Difference between revisions of "A Three Day Journey/2/en"
(Original Author: Aviva Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
(Original Author: Aviva Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
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<h1>A Three Day Journey?</h1> | <h1>A Three Day Journey?</h1> | ||
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<p>Some commentators explain that Hashem did not mislead Paroh, and that although Moshe's original request was for only a three day journey, changing circumstances caused the ultimate departure to be a permanent one. The variations of this possibility differ regarding the cause and timing of this change:</p> | <p>Some commentators explain that Hashem did not mislead Paroh, and that although Moshe's original request was for only a three day journey, changing circumstances caused the ultimate departure to be a permanent one. The variations of this possibility differ regarding the cause and timing of this change:</p> | ||
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<opinion name="">Upfront from the Start | <opinion name="">Upfront from the Start | ||
<p>Only the initial request was for a three day holiday, and after Paroh rejected it, Moshe upped the ante and demanded permanent freedom for the Israelites. There was thus no deception because Paroh knew of the plans all along.</p> | <p>Only the initial request was for a three day holiday, and after Paroh rejected it, Moshe upped the ante and demanded permanent freedom for the Israelites. There was thus no deception because Paroh knew of the plans all along.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Why did Paroh give chase?</b> "כִּי בָרַח הָעָם" poses a difficulty particularly for the position that Paroh had given the Israelites their unconditional release.<fn>R. Mecklenburg acknowledges this difficulty, but presents it as a problem even for those who say that Paroh had only authorized a temporary journey, as even according to them the Israelites were not fleeing.</fn> HaKetav VeHaKabbalah thus attempts to reinterpret "בָרַח" as if it were a passive (נפעל) form related to בריח, and thereby explains that Paroh thought the Israelites were locked in by the desert (as in "סָגַר עֲלֵיהֶם הַמִּדְבָּר"‎).<fn>See the Netziv below for a more plausible alternative which could also work for HaKetav VeHaKabbalah's position.</fn></point> | <point><b>Why did Paroh give chase?</b> "כִּי בָרַח הָעָם" poses a difficulty particularly for the position that Paroh had given the Israelites their unconditional release.<fn>R. Mecklenburg acknowledges this difficulty, but presents it as a problem even for those who say that Paroh had only authorized a temporary journey, as even according to them the Israelites were not fleeing.</fn> HaKetav VeHaKabbalah thus attempts to reinterpret "בָרַח" as if it were a passive (נפעל) form related to בריח, and thereby explains that Paroh thought the Israelites were locked in by the desert (as in "סָגַר עֲלֵיהֶם הַמִּדְבָּר"‎).<fn>See the Netziv below for a more plausible alternative which could also work for HaKetav VeHaKabbalah's position.</fn></point> | ||
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<opinion name="Switch Midway">Switch Prior to the Exodus | <opinion name="Switch Midway">Switch Prior to the Exodus | ||
<p>The original request and subsequent negotiations related only to a three day journey. However, the situation changed after the Plague of Darkness, and when Paroh ultimately granted permission, it was to leave forever.</p> | <p>The original request and subsequent negotiations related only to a three day journey. However, the situation changed after the Plague of Darkness, and when Paroh ultimately granted permission, it was to leave forever.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Despoiling Egypt</b> – The Netziv maintains that although the objects were given as loans, they later became spoils of war and legitimately became the property of the Israelites. See <aht page="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</aht>.</point> | <point><b>Despoiling Egypt</b> – The Netziv maintains that although the objects were given as loans, they later became spoils of war and legitimately became the property of the Israelites. See <aht page="Reparations and Despoiling Egypt">Reparations and Despoiling Egypt</aht>.</point> | ||
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<opinion name="Planned to Return">Always Planned to Return | <opinion name="Planned to Return">Always Planned to Return | ||
<p>Even after the Exodus, the Israelites were still planning on returning to Egypt after their three day journey, as Moshe had promised Paroh.<fn>Like the first two possibilities above, this option attempts to reconcile Moshe's requests with what the nation ultimately did. However, in contrast to HaKetav VeHaKabbalah's approach which reinterprets the subsequent requests to match them to the end result of the nation leaving permanently, this option posits that the originally intended outcome would have matched the requests. The Netziv's variation is a combination of these two.</fn> Once Paroh and the Egyptians drowned at Yam Suf, though, there was no longer any reason to return.</p> | <p>Even after the Exodus, the Israelites were still planning on returning to Egypt after their three day journey, as Moshe had promised Paroh.<fn>Like the first two possibilities above, this option attempts to reconcile Moshe's requests with what the nation ultimately did. However, in contrast to HaKetav VeHaKabbalah's approach which reinterprets the subsequent requests to match them to the end result of the nation leaving permanently, this option posits that the originally intended outcome would have matched the requests. The Netziv's variation is a combination of these two.</fn> Once Paroh and the Egyptians drowned at Yam Suf, though, there was no longer any reason to return.</p> | ||
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<category name="">No Choice but to Deceive | <category name="">No Choice but to Deceive | ||
<p>This approach understands the three day proposal as a necessary ruse to facilitate the Exodus. Commentators diverge regarding the intended audience of the deception and as to why this ploy was essential:</p> | <p>This approach understands the three day proposal as a necessary ruse to facilitate the Exodus. Commentators diverge regarding the intended audience of the deception and as to why this ploy was essential:</p> | ||
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<point><b>Why did Paroh give chase?</b> According to Ramban, Paroh's spies reported that the Israelites were not sacrificing but were rather parading as if they had achieved full freedom.</point> | <point><b>Why did Paroh give chase?</b> According to Ramban, Paroh's spies reported that the Israelites were not sacrificing but were rather parading as if they had achieved full freedom.</point> | ||
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Version as of 23:30, 25 June 2014
A Three Day Journey?
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Commentators disagree regarding whether any deception was involved in the request for merely a three day journey. Some suggest that Moshe did not mislead Paroh. According to HaKetav VeHaKabbalah, upon Paroh's denial of the original request, Moshe demanded complete freedom, and thus Paroh was fully cognizant from a very early stage that he was being asked to emancipate the nation. In contrast, the Netziv proposes that the change in plans occurred only after the unworthy among the Hebrews perished in the Plague of Darkness, as it was only then that the rest of the nation merited complete redemption. Finally, R"Y Bekhor Shor suggests that had the Egyptians not drowned in Yam Suf, the Israelites would have in fact returned to Egypt as promised and apparently the Exodus would have occurred in stages.
Most exegetes, though, think that the request was indeed a ruse, and a necessary one. They argue that had Moshe requested permanent freedom (an outrageous request by the moral standards of that era), Paroh would not have granted the Israelites even temporary leave, the Egyptians would not have loaned their valuables, and the process which ended with the Egyptians drowning at Yam Suf would not have been triggered. Additionally, the full extent of Paroh's intransigence would not have been displayed, and Moshe himself might have even been beheaded. Ramban also agrees that there was intent to deceive, but he proposes that the primary target of the deception was the Children of Israel themselves, who were not yet mentally prepared to leave Egypt permanently to go and conquer Canaan.
The differing positions are influenced by their views on a number of related issues. Under what circumstances or for what purposes is deception and/or lying permitted? How inflexible was Paroh? What is the meaning of "דֶּרֶךְ שְׁלֹשֶׁת יָמִים"? What was Paroh thinking when he finally let the nation go, and why did he give chase so soon after?
No Deception
Some commentators explain that Hashem did not mislead Paroh, and that although Moshe's original request was for only a three day journey, changing circumstances caused the ultimate departure to be a permanent one. The variations of this possibility differ regarding the cause and timing of this change:
Upfront from the Start
Only the initial request was for a three day holiday, and after Paroh rejected it, Moshe upped the ante and demanded permanent freedom for the Israelites. There was thus no deception because Paroh knew of the plans all along.
Switch Prior to the Exodus
The original request and subsequent negotiations related only to a three day journey. However, the situation changed after the Plague of Darkness, and when Paroh ultimately granted permission, it was to leave forever.
Always Planned to Return
Even after the Exodus, the Israelites were still planning on returning to Egypt after their three day journey, as Moshe had promised Paroh.17 Once Paroh and the Egyptians drowned at Yam Suf, though, there was no longer any reason to return.
- R"Y Bekhor Shor Shemot 5:4 interprets "דֶּרֶךְ שְׁלֹשֶׁת יָמִים" as three travel days, and thus he says that the Israelites about-faced immediately after the three days.19 According to him, despite the Israelites turning back toward Egypt, talebearers told Paroh that the Israelites intended to flee.20
- Alternatively, though, "דֶּרֶךְ שְׁלֹשֶׁת יָמִים" means a distance covered by an average person in three days.21 According to this, the Israelites might have still been at the beginning of their allotted journey time22 when Paroh was goaded into chasing after them.
No Choice but to Deceive
This approach understands the three day proposal as a necessary ruse to facilitate the Exodus. Commentators diverge regarding the intended audience of the deception and as to why this ploy was essential:
Egyptians Were Misled
- Had Paroh known that the Israelites intended to leave permanently, he would not have let them go even temporarily – Rashbam identifies this as Moshe's concern,23 and Ralbag says that this was Hashem's reason for the deception.
- Had Paroh and the Egyptians known from the beginning that the Israelites were leaving permanently, they would not have chased after them and drowned in Yam Suf24 – Shemot Rabbah, Lekach Tov, Ibn Ezra, Ran.
- The Egyptians would not have loaned their belongings to the Israelites had they known that they would not be returning – Ibn Ezra.25 Ibn Ezra assumes that the objects were a loan – see Reparations and Despoiling Egypt for a full discussion.
- Paroh's refusal of the three day request demonstrated his intransigence more so than if he had been asked to free the Israelites permanently26 – an opinion cited by the Ran,27 Akeidat Yitzchak, Abarbanel.28 While slavery itself was the norm during this time period in Egypt and the rest of the world,29 records exist of other Egyptian slaves being granted furloughs for religious worship.30
- Moshe would not have dared to request that Paroh completely free the Israelites,31 and such a bold request might even have caused Paroh to kill Moshe and act even harsher toward the Israelites – Shadal.32
- Rashbam and Shadal maintain that it is permissible to be deceptive in such cases.34 Rashbam notes the parallel use of sacrificial worship as a cover story also in the case of Shemuel, and Shadal alludes to the verse "וְעִם עִקֵּשׁ תִּתְפַּתָּל" also in his justification of despoiling Egypt.35 The Ran also, while highlighting the potential moral issues involved and noting that these caused both the Israelites36 and Paroh himself37 to doubt whether Moshe was acting as God's messenger,38 nevertheless explains that Hashem uses such means in administering punishment to the wicked.39
- Ibn Ezra is more circumspect in his justification of the action, saying "וחלילה שהנביא דבר כזב".40 He is thus forced to resort to arguing that technically Moshe did not lie because he never explicitly said they would return, and that the nation did in fact sacrifice at Mt. Sinai.41 Even according to Ibn Ezra, though, Moshe's request was misleading.
- Three travel days – Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael, Shemot Rabbah, and Rashi.45 According to them, Paroh's spies reported back to him that the Israelites did not head back to Egypt on the fourth day, and thus Paroh knew that he had been duped.
- A distance which takes an average person three days to cover – This is apparently the approach adopted by the Lekach Tov and Ibn Ezra who note that this is the distance to Mt. Sinai.46 According to them, Moshe did not lie,47 and the nation was, in fact, on its way to Mt. Sinai as promised.48 Thus, Ibn Ezra explains that it was the Israelites' U-turn at Pi-HaChirot which led Paroh to conclude that their intention was not to go to sacrifice.