Overview – Sefer Shemot/0/en
Overview – Sefer Shemot
Structure of the Book
Sefer Shemot tells how the Israelites transformed from a nation of slaves serving Paroh to a nation of free people serving Hashem. It can be divided into three main sections:
- "Slavery and Redemption" – The first unit, Chapters 1:1 – 15:21, speaks of the period of bondage and Israel's physical emancipation by Hashem.
- "A Nation in Transition" – The second section, Chapters 15:22 – 18:27, is a transition unit which describes the short period when the nation is already free, but have not yet covenantally bound themselves to God. It describes the people's first challenges on the road to nationhood.
- "Servants of Hashem" – The last section, Chapters 19:1 – 40:38, speaks of the nation's spiritual redemption and their entering into a covenantal relationship with Hashem.
This division is based on the above thematic issues, the different settings of each unit,1 and the varying protagonists highlighted in each section.2 The Song of the Sea (Chapter 15) serves as a further literary marker, festively closing the first unit and separating the prose accounts which surround it. For elaboration on the book's structure, and further subdivisions of each of its sections, see Structure – Sefer Shemot.
Themes
Nation Building
Challenges of Leadership
Building a Relationship with Hashem
Theological Issues
Many theological and philosophical issues are raised through the various stories of Sefer Shemot:
- Free Will
- Theodicy
- Revelation
- Prophecy
- Nature of Miracles