Difference between revisions of "Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage/2/en"
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<h1>Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage</h1> | <h1>Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage</h1> | ||
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<h2>Overview</h2> | <h2>Overview</h2> | ||
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<category name="">Punitive | <category name="">Punitive | ||
<p>This approach views the Egyptian experience as a punishment for a sin. It subdivides regarding which generation was the guilty party, why other generations were also either punished or informed of the punishment, and what the nature of the relationship is between the exile and the bondage:</p> | <p>This approach views the Egyptian experience as a punishment for a sin. It subdivides regarding which generation was the guilty party, why other generations were also either punished or informed of the punishment, and what the nature of the relationship is between the exile and the bondage:</p> | ||
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<point><b>The Israelites' idolatry in Yechezkel 20</b> – According to <multilink><aht source="RambanShemot12-40">Ramban</aht><aht source="RambanShemot2-25">Shemot 2:25</aht><aht source="RambanShemot12-40">Shemot 12:40</aht><aht parshan="Ramban" /></multilink>, the bondage started before the idolatry,<fn>This is how Ramban would respond to Radak's argument that there is no reason to look for sins of Avraham when there are sins of the entire nation explicitly mentioned. For further discussion of when the idolatry commenced, see <aht page="Religious Identity in Egypt">Israelites' Religious Identity</aht> and the Beit HaLevi Parashat Shemot.</fn> and the Israelites' sins were therefore the cause not of the original exile and bondage, but rather of the lengthening of the exile to 430 years.<fn>For more, see <aht page="Duration of the Egyptian Exile">Duration of the Egyptian Exile</aht>.</fn></point> | <point><b>The Israelites' idolatry in Yechezkel 20</b> – According to <multilink><aht source="RambanShemot12-40">Ramban</aht><aht source="RambanShemot2-25">Shemot 2:25</aht><aht source="RambanShemot12-40">Shemot 12:40</aht><aht parshan="Ramban" /></multilink>, the bondage started before the idolatry,<fn>This is how Ramban would respond to Radak's argument that there is no reason to look for sins of Avraham when there are sins of the entire nation explicitly mentioned. For further discussion of when the idolatry commenced, see <aht page="Religious Identity in Egypt">Israelites' Religious Identity</aht> and the Beit HaLevi Parashat Shemot.</fn> and the Israelites' sins were therefore the cause not of the original exile and bondage, but rather of the lengthening of the exile to 430 years.<fn>For more, see <aht page="Duration of the Egyptian Exile">Duration of the Egyptian Exile</aht>.</fn></point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<opinion name="Yosef's Brothers">Yosef's Brothers (Generation of the Exile) | <opinion name="Yosef's Brothers">Yosef's Brothers (Generation of the Exile) | ||
<p>Yosef's brothers, in whose time the exile came to pass, were the ones culpable, but the events were predicted long before that, and the brunt of the bondage was felt only by the subsequent generations.</p> | <p>Yosef's brothers, in whose time the exile came to pass, were the ones culpable, but the events were predicted long before that, and the brunt of the bondage was felt only by the subsequent generations.</p> | ||
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<point><b>The Israelites' idolatry in Yechezkel 20</b> – Abarbanel<fn>Like Ramban above.</fn> explains that the bondage started before the idolatry,<fn>For discussion of when the idolatry commenced, see <aht page="Religious Identity in Egypt">Israelites' Religious Identity</aht> and the Beit HaLevi Parashat Shemot.</fn> and the Israelites' sins were therefore the cause not of the original exile and bondage, but rather of the lengthening of the exile to 430 years.<fn>For more, see <aht page="Duration of the Egyptian Exile">Duration of the Egyptian Exile</aht>.</fn></point> | <point><b>The Israelites' idolatry in Yechezkel 20</b> – Abarbanel<fn>Like Ramban above.</fn> explains that the bondage started before the idolatry,<fn>For discussion of when the idolatry commenced, see <aht page="Religious Identity in Egypt">Israelites' Religious Identity</aht> and the Beit HaLevi Parashat Shemot.</fn> and the Israelites' sins were therefore the cause not of the original exile and bondage, but rather of the lengthening of the exile to 430 years.<fn>For more, see <aht page="Duration of the Egyptian Exile">Duration of the Egyptian Exile</aht>.</fn></point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<opinion name="Israelites in Egypt">Israelites in Egypt (Generation of the Enslavement) | <opinion name="Israelites in Egypt">Israelites in Egypt (Generation of the Enslavement) | ||
<p>The generation during which the slavery began was the one that sinned and was thus responsible for its own plight. The exile, though, preceded the sin in Egypt and thus came, not as part of the punishment, but rather for a different reason.</p> | <p>The generation during which the slavery began was the one that sinned and was thus responsible for its own plight. The exile, though, preceded the sin in Egypt and thus came, not as part of the punishment, but rather for a different reason.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Gratitude for the redemption</b> – Since Hashem saved the Israelites despite their sins, gratitude is the obvious response.<fn>This is true even if they repented, but it would be especially true if one maintains that the sins persisted until the Exodus – see above.</fn></point> | <point><b>Gratitude for the redemption</b> – Since Hashem saved the Israelites despite their sins, gratitude is the obvious response.<fn>This is true even if they repented, but it would be especially true if one maintains that the sins persisted until the Exodus – see above.</fn></point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<category name="">Educative | <category name="">Educative | ||
<p>This category subdivides regarding whether the educational objective was in the theological or moral-ethical sphere, and if the goal was achieved through the suffering or the redemption.</p> | <p>This category subdivides regarding whether the educational objective was in the theological or moral-ethical sphere, and if the goal was achieved through the suffering or the redemption.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Historical parallels</b> – R. Eliezer Ashkenazi claims that the purpose of the current exile, like the Egyptian Exile, is to allow for the dissemination of monotheism to the entire world.</point> | <point><b>Historical parallels</b> – R. Eliezer Ashkenazi claims that the purpose of the current exile, like the Egyptian Exile, is to allow for the dissemination of monotheism to the entire world.</point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<opinion>Afflictions of Love | <opinion>Afflictions of Love | ||
<p>The exile and bondage were a manifestation of Divine love, as they raised the spiritual level of the Israelites, brought them closer to Hashem, and prepared them to receive the Torah and the land of Israel.</p> | <p>The exile and bondage were a manifestation of Divine love, as they raised the spiritual level of the Israelites, brought them closer to Hashem, and prepared them to receive the Torah and the land of Israel.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Historical parallels</b> – R. Bachya says that the delayed redemption and intensification of the persecution toward the end of each of the Egyptian and current exiles is intended to increase both our reward and the punishment of our tormentors.<fn>R. Bachya wrote his commentary over 600 years before the Shoah.</fn> R. Chasdai Crescas adds that the excessive length of the current exile is not the result of sin, just as the Egyptian Exile was not a punishment for sins. Rather, he says, it is a manifestation of Hashem's kindness and is designed to bring us closer to him.<fn>R. Chasdai is likely attempting to provide comfort to his own community (which was decimated in the Spanish pogroms of 1391 and their aftermath), and to respond to Christian polemics regarding the wandering and downtrodden Jew. For R. Chasdai, the Jews of Christian Spain were reliving the experience of the Egyptian Exile on a daily basis. For more on R. Chasdai's view of his own exile, see Prof. Zev Harvey, R. Hasdai Crescas, (Jerusalem, 2010): 157-160.</fn></point> | <point><b>Historical parallels</b> – R. Bachya says that the delayed redemption and intensification of the persecution toward the end of each of the Egyptian and current exiles is intended to increase both our reward and the punishment of our tormentors.<fn>R. Bachya wrote his commentary over 600 years before the Shoah.</fn> R. Chasdai Crescas adds that the excessive length of the current exile is not the result of sin, just as the Egyptian Exile was not a punishment for sins. Rather, he says, it is a manifestation of Hashem's kindness and is designed to bring us closer to him.<fn>R. Chasdai is likely attempting to provide comfort to his own community (which was decimated in the Spanish pogroms of 1391 and their aftermath), and to respond to Christian polemics regarding the wandering and downtrodden Jew. For R. Chasdai, the Jews of Christian Spain were reliving the experience of the Egyptian Exile on a daily basis. For more on R. Chasdai's view of his own exile, see Prof. Zev Harvey, R. Hasdai Crescas, (Jerusalem, 2010): 157-160.</fn></point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<opinion>A Crucible | <opinion>A Crucible | ||
<p>The purpose of the exile and bondage was to purge the Israelites from all of their impure elements.<fn>This approach is similar to the previous one ("Afflictions of Love") in that both view the suffering as raising the spiritual level of the Israelites. They differ, though, regarding the level of the Israelites at the outset. The previous approach understands the afflictions to be taking an already righteous people to a higher level, while the current approach views the suffering as transforming a nation of sinners into a more worthy one.</fn></p> | <p>The purpose of the exile and bondage was to purge the Israelites from all of their impure elements.<fn>This approach is similar to the previous one ("Afflictions of Love") in that both view the suffering as raising the spiritual level of the Israelites. They differ, though, regarding the level of the Israelites at the outset. The previous approach understands the afflictions to be taking an already righteous people to a higher level, while the current approach views the suffering as transforming a nation of sinners into a more worthy one.</fn></p> | ||
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<point><b>What ultimately brought about the redemption?</b> According to this approach, the redemption came about after all of the impure elements were removed.</point> | <point><b>What ultimately brought about the redemption?</b> According to this approach, the redemption came about after all of the impure elements were removed.</point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<opinion name="Empathy">Instill Empathy for Less Fortunate | <opinion name="Empathy">Instill Empathy for Less Fortunate | ||
<p>By experiencing exile and slavery themselves, the Children of Israel learned to feel empathy and care for the downtrodden and less fortunate members of society.</p> | <p>By experiencing exile and slavery themselves, the Children of Israel learned to feel empathy and care for the downtrodden and less fortunate members of society.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Purpose or result?</b> It is unclear whether the Torah is implying that this was the purpose of the exile and slavery, or merely a lesson that can be derived in retrospect.</point> | <point><b>Purpose or result?</b> It is unclear whether the Torah is implying that this was the purpose of the exile and slavery, or merely a lesson that can be derived in retrospect.</point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<category name="Formative">Forging a National Identity | <category name="Formative">Forging a National Identity | ||
<p>Egypt was an incubator in which Yaakov's family could overcome both the internal and external challenges it faced on the road to developing into a nation with its own unique identity.</p> | <p>Egypt was an incubator in which Yaakov's family could overcome both the internal and external challenges it faced on the road to developing into a nation with its own unique identity.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Historical parallels</b> – R. Hirsch notes that both the Egyptian Exile and the current exile were caused by jealousy and internecine strife.<fn>While the Egyptian experience created a measure of equality between the twelve tribes, conflict between the tribes never ceased throughout the entire First Temple era.</fn></point> | <point><b>Historical parallels</b> – R. Hirsch notes that both the Egyptian Exile and the current exile were caused by jealousy and internecine strife.<fn>While the Egyptian experience created a measure of equality between the twelve tribes, conflict between the tribes never ceased throughout the entire First Temple era.</fn></point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<opinion name="Anti-Assimilation">Preventing Assimilation | <opinion name="Anti-Assimilation">Preventing Assimilation | ||
<p>Yaakov's family needed to leave Canaan to stem the tide of intermarriage. Once their population had grown into a nation,<fn>See Seforno in his Introduction to Sefer Bereshit that the land was promised to Avraham's descendants "כאשר יהיו לגוי מספיק לקבוץ מדיני".</fn> they could then return and conquer Canaan.</p> | <p>Yaakov's family needed to leave Canaan to stem the tide of intermarriage. Once their population had grown into a nation,<fn>See Seforno in his Introduction to Sefer Bereshit that the land was promised to Avraham's descendants "כאשר יהיו לגוי מספיק לקבוץ מדיני".</fn> they could then return and conquer Canaan.</p> | ||
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<point><b>What ultimately brought about the redemption?</b> According to this approach, the nation was able to be redeemed when it had achieved critical mass.</point> | <point><b>What ultimately brought about the redemption?</b> According to this approach, the nation was able to be redeemed when it had achieved critical mass.</point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<category>No Purpose | <category>No Purpose | ||
<p>This option challenges the assumption of the previous approaches that the bondage was Divinely planned and therefore must have had a purpose. It contends that the exile and bondage were purely the result of natural processes and human choices.</p> | <p>This option challenges the assumption of the previous approaches that the bondage was Divinely planned and therefore must have had a purpose. It contends that the exile and bondage were purely the result of natural processes and human choices.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Why did Hashem not prevent the Egyptians from enslaving the Israelites?</b> This approach does not address why Hashem waited for centuries on the sidelines before finally coming to the rescue of His chosen nation.</point> | <point><b>Why did Hashem not prevent the Egyptians from enslaving the Israelites?</b> This approach does not address why Hashem waited for centuries on the sidelines before finally coming to the rescue of His chosen nation.</point> | ||
<point><b>Gratitude for the redemption</b> – According to this approach, we feel gratitude because Hashem redeemed the Israelites from the situation into which they got themselves.</point> | <point><b>Gratitude for the redemption</b> – According to this approach, we feel gratitude because Hashem redeemed the Israelites from the situation into which they got themselves.</point> | ||
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Version as of 23:27, 25 June 2014
Purposes of the Egyptian Bondage
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
The Egyptian slavery is the only Biblical instance of national suffering which is not explicitly linked to any sin. Commentators thus divide between seeking candidates for a sin which might have deserved such a severe punishment, or trying to uncover non-punitive goals of the Egyptian experience. In doing so, exegetes use the Egyptian exile and the character of the Israelites in Egypt as a prism through which they view similar issues that arose regarding their own times and exile.
Complicating the task is the fact that the process of the exile and bondage was a lengthy one which spanned several generations, not all of whom behaved in the same manner or were affected in the same way. Those who take the punitive approach must therefore decide whether to look for a sin of Avraham who was the first to be warned of the punishment but didn't experience its consequences, a sin of Yosef's brothers who were exiled, or a sin of the Israelites who were enslaved. Similarly, those who adopt the educative/formative theories must also grapple with which generation needed the experience most and whether the goals were attained through the exile, bondage, or redemption. Thus, the central question becomes tangled in knotty theological issues such as collective punishment, children suffering for the sins of parents, afflictions of love, holding the righteous to a higher standard, free choice, and Divine providence.
Each approach has advantages and disadvantages, and they are not mutually exclusive. Creating an amalgam of the various options which allows for multiple generations and objectives may thus enable one to arrive at a fuller understanding of the dynamics of the process.
Punitive
This approach views the Egyptian experience as a punishment for a sin. It subdivides regarding which generation was the guilty party, why other generations were also either punished or informed of the punishment, and what the nature of the relationship is between the exile and the bondage:
Avraham (Generation of the Prediction)
Avraham, to whom the decree was first foretold, is the one who sinned, but the later generations of the exile and slavery were the ones who suffered the consequences.
- In Bereshit 15, Avraham displayed a lack of faith in Hashem when he asked for a sign that he would inherit the land ("בַּמָּה אֵדַע כִּי אִירָשֶׁנָּה") – Shemuel in Bavli Nedarim, Vayikra Rabbah,1 Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, Tanchuma, R. Yochanan b. Zakkai in Pirkei DeRabbi Eliezer (Higger).
- In Bereshit 14, Avraham acted inappropriately in drafting Torah scholars for battle – R. Elazar in Bavli Nedarim.2
- After his victory in the War of the Kings in Bereshit 14, Avraham squandered a golden opportunity to keep the people of Sedom3 as part of the spoils, absorb them into his household, and convert them4 – R. Yochanan in Bavli Nedarim.5
- During the famine in Bereshit 12, Avraham demonstrated a lack of faith in Hashem by leaving the land of Israel for Egypt and endangering Sarah6 – Ramban.7
Yosef's Brothers (Generation of the Exile)
Yosef's brothers, in whose time the exile came to pass, were the ones culpable, but the events were predicted long before that, and the brunt of the bondage was felt only by the subsequent generations.
- Yosef – According to Abarbanel, Yosef sinned (albeit unintentionally) by boasting about his dreams.32
- Binyamin – Abarbanel posits that Binyamin was punished even though he did not sin because the principle of collective punishment applies when the majority sins.33
- Yaakov – Abarbanel explains that Yaakov sinned in giving a special tunic to Yosef and thereby provoking the jealousy of the brothers.34
- Reuven – Abarbanel suggests that Reuven was involved in the hatred of Yosef,35 even though he did not participate in the sale.
Israelites in Egypt (Generation of the Enslavement)
The generation during which the slavery began was the one that sinned and was thus responsible for its own plight. The exile, though, preceded the sin in Egypt and thus came, not as part of the punishment, but rather for a different reason.
- Eating blood – Damascus Document. The prohibition of eating blood dates back to Noachide law46 and is one of the most often repeated prohibitions in the Torah.47
- Ceased performing circumcision – Tanchuma,48 Shemot Rabbah.49 Circumcision was an extremely logical candidate as it was the only commandment given as a covenant with Avraham's descendants.50 For discussion of the various opinions as to whether the Israelites practiced circumcision in Egypt, see Israelites' Religious Identity.
- Idolatry – Radak,51 Nimmukei Yosef,52 and Seforno53 develop this approach based on the explicit verses in Yechezkel 20. It is unclear though whether this idolatry preceded the bondage.54
- Tale-bearing and informing – Tanchuma,55 Tanchuma (Buber), Shemot Rabbah,56 Rashi, Ralbag.57 These sources learn from the story of Moshe's killing of the Egyptian taskmaster that informants existed among the Israelites.58
Educative
This category subdivides regarding whether the educational objective was in the theological or moral-ethical sphere, and if the goal was achieved through the suffering or the redemption.
Spread Monotheism
The redemption demonstrated Hashem's power, and the exile and bondage were merely a necessary prelude for this objective.
Afflictions of Love
The exile and bondage were a manifestation of Divine love, as they raised the spiritual level of the Israelites, brought them closer to Hashem, and prepared them to receive the Torah and the land of Israel.
A Crucible
The purpose of the exile and bondage was to purge the Israelites from all of their impure elements.98
Instill Empathy for Less Fortunate
By experiencing exile and slavery themselves, the Children of Israel learned to feel empathy and care for the downtrodden and less fortunate members of society.
Forging a National Identity
Egypt was an incubator in which Yaakov's family could overcome both the internal and external challenges it faced on the road to developing into a nation with its own unique identity.
A Melting Pot
The shared suffering of the entire nation in Egypt was intended to eliminate class distinctions and foster unity.
Preventing Assimilation
Yaakov's family needed to leave Canaan to stem the tide of intermarriage. Once their population had grown into a nation,110 they could then return and conquer Canaan.
No Purpose
This option challenges the assumption of the previous approaches that the bondage was Divinely planned and therefore must have had a purpose. It contends that the exile and bondage were purely the result of natural processes and human choices.