Friday, January 8, 2010

Shemot- Names

Shemot- Names
Exodus 1:1 to 6:1

I was listening to the CBC show Tapestry today and really enjoyed the story of a man (the editor of Slate magazine) who by sitting through a long boring Bat Mitzvah picked up a copy of the Bible and found it … interesting. In fact, he was so surprised by what he found he wrote a blog and eventually a book called “Good Book” I have borrowed from his ite the summary of the Torah passage. I thought you might like it from a guy who calls himself stupid about the Bible, and this was his raw impression about the passage.

The Complete Book of Exodus
blogging the bible:

Moses and God, the Sitcom
By David Plotz
Posted Wednesday, June 7, 2006, at 1:09 PM ET
Browse the complete Blogging the Bible series. To learn more about the Blogging the Bible project, click here.
Exodus, Chapter 1
Exodus begins with a population crisis. Jacob's descendants have multiplied and prospered in Egypt, "and the land was filled with them." The new Pharaoh is alarmed and "oppressed them with forced labor." But "the more they were oppressed, the more [the Israelites] increased and spread out, so that the [Egyptians] came to dread the Israelites." This is the classic demographic anxiety: too many of them, not enough of us. Even Israel has its own version of it today.
Here's something curious: The Bible, or at least the translation I'm reading, never describes the Israelites as "slaves." The Israelites perform forced labor for Pharaoh, and they have Egyptian taskmasters who "ruthlessly imposed" on them. But they don't seem to be slaves in the way Joseph was a slave to Potiphar. The Israelites aren't owned by Egyptians. There appear to be limits on their maltreatment: They are compelled to supply labor, but there's no mention of them being deprived of property or banned from other work. None of this minimizes their suffering. I'm just struck by the absence of that word "slave," which is thrown about so casually everywhere else in the Bible (and which we repeat endlessly at the Passover Seder: "We were slaves in Egypt …") Can anyone explain this? Or is it just a gremlin in my translation?
You can't keep an Israelite down! They keep multiplying, so Pharaoh then orders Hebrew midwives to kill all boys born to Hebrew women. When that doesn't work—the midwives seem to duck the order—a panicky Pharaoh demands that all newborn Hebrew boys get thrown into the Nile. The Bible is extremely keen on tit for tats: Very often, when you do a wrong, the very same wrong is visited on you later. Joseph's brothers sell him into slavery in Egypt, but then their descendants end up in bondage (or whatever) to Pharaoh. Jacob uses mistaken identity to trick Isaac out of a blessing. Laban, in turn, uses mistaken identity to trick Jacob out of his chosen wife. (And yet another turnabout, as Jacob changes the identity of Laban's goats and sheep to trick him out of his best animals.) And here Pharaoh tries to kill the Hebrew firstborn sons, but in a few chapters, it will be the firstborn Egyptian sons who die. It's divine retribution, or as we Jews prefer to call it, using that term from biblical Aramaic, "karma."
Chapter 2
Moses' mother saves him from drowning in the Nile: Why? Because he's "beautiful."
I don't know where the Disneyfied ideas about Moses, prince of Egypt, come from, but it's certainly not the Torah. Exodus has just sketchy details: Baby Moses floats in wicker basket and is rescued by Pharaoh's daughter, who then pays his own mother to raise him. That's it. The story jumps immediately from here to Moses as an adult. There's nothing—not a word—about Moses as a prince. Pharaoh's daughter is not mentioned again, much less described as his mother. Moses never carouses with Pharaoh's sons, or chariot races with them, or competes with them for the big guy's attention. Is Prince Moses just a modern confection, manufactured to lend some courtly glamour and the frisson of fraternal rivalry to the Exodus story?
Unlike greedy young Abraham, boring young Isaac, deceitful young Jacob, and proud young Joseph, young Moses doesn't require any seasoning. He emerges fully formed, righteous and ruthless, standing up for justice and the little guy. His very first recorded act (not counting being plucked from the river) is his murder of an Egyptian who was beating a Hebrew worker. Moses flees Egypt to escape Pharaoh's retribution.
His civil rights activism continues in exile. As soon as he arrives in Midian, he rousts the obnoxious shepherds who are preventing a young woman from watering her flocks. And then, reader, he marries her! (Her name is Zipporah, which clears up a family mystery. My Israeli father-in-law, who has a terrible memory for names, calls all men "Moishe" [Moses] and all women "Zipporah." I always thought they were just two common Israeli names. Now I get the Biblical joke.)
Meanwhile, back in Egypt, the Israelites' "cry for help from the bondage rose up to God. God heard their moaning, and God remembered His covenant. … God looked upon the Israelites, and God took notice of them."
Well, my Lord, what took you so long? What were you doing during all those years of hard labor? At the beginning of Genesis, God was a hands-on Sovereign of the Universe—fashioning man from dirt, wandering through Eden in search of Adam, sniffing thoughtfully at Noah's burnt offering, dropping by Abraham's tent to discuss Sodom and Gomorrah. But as Genesis passed, God was increasingly an absent father. He never appeared to Joseph and then left the Hebrews hanging in Cairo for hundreds of years. What was He busy with that He didn't have time to check up on His chosen people for generations? Was God just testing the Israelites? If so, why? Or is it just that God is mysterious and capricious and it's none of our business why the Hebrews had to suffer for so long?
Incidentally, Exodus is now referring to the Israelites as the "Hebrews," which is why I am using the term, too. But how did they become the Hebrews?
Chapter 3 and Chapter 4
No more absent father. When God comes back, He really comes back. He throws up the burning bush to stop Moses in his tracks, then calls out to him, "Moses, Moses." Moses answers, "Here I am." (This exchange—the double name-call, followed by "here I am"—exactly repeats the one between Abraham and God when the Lord stops the sacrifice of Isaac.)
The scene that follows between Moses and God is both high drama and low comedy. It is the most profound encounter between a man and his maker, and it previews all the themes of Exodus (particularly the tension between God's impatience and human willfulness, etc.) At the same time, it feels like nothing so much as a discussion between an enthusiastic, overeager father and his extremely sullen teenage son. God tries so hard with Moses. The Lord begins with a straightforward attempt to persuade Moses to help Him. He outlines the whole big story for Moses—My people are suffering, I have heard them, I am going to rescue them and bring them to a land "flowing with milk and honey." Then He says, rather gently, that He wants to send Moses to Pharaoh to negotiate the Israelites' release. But—the gall of this young prophet—Moses resists, "Who am I that I should go to Pharaoh?"
So, God gets a little more insistent: "I will be with you." This isn't good enough for the lawyerly Moses, who now wonders what he should tell the Israelites about who sent him. "They ask me, 'What is His name?' What shall I say to them?" God, moving into thunder-and-lightning-bolts mode, declares, "Ehyeh-Asher-Ehyeh," which is usually translated "I am that I am." Clearly getting peeved at Moses' hesitation, God repeats the whole exhortation He made already, even more emphatically, "I have declared: I will take you out of the misery of Egypt to … a land flowing with milk and honey," etc.
But does this satisfy Moses? Of course not. He complains: "What if they do not believe me and do not listen to me?" So, God tries the David Blaine route, turning Moses' rod into a snake. He causes white scales to appear and disappear on Moses' hand. Moses now moans that he can't go because he's a poor speaker, "slow of speech and slow of tongue." God would have smitten any other human who tried Him so, but He merely rebukes Moses: "Who gives a man speech? … Is it not I, the Lord?" This doesn't deter the vexatious prophet. If he lived in the 21st century, this is the point when Moses would be showing God two doctors' notes diagnosing chronic fatigue syndrome. Instead he counters, "Please, O Lord, make someone else Your agent." After all this whining and rebuffing, the Lord has had enough: He finally "became angry with Moses."
But here's the key point: Moses gets what he wants. God appoints Moses' brother Aaron to speak for him. As with Abraham at Sodom, God shows that He loves a challenge. He has no use for lumpish yes men. His truest favorites so far—Abraham and Moses, as well as Jacob and Joseph—don't back down from Him. In this meeting with God, Moses is incredibly, maddeningly frustrating. But he also asks all the right questions about his mission; he plans for every contingency; and he negotiates a better deal for himself. That's the kind of prophet I want on my team.
Chapter 5 and Chapter 6
Does Moses even intend to free the Israelites? When he first approaches Pharaoh, he doesn't ask for their freedom: He just asks for a respite so they can have a camp meeting in the wilderness. He doesn't say anything about leaving Egypt. Is this a Mosaic negotiating trick—asking for less upfront, then springing the demand for freedom later?

Thoughts on Blogging the Bible? Please e-mail David Plotz at plotzd@slate.com.


David Plotz did the full Tanakh in his unique “fresh” style.
I have inserted the link if you wish to hear his interview. It is kinda fun.

Back to the Torah passage:

I wanted to first comment on a couple items in Chapter 1. First, this problem starts with a new king who did not know about Joseph and his people. I imagine this who story. Without the knowledge of Joseph, the heor who save both the Children of Israel and Egypt, a new king arrives and says “hey, who on Earth are these guys?” History brings context. History helps us to make sense out of our world. A knowledge of history would have save this king from what his own people will call the destruction of Egypt.
Of course, in no way do I want to neglect the God of history and his divine choice to hold up Pharaoh as an example, but I sincerely think there is at least one more example of how a king can respond to the Children of Israel returning to the promised land. That example is King Cyrus.
One teacher, of mine (Dr. Walter Kiaser) described it this way. God says “let my people go!” and Pharaoh says “over my dead body.” God say, “hmmmm, sounds like a good idea to me.”
Now let’s look at Cyrus, “God says, time to let my people go” Cyrus, says “sounds good to me, in fact, let me make a contribution to your rebuilding project.” No great wrath on Cyrus. In fact, he’s held up as a good guy. Perhaps, he’s learned a bit from history.




Pharaoh and King Cyrus








Second item from Chapter 1: The heroes/liars
There are two midwives. Who are ordered by the king to kill the Hebrew male babies. They would simply be following orders of the king of the land.
Just for the record, I had forgotten that the midwives were Hebrew. Somehow I had gotten into my head that they were Egyptian. In part, it may be because of the English translation. It says they were “Hebrew midwives”. I had read this as they were midwives for the Hebrews, but if you look at the text the Hebrew is an adjective describing the midwives themselves, not the work (whom) they work for.
Now here is a bit of a problem. Aren’t these women blessed by God for telling a lie and disobeying the king? The answer is “yes”. Again, this sort of goes against common sense. God doesn’t reward liars…or does he? Again, “yes”. God builds houses (families) for them. Aparently they did not have families of their own, and God fixed that for them. You may argue that the King of Egypt was an evil man, so they had no responsibility to obey him, until you stop and think. He hasn’t had all the episodes of resisting God, yet. He is trying to exercise “population control” on those other people living within his borders, but compared to many of the evils done by many ancient kings, I doubt you would find this the most offensive.
God rewards (blesses) liars. It’s almost tough to think, but we begin to see that the Bible doesn’t say what we think is should say. God is the absolute sovereign. If this lower King decided to run counter to God, then these woman had to choose. The chose which King to fear, and it made all the difference.
Sometimes in Christian circles we do run into difficulties when a leader or a government stands in opposition to God. We sometimes feel and urge to be “polite and Christian”, and do little. “well, we’ll pray, or maybe write a letter.“ Not that I think there anything wrong with these things, but the truest faith heroes are ones who do more. They stand with God and even risk their lives for doing what is right. Those polite, passive Christians have no place in God’s word. These women are rewarded for what it one of the earliest acts of civil disobedience. I think in the days to come we will have to face more and more of these types of choices. I hope that from know what God says, we will be people who will be active, not passive.

Much of the rest of the Torah portion follows as all of us remember. Moses commits murder, and then flees into exile. Of course, if you saw the “Prince of Egypt” movie, you would think it an unfortunate accident. The Bible doesn’t suggest that. This piece is often glossed over among Christians, but it really has been the subject of much Jewish discussion. There is an ancient text called the Assumptions of Moses which includes this discussion between Michael and Satan about the body of Moses. Even though Moses was a hero. He was also a murder. Satan (the accusing angel) believed that all murders belong to him. Michael knew Moses belong in the place of rest. So they dispute. In case, you think this even is just a fantasy remember Jude (Yeshua’s ½ brother) treats it as true and uses part of this as a warning to people who apparently have a “deliverance ministry” of that time Jude 1:9.
In case you are wondering where Moses went…who appears at the mountain of transfiguration? Oh yeah, I remember.
Also, it is worthy to note the ages we are dealing with of Moses. Moses’ first attack on the Egyptian is when he is 40 years old (Act 7:23). We also know that Moses died at age 120 (Deut 34:7). We also know that the Children of Israel will spend 40 years (actually 38 years) wandering in the desert because of their lack of belief in God’s ability. This means that Moses was roughly 80 when God chooses his for this task. Think about that for a moment. Moses is too wet behind the ears at 40, so God gives him a long term “internship” dealing with dumb sheep. What better way to handle a couple million pseudo-slaves? After, his 40 year “internship” he’s finally ready. 2/3 of his life is over, and now he is finally a fit vessel for God’s use. Sometimes I am amazed at God’s choices. He seems to prepare people for years for what will amount to a small time of triumph.
A few weeks ago, I watched the Hiding Place again with my children. It had been a while since I saw it, but I remembered. Corrie Ten Boom spent a few terrible months in those concentration camps as a middle-aged woman, and then her whole life was built around sharing God’s grace in terrible circumstances. I hope that if and when God calls on us for that moment of action that we don’t shy a way. May we have the insight to realize that “for this reason we were put in this place”. Shabbot Tov

1 comment:

  1. Quote: “Quote: “We keep Sabbath because He (Jesus) kept Sabbath. The followers of Jesus must walk as he did. I understand and have full respect for those who worship on other days.“

    This is a historical fact: “Sunday wasn't celebrated until several centuries after the death of Ribi Yehoshua ha-Mashiakh (the Messiah) from Nazareth… and then it was syncretized from the day dedicated to the sun-god by the Roman Hellenists who had separated from the original Jewish followers by 135 C.E.” [Quote from the below website; “History museum” (left menu”); “Times and seasons” (top menu) and after that you can click on the link “Sun-god-day”.]

    There is a mitzwah in Torah that forbids celebration of “sun-god-day” and other days with pagan origin (wa-Yi•qәr•â′ (Leviticus) 18.3),

    To follow Ribi Yehoshua, it is necessary that one follows the mitzwot (directives or military-orders) in the Torah that he taught (see proof here: www.netzarim.co.il).

    Anders Branderud

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