Exodus 1:1-6:1 – Isaiah 27:6-28:13; 29:22-23 (Ashkenazim)
Jeremiah 1:1-2:3 (Sephardim) – Luke 4:16-30
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Shemot
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Parashat Shemot
1. Pharaoh's plan to decimate the Hebrew population by
murdering their baby boys was the last of three plans. First, he enslaved the
Hebrews to reduce their birthrate; then he commanded the Hebrew midwives to
stealthily murder the newborn boys; and only after both plans failed did he
come up with his "Final Solution" to the Israelite problem - a public
extermination of all newborn males. How did Pharaoh and the Egyptian people
become willing to commit public infanticide? If Pharaoh was vicious enough to
decree these brutal murders, why did he not do so from the beginning?
Leah Vaks
Our approach to these
questions will elucidate the degenerating nature of social oppression and
illustrate history repeating itself. Pharaoh's original goal was not to kill
the Hebrews but to inhibit their growth and reduce the powerful status that
they had acquired since Joseph's time. Like a true tyrant, Pharaoh would have
been satisfied with breaking the spirit and destroying the dignity of the
nascent Israelite nation. He was able to derive free labor from the enslaved
people as well as raise the national pride of the Egyptians by providing them
with a social group whom they could marginalize and hate. Similarly, under Nazi
tyranny, Jews were made into social pariahs through being denied their rights
and livelihoods, and then through conscription into labor camps. Germans were
glad to target a minority whose oppression would save Germany's honor.
While slavery doubtless
took its toll on the spirit of the Hebrews in Egypt, their birthrate did not decrease. Instead of
looking forward to the birth of more slaves, Pharaoh feared the continued
proliferation of the Israelites. Though they were now his laborers, he still
saw them as a nation of undesirables who may eventually challenge his
authority. So he decided to undercut
their numbers directly through an "early intervention" system by which healthy
newborns would be presented as stillborns to their unsuspecting mothers. The
Nazis had a parallel policy of "sterilization" for all social elements whom
they considered undesirable. Using midwives and doctors to perform crimes would
mask the atrocity as a necessary medical procedure.
Yet the fact that Pharaoh
attempted to keep the infanticide secret at first showed that he was reluctant
to inform the Egyptians of his policy. Similarly, Hitler kept many Germans in
the dark about what was happening to the Jews after their relocation from the
ghettos.
Eventually, however, Pharaoh
had to enlist the assistance of his people in his battle against the "pariah
nation" who kept on increasing and growing stronger despite all attempts to cut
her down. Yet moral outrages on a mass scale can only be perpetrated after the
ground has been prepared through the inculcation of fear and hatred of the
marginal group. In the case of Nazism, Hitler recruited the Germans for
genocide through a constant stream of anti-Semitic propaganda that dehumanized
the Jews and cast them as the source of all of Germany's woes; Pharaoh, too had
to use an equally powerful method of persuasion, in order to legitimize
infanticide in the eyes of the Egyptians.
As suggested by several midrashim, the catalyst for Pharaoh's
final decree was the urgent prediction of the court astrologers that the
Redeemer of the Israelites was about to be born. Now Pharaoh was confronted
with a seemingly irrefutable threat. It is likely that he propagated this
threat in one form or another among the Egyptians in order to fill them with a
sense of desperation. The contempt of the Egyptians for the Hebrew slaves was
expanded to include a sense of personal mission to prevent the slaves from
leading a victorious insurrection. While according to Midrash Rabba and Tanchuma,
this decree of public infanticide lasted for only one day, Pirqe deRabbi Eliezer suggests a more extended policy that lasted
for more than three years. In either case, the urgent fear of revolt made the
Egyptians willingly complicit in this horrendous act of murdering babies.
One does not have to take
the modern historical case of Nazi Germany to find a parallel to the Egyptian
decree of infanticide; already the Besora
of Matthew narrates a strikingly similar tale. In 2:16, Matthew recounts how Herod, the appointed king of Judea, put to death all the children up to 2 1/5 years of age who lived in Bethlehem and the surrounding areas. Though he was not a
foreign tyrant, but supposedly a Jewish king, on learning that his
competitor-the Messiah-was to be born, he acted no different than the pagan
Pharaoh. The Midrash and Matthew both teach the same lesson: that the righteous
Redeemer of Israel is always a threat to worldly rulers who condone the
oppression and marginalization of people in society. Yet despite their ruthless
attempts at annihilation, the Redeemer always survives and wins the battle for
his people. May our Redeemer Yeshua soon come to Zion!
2. What sin were the men in Exodus 2:11 guilty of? What was the consequence of their actions?
What can we do to ensure that we do not commit the same sin? What practical
application does this have to our lives?
Rabbi Jason Sobel
The Jewish men who were fighting with one another
were guilty of sinat chinam, baseless
hatred. The individual described in this passage as the "wicked one" turns from
beating his fellow Hebrew to verbally assaulting and threatening Moses. His
response to Moses was totally unwarranted and seems to be characteristic of the
Jewish people's general attitude towards one another at this time. Instead of
fighting back against their Egyptian oppressors, they channeled their pain and
anger towards one another.
Moses actions were not motivated by pride or by a
lust for power. Rather it was his love for his people as well the belief that
the Lord was raising him up as the redeemer of Israel
that moved him to take action. This view is underscored by Stephen's speech in
Acts 7:23-29:
When Moses was forty years old, he decided to visit his
fellow Israelites. He saw one of them being mistreated by an Egyptian, so he
went to his defense and avenged him by killing the Egyptian. Moses thought that
his own people would realize that God was using him to rescue them, but they
did not.
Their lack of love for one another and utter disunity
made them oblivious to the work of God in their midst and even seems to have
caused their redemption to be delayed by forty years. This same sort of sinat chinam, baseless hatred, which
also characterized the Jewish Community in the first century culminated in the
death of our Messiah and the destruction of the Second
Temple. In the same way, we must be
careful that our lack of love for another does not cause us to miss or hamper
the work that the Lord wants to accomplish in our day.
We must understand that our collective attitude and
actions can either hinder or hasten the ge'ula
shelema, the final redemption. In light of this Torah portion, there are
two primary actions that we should take in order to guard against repeating the
sin of our ancestors. First, we must cultivate ahavat hinam, gratuitous love for another. If our sinat chinam lead to the death of Yeshua
and destruction of the Temple, then
only ahavat chinam can lead to its
rebuilding and his return.
Secondly, we must cultivate a desire for the
messianic redemption. Belief in and desire for the Messiah's coming is one of
the fundamental principals of Jewish faith - "I believe with complete faith in
the coming of Messiah, and even though he may tarry, I will wait for him
daily." (Rambam's Thirteen Principals of Faith). We must cultivate a deep
longing for Messiah Yeshua's return and the unconditional belief that he might
come today. We must live in light of this reality by daily desiring and praying
for the Messianic redemption. Like Israel in the days of Moses, We must cry
out, beg, and plead, that today will be the day of our redemption - "The
Israelites ... cried out, and their cry for help . . . went up to God" (Exodus
2:23).

David Rudolph, Ph.D.
Luke 4:16-30 - A Spirit-Empowered Messiah?
Our weekly besora
reading begins with Yeshua entering a Nazareth
synagogue on Shabbat and reading from the Isaiah scroll. The particular text he
reads (Isaiah 61:1-2 with 58:6) could be described as his Messianic mission
statement:
The Spirit of ADONAI is upon me because he has anointed me to
announce Good News to the poor; he has sent me to proclaim freedom for the
imprisoned and renewed sight for the blind, to release those who have been
crushed, to proclaim a year of the favor of ADONAI
Luke 4:18-19 CJB
Yeshua lived out this Messianic mission statement
over the course of three and a half years. The four Besorot (Gospels) describe how he proclaimed the good news of the
kingdom, freed people from spiritual bondages, healed the sick, opened the eyes
of the blind, strengthened the weak, and forgave sins. It is notable that Luke
9-10 describes Yeshua sending out the 12 and the 72/70 to do all these things.
And Luke's sequel, the Book of Acts, details how the Messianic community
ministered as Yeshua did.
But what often goes unnoticed, especially by those
of us who honor the Father and Son but give less attention to the Spirit, is
that the Ruach (Spirit) empowered
Yeshua to fulfill his messianic mission. Leading up to Luke 4:16-30, we are
told that the Ruach descended on
Yeshua in bodily form like a dove (Luke 3:22).
Yeshua was "filled with the Ruach"
(Luke 4:1). He walked "in the power of the Ruach"
(Luke 4:14). Yeshua was saturated
and overflowing with the Ruach!
Have you ever thought about the fact that the term
"Messiah" comes from the Hebrew word mashiach,
which means "anointed one"? Anointed with what? Prune juice? In Luke 4:18,
Yeshua tells us that he was anointed (mashach)
with the Ruach ADONAI (the Spirit of
the LORD). Similarly, in Isaiah 11:1-2, the first thing Isaiah tells us about
the son of Yishai (Jesse), the Messiah, is that "the Spirit of ADONAI will rest on him." My point is
that Spirit-empowerment was inherent to Yeshua's "Messianic" identity, even as
it should be fundamental to the identity of "Messianic" (Anointed) Jews and
gentiles (cf. Acts 1:5, 8; 2:4, 17-18, 33, 38; 4:8, 31; 5:32; 1 Corinthians
6:19; 12:13; 2 Corinthians 1:21-22; 3:3; 5:5).
Do you have vision to live out Yeshua's
Messianic mission statement in the here and now? If we are going to dare to
proclaim the besora (good news) to
our people, if in holy chutzpa and
humble acknowledgement of our own shortcomings we want to free our people from
addictions and see them healed from afflictions, if we want to see eyes opened,
the weak strong, and the sinner make teshuva
in the name of Yeshua, then we are going to need the power of the Ruach, even
as Yeshua did. Lord, may you deluge our hearts and synagogues with your Ruach
and give us a taste of the world to come as you describe it in the second part
of Isaiah 61!
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- PARASHAT VA'ERA
Exodus 6:2-9:35
Ezekiel 28:25-29:21
Luke 4:31-44
UPCOMING YACHAD NETWORK EVENTS
4th Annual Young Leaders Shabbaton
New
York City ●
June 2008
7th Annual Young Messianic Jewish
Scholars Conference
New
York City ●
June 2008
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