Bo 5772 – Gilayon #735
(link to original page)
Click here to
receive the weekly parsha by email each week.
Parshat Bo
No one saw his fellow
and no one rose from where he was three days,
But all the israelites had
light in their dwelling places.
(Shemot 10:23)
You
find darkness mentioned three times in the parasha: "That
there be darkness", "a darkness one can feel"
"and there was pitch dark", -thus alluding to three types of
darkness; alata, afela,
and arafel.
Alata [thick
gloom] (Translations of the Hebrew terms for
darkness are by Robert Alter.) is the
darkness of the "Covenant of the Pieces", as is written: '…there was
a thick gloom".
Afela [pitch
dark] is the darkness of
as is written, "and there was pitch dark".
Arafel is the
darkness at the giving of the Torah, as is written (Shemot
20) "And Mosheapproached the darkness".
Rabeinu Behayey, Shemot 10:21)
Therefore
the pure and righteous do not complain about the darkness, but they increase
light; they do not complain about evil, but they increase justice; they do not
complain about heresy, but increase faith; they do not complain about ignorance
but increase wisdom.
(From "Arpilei Tohar",
Rabbi A. Y. HaCohen Kook zt"l
27-28)
My
grandfather, of blessed memory, said regarding the passage, "No one saw
his fellow and no one rose from where he was for three days" – He who
cannot see his fellow with a good eye [generously] cannot himself survive.
(Imrei Emet quoting
the Hidushei HaRim, Pesach
sermon)
*
Hardening of the heart – as addiction
Gili
Zivan
And the Lord
said to Moses, "See, I have set you as a god to Pharaoh, and Aaron your
brother will be your prophet. You it is who will speak all that I charge you
and Aaron your brother will speak to Pharaoh, and he will send off the
Israelites from his land. And I on My part shall harden Pharaoh's heart, that I
may multiply my signs and My portents in the
…And
Pharaoh's heart hardened and he did not heed them, just as the Lord had spoken.
(Shemot 7:1-13)
Every year, Parashat "Bo" raises anew the problem of the
hardening of Pharaoh's heart. Again and again it is difficult to accept the
passages describing the toughening of Pharaoh's heart by the Holy One, Blessed
Be He. Similar to the heretics mentioned by Rabbi Yochanan,
we want to protest and say: "But he was unable to repent!?" (Midrash Rabba, Shemot 13, section 3).
How many nibs
have been broken on the issue of freedom of choice vs. the hardening of Pharaoh's
heart… and I confess: I really do not know Scripture's intentions, but, having
already touched upon the subject, I would like to develop the Midrash's statement, further developed by the Ramban ( in his first answer) and intimated in the Rambam's writings.
Resh Lakish replies to the
heretic's question:
At scoffers
He scoffs". The Holy One cautions a person once, twice, thrice, and if still
he does not repent – He locks his heart against penitence in order to repay him
for his sins. And so with evil Pharaoh – since the Holy One had sent punishments
five times and he paid no attention, the Holy One said to him: You stiffened
your neck and hardened your heart – I will add more impurity to your impurity, thus:
"For I have hardened his heart."
The Midrash noted that the Holy One hardened Pharaoh's heart
only from the sixth plague on. During the first five plagues, Pharaoh hardened
his heart of his own volition, and the punishment for his refusal was the preclusion
of his repentance. The Ramban explains in similar
fashion:
And they gave
explanations to the question which all ask, if God hardened his heart, what was
his sin? There are two explanations, both true. One – Because Pharaoh, in
his wickedness, did greatly harm
was to be denied paths to repentance, …and he was
judged according to his earlier behavior.
Rambam, whose words in the "Laws of Repentance" repeatedly
emphasize the centrality of free choice as a foundation stone of religious
thought, relates to our question:
Many passages
in the Torah and Prophets seem to contradict this principle, and most people
misinterpret them, and some think that the Holy One decides whether one does
wrong or right, and that man does not control his heart to determine his
actions. I now explain a major principle from which you will know the meaning
of all those passages – when an individual or members of a community sin and
the sinner sins consciously and willingly, as we have shown, it is proper
to punish him. And the Holy One knows how to punish – …In which
circumstances is this true? When he does not repent. But
if one has repented, repentance is a shield against divine punishment. Just
as one sins consciously and willingly, so can he repent consciously and willingly.
It is possible that one perform a terrible sin or many sins, until he
stands in judgment before the truthful judge and the punishment for these
sins committed willingly and consciously is that he will be denied repentance,
and he is not permitted to repent from his wickedness in order that he die and
perish in his sin which he committed… therefore is it written in the
Torah "And I will harden Pharaoh's heart" because he had sinned
earlier on his own and harmed Israel dwelling in his land, as is written: "Come
let us be shrewd with them" – the sentence was given to prevent him
from repenting until he be punished therefore the Holy One hardened his
heart" (Laws of Repentance, 1:1-3 with
omissions).
Woven like a
silken thread from Midrash Rabba
to the Rambam is the principle that Pharaoh chose of
his own free will to exploit the minority dwelling in his land – chose to
damage, chose to murder – and chose not to listen to the cry of the enslaved crying
for freedom and pleading time and again "Let my people go". The hardening
of his heart which, at this stage, denies him the possibility of repentance, is itself his punishment for his decision to
exploit and abuse the helpless minority.
I should like
to carry this a step further, and to argue that the
hardening of the heart is not a punishment externally imposed upon the guilty
by the punisher; it is part and parcel of the human personality. There is a
point where that which began as a decision becomes a habit, and habit, with
time, becomes man's "second nature." Smoking a cigarette which
eventually becomes a pack of cigarettes, exaggerated eating from which a person
cannot free himself, speech patterns which one has adopted, methods of
reaction, etc. Certainly such is the case regarding all forms of addictions – drugs,
alcohol, and others.
As in Barry Sacharov's song "Slaves", "…We are all
slaves even / When we have something like this as if / We
open our mouth wide / And wait for the next pleasure." In our media-worshipping
society it is very difficult not to be influenced by social criteria of good
and bad. We are all "addicted to something", we all find it hard to
free ourselves of habits founded in social perversions. The punishment of hardening
Pharaoh's heart, or, in other words, prevention of repentance (the change) from
his sin is but that second when the person cannot stop. Perhaps he wants to
change, but he has already missed the boat. His body cannot function without
the drug, his personality cannot forgo the high which,
with time, becomes his raison d'etre. The fix
hardens his heart, and all the promises he made to himself evaporate into
nothingness when he again feels the need.
How much help
and support does the addict require in order to free himself of the dependence
he has developed? And even then, testify the professionals, not always will he
succeed. There is still hope for the young, but there comes an age when it is
almost impossible to change.
Does not all
of Israeli society suffer from the illness of "hardening of the heart",
i.e., from increasing addictions, even in our protected religious community?
[The misuse of psychoactive material and addiction to them and to similarbehavior, such as addition to gambling, to sex or to eating, also exist among
religious adults and adolescents, even they would seem to be "inoculated"
against these phenomena", (Returno – Jewish
Rehabilitative Community for Dealing with Addictions, p. 9] at "Retorno" (In Spanish: U-turn, or return, as a symbol
of returning to life), a village for the rehabilitated, located in the hills of
the Judea lowlands, which deals with male and female youngsters – primarily from religious backgrounds– who, having
undergone some serious crisis in life, sought solutions in the wrong places. In
the preface to their research volume on the rehab village, the authors (Ronel, Chen,
Elisha) analyze Retorno's system of treatment,
comparing it to the well-known 12 step system of Alcoholics Anonymous, laying
special emphasis on the spiritual dimension of treatment in "Retorno":
The
sickness of addiction is characterized by a sense of inner emptiness on the spiritual
level. This emptiness leads to a need for achieving external satisfaction
though drugs. This inner void derives from the addicts' extreme
concentration on 'myself', which is perceived to be the phenomenological
root of the addiction and as an expression of spiritual disturbance… accordingly,
recovery from the addiction is conceived as "a spiritual journey",
and the twelve steps are the means to spiritual growth (Ibid, p. 12).
Do not
these words draw us back to our parasha? Do not
Pharaoh's defiant cry "Who is God that I should obey His all to send off
(Shemot 5:2)
and his refusal to see the suffering of those around him: "…for they are
idlers. Therefore do they cry out, saying 'Let us go sacrifice to our god.' Let the work be heavy on the men…!" (Shemot 5:8,9) – do these not testify to extreme egotism and
concentration upon the self?
The book's
authors maintain that the cure for the sense of emptiness from which the addict
suffers is a spiritual journey, the personal search for "the meaning of
life". The meaning of life "is not the result of psychological-social
factors, but rather the result of a personal decision based upon spiritual
processes" (ibid.).
Is this not
the exact claim of the commentators with whose words we began the discussion?
Does not the loss of the ability to choose derive from the addict's selfish
concern with himself? The spiritual journey back to life, then, is
contingent upon the discovery that man is able to bequeath to others love, joy,
optimism, support, etc.
The addict
needs a helping hand in order to be able to return. Pharaoh, who does not
recognize the Lord, but considers himself to be the lord, does not recognize 'the
other", and has no need of him, and therefore he is denied repentance.
The repentance
option ("Retorno" in Spanish) is denied
only to one whose hardening of the heart is so great than he cannot open even a
miniscule opening to one who is found outside himself.
Dr.
Gili Zivan is a co-director
of the
and a member of Kibbutz Sa'ad.
"They shall ask, each man
of his neighbor, each woman of her neighbor." – help for the suffering
recognizes no boundaries
When it developed that redemption
was delayed for the twelve months of Egypt's trial, and that from the
pestilence on they deepened their association… and yet more, during the
affliction of darkness, when no one was able to go out for three days, and
everyone suffered for three days, but the Children of Israel, who had light in
their settlements, supplied them with food and all necessities, did not rejoice
in their adversity and did not take revenge. Thereby they found great favor in
their eyes.
(Haamek Davar, Shmot 11:2)
Between holiness and
national historical ties
The foundations of sanctified
sites are not delineated in the divine teachings, but derive from the nation and
its roots. Har Hamoriah,
for example – there was the point of man's creation, there Avraham
sacrificed Yitzhak; later it was chosen by the word of a prophet. The Torah
states only "the place which God will choose". The site of the
Torah is
departed, — let sheep and cattle go up!… Forbid
that sentiments mislead us any visualization of the religion. But Yerushalayim, all Eretz Yisrael, and Har Hamoriah are constructions of their relation to our
fathers. They, the fathers, are the roots of the nation; the nation must be one
with its roots. All sentiments should be directed toward the unification of the
nation.
(Meshekh Hokhma, Shmot 12:21,22)
The blood on the lintel: on
the inside? On the outside? What for?
"And they should put it on
the doorposts and on the lintel': on the inside. But perhaps it really means on
the outside? This is what the verse means by 'and the blood should be as a sign
for you' – a sign for you, and not for others.
(Mechilta Bo Masehet
Depascha Parasha 6)
Many have said that putting the
blood on the lintel and the two doorposts was to show that they could publicly
slaughter what was abhorrent to the Egyptians, because the fear of them had
already fallen on the Egyptians, and they were not afraid that they would stone
them. But if that were the case, it would have been on the gate to the
courtyard. But in fact, the blood was only daubed in secret, with the courtyard
gate shut, and they did the slaughtering in the afternoon so no-one would see
since it was close to nightfall, and no one left their house until morning, for
they went on their way and each person closed his/her courtyard gate, because
the Egyptians thought they would return. Only the reason for the blood on the
lintel was to be a ransom for everyone who ate in the house and a sign to the
destroying angel when he saw it, as though it were a label.
(Ibn Ezra Exodus XII, 7)
We were commanded to slaughter
the Paschal lamb and sprinkle its blood on the doorway in
outside (Leviticus I,2)
to cleanse ourselves of those notions and publicly declare their opposite, and
inculcate the opinion that the deed you think is a cause of destruction is what
saves from destruction.
(Maimonides,
Guide of the Perplexed, III, 46)
'And it shall be as a sign on
your arm': tefillin should be put on the weak arm.
And so it is with the two arms of
a man, for the left arm is weak and is next to the heart, the seat of wisdom,
for the intelligent part of the heart causes the arm to be weak, for the arm is
busy with material concerns, but the right arm is next to the liver, seat of
desire, which is not opposed to the arm, because there lies its main strength,
but where the intelligence resides, there the arm is weak. And when it says
here 'And it shall be for a sign on your arm', it is as though it said it
should be for a sign on your heart, for the heart is the case of the arm's
weakness, for the point of the tefillin is to be a
reminder for a man where the intelligence resides in the brain and the heart.
And concerning the tefillin for the head it said it
should be 'between you eyes', for the eye and the heart are two pimps for sin (Talmud Yerushalmi Berachot 81 halacha 5),
therefore these two places need something to remind them of the existence of
the Almighty, may He be blessed, and his power, and they will thereby recoil
from evil.
(Kli Yakar Exodus
XIII, 16)
To all our readers and supporters:
We need your support in order that the voice of a
religious Zionism committed to peace and justice will continue to be heard
through the uninterrupted distribution of Shabbat Shalom in hundreds of
synagogues, on the Internet and via email in both Hebrew and English.
Donations in
send your checks made out to "Oz VeShalom"
to Oz VeShalom-Netivot Shalom POB 4433
For a
tax deductible donation, the New Israel Fund may be used as the conduit.
Contributions should be marked as donor-advised to Oz ve'Shalom,
the Shabbat Shalom project with mention of the registration number 5708.
If you wish to subscribe to the email English editions
of Shabbat Shalom, to print copies of it for distribution in your synagogue, to
inquire regarding the dedication of an edition in someone's honor or memory, to
find out how to make tax-exempt donations, or to suggest additional helpful
ideas, please call
+972-52-3920206 or at ozveshalomns@gmail.com
Issues may be dedicated in honor of an event, person, simcha, etc. Requests must be made 3-4 weeks in advance to
appear in the Hebrew, 10 days in advance to appear in the English email.
About
us
Oz
Veshalom-Netivot Shalom is a movement dedicated to
the advancement of a civil society in
promoting the ideals of tolerance, pluralism, and justice, concepts that have
always been central to Jewish tradition and law.
Oz
Veshalom-Netivot Shalom shares a deep attachment to
the
central religious value. It believes that Jews have both the religious and the
national obligation to support the pursuit of peace. It maintains that Jewish
law clearly requires us to create a fair and just society, and that
co-existence between Jews and Arabs is not an option but an imperative.
4,500
copies of a 4-page peace oriented commentary on the weekly Torah reading are
written and published by Oz VeShalom/Netivot Shalom
and they are distributed to over 350 synagogues in
email. Our web site is www.netivot-shalom.org.il.
Shabbat
Shalom is available on our website: www.netivot-shalom.org.il
For
responses and arranging to write for Shabbat Shalom: