SHEMOS
by Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
Torah
"AND
THESE ARE THE NAMES OF THE CHILDREN OF
With the beginning of the
book of SHEMOS, "Exodus",
The Exodus of the People
of Israel from Egypt is the pivotal event in the history of mankind, paradigm
of all true freedom and liberation, the eternal proof that G-d is not only the
Creator of the natural world but also directs and controls all aspects of human
affairs with HASHGACHAH PRATIS - "providence in every detail" - for
good.
For the sake of G-d's
self-revelation to the world, it is not sufficient that He should be known
privately to a select few. The climax of G-d's revelation is when "the
earth will be full of the KNOWLEDGE of G-d like the waters cover the seas"
(Isaiah 11:9). Even those who are turned away from G-d, even those who resist
knowing Him, must be forced to admit -- even against their will -- that G-d is
King of the whole world.
Thus when Moses first
calls on Pharaoh in the name of G-d to release His People, "...and Pharaoh
said, 'Who is HaShem that I should listen to His voice. I do not KNOW
HaShem." (Ex. 5:2). But in the end Pharaoh himself was forced to send them
away: "Go, serve HaShem as YOU said" (12:31); "And Egypt said,
let me flee from Israel, for HaShem is fighting for them against Egypt"
(14:25).
In
Even the Egyptians had to
come to KNOW. Even Jethro -- who tried every religion
in the world -- had to admit in the end: "Now I KNOW that HaShem is
greater than all the gods." (Ex. 18:11). More than anyone, the Israelites
-- who in slavery fell into the false consciousness imposed on them by their
oppressors -- had to learn the lesson on their own flesh. The Exodus from
After introducing us to
the "upside-down" world of
* * *
THE
CONSTRICTION OF THE THROAT
In the upside-down world
of
Pharaoh "does not
know" HaShem: he resists knowing. Thus MITRAYIM is related to the root
MEITZAR, the "narrow strait", a place of constriction. In kabbalistic literature, Pharaoh is called "the
constriction of the throat" (MEITZAR HAGARON). Through the neck run three
narrow channels that are vital to survival: the windpipe, the gullet and the
jugular veins (corresponding to Pharaoh's three "officers", the
The book of Genesis is
the "head" of the Torah: BEREISHIS, "at the head". The
first word and first verse of Genesis contain the entire creation "in a
nutshell" (King Solomon's "garden of nuts"). The first book of
the Torah is the head and brain in the sense that it introduces us to all the fundamentals
of true religion. The rest of the Torah is the "body". Exodus is the
"arms" ("for with a mighty HAND G-d took you out of
With the opening of the
book of Exodus, we are at the beginning of the transition from "the
head", Genesis, to the "body", the rest of the Torah. We are at
the "neck". This is why we must now encounter Pharaoh, the "back
of the neck" -- the real Pharaoh, no longer Joseph's "friendly"
patron but a wicked tyrant who, to perpetuate his own rule, is hell-bent on keeping
the world from KNOWING G-D.
Pharaoh's scheme is to
constrict the passage of DAAS from the head and brain down into the body.
Whereas the nervous system connects the body with the brain, bringing
sensation, awareness and consciousness to all parts, Pharaoh's officers work to
constrict the flow of awareness. The
The role of Moses is to
bring DAAS, spiritual knowledge and awareness from the "head" down
into the "body". It is not enough to know that there is a G-d in our
minds. We have to bring that knowledge down into our actual lives and daily
activities. "And you shall KNOW TODAY and BRING DOWN INTO YOUR HEART that
HaShem is G-d in the heaven above and on the earth below, there is none
other" (Deut. 4:39).
* * *
THE KEY
IS SHABBOS
Adam was created for the
highest mission, to "fill the earth and conquer it and rule over the fish
of the sea and the birds of the heavens and every living being swarming on the
earth" (Gen. 1:28). But Adam fell from his mission, and instead of
"tending and guarding" the Garden of Eden (Gen. 2:15), he was driven
out to become slave to the earth: "With the sweat of your brow you will eat
bread." (Gen. 3:19).
The only way for the
Children of Adam to escape this servitude is through the Shabbos, which each
week releases man from slavery to the material world and the battle for
survival, lifting him above it to the world of DAAS, the knowledge and
awareness of G-d.
Thus when Moses first
went into Pharaoh, his initial request was that the Children of Israel should
have a holiday from their slavery: "Let us please go for a journey of
three days into the wilderness, and there we will sacrifice to HaShem our
G-d" (Ex. 5:3).
Pharaoh's immediate
reaction was to resist the idea: "Why are you disturbing the people from
their labors, go back to your tasks. You are causing them to cease from their
tasks" (Ex. 5:5). The Hebrew for "you are disturbing" is taPhRiyOO, containing the word PHARAOH -- as if Moses and
Aaron are the tyrants. The Hebrew for "You are causing them to cease"
is ve-hiSHBATem, containing the word SHABBOS.
Pharaoh's scheme for preventing DAAS spreading from the head, Moses, to the Children
of Israel, the body, was to make the Children of Israel so busy with
this-worldliness that they would not have TIME to be aware of G-d. And indeed
the Children of Israel became so wearied by their intensified servitude on the
threshold of redemption that "they did not listen to Moses because of
shortness of spirit and hard work" (Gen. 6:9).
Moses had to legislate the Shabbos because there is a wicked force in man
-- Pharaoh -- that will not allow him to rest from the world until he must by
law! Shabbos was the first commandment given to the Children of Israel directly
after their entry into the wilderness following the crossing of the
* * *
THE
RIGHTEOUS WOMEN
"In the merit of the
righteous women that were in that generation,
The Midrashim
give many examples of the heroism and self-sacrifice of the women of the period
of exile and slavery in
While our parshah
introduces the Savior of Israel -- Moses -- who was a man, it is striking that
the most decisive roles are played by women. In Genesis we saw a succession of
great women turning and shaping history on their own initiative, such as Sarah,
Rebeccah, Rachel, Leah and Tamar. In our parshah this
is a recurring phenomenon: four outstanding women take decisive action on their
own initiative to bring about redemption: Jochebed,
Miriam, Batya and Tziporah.
Thus when Pharaoh wanted
to kill the Israelite boys, it was the two midwives, "Shifra"
and "Pu'ah" (= Jochebed
and Miriam) who cleverly frustrated his plans. When Amram
"took the daughter of Levi (=Jochebed)"
(Ex. 2:1) from whom he had separated because he did not want to breed children
who would be killed, it was on the initiative of Miriam that he relented (see
Rashi ad loc.). By drawing Moses out of the water, Batya
saved the entire world. The dauntless Miriam went straight up to the king's
daughter offering to bring someone to take care of the rescued baby. Batya had the good sense to understood
the crucial importance of good nurturing. Jethro's
daughters were perhaps too modest to invite Moses home until their father told
them -- after all, they thought he was an Egyptian (Ex. 2:19-20). However, Tziporah showed no hesitation when she saw an angel
consuming her husband Moses for failing to circumcise Eliezer: she took a flint
and performed the bloody circumcision herself, showing that as a true righteous
convert, her heart was circumcised to G-d.
In all these cases,
examples, the heroism and initiative of these women is
bound up with breeding and rearing future generations to know and serve G-d.
Shabbat Shalom!
Avraham Yehoshua Greenbaum
