Plagues and The Sephirot
Plagues and The Sephirot
Plagues and The Sephirot
by
Robert M. Haralick
l dnK =z da !
! :g : !d
Come, let us outsmart them.4
Come let us outsmart them, let us be clever over them here means
not only by plotting and scheming, not only by deception, but by
practicing on the Israelites the dnk !, the wisdoms of Egypt, the
! :g
black magic arts of Egypt.
There must not be found among you anyone that
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
They are all species of sorcery, and through them the Egyptians
were more skilled in sorcery than all other men. When the Egyptians desired to consort with the demons, they used to go out to
certain high mountains and oer sacrices and make trenches in
the gound and pour some of the blood around the trenches and
the rest into them and put esh over it, and bring oerings to the
demons. Then the demons used to collect and consort with them
on the mountain.6
As for the wisdom of Egypt, this is the lower wisdom which is
called
the handmaid behind the millstones7
4
Exodus, 1:10.
Deuteronomy 18:10.
6
The Zohar, Vol 5, (III, 69b), trans. Maurice Simon and Harry Sperling (London:
Soncino Press, 1978), p. 66-67.
7
Exodus 11:5.
5
Blood
mc
=
Exodus 7:19.
Rashi, Pentateuch and Rashis Commentary, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Abraham ben
Isaiah and Benjamin Sharfman (Brooklyn, NY: S. S. and R. Publishing, 1976), Exodus
8:19, p. 64.
9
They had many idols, but their chief god was the Nile,
and the Lord executed judgements on them all.
Said R. Abba:
The exposition of R. Johanan is the correct and selfevident one. For we know that rst the gods of a nation
are punished and then the nation itself. So here, rst
the Nile and wood and stones were smitted, as Scripture says:
and there shall be blood throughout the land
of Egypt, both in wood and stone,10
the wood and stone being the very gods which the
Egyptians worshipped.11
Cassuto says that
Vessels of wood and stone were uncommon in Egypt at that time;
... When, however, we consider the fact that the term wood and
stone usually signies idols in the Bible, and that the Egyptian
priests used to wash the images of their gods in water every day
early in the morning, we may possibly conjecture that the sense
of the passage is that even the water that was poured that very
morning over the idols turned to blood, thus providing another
example of mockery at the expense of the Egyptian deities.12
We read in Midrash Rabbah
Why were the waters rst smitten, and with blood? Because
Pharaoh and the Egyptians worshipped the Nile, and God said: I
will smite their god rst and then his people, just as the common
saying goes: I will smite the gods and their priests will tremble.13
10
Exodus 12:19.
The Zohar, vol. 2, trans. Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon (London: The Soncino
Press, 1978), p. 58.
12
Umberto Cassuto, A Commentary on the Book of Exodus, trans. Israel Abrahams
(Jerusalem: The Magnes Press, 1987), p. 99.
13
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 126.
11
Why did God punish them with blood? To pay them back in their
own coin, for ... They did not allow the daughters of Israel to have
ritual immersion after their menstruation, so that they should not
increase; on this account were they smitten with blood.14
Rabbi Sorotzkin suggests that the blood was
In vengeance for the Jewish children that the Egyptians had
thrown into the River.15
Nachmanides tells us that
In Pharaohs sight, all the waters that were in the river turned to
blood, and the blood was furthermore throughout all the land of
Egypt.16
The waters represent the life-blood of the land of Egypt, for without the
waters of the Nile river, the land would not be fertile. Blood represents
the soul of the living, for without blood the living would be soul-less and,
therefore, spiritually dead. Turning the waters to blood has the immediate
consequence of
The shlife that is in the River shall die and the River shall
become foul. Egypt will grow weary of trying to drink water
from the River.17
Sforno says that the turning of the water to blood is not just an illusion, a
change in appearance, it is a change in essence.
There will be no form (essence) of water (combined) with the
appearance of blood, rather it shall become the essence (form) as
well as the appearance of blood; hence the sh will die.18
14
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 127.
15
Zalman Sorotzkin, Insights in the Torah, Shemos, trans. Ralph Blumberg (Brooklyn,
NY: Mesorah Publications, 1993), p. 74.
16
Nachmanides, Ramban Commentary on the Torah, Exodus, trans. Rabbi Charles
Chavel, (New York: Shilo Publishing House, 1973), p. 82.
17
Exodus 7:18.
18
Ovadiah Sforno, Sforno: Commentary on the Torah, trans. Rabbi Raphael Pelcovitz
(Brooklyn, NY: Mesorah Publications, 1987), p. 282.
Therefore, we can conclude that the attempt of Egypt to use the labor,
sweat, and blood of the Israelites to support the soul of Egypt is like making
the waters of the Nile be blood to support the fertility of the land. The
consequence is that the life in the waters will die and the life on the land will
become wearisome. It just cannot work.
Rabbi Sorotzkin explains that
Here the Torah hints at what Rabbi Eliezer expounds upon in
the Haggadah, that each Plague was made up of four Plagues.
First the water would change to blood the sight of blood alone
is enough to upset people. Then sh in the River would die
leaving the Egyptians without their staple food. Then the River
would become foul with an oensive odor. And last Egypt will
grow weary with trying to drink they would have no water. All
in all four plagues.
Following Rabbi Akiva, who says that each Plague was made of
ve Plagues, we can add the wearisome labor of digging around
the River for drinking water which is within the meaning of
Egypt will be wearied.19
Rabbi Alshech explains that
The striking by the rod, was to prove that this was an act of God,
not another trick, such as the Chartumim would perform. There
were three distinctions between this miracle, and the kind of thing
the magicians were capable of. Their art could change the color
of the water, but not its nature. People could continue to drink
water discolored by the magicians, whereas they could not drink
what had been turned into blood by Moses sta. Secondly, the
art of the magicians was limited to converting the color of the
water in a continuous river bed. Once that water had seeped
out, to form ponds in some place, it would not be subject to the
magicians art. In the case of Gods sta however, all water which
had surfaced in Egypt, turned into blood. The third dierence
was that when the magicians turned water into red water, both
19
Zalman Sorotzkin, Insights in the Torah, Shemos, trans. Ralph Blumberg (Brooklyn,
NY: Mesorah Publications, 1993), p. 74.
zEkln. From the Zohar, we learn that st , soul, is associated with the
:=
V
Serah zEkln.
:=
20
Rabbi Moshe ben Chayim Alshech, Torat Moshe, trans. Eliyahu Munk (Jerusalem:
Rubin Mass, 1988), p. 282.
21
Numbers 30:15.
22
Leviticus 18:29.
The Zohar, vol. 2, Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon translators, The Soncino Press,
London, 1978, p. 281.
24
Sefer Yetzirah, trans. Aryeh Kaplan (Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson, 1995), p. 274.
25
Genesis 9:4.
26
Leviticus 17:11.
27
Leviticus 17:14.
28
Deuteronomy 12:23.
Frogs
mictv
: =:
Genesis 4:3-5.
Genesis 4:10.
10
Exodus 7:26-29.
Genesis 12:15.
33
The Zohar, vol. 2, Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon translators, (London: The
Soncino Press, 1978), p. 98.
34
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 200.
35
Psalm 78:45.
32
11
Why did He visit them with frogs? Because the Egyptians, when
subjecting Israel to slavery, ordered them to bring reptiles and
creeping things; in retaliation did He bring frogs upon them.
Whenever they used to ll a cup, it was found to be full of frogs.36
Rabbi Alshech explains that
By announcing that the frogs would smite all within the borders
of Egypt, God wanted to show that precisely the area subject
to the horoscope governing Egypt would be struck, not a square
yard more or less. These frogs, i.e. the ability to multiply were
the known frogs, Batzefardim, which would swarm completely out
of control in their numbers from their normal habitat, the Nile.
They would occupy all sources of water pond etc. These were
not intelligent frogs. The Nile, however, would spawn in quantity
another species of frogs, which were intelligent and which would
invade the centers of civilization, homes, even the bed of Pharaoh.
Their specic objective would be to frustrate the Egyptians family life. Afterwards, they would interfere with another aspect of
life on this earth, namely the economy, food supplies. Therefore
they would invade the kitchens, ovens, kneading bowls etc, consuming all in their path. By persecuting the Egyptians to the
point of where they would be fed up with their very lives if the
plague were not removed, these frogs also showed that God who
had sent them, had decisive inuence on life on earth itself. The
Midrash explains that these intelligent frogs committed many acts
that were against all instincts of survival and self preservation,
in order to carry out the design of their Creator, and produce a
feeling of abhorrence amongst their victims. These frogs survived
in the most unlikely situations, such as in burning ovens, human
intestines etc. They only died after they had demonstrated their
ability to survive in the places in which they should have died immediately. They left all those places that were natural deathtraps
for them alive and died away from the houses and the eld.37
36
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 134.
37
Rabbi Moshe ben Chayim Alshech, Torat Moshe, trans. Eliyahu Munk (Jerusalem:
Rubin Mass, 1988), pp. 284-285.
12
The word frogs mictv can be broken into mic, which is the plural of
: =:
=
the noun c, meaning knowledge or understanding and the root uxt, which
=
means to break, break through, break out, erupt, demolish, destroy, make a
breach, crack, scatter, rush upon, burst, spread, increase, or overow.
When Jacob leaves Beersheva and was on his way to Haran, God talks
to Jacob using a word whose root is uxt.
The land on which thou liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy
seed; and thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth, and thou
shalt spread abroad to the west, and to the east, and to the north
and to the south; and in thee and in thy seed shall all the families
of the earth be blessed.38
Using the verb uxt, Jacob says to Laban:
For the little which thou hadst before I came is now increased to
a multitude; and the Lord has blessed thee since my coming.39
Supporting this meaning of spread and increase is:
The house of their father increased greatly.40
His substance is increased in the land.41
So we can understand that relative to knowledge, frogs is symbolic of
the knowledge that facilitates a breaking out or a breaking through which is
concomitant with a spreading or increase. And this breaking through and
increasing brings blessing.
The feelings of cqg and dEa, their balance in z` :Z, and the deterVV
Vt .
mination to manifest or express these feelings in gv and cd, leads to a
=
carefully thought out plan of action. This connection between the feelings
which give rise to the carefully considered plan and the action takes place
through cq. We can also understand that foundation, cq, functions as
a connection in that the foundation of a building binds and connects the
building to the earth. This is related to
38
Genesis 28:13-14.
Genesis 30:30.
40
1 Chronicles 4:38.
41
Job 1:10.
39
13
Psalms 104:5.
Sefer Yetzirah, Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan, trans. (Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson, 1995), p.
42.
44
Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan, Sefer Yetzirah (Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson, 1995), p. 43.
The Zohar, vol. 1, Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon translators, (London: The
Soncino Press, 1978), p. 192.
45
14
Lice
miK
.
Proverbs 10:25.
Exodus 8:12.
48
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 136.
49
Exodus 8:13.
50
Rabbi Moshe ben Chayim Alshech, Torat Moshe, trans. Eliyahu Munk (Jerusalem:
Rubin Mass, 1988), p. 288.
47
15
The word miK is a plural form for the word oK, which as a noun means a
.
louse or ea. But it has another meaning as yes, rightly, or honestly. And as
an adjective it means sincere, frank, outspoken, candid, true, honest, right,
or earnest. When Joseph talks to his brothers the rst time they came to
Egypt to buy food, he recognizes them and says using the plural miK of the
word oK:
You are spies: to see the nakedness of the land are you come. And
they said to him, No, my lord, but to buy food are thy servants
come. We are all one mans sons; we are true men, thy servants
are no spies.51
Then Joseph says to them:
If you are true men, let one of your brothers be bound in the
house of your connement.52
Finally, when the brothers return to their father Jacob they tell him:
The man, who is the lord of the land, spoke roughly to us, and
took us for spies of the country. And we said to him, We are true
men; we are no spies. We are twelve brothers sons of our father.
One is no more, and the youngest is this day with our father in
the land of Canaan. And the man, the lord of the country, said
to us: Hereby shall I know that you are true men: leave one of
your bretheren here with me and take food for the famine of your
households, and be gone: and bring your youngest brother to me.
Then shall I know that you are no spies, but that you are true
men.53
As a noun oK also means base, pedestal, mount, stand or bracket. And cognate to this meaning is the noun dK meaning base, stand, easel, or mounting.
=
And as well dK means ruler used for drawing straight lines. The root dpk
=
means to name.
The left column of the Tree of Life headed by the Serah diA, is the Se.
rah for Analytic Understanding and logical reasoning. This is the sphere of
51
Genesis 42:9-11.
Genesis 42:19.
53
Genesis 42:31-34.
52
16
comprehending everything in its place. It is the sphere of giving names. Under diA is the Serah of dEa, strength. Strength provides a base, a stand.
.
Strength is a ruler. Its lines are straight and disciplined. And under the Serah dEais the Serah cd, the Serah related to communication. Its virtue
is honesty. Its vice is deceit. When that which is named and understood is
discussed with discipline, what manifests is honesty and candidness.
To communicate with honesty and candidness in a disciplined discussion,
involves speaking words. The Hebrew root for speaking is xac. Interestingly
enough there are exactly ten times that Aaron and the root xacare associated
in parashot `x`e andzens, the rst sections that discusses the plagues. God
speaks to Moses concerning Aaron.
I know that he can speak well (xA = xA =).54
-c -c
And thou shalt speak ( Z =c) unto him and thou shall put the
!A .
words (mia :d) in his mouth.55
!C =
And he shall speak (xA .) for thee.56
Vc
And Moses told Aaron all the words (ia .) of the Lord who had
:C
sent him.57
And Aaron spoke (xA =) all the words (mia :d) which the Lord
-c
!C =
58
had spoken (xA .) to Moses.
VC
And Aaron thy brother shall speak (xA =) unto the Pharaoh that
-c
he let the children of Israel go out of his land.59
From this it is no surprise to learn that Aaron is the shephard of cd.
Wild Beasts
Exodus
Exodus
56
Exodus
57
Exodus
58
Exodus
59
Exodus
55
4:14.
4:15.
4:16.
4:28.
4:30.
7:2.
17
Exodus 8: 17.
Rabbi Moshe ben Chayim Alshech, Torat Moshe, trans. Eliyahu Munk (Jerusalem:
Rubin Mass, 1988), p. 289.
61
18
The root axr has ve meanings: to be dark, grow dark, become evening, be
obscured, or become gloomy; to guarantee, stand surety, or pledge; to mix or
confuse; to be agreeable, pleasant, or sweet; and to trade, barter, negotiate, or
deal.
The Zohar tells us
Then there came upon them the plague called a (lit. mixture,
i.e. mixture of various beasts) which allegorically indicates that
the Almighty confounded their magical arts so that their practitioners were not able to piece them together. Moreover, that
confusion produced a mingling of a perverse and hybrid kind similar to those referred to in the words of Scripture,
thou shalt not sow thy eld with two kinds of seed;
neither shall there come upon thee a garment of two
kinds of stu mingled together.62
Many were then the legions that bestirred themselves above, but
the Holy One, blessed be He, confounded them altogether; these
mighty deeds which the Almighty performed in Egypt were accomplished by the raising of one of his hands against them, both
on high and below. It was then that the wisdom of Egypt perished, as Scripture says:
and the wisdom of their wise men shall perish and the
understanding of their prudent men shall be hid.63
Note further the pronouncement:
And I will confuse Egypt with Egypt.64
that is to say, celestial Egypt with terrestrial Egypt. For the
celestial legions are in charge of the terrestrial ones, and they
both were altogether thrown in disorder. They were confused
on high so that the Egyptians could not derive inspiration from
the celestial sources as formerly. It was with this object that
62
Leviticus 19:19.
Isaiah 29:14.
64
Isaiah 29:1.
63
19
The Zohar trans. Harry Sperling, Maurice Simon, and Paul Leverto vol. 3, (II, 30b),
(London: The Soncino Press, 1978), p. 99.
66
Rashi, Pentateuch and Rashis Commentary, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Abraham ben
Isaiah and Benjamin Sharfman (Brooklyn, NY: S. S. and R. Publishing, 1976), Exodus
8:17, p. 72.
67
Ovadiah Sforno, Sforno: Commentary on the Torah, trans. Rabbi Raphael Pelcovitz
(Brooklyn, NY: Mesorah Publications, 1987), p. 285.
68
Exodus 12:38.
69
Rashi, Pentateuch and Rashis Commentary, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Abraham ben
Isaiah and Benjamin Sharfman (Brooklyn, NY: S. S. and R. Publishing, 1976), Exodus
12:38, p. 119.
70
Umberto Cassuto, A Commentary on the Book of Exodus, trans. Israel Abrahams
(Jerusalem: The Magnes Press, 1987), p. 147.
71
The Zohar trans. Harry Sperling, Maurice Simon, and Paul Leverto vol. 4, The
Soncino Press, London, 1978, p. 144.
20
When they [the mixed multitude] beheld the signs and the wonder which Moses wrought in Egypt they came to Moses to be
converted. Said the Holy One to Moses:
Do not receive them!
Moses, however, replied:
Sovereign of the universe, now that they have seen Thy
power they desire to accept our Faith, let them see
Thy power every day and they will learn that there is
no God like unto Thee.
And Moses accepted them. And why, then, were they called
mixed multitude? Because they consisted of all the grades of
the Egyptian magicians.72
It was of this mixed multitude that we read
The people gathered themselves unto Aaron, and said to him,
Up, make us gods, which shall go before us; for as for
this man Moses, who brought us up out of the land of
Egypt, we know not what is become of him.73
Then the Zohar tells us that at the incident of the molten calf, the mixed
multitude:74
was not sincere, and therefore they caused him [Moses] to be
degraded as it is written,
Go, get thee down, for thy people (i.e. thy proselytes)
which thou broughtest up out of the land of Egypt,
have become corrupt: they have turned aside quickly
out of the way whidh I commanded them; they have
72
21
Exodus 32:7-8.
Rashi, Pentateuch and Rashis Commentary, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Abraham ben
Isaiah and Benjamin Sharfman (Brooklyn, NY: S. S. and R. Publishing, 1976), Exodus
32:4, p. 402.
77
Exodus 32:6
78
Rashi p. 403.
79
Hirsch, p. 609.
80
Numbers 11:4.
81
Rashi, Pentateuch and Rashis Commentary, Numbers, vol. 4, trans. Abraham ben
Isaiah and Benjamin Sharfman (Brooklyn, NY: S. S. and R. Publishing, 1976), Numbers
11:4, p. 104.
82
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 200.
76
22
Also note the parallel between Mqtq` and axaxr. Sefer Yetzirah teaches
that ` and r are among the gutteral letters formed in the throat; q and x are
sibilants produced by expelling air between the teeth with the tongue held
at; t and a are both labial letters primarily formed by closing the lips.83
The rst time a is used it occurs in the form ad, the mixture of wild
V
beasts.84 Now if these letters are rearranged and the lled out as x, there
results dA, meaning in nakedness, incest, shame, lewdness, unchastity, or
:
foul thing. Lewdness and lust are among the principal vices of gv.
=
This association with lewdness is reinforced by the prophet Ezekiel, who
uses the word Z : coming from the root axr.
:a
Therefore, behold I gather all your lovers with whom you mingled
[to whom you were pleasant] and all whom you loved with all
whom you hated and I shall gather them against you from around
and I shall expose your nakedness to them and they will see all
your nakedness. And I shall judge you with the judgments of
adulteresses and murderesses, and I shall deliver you into their
hands.85
The shephard of gv is Moses. Moses is the one having total certainty,
=
faith, and devotion to God. Even when Moses did not have sucient information on the intellectual level that God will be making miracles to help the
Israelites, he was devoted and had complete faith. When the Israelites had
just left Egypt and came to the Sea of Reeds and Pharaoh with his horsemen
caught up to them, the Israelites were afraid. And they asked Moses:
Is it not better for us to serve the Egyptians than to die in the
wilderness? But Moses said to the people
Have no fear! Stand by, and winess the deliverance
which the Lord will work for you today; for the Egyptians whom you see today you will never see again. The
Lord will battle for you; you hold your peace!86
83
Sefer Yetzirah, trans. Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan (Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson, 1995), p.
102.
84
Exodus 8:17.
Ezekiel 16:37-38.
86
Exodus 14:12-14.
85
23
When the Israelites came to the hill country of the Amorites and
the people wanted to send spies to explore the land and the report
came back that the people of the land were strong and tall Moses
said:
Have no dread or fear of them. None other than the
Lord your God, who goes before you will ght for you,
just as He did for you in Egypt before your very eyes,
and in the wilderness, where you saw how the Lord your
God carried you as a man carries his son all the distance
that you traveled until you came to this place.87
Before Moses dies and Joshua leads the Israelites into the land to
be given to the Israelites, Moses says to Joshua:
You have seen with your own eyes all that the Lord your
God has done to these two kings; so shall the Lord do
to all the kingdoms into which you shall cross over. Do
not fear them, for it is the Lord your God who will
battle for you.
The faithfulness and devotion lived by Moses is clear from these passages.
Faithfulness and devotion is one of the principal virtues of gv.
=
Pestilence
xa V
Vc
Deuteronomy 1:29-31.
Exodus 9:1-3.
24
here it speaks of the hand of the Lord, to wit, with all its ve
ngers, for the reason that ve species of cattle were smitten, as
enumerated in the passage,
upon the horses, upon the asses, upon the camels, upon
the oxen, and upon the sheep.89
They were smitten each one by one of the ve ngers, and thus
together by the hand of the Lord. Hence we read, a very grievous
murrain, signifying that the cattle died of themselves, suddenly
and without any visible cause.90
The word xa V, pestilence, has many cognates. The root xA . means to
Vc
-c
destroy. The noun xA = means leader or guide. The root xa ! means to say
!c
=c
or speak. The noun xa ! means thing, matter, aair, something, anything,
!c
word, speech, news, saying, message, or command.
We read in Psalms:
Eyr mn dJJdJ xa :A
=: =
,
=c .
By the word of the Lord was heaven made91
mn, heaven, is a code word for the Serah z` :Z as we read in the Zohar.
=
Vt .
Heaven, mn, symbolizes Beauty, z` :Z.92
=
Vt .
The Zohar says on the verse:
Let the waters under the heaven be gathered together
unto one place93
that is, let the grades beneath the heaven be unied in it so as
to form one whole, perfect in all the six directions.94
89
Exodus 9:3.
The Zohar, vol. 3, (II, 31b), Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon translators, (London:
The Soncino Press, 1978), pp. 101-102.
91
Psalms 33:6.
92
The Zohar trans. Harry Sperling, Maurice Simon, and Paul Leverto vol. 4, The
Soncino Press, London, 1978, p. 110.
93
Genesis 1:9.
94
The Zohar trans. Harry Sperling, Maurice Simon, and Paul Leverto vol. 1, The
Soncino Press, London, 1978, p. 51.
90
25
The six directions refer to the six Serot cqg, dEa, z` :Z, gv, cd, and
VV
Vt . =
cq of which z` :Z is the central representative. The vice of the Serah
Vt .
z` :Z is pride or arrogance. Pride and arrogance destroy Godliness. How is
Vt .
arrogance, conceit, and haughtiness expressed? It is expressed with speech,
through our words. And it is expressed by not listening to the words that
others speak.
It is this arrogance of Pharaoh which we can associate with his hardened
heart, for the passages which discuss Pharaohs hardened heart use the word
xA ., the third person masculine past tense of the root xac, to speak.
VC
And the heart of Pharaoh was hardened, that he did not hearken
to them as the Lord had spoken.95
And the magicians of Pharaoh did so with their secret arts. And
Pharaohs heart was hardened, neither did he hearken to them as
the Lord had spoken.96
But when Pharaoh saw that there was respite, he hardened his
heart, and hearkened not to them as the Lord had spoken.97
Then the magicians said to Pharaoh:
This is the nger of God.
And Pharaohs heart was hardened, and he hearkened not to them
as the Lord had spoken.98
And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh and he hearkened
not to them as the Lord had spoken to Moses.99
And the heart of Pharaoh was hard, neither would he let the
children of Israel go as the Lord had spoken to Moses.100
Exodus
Exodus
97
Exodus
98
Exodus
99
Exodus
100
Exodus
96
7:13.
7:22.
8:11.
8:15.
9:12.
9:35.
26
dr dJJdJ xA .Jx` lK
=:
,
VC
=: ,
All that the Lord has spoken we will do.101
dn EpN dZ =JxA =
!
!
!` VC
Speak with us and we will hear.102
dr dJJdJ xA .Jx` mia :JlK
=:
,
VC
=:
!C !
All the words which the Lord has spoken will we do.103
rn dr dJJdJ xA .Jx` lK
!
=:
,
VC
=: ,
All that the Lord has spoken we will do and obey.104
The shephard of z` :Z is the patriarch Jacob. Rabbi Simeon of the
Vt .
Zohar explains.
And the middle bar in the midst of the boards shall
pass from one end to the other.105
The middle bar, he said, signies Jacob, the perfect saint, as
we have pointed out on another occasion in connection with the
characterization of Jacob as
A complete man, dwelling in tents.106
It does not say, dwelling in a tent, but dwelling in tents,
which denotes that he unied the two tents (of Severity and
Mercy). The same implication may be found here:
The middle bar in the midst of the boards shall pass
from one end to the other
101
Exodus 19:8.
Exodus 20:16.
103
Exodus 24:3.
104
Exodus 24:7.
105
Exodus 26:28.
106
Genesis 25:27.
102
27
uniting them. Jacob was perfect in regard to both sides, the Holy
Ancient and the Microprosopus, and also to the supernal Grace
and the supernal Power, harmonizing the two. ...
I perceive that Wisdom, (dnk !) is the totality of all the holy
! :g
Seroth, and that supernal Grace (cqg) emanates from Wisdom,
VV
and Power (dEa), which is the prompter of severe judgement,
from Understanding (diA). Jacob harmonized both sides.107
.
This is also what Rabbi Joseph Gikatilla teaches.
Jacob is the essence of the central attribute; just as the center
leaf of the date palm belongs to both sides of the palm, so Jacob
belongs to both tents which are the tent of Abraham, which is
compassion, and the tent of Isaac, which is judgement. And this
is the essence of the verse:
And Jacob was a simple man who dwelled in tents.108
For why did the verse have to mention that he dwelled in tents?
It could have said he dwelled in a tent. It comes to teach that
the attribute of Jacob stands between the two tents and it axes
itself to the right and left through the middle attribute until one
nds Abraham and Isaac latched on to Jacob. Abraham to the
right of Jacob and Isaac to the left.109
It is Jacob of whom it is said:
Give truth to Jacob.110
And how is truth expressed if not through words, mia :?
!c
The Serah z` :Z represents the heart of the six Serot cqg, dEa,
Vt .
VV
z` :Z, gv, cd, and cq. These six are called mn, heaven.
Vt . =
=
107
The Zohar trans. Harry Sperling, Maurice Simon, and Paul Leverto vol. 4, The
Soncino Press, London, 1978, p. 108.
108
Genesis 25:27.
109
Rabbi Joseph Gikatilla, Gates of Light, trans. Avi Weinstein, (San Francisco: Harper
Collins Publishers, 1994), p. 209.
110
Micah 7:20.
28
Boils
oig
.
Genesis 1:1.
Genesis 1:2.
113
Genesis 1:3.
114
Genesis 45:27.
115
Exodus 9:8-9.
112
29
Why did He bring boils upon them? Because they had appointed
the Israelites to heat warm things for them and keep cool the
things that were cold; on this account were they smitten with
boils so that they should not be able to touch their bodies. [So
that their bodies could not stand either hot or cold.]116
Rabbi Alshech tells us that
By commanding Moses to throw the soot into the celestial spheres,
God wanted to make Moses a participant in overcoming the powers of magic in the heavens, i.e. enable him to overcome a purely
spiritual force. Since Moses had been manipulating the element
re, an element used both in the material and the spiritual sense,
this was appropriate. Moses having also demonstrated power over
wind previously, was able to prevent the soot from being dispersed
by the wind, and ascend to heaven without hindrance.117
The word oig means boils. It is related to the root ogs meaning to be hot
.
or to be overheated. This is the root of the word used in
The Kings servant is a king; cleave to heat and it will warm
you.118
And there is the related noun og, swimmer. It must be from this that the
:
Talmud infers that the boils were wet on the outside and dry on the inside.
For we read:119
Rabbi Joshua ben Levi said:
The boils brought upon the Egyptians by the Holy One,
blessed be He, were moist within but dry without, as
it says
116
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 141.
117
Rabbi Moshe ben Chayim Alshech, Torat Moshe, trans. Eliyahu Munk (Jerusalem:
Rubin Mass, 1988), p. 292.
118
Midrash Rabbah, Genesis, vol. 1, trans. Rabbi H. Freedman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 127.
119
The Soncino Talmud, Seder Nezikin vol. 1, Bava Kamma, trans. E. W. Kirzner
(London, The Soncino Press, 1935), p. 458.
30
oig occurs again in the Torah amongst the zrxv irbp and we
.
know from the Gemora that in relation to dekn it is a wound
similar to a burn, but not caused by re, but by a knock, blow or
pressure etc., i.e. inamation. oig in Chaldean means generally
.
to be hot, dpegs dps a hot year. oig is accordingly an inamma.
tory condition which can develop and for boils, where pus forms
which wants to force its way out, zrara` from dra, wanting
to get out. If oig is such an inammation which ends up in
.
pus, necroses and ultimate gangrene (the oig dken ultimately
.
loses limbs and members through gangrene) it is clear why soot
was taking to induce it. There is nothing which, by its nature
works so much against inammation, gangrene and foulness, as
charcoal, tar, creosote, and their derivatives, all materials related
to, and even derived from soot. It is quite probable that soot was
the recognised remedy for oig. Here, just that, was to induce
.
121
it.
The Ramban explains:
According to the opinion of our Rabbis, [the small quantity of]
soot [in the hands of Moses] became the dust which settled over
the whole land of Egypt, and that dust, coming upon man and
upon beast, caused them to break forth with boils and blains
throughout all the land of Egypt, since it was a burning hot dust.
Perhaps the wind caused the dust to enter the homes as well, and
there was thus no escape from it. This is a correct [conjecture].
Many times during a drought, the fall of the dew is accompanied
by a sort of dust, and it is furthermore written.
The Eternal will make the rain of thy land powder and
dust.122
120
Exodus 9:9.
Rabbi Samuel Raphael Hirsch, The Pentateuch, vol. 2, Exodus, trans. Isaac Levy,
(Gateshead, Judaica Press, 1989), p. 99.
122
Deuteronomy 28:24.
121
31
It is also possible to say, in line with the plain meaning of Scripture, that the purport of the expression, And it shall become ne
dust is that the dust which will be produced in that place from
the soot will bring boils over all the land of Egypt, as He infected
the air to do so, it being a decree of the Supreme One.123
Cassuto tells us:
The furnace is a factory where work is done by means of re,
and inter alia it is a kiln for burning bricks. Although prior to
the Roman period, the Egyptians used mainly sun-dried bricks
(adobe), yet the making of red bricks was also practised by them.
Particularly in buildings of the nineteenth dynasty to which
Ramsee II, the pharaoh of the oppression belonged and also of
the twentieth dynasty, re-baked bricks have often been found.
Now it was stated earlier that brick-making was one of the severe
tasks imposed upon the Israelites in Egypt (Exodus 1:4), even
constituting their primary work (Exodus 5:7-9) and apparently
the two things the labour and the plague were interconnected.
The smoke of the kiln is quickly dispersed in the air; and sooner
or later the bricks are taken outside the factory; but the soot
continues to cling to the walls of the kiln, at once an indicaton
and a symbol of the hard work of the toilers. Hence it was in
accord with poetic justice that the soot, which had been created,
as it were, by the sweat of the enslaved people should inict
punishment on the bodies of the enslavers.124
Besides being a plague on Egypt, oig, boils, is also part of the curses
.
on the Israelites. Moses explains to the Israelites that if the Israelites follow
the commandments God will provide blessings on the Israelites and if the
Israelites do not follow the commandments, then God will bring on curses to
the Israelites.
The Lord will aict you with the boils of Egypt, haemorrhoids,
123
32
[tumors], and with scab, and with the itch, whereof thou canst
not be healed.125
Rashi, following the Talmud, comments on this verse that the boils would
be very severe inammations that were moist on the inside and dry on the
outside. He says the scab should be interpreted as a festering boil. And the
itch should be interpreted as a boil that is dry like a potsherd.126
The Lord will aict you with severe boils in the knees and in the
legs whereof thou canst not be healed, from the sole of thy foot
unto the crown of thy head.127
The verb aict used in each of these verses is dkK , from the root dkp,
! :
which means to aict, smite, strike, hurt, wound. The word dkK occurs
! :
exactly four times in the Pentateuch. The other two times are also part of
the curses:
The Lord shall aict thee with a consumption, and with a fever,
and with an inammation, and with an extreme burning, and
with the sword, and with blasting, and with mildew; and they
shall pursue thee until thou perish.128
The Lord shall aict thee with madness, and blindness, and astonishment of heart.129
Kabbalistically, this action to aict or to smite is a pushing away, a withdrawing, and so is associated with the left column of the Tree. To deliberately
strike or hurt is an action that people take when they are angry. Anger is the
principal vice of dEa. These last two verses tell us that the anger is hot for
we have an associated fever, inammation, and extreme burning. The disease
is very hot. Rashi tells us that the consumption causes the wasting away and
swelling of the esh. The fever is very hot. The inammation is a heat more
125
Deuteronomy 28:27.
Rashi, Pentateuch and Rashis Commentary, Deuteronomy, vol. 5, trans. Abraham ben Isaiah and Benjamin Sharfman (Brooklyn, NY: S. S. and R. Publishing, 1976),
Deuteronomy 28:27, pp. 249-250.
127
Deuteronomy 28:35.
128
Deuteronomy 28:22.
129
Deuteronomy 28:28.
126
33
intense than a fever. There is a continual thirsting for water. The reference
to the sword is a reference to armies coming against the Israelites.130 The
Zohar associates the Serah dEa with a burning re.131
The reference to mildew can be associated with the wetness of the boils
on the inside. The anger here is so hot that it is a mad anger, a blind anger,
an anger that is an astonishment of heart, which Rashi interprets to mean
an obstruction of the heart.
The shephard of dEa is the patriarch Isaac. The Zohar tells us that
as soon as Abraham was circumcised, there issued from him Isaac,
who was the holy seed and who was attached to the supernal
spheres as symbolizing re from water.132
So the patriarch Isaac is associated with re, the re that came from Abraham
who is associated as water.
When Jacob and his family leave Laban and Laban pursues them and
catches up to them and just before they agree to make a covenant, the
patriarch Jacob says:
Were it not that the God of my father, the God of Abraham, and
the Fear of Isaac, had been with me, surely you would have sent
me away empty-handed.133
From this we learn that fear is associated with Isaac.
The Zohar in sketching out the lower seven sephirot, which it calls palaces,
says
The rst palace is the palace of love; the second of fear; the third
of mercy; the fourth, of prophecy through the clear mirror; the
fth, of prophecy through the hazy mirror; the sixth, of righteousness; the seventh, of justice.134
130
Rashi, Pentateuch and Rashis Commentary, Deuteronomy, vol. 5, trans. Abraham ben Isaiah and Benjamin Sharfman (Brooklyn, NY: S. S. and R. Publishing, 1976),
Deuteronomy 28:22, p. 247.
131
The Zohar, vol. 1, trans. Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon (London: The Soncino
Press, 1978), p. 97.
132
The Zohar, vol. 1, trans. Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon (London: The Soncino
Press, 1978), p. 350.
133
Genesis 31:42.
134
The Zohar, vol. 1, Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon translators, (London: The
Soncino Press, 1978), p. 97.
34
Thus fear is associated with the second of the seven lower Serot. This is
dEa.
The left column of the Tree of Life is the column of re. The root of
oig is pgs, which means to be hot. So it all ts together. oig, boils, is
.
.
associated with dEa.
Hail
cA
!
Exodus 9:22-25.
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 146.
136
35
36
This is why Moses had to point toward the sky. The re streaming
from the skies, prior to the hail descending, should have heated
the atmosphere and made the very occurrence of hail impossible.
God used the re to drive home the point that the origin of this
hail could not be explained by applying the laws of physics.139
Sforno140 explains that re ran down onto the earth means that
the enamed air came down to the earth through the forceful
thrust (lit. movement) of the hail which pressed upon it as it
descended.
and re aring up amidst the hail means that
the forceful thrust of the hail enamed the atmosphere, causing
thunder. The forceful movement was so great (intense) that it
damaged the soft (pliable) as well as the hard (growth) as it says
and the hail smote every herb of the eld and broke
every tree of the eld.141
The plague of hail is the seventh plague. It is the only plague in which
Pharaoh is told that he can do something to limit the damage the plague
will do. He is told to bring his cattle to shelter.
Send therefore now, and gather thy cattle, and all that thou hast
in the eld; for upon every man and beast which shall be found
in the eld, and shall not be brought home, the hail shall come
down, and they shall die.142
So this plague has the severity of a killing hail. But it also has the aspect of
the mercy of Lovingkindness, the Serah cqg, for he is told that the cattle
VV
can be saved if it is brought to shelter.
Rabbi Sorotzkin explains that
139
Rabbi Moshe ben Chayim Alshech, Torat Moshe, trans. Eliyahu Munk (Jerusalem:
Rubin Mass, 1988), p. 293.
140
Ovadiah Sforno, Sforno: Commentary on the Torah, trans. Rabbi Raphael Pelcovitz
(Brooklyn, NY: Mesorah Publications, 1987), pp. 288-289.
141
Exodus 9:25.
142
Exodus 9:19.
37
Zalman Sorotzkin, Insights in the Torah, Shemos, trans. Ralph Blumberg (Brooklyn,
NY: Mesorah Publications, 1993), p. 91.
144
Ecclesiastes 7:14.
145
Job 25:2.
146
The Bahir, trans. and comm. Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan (Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson,
1995), p. 135.
147
The Zohar, vol. 1, trans. Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon (London: The Soncino
Press, 1978), pp. 114, 286.
38
Job 38:29.
Job 38:29.
150
The Zohar, vol. 1, trans. Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon (London: The Soncino
Press, 1978), p. 286.
151
The Zohar, vol. 4, trans. Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon (London: The Soncino
Press, 1978), p. 286.
152
Genesis 24:12.
153
Genesis 24:27.
149
39
The Zohar associates Abraham with water. About Abraham, the Zohar
says that
he observed so strictly the laws regarding clean and unclean that
no man in a state of ritual impurity was allowed to serve in his
house until he had duly cleansed himself by bathing before nightfall or by abstention for seven days, according to the degree of his
delement. ... The reason why Abraham did this was because he
was himself pure and is designated pure (as it is written,
Who can bring forth a pure one from one impure?154
which is a reference to Abraham, who was born of Terah). R.
Simeon said that it was in order to conrm Abraham in his special
grade, which is symbolized by water, that he set out to keep the
world pure by means of water.155
The word ca occurs as ca ve times, in the form ca = seven times,
!
!
!d
in the form ca two times, and in the form ca = three times. The ve
!
!d
corresponds to the ve Serot that are on the right or lean to the right. The
seven correspond to the seven lower Serot. The two corresponds to the two
columns, and the three corresponds to the upper three Serot diA, dnk !,
. ! :g
xz V.
VK
Locusts
dA =
V`
Tomorrow I will bring the locusts into thy border: and they shall
cover the face of the earth, so that it will not be possible to see
the earth. And they shall eat the residue of that which is escaped,
which remains to you from the hail, and shall eat every tree which
grows for you out of the eld. And they shall ll thy houses, and
the houses of all thy servants, and the houses of all Egypt, which
neither thy fathers, nor thy fathers fathers have seen, since the
day that they were upon the earth to his day.156
154
Job 14:4.
The Zohar, vol. 1, Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon translators, (London: The
Soncino Press, 1978), p. 328.
156
Exodus 10:4-6.
155
40
Rabbi Alshech tell us that the subject of the words not be possible to see
the earth
are the locusts themselves; they will cover the earth in such density, that they themselves cannot see what they are eating, as they
can only see the other locusts around them. Normally, locusts descend on vegetation closely following the areas which have been
seeded and have begun to sprout. In this case, arrival of the
locusts will be sudden, and they will cover the whole country simultaneously. This despite the fact that they will have little to
feed on, namely only what the hail has left undamaged. Although
they must be hungry, they will only consume what is left mk !, to
Vl
you. They will not touch what belongs to the Israelites, i.e. the
province of Goshen.158
Rabbi Epstein asks
Why did the Holy One Blessed be He bring a locust plague upon
them? Because they made the Jews sowers of grain and barley
and all kinds of beans; therefore, He brought upon them a locust
plague, which destroyed all that the Jews had sown for them.159
So Moses stretched out his rod over the land of Egypt, and the
Lord brought an east wind upon the land all that day, and all
that night. And when it was morning, the east wind brought the
locusts.160
157
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 154.
158
Rabbi Moshe ben Chayim Alshech, Torat Moshe, trans. Eliyahu Munk (Jerusalem:
Rubin Mass, 1988), p. 297.
159
Rabbi Boruch Halevi Epstein, The Essential Torah Teminah, Shemoth, trans. Shraga
Sliverstein (Jerusalem: Feldheim Publishers, 1989), p. 31.
160
Exodus 10:13.
41
42
Exodus 10:15.
Umberto Cassuto, A Commentary on the Book of Exodus, trans. Israel Abrahams
(Jerusalem: The Magnes Press, 1987), p. 127.
168
Umberto Cassuto, A Commentary on the Book of Exodus, trans. Israel Abrahams
(Jerusalem: The Magnes Press, 1987), p. 127.
169
Exodus 14:28.
167
43
window of heaven through which the rain comes or through which blessings
come as in:
Test me in this says the Lord of Hosts and see if I will not open
for you the windows of heaven and pour out so much blessing that
you will not have enough room for it.170
In the six hundredth year of Noahs life, in the second month,
the seventeenth day of the month, on that same day were all
the fountains of the great deep broken open, and the windows of
heaven were opened.171
The Zohar tells us
And the windows of heaven were opened refer to the upper
waters.172
Now the upper waters come from dnk !, which is likened to heaven, For
! :g
the Serah dnk ! heads the right column, the column of water. So if dnk ! is
! :g
! :g
associated with heaven, then the Serah diA, Understanding, that follows it
.
on the Tree of Life can be likened to looking through an opening to heaven,
a window through which what is in heaven can be understood. So dA = can
V`
be associated with the Serah diA.
.
Darkness
jg
,
Malachi 3:10.
Genesis 7:11.
172
The Zohar, vol. 1, Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon translators, (London: The
Soncino Press, 1978), p. 202.
173
Exodus 10:21-23.
171
44
45
Ovadiah Sforno, Sforno: Commentary on the Torah, trans. Rabbi Raphael Pelcovitz
(Brooklyn, NY: Mesorah Publications, 1987), pp. 294-295.
179
Judges 16:26.
180
Rabbi Samuel Raphael Hirsch, The Pentateuch, vol. 2, Exodus, trans. Isaac Levy,
(Gateshead, Judaica Press, 1989), p. 113.
46
Zalman Sorotzkin, Insights in the Torah, Shemos, trans. Ralph Blumberg (Brooklyn,
NY: Mesorah Publications, 1993), p. 103.
182
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 156.
183
Psalm 18:12.
184
Genesis 1:2.
185
The Zohar, vol. 1, trans. Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon (London: The Soncino
Press, 1978), p. 252.
186
The Zohar, vol. 1, trans. Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon (London: The Soncino
Press, 1978), p. 120.
187
The Zohar, vol. 1, trans. Harry Sperling and Maurice Simon (London: The Soncino
Press, 1978), p. 213.
47
zxkA zKn
: ==
48
Exodus 11:5-7.
Midrash Rabbah, Exodus, vol. 2, trans. Rabbi S. M. Lehrman, (London: The Soncino
Press, 1983), p. 178.
191
Numbers 33:4.
190
49
you will realize that I execute judgments upon all the gods of
Egypt.192
Pesikta Rabbati explains what the rstborn encompasses.193
What is implied by all in the expression all the rstborn? That
rstborn males sired by men, rstborn males given birth to by
women, and even rstborn females died that night. Hence it is
said all the rstborn. ...
It was not only the rstborn who died. If it were, why should
Scripture go on to say,
There was not a house where there was not one dead.194
Since it is possible that there were houses where there were no
rstborn, what is meant by saying There was not a house, etc? R.
Abba bar Hama explained: In a house that had no rstborn the
Holy One, blessed be He, smote the one who was put in charge
of the house, as is said
He smote all the rstborn in Egypt, the chief of all their
substance.195
the word chief being understood as in the verse
Shimri the chief, for though he was not the rstborn,
yet his father made him chief.196
Rabbi Alshech explains further:
Proof that these deaths really occurred simultaneously, would be
the cries of the bereaved, which would all be heard at the same
time. It would be one outcry, not a series of outcries. We have
192
Umberto Cassuto, A Commentary on the Book of Exodus, trans. Israel Abrahams
(Jerusalem: The Magnes Press, 1987), p. 133.
193
Pesikta Rabbati, trans. William Braude (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1968), p.
837.
194
Exodus 12:30.
195
Psalm 105:36.
196
1 Chronicles 26:10.
50
stated, and we know from the Haggadah shel Pesach, that Gods
retributive actions are accompanied by subordinate forces called
Fiercenss of His anger, wrath, and indignation, and
trouble, an embassy of evil messengers.197
How do we know that if God Himself had not struck down the
rstborn, they had not been killed by any of these other forces
representing Gods anger?
The proof lay in the fact that not a single Jewish rstborn died,
not even a dog wailed. This would be sucient evidence that
the hand of God Himself had been at work. This is why this
phenomenon had to be predicted in verse 7. Since Baba Kama
60 says that when destructive forces are abroad, dogs can be
heard to bark, since they are sensitive to such presences, the fact
that only the dogs in the Jewish neighborhoods kept silent would
be ample testimony that only Egyptians were dying.198
The Serah xz V, Crown, corresponds to the will which is the rst or primary
VK
aspect of our spiritual being. The will is our rst-born. We are the rst-born
of God.
Israel is my son, my rstborn.199
The word Israel, l`
-y, can be divided into two parts: l`, which means
God, and the root xsi, which means to go straight, to be straight, just,
upright, pleasing, agreeable. fair-dealing, or honest. Israel, therefore, has the
meaning of straight to God. The Israelites are people who going straight to
God align their wills with the will of God. That is why we read
Sanctify unto Me all the rstborn, whatsoever openeth the womb
among the children of Israel, both of man and of beast, it is
Mine.200
197
Psalm 78:49.
Rabbi Moshe ben Chayim Alshech, Torat Moshe, trans. Eliyahu Munk (Jerusalem:
Rubin Mass, 1988), p. 302-303.
199
Exodus 4:22.
200
Exodus 13:2.
198
51
All the rstborn of man among thy children shalt thou redeem.201
The rstborn of thy sons shalt thou give unto Me.202
Mine is every rstborn: on the day that I smote every rstborn in
the land of Egypt I hallowed unto Me all the rstborn in Israel,
both man and beast, Mine they shall be: I am the Lord.203
For they are wholly given to Me from among the children of Israel;
instead of all that openeth the womb, even the rstborn of all the
children of Israel, I have taken them unto Me. For Mine are
all rstborn, among the children of Israel, both man and beast;
on the day that I smote all the rstborn in the land of Egypt I
sanctied them for Myself.204
Pesikta Rabbati205 mentions the phrase innermost parts of the belly in
speaking about the womb.
With lashings that wound Thou wouldst have cleansed away evil
the Egyptians did not consent to let them go. When did they
let them go? After the smiting [of that which comes out] of the
innermost parts of the belly that is, after the smiting of the
rstborn:
And it came to pass at midnight that the Lord smote
all the rstborn in the land of Egypt.206
The opening of the womb of God is xz V. Our will is to become Gods
VK
will, for that is how we receive God. Interestingly enough, the slaying of the
rstborn, zxkA zKn, contains within it the letters k, z, and x, the letters
: ==
of xz V.
VK
The Slaying of the rst-born of the Egyptians corresponds to the slaying
of the will of those who live in limitation, in bondage. For in limitation and
201
Exodus 13:13.
Exodus 22:28.
203
Numbers 3:13.
204
Numbers 8:16-17.
205
Pesikta Rabbati, trans. William Braude (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1968), p.
833.
206
Exodus 12:29.
202
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bondage, the will has been killed. The leader of the Egyptians, Pharaoh, is
a leader who says
Who is the Lord, that I should obey His voice to let Israel go? I
do not know the Lord.207
The will of Pharaoh has no desire to recognize or align itself with the will of
God. In the end, this will is annihilated. This is the slaying of the rst-born.
Conclusion
The Kings Tactics
We read in Pesikta Rabbati
R. Jose bar Hanina taught: The Holy On, blessed be He, moved
against the Egyptians with the tactics used by a king in command
of his army. How so? In the words use, when a province rebels
against a king, what does the king do to it? He rst shuts o its
water. So did the Holy One, blessed be He. He rst turned the
Egyptians water into blood as is said
Over all their ponds of water that they may become
blood.208
What does a king do next? He brings up trumpeters to sound a
warning against the province. Even thus the Holy One, blessed
be He, brought frogs against Egypt to serve as trumpeters of a
warning against Pharaoh, as is said
Concerning the trumpeting of the frogs209
What does a king do next to the rebellious province? He makes a
trench in the earth round about it. Even thus did the Holy One,
blessed be He, as is said
207
Exodus 5:2.
Exodus 7:19.
209
Exodus 8:8.
208
53
Exodus
Exodus
212
Exodus
213
Exodus
214
Exodus
211
8:12.
8:17.
9:15.
8:10.
9:23.
54
215
Joel 2:9.
Exodus 10:23.
217
Pesikta Rabbati, trans. William Braude (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1968),
pp. 838-840.
216
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