts to foreign
terms by employing puns or a 'play on words' (such as the in the name
"Bavel," Gen. 11:9). There is, however, one other instance in
Scripture where the root m.sh.h (mem,
shin, hey) is used: "He drew me out - yimsheni - of many waters,"
sings King David (2nd Sam. 22:17; Ps. 18:16), being an apt
description of Moshe’s current condition, and also of the future predicament of
his people, when they too will face a large body of water. The basket that baby
Moshe was put in is called "tey'va," the identical word used
for Noach's ark! The gigantic structure and the little basket are both havens
of safety and protection, out of which deliverance with large-scale
ramifications was destined to emerge.
It takes the death of the king (2:23) for the Children of Yisrael to
"groan" and "cry out" -"va'yiz'aku"
- and “their cry" - "shava'atam" - goes up
to Elohim. Notice that here the verb “to cry out” is different from the noun
“cry.” In other words, by the time the cry (“za’a’ka”) reaches heaven,
it turns into a "sha'v'a" (sh.v.a. shin, vav, ayin), a noun
which is "akin to deliverance or salvation" (y.sh.a - yod, shin,
ayin) [5]. Thus,
the cry already contains within it the response! And so we read that Elohim
"heard," "remembered," "looked" (or
"saw"), and "acknowledged" (2:24-25).
Chapter
3 elaborates on the implementation of the above verbs through the person of
Moshe and his mission. It will be by Moshe that YHVH will reveal Himself to His
People. Moshe spends time in the desert, "midbar,"
"tending the flock of Yitro (Jethro), his father-in-law… and he led the
flock to the back of the desert, and came to Horeb, the mountain of Elohim”
(3:1). "Midbar" stems from the root d.v.r (dalet, vet/bet, resh),
meaning “speech,” but this
root also supplies us with “to drive” (as in “push out”) and “defeat.” It
shares the same root with "pestilence" or “plague,” and with the Holy
of Holies in Solomon's Temple
("dvir"). It seems that when the one who is stricken with plague
(sin) is driven to the ‘backside’ of the desert, it is there that
he hears YHVH’s still small voice speaking, and before long finds
himself in the Holy of Holies, with Moshe being a case in point. In 4:10 – 16, the root d.b/v.r. is
repeated seven times in various forms such as “words” and “speaking.”
YHVH reveals Himself to Moshe, talking to Him in the place of silence and
desolation, thus indicating that His Presence and sovereignty are not limited
by the way things (also of the root d.v.r - davar = thing) may appear in
the natural. The sea, for example, that will face the Israelites in their
future escape, will turn into "dry land" which will enable their
passage. Incidentally, this “dryness” or “parched land” is called
"charava" (Parashat B'shalach, Ex. 14:21), of the root ch.r.v (chet,
resh, bet/vet). The particular desert location referred to here is called “Chorev”
(Horeb, 3:1) and also stems from the root, ch.r.v (chet, resh, vet), which
means “desolation or waste,” forming also the root for
"cherev" - “sword” and “churban” – “destruction.” Not surprisingly,
in this part of the world where water is scarce, “dryness” and “destruction”
are almost synonymous.
Elohim’s plans for His people may be elicited from some of the terms used
here. He declares that He Himself "will go down" to rescue His people from Mitzrayim (Egypt
- straits, narrowness, adversity),
and "will bring them up" to "a good and broad land" (3:8 emphases added).
When Moshe is to assemble the elders of Yisrael he is to convey to them that,
the Elohim of Avraham, Yitzchak, and Ya'acov literally, "visiting has
visited you and that which has been done to you in Egypt " (3:16). We also noticed above, in Yospeh’s request at the end of
the B’resheet (50:25), that he used the same term when he expressed his faith
about Elohim visiting His people to take them back to the land. In both
these cases "visit" is "pakod," the root
being p.k.d (pey, kof, dalet), and means “to visit,
attend, muster, appoint,[6] count,
or miss.” This word is also known as "precept" (e.g. Ps.
119:15, 27). Like several of the other words for "commandments" and
"laws" this one also has, as is evident here, a different or broader
meaning than what is generally perceived - something that we will be taking a
closer look at when several of these terms will surface in future Parashot
(Parasha – singular; Parashot – plural). This verb appropriately sums up YHVH’s
multi-facetted plan for His people.
The long
discourse that the reluctant Moshe has with YHVH is about to end when YHVH
tells him: "Now therefore, go, and I will be with your mouth and teach you
what you shall say" (4:12).
Similar words are repeated in verse 15, with the promise to instruct him and his
brother A’ha’ron (Aaron) as to what they will have to do. It was likewise a totally submissive Yeshua who expressed a
similar idea during His earthly ministry, "The son can do nothing by
himself, he can do only what he sees his Father doing, because whatever the
Father does, the son does also" (John 5:19, see also 8:28; 12:49; 14:10).
Moshe and A’ha’ron comply and go to see Par’oh. In 5:4 we read: “And the king of
Egypt
said to them, Moses and Aaron, why do you keep the people from their work? Get
to your burdens!” “Keep the people” is “tafri’ou,” from the root p.r.a.,
(pey, resh ayin), which we looked at in Parashat Miketz
(Ge. 41-44:17), where we also noticed its (coincidental?) similarity with the
name Par’oh. The meaning of
this root, being “unruliness” and “dishevelment” (of hair), is not incompatible
with this king’s conduct toward his Hebrew subjects.
We noted above that, because of their lowly state the Hebrews were
referred to in singular person. In 4:22 they are referred to once again in this
manner; but this time for an entirely different reason. Here YHVH calls Yisrael,
"My first born son." Even though by the end of the Parasha the lot of
the Israelites is made (temporarily) even worse than it had been before Moshe's
audience with Par'oh, the People, who at the beginning of Sh'mot are presented
as a forgotten and maltreated mass, are now the object of YHVH's direct
intervention. It is, therefore, with these words that our Parasha ends:
"Then YHVH said to Moses, 'Now you shall see what I will do to Pharaoh, for
with a strong hand he will
let them go, and with a strong hand
he will expel them out of his land'" (6:1).
In Parashat Sh’mot we see
once again the sovereignty of YHVH over the schemes and intentions of the
enemy. Just as in the case of Yoseph, whose destiny the enemy attempted to
disrupt, yet YHVH used this very plan to catapult him into the place that He had
designed for him, so is this principle also true in regards to Moshe (and in an
even greater sense to Yeshua, see 1 Cor. 2:7, 8). The very man whose command
should have brought about this infant’s death, ended being the one in whose
palace the infant was protected, raised, and groomed for leading the Israelites
out and away from under his despotic and tyrannical control and dominion.
1 New Studies in Shemot, by Nechama Leibowitz, trans.
Aryeh Newman,
Eliner Library, Jerusalem , 1995
2 Ibid
3 Ibid
4 The New Brown, Driver,
Briggs, Gesenius Hebrew and English Lexicon,
ed. Francis Brown,
Hendrickson Publishers, Peabody ,
Mass.
5 Ibid
6 Ibid
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