Biblical Parallels Index – Shemot 1/0

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Biblical Parallels Index – Shemot 1

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List of Names

Tanakh Lab1 demonstrates that one of the chapters most linguistically similar to Shemot 1 is Bereshit 46.  Both chapters include a list of the members of Yaakov’s family who descended to Egypt.

Tools

  • See the Tanakh Lab to compare the two chapters, and specifically the two lists of those who descend to Egypt, with each starting: וְאֵלֶּה שְׁמוֹת בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל הַבָּאִים מִצְרָיְמָה.

Sources

Many commentators discuss the need for the parallel lists:

  • Shemot Rabbah2 views the repetition of the list is a symbol of Hashem’s affection for the nation of Israel
  • Rashbam, R. Y"S Reggio, and Shadal suggest that repetition is necessary in order to contrast the small number of Jews who came to Egypt with the population explosion that took place subsequently.
  • R"Y Bekhor Shor and Ramban view the second list as a narrative resumption. Being a new book, Sefer Shemot resumes the narrative of arrival in Egypt by briefly repeating the list.  Ramban adds that this introduction is necessary in order to properly develop the book’s theme of exile and redemption.
  • R. Hirsch suggests that, since Sefer Shemot is about the beginning of the Jewish nation, it was necessary to begin the book with a list of those who comprised the foundations and origins of the nation. 

Articles

  • See Individual and National Identity, by R. Aharon Lichtenstein, for analysis of the parallels and differences between the two lists of names, viewing the first as an expression of individual identities and the second as an expression of communal identity.
  • See רשימת היורדים למצרים כמבוא לספר שמות, by Professor Yonatan Grossman, for analysis of the differences between the lists of names in Bereshit and in Shemot, and how these differences relate to the distinct themes and perspectives of the two books. 

Population Growth

 Makbilot BaMikra points out that the description of the Israelites’ rapid population growth (verse 7) is parallel to other cases of proliferation in Tanakh.

Tools

  • See Makbilot BaMikra for a list of other verses which speak of proliferation using variations of the language of "פְּרוּ וּרְבוּ".3  These terms are found in the blessings at the world’s creation, after the Flood, and in the narratives of the Patriarchs. The parallel might indicates that Shemot 1, like those previous examples, is the start of a significant new phase of history.

Articles

Servitude in Egypt

The description of slavery described in Shemot 1 recalls the original foretelling of that slavery in the Covenant Between the Pieces in Bereshit 15.

Tools

  • See Makbilot Bamikra for a list of verses where the enslavement is discussed.
  • See the Tanakh Lab that the combined terms of "עינוי" (affliction) and "שעבוד" (enslavement) mentioned in Bereshit 15 "וַעֲבָדוּם וְעִנּוּ אֹתָם אַרְבַּע מֵאוֹת שָׁנָה", are echoed in Shemot 1:11-13.

Articles

  • See Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage for exploration of the cause and divine purpose of the servitude foretold to Avraham that unfolds in the beginning of Sefer Shemot. 
  • See Divine Plans and Israelite Free Choice for analysis of whether the Israelites had any agency in bringing about the exile, or if it was entirely predetermined based on the revelation to Avraham in Bereshit 15. 
  • See Divine Plans and Egyptian Free Choice for analysis of whether the Egyptians had any agency in bringing about the servitude of the Israelites, or if it was entirely predetermined based on the revelation to Avraham in Bereshit 15. 
  • See R. David Silber’s essay Gerut, Avdut, and Innuy: The Covenantal Formula in Go Forth and Learn: A Passover Haggadah for a theory about the ways in which the prophecy of subjugation in Bereshit 15 plays out in the lives of the Patriarchs and their descendants, and the purpose of this element of the covenant. 
  • See The Exile in Egypt: Process or Punishment by R. Zvi Shimon for an overview of commentators’ approaches to the purpose of the servitude, and the suggestion that it was to cement the Israelites’ covenant with and sense of indebtedness to Hashem.

Fearing God Comparing the various stories in which the term "fearing God" appears helps to shed light on the meaning of the term and the people who are so described.

Tools

  • Use the advanced concordance4 to find the various contexts in which the concept of fearing God appears.5 Taken together, the verses imply that fear of God is not specific to Jewish or religious contexts.  It suggests obedience to a higher authority/God and commitment to ethical behavior.
  • Among those described as "God-fearing" is Avraham, so-called after passing the test of the Akeidah.

Sources

  • See Shadal (Shemot 2:15) and R. David Zvi Hoffman (Shemot 2:17) who explain “fear of God” in this manner, to refer to eithical behavior rather than a recognition of Hashem.
  • Shadal even uses this understanding as a support to argue that the midwives must have been "G/god-fearing" Egyptians. 

Articles

  • See Yirat Shamayim as an Approach to Life and as a Legacy, by R. Michael Rosensweig, for a comparison of the midwives’ actions to those of Avraham (based on the parallel verses that describe them both as fearing God, as noted above).
  • See Who are the Midwives for discussion ethnicity and identity of the midwives and how how the meaning of the phrase  "וַתִּירֶאן... אֶת הָאֱלֹהִים " might impact the question.