Part of a Process
God tells Moses to
remind the Children of Israel that their suffering and redemption is part of an
ongoing covenantal process.
By Regina Stein
The following article
is reprinted with permission from CLAL: The
National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.
Moses and God have little credibility among the Israelites
in Egypt. Moses' talk of redemption leads only to more severe oppression by
Pharaoh. No sooner does God assure Moses that God's might will soon be
demonstrated than we read again at the beginning of the parsha that God speaks
to Moses.
Hasn't there been enough talk already? What could God
possibly say at this point that would be helpful rather than detrimental to the
Israelites?
Remind them, God says to Moses, that they are in the midst
of an ongoing process. Remind them that this process began long ago, with their
ancestors Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, who also had to learn that the covenantal
promise would not be completely fulfilled in their lifetimes. Israel will only
find the strength to endure and believe in the coming redemption, God seems to
be saying, if they can learn to look back at the suffering and redemptive
moments experienced by their ancestors.
Israel must remember that the covenant does not begin with
them and will not end with their Exodus from Egypt. "I will free you ...
deliver you ... redeem you ... take you ... and I will bring you to the land
which I swore to give to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob." It's all in the
process.
"In every generation," we recite at the Passover
Seder, "we must learn to view ourselves as having personally experienced
the Exodus from Egypt." We, as our ancestors before us, tend to focus on
the immediate moment with its problems and crises. But to be a Jew is to
realize that we are part of a process that began long ago and will not end in
our lifetimes.
There may be no immediate gratification; we may be impatient
when we do not see the immediate results of our efforts. But as with Moses and
the Israelites in Egypt, we can find consolation and meaning in the awareness
that we are part of that ongoing covenantal process.