Bo 5770 – Gilayon #635
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Parshat Bo
This month shall be to you the head of the months;
to you it shall be the first of the months of the
year.
(Shemot
12:2)
This month
shall be to you the head of the months – By way of
example: A son was born to a king, and the king made a celebration. The son was
taken into captivity for many years. Eventually he was redeemed, and the king
made for him a royal party. Before the Israelites went down into
they would count by the servitude; after they had gone down and were enslaved
there, the Holy One performed miracles for them and they were redeemed. They
then began to count by months, as is written, This
month shall be to you the head of the months.
(Shemot
Rabba 15)
Therefore, in the Land of Egypt, in the the land
of the most consistent paganism, in the land in which this pagan immutability
extended even into the state system of social life and created the chains of
caste, in Egypt God called the future leader of His people out into the open,
showed him the narrow crescent of the moon struggling out of complete darkness
into new light, and said, "This is to be your model." Just as it,
bound by physical laws, rejuvenates itself, so are you, but of your own free
will, to create your own rejuvenations. Whenever it occurs it is to remind you
of your own possibilities of rejuvenation, and inasmuch as I rejuvenate you and
you rejuvenate yourselves, you are – moon-like – to pass across the night sky
of the nations and proclaim everywhere the teaching of rejuvenation, this
teaching that God has given man the possibility of always been able to start
afresh, that his whole moral and physical fate is entirely in his own hands.
(Rabbi
S.R. Hirsch Shemot 12:1-2, Levi translation)
Three Days' Journey and Borrowing Vessels
Ariel Stollman
In our parasha, immediately following the plague of arov,
Pharaoh suggests that the Israelites offer sacrifices within the
demands: We shall travel a three days' journey (Shemot 8:23). Soon
before the actual Exodus, God asks Moses: Please, speak into the ears of the
people, and let them borrow, each man from his friend and each woman from her
friend, silver vessels and golden vessels (Shemot 11:2). I would like to focus on these two
items, the three days' journey and the borrowing of vessels. They seem
to lack any connection with each other, but the link between them will become
clear upon deeper inspection.
Moses' demand that the Israelites be allowed to make a
three days' journey instantly suggests a question: what would the
Israelites have done if Pharaoh had conceded this minimal request? Would they
have been good to their word and returned to
or would they have taken advantage of Pharaoh's "generosity" by continuing
their trek all the way to
Moses and Aaron simply make their ultimate demand to leave
wouldn't Pharaoh have freed the Israelites even without such trickery?
Similar questions can be asked in connection with the
borrowing of vessels. True, by borrowing the vessels the Israelites saw the fulfillment
of the ancient promise made by God to Abraham at the Brit ben Habtarim,
that his descendants would leave their land of exile with much property. Furthermore,
the book of Devarim tells us that a Hebrew slave who completes the period of
his servitude has rights to a grant from his master. According to that principle,
the Israelites deserved a grant from the Egyptians for their long period of
servitude.
Despite all this, it remains unclear why the Israelites had
to resort to deception. Even if the weak can be justified in their use of
deceit to gain what is theirs by right, why would this be necessary in the case
of the Exodus, which was entirely miraculous and involved the immediate
revelation of God?
We can find the answers to these questions later when the
Exodus story reaches its climax with the splitting of the
Sea.
The standard reading of the story of the
Sea has it that God saved the Israelites from their Egyptian
pursuers by drowning the latter in the sea. However, a deeper investigation
reveals a different course of events.
First of all, according to Scripture the entire situation was
staged. God asked Moses to maneuver the people in such a way as to convince
Pharaoh that they had lost their way in the wilderness. He also promised to
"strengthen" Pharaoh's heart so that he would chase after the
Israelites; otherwise, the Israelites would have left
to call this a "rescue":
The Lord spoke to Moses, saying, Speak to the children of Israel, and let them turn back and
encamp in front of Pi hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea; in front of Baal
Zephon, you shall encamp opposite it, by the sea. And Pharaoh will say about the children of
land. The desert has closed in upon them. And I
will harden Pharaoh's heart, and he will pursue them, and I will be glorified
through Pharaoh and through his entire force, and the Egyptians will know that
I am the Lord And they did so. And I will strengthen
Pharaoh's heart, and he will pursue them, and I will be glorified through
Pharaoh and through his entire force, and the Egyptians will know that I am the
Lord And they did so. (Shemot 14:1-4)
Secondly, take note that the sea trapped the Egyptians when
they were already fleeing the great commotion and were on their way home
to
By that point, the Israelites were in no danger at all, as is clearly implied
by the relevant verses (I have written on this at length in my article "Iyyun
Bekriyat yam Suf" in Alon Shevut 130):
It came about in the morning watch that the Lord looked
down over the Egyptian camp through a pillar of fire and cloud, and He threw
the Egyptian camp into confusion. And He removed the wheels of their chariots,
and He led them with heaviness, and the Egyptians said, Let me run away
from the Israelites because the Lord is fighting for them against the
Egyptians Thereupon, the Lord said to
Moses, Stretch out your hand over the sea, and let the water return upon the
Egyptians, upon their chariots, and upon their horsemen. So Moses stretched out
his hand over the sea, and toward morning the sea returned to its strength, as
the Egyptians were fleeing toward it. (Shemot
14: 24-27)
If so, one must conclude that the splitting of the Red Sea
and especially the drowning of Pharaoh and his troops were not secondary
consequences of
rescue. They were purely punitive, just like the Ten Plagues.
I shall now demonstrate that the request that the Israelites
be allowed to make a three days' journey and the borrowing of vessels
were also aimed at getting Pharaoh and his people to chase the Israelites to
the
deaths.
The plain meaning of Scripture (as opposed to popular opinion)
has it that even after the deaths of the firstborn, Pharaoh only agreed to
release the Israelites for a short time (and certainly not permanently) in
order for them to worship God in the wilderness:
and he said, "Get up and get out from among my
people, both you, as well as the children of
as you have spoken. Take also your
flocks and also your cattle, as you have spoken, and go, but you shall
also bless me." (Shemot 12:31-32)
Take note of the expression as you have spoken; it
implies that Pharaoh acquiesced to the original demand. In contrast to the
previous instances in which he tried to keep the entire people from leaving and
suggested that only the men would leave, here he is prepared to allow everyone
to go. However, he is still referring to the original demand, i.e., a three
days' journey. Let us recall that Moses never actually asked that the
Israelites leave for good. We can also understand the continuation of the verse
in this light: It was reported to the King of
The people could be thought of as having run away since they did not return as
required by the agreement. Ibn Ezra explains the passage precisely along these
lines:
…Pharoah thought, based on what Moses said about a three
days' journey, that they would go and then return to
to me that this was said for two reasons. First, so that they would give them
vessels of silver and gold, since if they knew they would not return, they
would not have given them. And secondly, so that Pharaoh and his troops would
drown. For if they had left with his permission, and he had no thought of their
returning, he would not have chased them. The proof is [in the verse] It was
reported to the King of
that the people had fled. (Ibn Ezra Perush HaKatzar Shemot 11:4)
That is to say: the request to leave for only three days
(rather than forever) was aimed at getting Pharaoh to chase after the
Israelites in order for him to get his punishment.
The issue of the "borrowing" of vessels invites a
similar explanation. Of course the Israelites deserved payment and a
"grant" for all their years of servitude in
taken by force rather than through deception. The reason why the Israelites
were commanded to borrow the vessels (rather than take them outright) was to
later convince the Egyptians to join Pharaoh in his pursuit of the Israelites. Hizkuni
(Shemot 11:2)
explains:
and let them borrow, each man: by this God's promise
was fulfilled: and afterwards they shall leave with much property (Bereishit 15:14). As
for it being borrowed rather than an outright gift, this was in order that the
Egyptians be incensed to chase after them.
Seforno uses this idea to explain why God used the word na
["please"] (Shemot 11:2), entreating the Israelites to borrow vessels fromthe Egyptians. He says that the Israelites already knew that they were not
coming back and were afraid that if they borrowed vessels it might spur on the
Egyptians to chase after them. That is why the Israelites were not interested
in borrowing vessels, but God promised them they had nothing to worry about, as
this was all part of the plan that would lead to their salvation.
In conclusion:
The miracle of the splitting of the
Sea was intended to punish Pharaoh and his people for what they
had done to the Israelites; it was not carried out in order to save the
Israelites. A few tricks were used to get Pharaoh and his people to chase the
Israelites into the sea. The first one is found explicitly in Scripture: the
maneuver before Pi-Hahirot that was meant to convince Pharaoh that the
Israelites had lost their way, becoming easy prey. Similarly, the fact that the
Israelites broke the original agreement – fleeing Egypt instead of leaving it
for a limited period of time – spurred on the Egyptians to chase after them (It
was reported to the King of Egypt that the people had fled; and Pharaoh and his
servants had a change of heart toward the people, and they said, What is this
that we have done, that we have released Israel from serving us?). Furthermore,
the "borrowed" vessels held by the Israelites were certainly an
important factor motivating the Egyptians' pursuit of the Israelites, as Rashi
(Shemot 14:5) explains:
…he [Pharaoh] sent officers with them, and as soon as the
three days they [the Israelites] had set to go [into the desert] and return had
elapsed, and they [the officers] saw that they were not returning to
came and informed Pharaoh… His servants [also] had a change of heart, for previously
they had said to him, How long will this one be a stumbling block to us?
(Exod. 10:7).
Now they had a change of heart to pursue them [the Israelites] on account of
the money that they had lent them.
Ariel Stollman is a software developer and an expert
in solving operational problems of complex Internet systems
Light and darkness
and no one rose from his place for three days
– the plague continued to keep them immobilized for so long that they would
have died from thirst and hunger if the Israelites did not come to help them,
feeding them and giving them drink. Thus it seems reasonable that they did
this, and Scripture alludes to it the later verses; when the Egyptians saw the
Israelites repaying evil with good, they lost their hatred of them and began to
honor and love them, and to believe that they had a divine quality. That is why
they generously lent things to them and showed them favor. They also greatly
honored Moses, which they had not done previously, as is made clear in the
coming verses.
(R. Yitzhak Shmuel Reggio 10:23)
Please, speak into the ears of the people, and let them
borrow, each man from his friend and each woman from her friend, silver vessels
and golden vessels." So the Lord
gave the people favor in Pharaoh's eyes; also the man Moses was highly esteemed
in the eyes of Pharaoh's servants and in the eyes of the people.
(Shemot 11:2-3)
and let them borrow [vayishalu] – as
absolute gifts, as in, Request [she'al] of Me, and I will make nations your
inheritance (Psalms 2:8).
each man from his friend and each woman from her friend
– In this verse Scripture reveals to us that during the troubles of darkness
the Egyptians became reconciled with the Israelites, since they [the Israelites]
were good to them during the three days when no one could get up. The proof of
it is that now they call them friends, while previously they were
not their friends but rather oppressed them and worked them harshly.
(R. Yitzhak Shmuel Reggio 11:2)
Therefore the pure
righteous ones do not complain about wickedness but rather increase justice;
they do not complain about heresy, but rather increase faith; they do not
complain about ignorance, but rather increase wisdom.
(Harav Kook Ztz"l, Arpelei Tohar 27-28)
"Mixed
Multitude": Two Views
Your people have
acted basely (Shemot 32:7) – It does
not say the people but rather, your
people: a mixed multitude that you decided to take in and convert of your
own initiative, without consulting Me, and you said it would be good to bring
converts close to the Divine Presence. Now they have become debased and debase
others.
(Rashi on Shemot 32: 7)
Lover, indeed, of
peoples (Devarim 33:3). Including the
nations of the world
such as the mixed multitude and those of the nations who converted
and came to accept the Torah together with
God, He accepted them and His presence rested upon them.
(RaShBaM Devarim 33:3)
[Now when Pharaoh let] the
people [go…] (Shemot 13: 17): The numerical value of the people [et
ha'am] is equivalent to that of also a mixed multitude [ve'gam erev rav]
(12: 38).
(Ba'al Ha'Turim on Shemot 13: 17)
Between Holiness and National Historical
Ties
The sanctified sites are not founded in
religion; rather, they derive from the nation and its roots.
for example, was the place of man's creation, there Abraham sacrificed Isaac;
later it was chosen by the word of a prophet. Religion writes only of the
place which God will choose.
is the place of religion. Once the Divine Presence departed, the sheep
and cattle could ascend it! God forbid that sentiments mislead us to lend
any image to religion. [The significance of]
all the
relation to our fathers, fathers who 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, Shemot 12:21,22)
And it shall be a sign on your hand –
the Weaker Hand: Physical Strength and Intelligence
And it shall be a sign on your hand – Our
Sages, of blessed memory, said: "The weak hand – to teach that tefillin are to be placed on the left hand" (Menahot 37)…
therefore the passage specifies the weak hand, to teach that man
not overcome with strength, but that the Lord wages war, for man's hand
is too weak to accomplish things great or small if not for God's hand holding
his hand… Therefore God commanded to place the tefillin,
on which the name of God is inscribed, upon the weak hand to teach that
God's strong right hand is that which gives power to this weak hand, as is
written For with a powerful hand did God deliver us from Egypt – this is
God's powerful right hand, which corresponds to man's left hand, and with it
God delivered us, and since we face God, His right hand is juxtaposed to our
weak hand, to teach that no deed depends upon man's activity, but rather upon
the help of The Holy One, Blessed be He.
(Kli Yakar, Shemot 13:16)
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