Parashat B’shalah
When Miracles Are Not Enough
The transformation
into a sacred people occurs not through miracles but rather through steady
education, discipline and communal reinforcement.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
Surely, this Torah reading contains some of the most
dramatic and well-known scenes in all of written literature. The liberation of
the Israelite slaves by God, the pursuit of the fleeing Hebrews by Pharaoh and
his army, the splitting of the Red Sea, with Israel crossing safely beyond and
Pharaoh's forces drowning in the waters--these scenes indelibly shaped the
consciousness of the Jewish people throughout our tumultuous history. We are
who we are precisely because we recall our origins as a slave people, because
so much of Jewish practice is designed to remind us that we owe our freedom to
a God of love and justice.
The story of the liberation from Egypt is the cornerstone of
Jewish existence. Or is it? Read the 'parshah' again, and you will find that
what is most striking is not the miracles--wondrous as they may be. What is
particularly noteworthy is how quickly the Israelite slaves forget about their
extraordinary redemption.
Barely did they cross to freedom, when the people complained
to Moses and to God. They complained about a lack of water, they complained
about a lack of food, and they complained simply about no longer being
surrounded by familiar--if hostile--Egypt.
In the words of Midrash Sh'mot Rabbah, "Have you
forgotten all the miracles which God performed for you?" Miracles seem to
be an ineffective way of inculcating a consciousness of God. In fact, the
entire Bible can be read as a book about the consistent inability of God to
teach the Jews to be grateful.
First, God tries an idyllic garden. That doesn't work; Adam
and Eve disobey anyway. Then God sends a flood. That fails also; people
continue to act violently. God then enslaves the Jews, sends a liberator, and
redeems them from Egypt. After ten miraculous plagues and a split sea, the Jews
still act truculently.
God gives a Torah of instructions--the Jews ignore it. God
sends prophets of insight--the Jews rebel against them. The Bible seems to
indicate that miracles don't work. People marvel at them while they are in process,
and then forget about them the moment they finish.
To reform human character takes much more than "special
effects," no matter how Divine their origin. To transform human behavior
requires not grandiose drama, but rather constant and gradual education,
reinforcement, discipline and community.
The shift from biblical to rabbinic Judaism reflects the
growing, divine insight that the way to mold a sacred people lies not in
external miracles, but in inner transformation. That transformation is accomplished
through small, prosaic progress. By gradually incorporating mitzvot (commandments) into our
lives--by moving a step at a time toward making Shabbat and 'tzedakah' [charity], 'kashrut' [observance of Jewish dietary
restrictions] and social justice, prayer and study a regular part of our
being--we can, with time, remake ourselves in the Divine image.
Such a transformation is much more difficult than merely
splitting a sea. It involves a tenacity and an openness that must be cultivated
continually. But the reward of such a transformation is precisely what God
sought more than three thousand years ago at the shores of the Red Sea--a
Jewish community that puts God at the center through the study, practice, and
development of our sacred Heritage.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit
Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the University
of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is the
author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill). For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary,
please send an email request to bartson@uj.edu.