Equal Before
God
Moshe and Pharaoh
clash over who among the Israelites will worship God in the desert,
illustrating the fundamental differences between paganism and monotheism.
By Rabbi Shimon Felix
The following article is reprinted with permission from The Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
This week's parsha (Torah portion) contains one of my
all-time favorite conversations, one of the occasions where two opposing world
views are really beautifully, succinctly and clearly articulated.
As the parsha begins, the Egyptians have been through seven
plagues, but will still not let the Israelites go. Moshe now warns them of the
next plague, the locust. Pharaoh's people have had it, they are ready to give
in. "And the servants of Pharaoh said to him: 'Until when will this one be
a stumbling block to us? Send out these people that they may worship the Lord
their God. Don't you know yet that Egypt is lost?'"
Pharaoh capitulates, sends for Moshe and Aharon, and says to
them: "Go, and worship the Lord your God." But Pharaoh also has a
question: "Who will be going?"
And now, with his response to Pharaoh, Moshe lays the groundwork for universal
suffrage and the French and American Revolutions: "With our young people
and our old people we will go, with our sons and our daughters...we will go,
for it is a holiday to God for us."
Pharaoh's response is swift: "...Not so, let the male
adults go and worship the Lord, for this is what you ask." Angrily,
Pharaoh brings the meeting to an end: "And he drove them out from before
him." The interview is over, the deal is off, and the locusts arrive the
next day.
This short exchange between Moshe and Pharaoh is crucial to an understanding of
Judaism, and monotheism. Pharaoh is a pagan. For him, a religion's rituals are
done by the functionaries or the leaders of the tribe. The rest of the people,
the servants and subjects of the king, are dependant on the relationship
between the leaders--the priests and the royalty--and the various deities they
serve.
Pharaoh can see no reason for everyone to be part of the
worship of the Lord. As his 'secular' world is arranged--hierarchal,
authoritarian, and totalitarian--so is his religious world. It is the religious
leadership--in this instance the adult males--who must go and serve the
Israelite God. The people should remain behind, enslaved, passive, and hope
that the priests get the rituals right, and thereby insure the blessings of
their God or Gods.
Pharaoh thinks that only the adult males should go because he does not grasp
the notion of freedom for all. He sees Moshe and Aharon as the Jewish
leadership, to whom, under pressure from their God and his plagues, he is
willing to cede some authority. He can not imagine that their God wishes to
relate to each and every one of the miserable people he has enslaved. He can
not imagine that each of these individuals is a separate entity, standing alone
before God.
Moshe, on the other hand, explains the core of monotheism to Pharaoh, and to
us. All of us, young and old, man and woman, must stand before God. As equals.
As individuals. We all must participate in the relationship with the divine.
And so, all of Israel must be allowed to go and commune with God in the desert.
God, who created every one of us, has a relationship with every one of us.
This is the way Judaism works, and this is why the Jews must
leave oppressive, totalitarian, autocratic Egypt, the Egypt that enslaves, the
Egypt that rules, for the freedom of the desert. There, and only there,
unencumbered by the chains of slavery, oppression, and royalty, each and every
individual, on his or her own, stands before the Creator of the Universe.
Celebrates before the Creator of the Universe. In fact, we can perhaps say that
the specific content of this celebration in the desert is the fact that all of
us, young and old, male and female, can stand, and are standing, as independent
entities before God. That itself is worthy of celebration.
As the plagues continue, and reach the awful climax of the killing of the first
born, God's side of this equation is clarified. The reason each and every one
of us must stand before God is this: He created us all. He rules us all. In the
pagan world, with a plethora, a hierarchy, of Gods, not everyone has the same
relationship with one deity or another; not every deity has the same
relationship with the world and its creatures. If, on the other hand, there is
one, all-powerful Creator, as the plagues prove, we are all equally his
creations. We all stand before him equally as his, and only his subjects.
Some of you may be wondering exactly how far I want to really go with this
egalitarian thing. In other words, really put my money where my mouth is. Good
question.
I do think that what I said above is right, and true. I also think that the
Jewish people know that men and women, children and adults, also have to
interact, live together, raise families, in community, and that there are ways
in which we, as a people, have tried to arrange these interactions, ways worthy
of our respect, on the one hand, and our respectful criticism on the other.
Rabbi Shimon
Felix is the Israel Director of the Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
He lives with his family in Jerusalem, and has taught in a wide variety of
educational frameworks in Israel and abroad.