This week’s Parsha Preview is co-dedicated to the refuah of Menachem Mendel Ben Faigie Ruchel, Yocheved Bat Leah, Simcha Bat Mazel, Ofek Ben Tali, Shimon Ben Miriam, Sara Bat Hodda, Avraham Moshe Ben Miriam Tova, Baruch Kalman ben Leiben Jacobs and Kyla Chaya Bat Sarah Polson may Hashem grant them all a speedy recovery and a complete healing.
Once again, you can have this Parshah Preview dedicated in honour or memory of a loved one, you can ask for a refuah or simply acknowledge a milestone. It does not cost a thing all you have to do is ask.
Happy Birthday to my friends who will celebrate Birthday’s this coming week:
Happy Birthday to:
David Soberano
“Ad Meyah Vesrim Shannah”
Bo
Exodus 6:2-9:35
Candle Lighting in
Candle Lighting in Thornhill 4:57 P.M.
Main characters of this week’s Parsha
G-d
Moses
Aaron
Pharaoh
The last three of the Ten Plagues are delivered on Egypt: a cloud of locusts devours all the crops and vegetation; a solid, obvious darkness cloaks the land; and all the firstborn of Egypt are killed at the stroke of midnight of the 15th of the month of Nissan.
G-d orders the first mitzvah to be given to the people of
The death of the firstborn finally shatters Pharaoh's opposition and he literally forces the Children of
The Children of
They are also commanded to wear tefillin on the arm and head as a reminder of the Exodus and their resultant commitment to G-d.
Food for further thought……….
Why do we eat matzah? Is it simply to remember how G-d saved us during the events of Yetziat Mitzrayim (leaving
Answer to last weeks Parsha Va’era
As the chosen redeemer of the Jewish people, what was Moshe’s job description? History refers to Moshe as “Our Teacher.” However, an analysis of Moshe’s relationship with the Jewish people reveals a far more exacting and detailed job description.
Was Moshe more than just a teacher?
Moshe's mission started at the Burning Bush when G-d said to him, "Go to Pharaoh and take the Jews out of
I believe that an analysis of Moshe's exchange with G-d at the end of last week's Parsha, and G-d's answer to Moshe that continues in this week's Parsha reveals the answer.
In last week's Parsha it was decided that Moshe and Aharon would go to Pharaoh and tell him to let the Jews leave
There are two classic approaches to understand Moshe's question.
1. Moshe challenged G-d's justice. In his fervor and concern over the plight of the Jewish people, Moshe allowed himself the right to question G-d's judiciousness.
2. Moshe did not challenge G-d's judiciousness. Moshe was reflecting back on his own obvious inadequacies. Clearly, G-d's judiciousness could not be questioned. "G-d is a Rock and all His ways are just and perfect." However, G-d is limited by the actions of humans.
Whenever G-d works through a human agent, there is the possibility of that agent messing up. If the human agent sins, or chooses to go against G-d's instructions, the original plan will not work. The result will of course be the same because G-d has unlimited resources with which to accomplish his intended goal. However, the original plan involving the human agent and allotted time schedule would have to be changed. Therefore, when the plan did not work as Moshe thought it would it was because Moshe was not worthy of being the medium through which G-d's power would be miraculously revealed.
G-d's response to Moshe must be analyzed in relation to both possible explanations of Moshe's complaint. According to Rashi, G-d immediately compared Moshe's questioning of either his own inadequacy or G-d's judiciousness to Avraham's unquestioning belief and loyalty. "Although I promised Avraham that his future children would come through Yitzchak, Avraham did not question Me when I told him to sacrifice Yitzchak. Yet, “you now question my methods" (Rashi 6:1)
Rashi's presentation of G-d's opening response easily follows the first of our possible explanations of Moshe's complaint. G-d was criticizing Moshe for questioning G-d's judiciousness by contrasting him with Avraham's absolute belief and trust in G-d. "Just as Avraham did not question My methods so too you should not question My methods."
In this week's Parsha, G-d continued his critique of Moshe's lack of trust. "In fact, Avraham had more reason to question My methods than Moshe. It was to Avraham that I had promised that Yitzchak would father a nation of children who would inherit the
The truth is that the comparison to the Forefathers was the perfect answer to Moshe's proclaimed inadequacy. Regardless of why, G-d had chosen Moshe to do the job. He was the one. Had G-d wanted to, He would have chosen someone else.
The truth is that Moshe was the perfect person for the job for the very reasons that he appeared to be inadequate. G-d wanted a human agent who on his own could not have possibly gotten the job done. Therefore, it would be clear to the world that G-d was the One Who had taken the Jews out of slavery and no one else.
Moshe was to one day be proclaimed by G-d as "the most humble of all men to have ever lived." However, there are times when humility is a weakness rather than a strength. Humility that recognizes ability but avoids arrogance is a virtue. Humility that denies ability and responsibility is a weakness. In last week's Parsha, G-d would have killed Moshe if not for Tziporah's quick intervention. This shows that G-d was prepared to pull the plug on Operation Moses if Moshe proved to be inadequate. Had that happened, we most likely would have never heard about Moshe's miraculous birth, development, and demise. Instead, the story of the Exodus would have had a different set of players and events. The result would have been the same. The Jews would have been freed and G-d's greatness would have been revealed. Therefore, it was incumbent upon Moshe to accept that he was the chosen Redeemer, whether he understood it or not, whether he wanted the job or not. The same could be said of Megillat Esther, Esther is reluctant to go King Achashverosh. Mordechai intercedes and tells Esther, if it is not you who pleads our case another will be chosen and you will have lost the merit to defend the Jewish people.
When Moshe confronted G-d by questioning his own adequacy for the job of Redeemer, he questioned G-d's methods. Moshe was not ignorant of his own actions. Moshe knew whether he had sinned between the time he was given the job and the time he stood before Pharaoh. He had not! The one sin of not giving his son a Brit Milah had been dealt with. Therefore, Moshe should have proceeded with absolute confidence that what he was doing was playing a role in a script that had been carefully scripted by G-d. Regardless of his questions and doubts, G-d was in charge.
G-d compared Moshe to Avraham, Yitzchak, and Yakov because they epitomized trust. Regardless of why Moshe questioned G-d's plan, it reflected a lack of trust in G-d's handling of the operation. True, Moshe was to be the most humble of all men, however, G-d wanted to make sure that his humility was a virtue and not a weakness.
Had Moshe accepted the job from the very beginning without questioning his own inadequacy or his trust in G-d, the story of the Exodus would have been far more profound and revealing. Moshe would have gone directly to Pharaoh, told him that G-d had sent him with the message, "Let My people go!" and Pharaoh would have said "Yes, go!" That would have been it! No plagues, no other miracles, just a simple go! That would have been the greatest miracle of all. It would have been the manifestation of the G-d who sets limits to the world and has absolute control over all things, including the actions of humans. When it was the time for redemption and the end of slavery Pharaoh would have let the Jews go! It would have revealed that the enslavement was for a reason and that G-d was the absolute ruler of all things including time and circumstance. Instead, Moshe argued with G-d and questioned His methodology necessitating a bag of tricks and miracles to reveal G-d's greatness.
Shabbat Shalom Umevorach-A peaceful and Blessed Shabbat
Yitzchak Alloul
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