Difference between revisions of "Exile and Enslavement – Divinely Designed/0/en"

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<li>If Hashem impacted the Egyptians' decisions, how could He hold them accountable for their involuntary actions?</li>
 
<li>If Hashem impacted the Egyptians' decisions, how could He hold them accountable for their involuntary actions?</li>
 
<li>Why did Hashem cause, or at the very least stand idly by, while His chosen nation suffered?  Did the Israelites deserve to be enslaved?</li>
 
<li>Why did Hashem cause, or at the very least stand idly by, while His chosen nation suffered?  Did the Israelites deserve to be enslaved?</li>
<li>Why are we so grateful for Hashem's redemption of the Children of Israel, if He was also responsible for causing the exile and bondage?<fn>See the similar but slightly different question asked by the <multilink><a href="MaaseiHashem1" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Hashem</a><a href="MaaseiHashem1" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Mitzrayim 1</a><a href="R. Eliezer Ashkenazi" data-aht="parshan">About R. Eliezer Ashkenazi</a></multilink>:  "ראוי לנו לחקור מה זאת החזקת הטובה אשר חוייבנו לו ית' על הוצאתו אותנו משם, והוא המלך במשפט יעמיד ארץ למה לא יציל עשוק מיד עושקו והמוכה מיד מכהו אחרי היותו חף בלי פשע".</fn></li>
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<li>Why are we so grateful for Hashem's redemption of the Children of Israel, if He was also responsible for causing the exile and bondage?<fn>See the similar but slightly different question asked by the <multilink><a href="MaaseiHashem1" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Hashem</a><a href="MaaseiHashem1" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Mitzrayim 1</a><a href="R. Eliezer Ashkenazi (Maasei Hashem)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Eliezer Ashkenazi</a></multilink>:  "ראוי לנו לחקור מה זאת החזקת הטובה אשר חוייבנו לו ית' על הוצאתו אותנו משם, והוא המלך במשפט יעמיד ארץ למה לא יציל עשוק מיד עושקו והמוכה מיד מכהו אחרי היותו חף בלי פשע".</fn></li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
<p>For analysis of these issues, see <a href="Divine Plans and Egyptian Free Choice" data-aht="page">Divine Plans and Egyptian Free Choice</a> and <a href="Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage" data-aht="page">Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage</a>.</p>
 
<p>For analysis of these issues, see <a href="Divine Plans and Egyptian Free Choice" data-aht="page">Divine Plans and Egyptian Free Choice</a> and <a href="Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage" data-aht="page">Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage</a>.</p>
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<h2 name="Divine Decree">Divine Decree of Bondage</h2>
 
<h2 name="Divine Decree">Divine Decree of Bondage</h2>
<p>The first prediction of the slavery occurs in <a href="Bereshit15-13" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15</a> at the Covenant of the Pieces when Hashem tells Avraham that his descendants will be enslaved and oppressed.  In light of this, <multilink><a href="RambamTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Maimonides</a><a href="RambamTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Hilkhot Teshuvah 6:5</a><a href="Rambam" data-aht="parshan">About Rambam</a></multilink> formulates the following question as to why the Egyptians were punished:</p>
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<p>The first prediction of the slavery occurs in <a href="Bereshit15-13" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15</a> at the Covenant of the Pieces when Hashem tells Avraham that his descendants will be enslaved and oppressed.  In light of this, <multilink><a href="RambamTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Maimonides</a><a href="RambamTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Hilkhot Teshuvah 6:5</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Maimon (Rambam)" data-aht="parshan">About Rambam</a></multilink> formulates the following question as to why the Egyptians were punished:</p>
 
<q dir="rtl">והלא כתוב בתורה ועבדום וענו אותם, הרי גזר על המצריים לעשות רע... ולמה נפרע מהן?</q>
 
<q dir="rtl">והלא כתוב בתורה ועבדום וענו אותם, הרי גזר על המצריים לעשות רע... ולמה נפרע מהן?</q>
 
<p>Various solutions have been proposed to address this question:</p>
 
<p>Various solutions have been proposed to address this question:</p>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li>Hashem only foretold the future but did not compel the Egyptians to act in any particular way – <multilink><a href="RanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Ran</a><a href="RanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="Ran" data-aht="parshan">About R. Nissim Gerondi</a></multilink>.<fn><multilink><a href="AbarbanelHaggadah" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="AbarbanelHaggadah" data-aht="source">Zevach Pesach s.v. "Baruch Shomer" Approach #3</a><a href="Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink> adopts a similar approach regarding the parallel question from the Israelite perspective.</fn></li>
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<li>Hashem only foretold the future but did not compel the Egyptians to act in any particular way – <multilink><a href="RanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Ran</a><a href="RanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="R. Nissim Gerondi (Ran)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Nissim Gerondi</a></multilink>.<fn><multilink><a href="AbarbanelHaggadah" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="AbarbanelHaggadah" data-aht="source">Zevach Pesach s.v. "Baruch Shomer" Approach #3</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink> adopts a similar approach regarding the parallel question from the Israelite perspective.</fn></li>
<li>The decree was only general and the identity of the oppressing nation was not specified – <multilink><a href="RanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Ran</a><a href="RanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="Ran" data-aht="parshan">About R. Nissim Gerondi</a></multilink>.</li>
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<li>The decree was only general and the identity of the oppressing nation was not specified – <multilink><a href="RanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Ran</a><a href="RanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="R. Nissim Gerondi (Ran)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Nissim Gerondi</a></multilink>.</li>
<li>The decree was only on a nation and not any particular individual – <multilink><a href="RambamTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Rambam</a><a href="RambamTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Hilkhot Teshuvah 6:5</a><a href="Rambam" data-aht="parshan">About Rambam</a></multilink>.</li>
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<li>The decree was only on a nation and not any particular individual – <multilink><a href="RambamTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Rambam</a><a href="RambamTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Hilkhot Teshuvah 6:5</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Maimon (Rambam)" data-aht="parshan">About Rambam</a></multilink>.</li>
<li>The decree was only to enslave and oppress while the Egyptians went much too far and even attempted to exterminate – <multilink><a href="RaavadTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Raavad</a><a href="RaavadTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Hilkhot Teshuvah 6:5</a><a href="R. Avraham b. David" data-aht="parshan">About Raavad</a></multilink>'s second answer, <multilink><a href="RambanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Ramban</a><a href="RambanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="Ramban" data-aht="parshan">About Ramban</a></multilink>'s first approach.</li>
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<li>The decree was only to enslave and oppress while the Egyptians went much too far and even attempted to exterminate – <multilink><a href="RaavadTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Raavad</a><a href="RaavadTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Hilkhot Teshuvah 6:5</a><a href="R. Avraham b. David" data-aht="parshan">About Raavad</a></multilink>'s second answer, <multilink><a href="RambanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Ramban</a><a href="RambanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Nachman (Ramban)" data-aht="parshan">About Ramban</a></multilink>'s first approach.</li>
<li>The Egyptians were punished because their intention was not to fulfill the Divine decree – <multilink><a href="RambanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Ramban</a><a href="RambanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="Ramban" data-aht="parshan">About Ramban</a></multilink>'s second approach answer.</li>
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<li>The Egyptians were punished because their intention was not to fulfill the Divine decree – <multilink><a href="RambanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Ramban</a><a href="RambanBereshit15-14" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:14</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Nachman (Ramban)" data-aht="parshan">About Ramban</a></multilink>'s second approach answer.</li>
 
<li>The Egyptians were not punished for enslaving the Israelites, but only for not freeing them immediately upon receiving Hashem's instructions – <multilink><a href="RaavadTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Raavad</a><a href="RaavadTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Hilkhot Teshuvah 6:5</a><a href="R. Avraham b. David" data-aht="parshan">About Raavad</a></multilink>'s first answer.</li>
 
<li>The Egyptians were not punished for enslaving the Israelites, but only for not freeing them immediately upon receiving Hashem's instructions – <multilink><a href="RaavadTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Raavad</a><a href="RaavadTeshuvah6-5" data-aht="source">Hilkhot Teshuvah 6:5</a><a href="R. Avraham b. David" data-aht="parshan">About Raavad</a></multilink>'s first answer.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
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<p>But if Hashem caused the slavery, why should the Egyptians have to pay the price?  This question motivated many commentators to reinterpret this verse:</p>
 
<p>But if Hashem caused the slavery, why should the Egyptians have to pay the price?  This question motivated many commentators to reinterpret this verse:</p>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li>The Egyptians changed their own hearts, and "הָפַךְ" should be read as נהפך – <multilink><a href="RasagShemot1-10" data-aht="source">R. Saadia</a><a href="RasagShemot1-10" data-aht="source">Commentary Shemot 1:10</a><a href="R. Saadia Gaon" data-aht="parshan">About R. Saadia</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RadakTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="RadakTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Tehillim 105:25, 2nd answer</a><a href="Radak" data-aht="parshan">About Radak</a></multilink></li>
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<li>The Egyptians changed their own hearts, and "הָפַךְ" should be read as נהפך – <multilink><a href="RasagShemot1-10" data-aht="source">R. Saadia</a><a href="RasagShemot1-10" data-aht="source">Commentary Shemot 1:10</a><a href="R. Saadia Gaon" data-aht="parshan">About R. Saadia</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RadakTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="RadakTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Tehillim 105:25, 2nd answer</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About Radak</a></multilink></li>
<li>Hashem made the original decree centuries before but did not impact on the Egyptians' heart – <multilink><a href="RadakTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="RadakTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Tehillim 105:25, 1st answer</a><a href="Radak" data-aht="parshan">About Radak</a></multilink>.</li>
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<li>Hashem made the original decree centuries before but did not impact on the Egyptians' heart – <multilink><a href="RadakTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="RadakTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Tehillim 105:25, 1st answer</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About Radak</a></multilink>.</li>
 
<li>The Egyptians changed their own hearts, but the action is attributed to Hashem because He is the ultimate source of everything in the world – <multilink><a href="MeiriTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Meiri</a><a href="MeiriTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Tehillim 105:25</a><a href="R. Menachem HaMeiri" data-aht="parshan">About the Meiri</a></multilink>.</li>
 
<li>The Egyptians changed their own hearts, but the action is attributed to Hashem because He is the ultimate source of everything in the world – <multilink><a href="MeiriTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Meiri</a><a href="MeiriTehillim105-25" data-aht="source">Tehillim 105:25</a><a href="R. Menachem HaMeiri" data-aht="parshan">About the Meiri</a></multilink>.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>

Version as of 08:11, 4 December 2014

Exile and Enslavement – Divinely Designed?

Introduction

Centuries before the Exodus,1 Hashem revealed to Avraham that his descendants would be exiled and enslaved in a foreign country for hundreds of years. Bereshit 15 reads:

EN/HEע/E

(יג) וַיֹּאמֶר לְאַבְרָם יָדֹעַ תֵּדַע כִּי גֵר יִהְיֶה זַרְעֲךָ בְּאֶרֶץ לֹא לָהֶם וַעֲבָדוּם וְעִנּוּ אֹתָם אַרְבַּע מֵאוֹת שָׁנָה.

(יד) וְגַם אֶת הַגּוֹי אֲשֶׁר יַעֲבֹדוּ דָּן אָנֹכִי וְאַחֲרֵי כֵן יֵצְאוּ בִּרְכֻשׁ גָּדוֹל.

(13) He said to Avram, "Know for sure that your descendants will be sojourners in a land that is not theirs, and they will enslave them and afflict them for four hundred years.

(14) And also the nation, whom they will serve, will I judge, and afterwards they will go out with great wealth.

The realization of this Divine master plan required the choreographed cooperation of two additional parties – the Children of Israel and the unidentified foreign nation to be named later (i.e. the Egyptians).2 Before Hashem could redeem the Israelites, they first needed to go into exile, and another nation had to enslave them.3

To comprehend the dynamics of this entire process, one must first examine each of its multiple stages and try to establish to what extent each of Hashem, the Israelites, or the Egyptians played decisive roles in their implementation. Did Hashem control the entire process4 or did the Israelites and Egyptians exercise their own free wills at different stages?5 One can then proceed to analyze the motivations of each of the various participants and to address the theological ramifications of the interplay between all of these issues.

Exile: Hashem and the Israelites

The Covenant of Pieces and Yosef's words to his brothers in Bereshit 45:5-8 imply Divine foreknowledge of the exile and Hashem's active intervention to make it happen. This raises several issues:

  • Did God's prophecy to Avraham suspend human free choice?6
  • Why did Hashem decree the exile, and did He force the Israelites to emigrate to Egypt? Could Avraham's descendants have chosen not to leave Israel?
  • Why did the Israelites continue to remain in Egypt even after the famine was over?

For discussion of these questions, see Divine Plans and Israelite Free Choice and Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage.

Slavery: Hashem and the Egyptians

While at the Covenant of Pieces Hashem presents the slavery as a foregone conclusion, Shemot 1 describes how Paroh and the Egyptians enslaved the Israelites without mentioning any Divine role. Both of these also need to be reconciled with Tehillim 105 which implies that Hashem actively caused the bondage.

  • Could the Egyptians or Paroh have employed free choice and decided not to subjugate the Israelites?7
  • If Hashem impacted the Egyptians' decisions, how could He hold them accountable for their involuntary actions?
  • Why did Hashem cause, or at the very least stand idly by, while His chosen nation suffered? Did the Israelites deserve to be enslaved?
  • Why are we so grateful for Hashem's redemption of the Children of Israel, if He was also responsible for causing the exile and bondage?8

For analysis of these issues, see Divine Plans and Egyptian Free Choice and Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage.

Delayed Redemption: Hashem and Paroh

Even after Hashem commissions Moshe to take the Israelites out of Egypt, a long time passes until the Exodus actually occurs.9 This delay is caused by the hardening of Paroh's heart which Hashem, not only predicts already in Shemot 3:19, but actually causes according to Shemot 4:21 and many other verses.

  • Was Paroh's fate determined and sealed with Hashem's proclamation, or could he still have exercised free choice and immediately released the Israelites?
  • If Paroh's flouting of God's word was a preordained conclusion, why was he punished and what was the point of making Moshe repeatedly go through the motions of trying to persuade Paroh to release the Israelites?
  • Why would Hashem force the Israelites to endure additional and even harsher slavery if He had already decided to redeem them?

For further discussion, see Hardened Hearts, Delayed Redemption, and Purpose of the Plagues.