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Parshat
Va-eira
God reveals Himself to Moshe as the One who fulfills promises. The Israelites
at first are reluctant to believe Moshe who again has doubts about his
ability. God tells Moshe that Aharon will be his spokesman and that
God will always be with them.
Moshe and Aharon go to Pharoah and demand that he release the Children
of Israel from bondage. Aharon casts down his staff and it turns into
a serpent. Pharoah is not impressed as the magicians in Egypt do the
same thing. Pharoah is warned about the first plague but hardens his
heart. Aharon follows Moshe’s directions and waves his staff over
the Nile. It turns to blood and all the water in Egypt turns to blood
as well. Only in Goshen do the Israelites have normal water. This continues
for seven days but the magicians also duplicate the act.
Moshe warns Pharoah about a plague of frogs and is ignored. Consequently
frogs come swarming out of the river and over-run the land. Pharoah
pleads with Moshe to stop the plague and after praying to God, the plague
ceases. Pharoah, however, does not relent and let the Israelites go
free. A third plague of lice occurs without warning. The magicians were
unable to repeat this but Pharaoh again refuses to listen to their pleas
to let the Israelites go free.
Moshe warns Pharoah that wild beasts will ruin the land but that Goshen
would be unaffected. Still not heeding the warnings, the plague destroys
the land and Pharoah agrees to let the Israelites sacrifice to God in
Egypt. Moshe’s demands that they be allowed a three days journey
to the desert. The plague of beasts stops when Pharoah agrees but quickly
changes his mind when the plague stops. Moshe now warns that a cattle
disease (murrain) will kill all of the Egytpian livestock and devastate
the country. Pharoah refuse to give into Moshe’s demands and the
plague is unleashed with horrible effects. A sixth plague is then brought
down without warning in the form of boils on the body of every Egytpian.
Pharoah is then warned about a plague of hail which will destroy both
the land and the remaining livestock. This hail brought fire as well
as destructive impact and again devastates the land. Pharoah still refuses
to let the Israelites go free.
“Va-eira el Avraham, el Yitzchak, v’el Yaakov b’el
shaddai, u’sh’mi YHVH lo no-da’i’ti la-hem.”
The parsha opens with God speaking to Moshe through the Attribute of
Justice: “Va’yida-ber Elohim el Moshe”. As Rashi writes:
“He spoke with him sternly (with justice) because Moshe was severe
in speaking and saying, ‘Wherefore hast Thou dealt ill with this
people’.” The Torah continues: “and He said unto him:
I am the Lord (YHVH), and I appeared unto Avraham, unto Yitzchak, and
unto Yaakov as El Shaddai (God Almighty), but by my name (YHVH) I made
Me not known to them.” Rashi comments on the switch to YHVH (Attribute
of Mercy): “I am faithful to pay a good reward to those who walk
before Me. And not for naught have I sent you to fulfill My words which
I spoke to the first fathers.”
What does the Torah mean by “I appeared… as God almighty
(El Shaddai)…” Rashi states that God made promises to the
patriarchs but did not demonstrate his Attribute of Faithfulness. In
this parsha, God reveals Himself to Moshe as One who fulfills promises.
God Himself will redeem the Israelites.
Moshe is constantly filled with self doubt as a reluctant leader. The
sages discuss this as his greatest strength. Moshe was the humblest
of people and nothing was considered beneath his dignity. The Midrash
points out that just as Moshe was tender but firm with the sheep he
tended, so too would he be tender but firm with God’s flock; the
Israelites. King David started out as a shepherd as well.
Humility is a
great strength of character and something to be emulated. Having personal
concern for someone less fortunate is one of the highest mitzvot one
can fulfill. The story is told about the great scholar Rabbi Yisroel
Salanter (the founder of the Mussar movement). One Yom Kippur evening,
the Rabbi arrived in shul very late. It seems that on the way he heard
a baby crying. Investigating, he found a baby alone in a house with
none of his family around. Not wanting to leave the infant in such
a distressed state, Rabbi Salanter stayed with the infant, calming
him down, until a babysitter could be found. Only when he was certain
the baby was comfortable, did he then go on to services.
What could be more humble than the lowly thorn bush selected to receive
God’s Essence when He revealed himself to Moshe. This is an
important lesson. The Israelites at that time were at their lowest
level of dignity and, like a thorn bush, could be elevated to greatness
through divine service. The gemara (Taanit 17) writes:
“Rabbi Chanina ben Ida said: Why are the words of Torah compared
with water? This is to teach you, just as water flows from a higher
level to a lower, so too the words of the Torah endure only with the
person who is lowly.”
“And the Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord when I stretch
forth My hand upon Egypt, and I bring out the children of Israel from
among them.” The ten plagues are familiar to most of us from
the Pesach seder. The word “makot” alludes to many things
both through a re-arranging of the letters or from the gematria (numerical
value) of the letters. “Makot” is similar to the word
“michvat”, which means “burning”. The plagues
were meant to punish the Egyptians and impress the Israelites. A burning
desire for redemption resulted from witnessing the awesome power of
God. It is similar to the word “tamchu” which means “supported”.
During the ten plagues, the Israelites were supported by God. This
is true during the final plague; the slaying of the first born. By
placing the lamb’s blood on the door posts and lintels, the
Children of Israel were protected as God “posach”, passed
over their houses. The mezuzah is a reminder of this act of support.
In fact, the word “makot” has the same numerical value
as the plural “mezuzot”.
Many sages have analyzed the symbolism of the ten plagues. Their group
patterns (such as three groups of three plagues in which two are preceded
by a warning and the third is not) or their relationship to the number
ten (ten commandments, ten utterances at the Creation, the ten brothers
that attacked Yosef, etc). I have found an interesting commentary
on the ten plagues in the Haggadah by Rabbi Yitzchak Abarabanel (from
fifteenth century Spain):
“The sages explain that Hashem brought these particular plagues
upon the Egyptians for the following reasons:
The Egyptians were chastened with the plague of blood because they
prevented Jewish women from purifying themselves from their blood
of niddah (menstruation).
The intolerable barking of the crocodiles (the Abarabanel cites an
opinion of the medieval Talmudic commentator Rabbeinu Chananel, who
translates tzefardea as “crocodiles” instead of the usual
“frogs”) was punishment for making Jewish women suppress
their cries of pain when they gave birth in hiding.
The Egyptians’ land swarmed with lice preventing them from doing
their work, because they stole land from the Jews. While the Jewish
men were busy tending the cattle of the Egyptians, Jewish women would
have to nurse the Egyptians’ children.
The wild animals were the very animals the Jews tended which were
sent to snatch these children and devour them. Because the Egyptians
would hitch Jews to their plows to save the strength of their cattle,
Hashem smote their cattle with pestilence.
The Egyptians were smitten with boils so that they would not come
to their bathhouses and the Jews would be free to use them.
They were pelted with hailstones because they used to stone the Jews.
The hail also gave the Jews a respite from their work in the Egyptians’
gardens and orchards.
Because the Egyptians would use the Jews to plant for them, the locusts
were sent to eat all that the Jews had sown.
Darkness allowed the Jews to bury the sinners among them who died
during that plague. The burials could take place without humiliation
of the Egyptians’ watching.
Hashem concluded the plagues with the killing of the first born to
fulfill His threat in His initial warning to Pharoah: So says Hashem,
Israel is My first born son. And I say to you, send My son so that
he may serve Me. And if you refuse to send him, behold, I will kill
your first born son.”
“I prefer to explain the plagues as Hashem’s means of
demonstrating His mastery over all four of the elements-earth, fire,
water, and air. First, Hashem smote the water by turning it into blood.
This had the primary effect of making the Egyptians suffer from thirst
and the secondary effect of killing those creatures of the deep which
they used for food. But not only did beneficial aquatic life die off.
Some harmful creatures-the crocodiles-increased in number miraculously
and emerged from the water to annoy the Egyptians.”
“After smiting the element of water through these two plagues,
Hashem smote the Egyptians’ land in the next three. First, the
land itself turned to lice. Then He brought two plagues involving
animals, which exist on the earth’s surface-wild beasts and
pestilence.”
“Boils came through the element of the air, as it says: And
Moshe through it heavenward and it became an infestation of boils.
Hail came through the element of fire, as it says: And Hashem sent
thunder and hail, and fire ran down upon the ground. Locusts are creatures
which fly through the element of air. Darkness was brought about through
a thickening of the air which did not allow the sun’s light
to penetrate. Finally, the killing of the firstborn came about through
a miraculous airborne fire which suddenly entered the bodies.”
“Alternatively, we can view the ten plagues as just retribution
for the evils inflicted by the Egyptians upon the Jews. The Egyptians
bloodied the waters of the Nile by killing Jewish children in it.
Thus its waters were literally turned into blood. Because Jewish women
cried in anguish as they saw their children cast into the river, Hashem
brought forth from the river crocodiles with their cries. The Egyptians
embittered the lives of the Jews by forcing them to perform hard labor
with mortar and bricks which come from the ground. Therefore Moshe
hit the ground with his staff to bring on the plague of lice, as if
to curse the ground which had brought his people such suffering.
Not only were the Jews subject to Pharoah, but nay Egyptian, from
the highest to the humblest, could bid them to do their labor. Because
of this, they were punished by a mixture of wild beasts of all sizes
who would snatch them form their houses as they did to the Jews. The
Jews could not tend to their cattle properly because of all the work
they had to do for the Egyptians. In addition, the Egyptians used
to steal the cattle of the Jews. Because of this, Hashem smote the
Egyptians’ cattle with pestilence.
Because the Egyptians separated Jewish men from their wives, they
were smitten with boils which prevented marital relations. Because
the Egyptians would throw stones and shout curses at the Jews, Hashem
punished them with hailstones and thunderclaps. Because the Egyptians
would steal the crops of the Jews, Hashem sent locusts to consume
their crops. Because the Jews suffered in the darkness of exile, Hashem
smote the Egyptians with darkness. Finally, just as the Egyptians
used to kill the children of Hashem, so did He slay their firstborn
children.”
As we say in the Haggadah, had not God done all of this for our ancestors,
we might to this day, still be slaves unto Pharoah. May we be worthy
of the future redemption and not exiled to the spiritual wilderness
of material affects, vanity, honor, loshen hara (gossip) and sinat
chinan (indiscriminate hatred) of our fellow Jews and truly live the
mitzvah of Ahavat Yisroel.
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