|
PARASHAT HASHAVUA
*********************************************************
This week's shiurim are dedicated
in memory of Mrs. Cela Meisels, Tzerka Nechama bat Shlomo,
whose yahrzeit falls on the 14th of Tevet.
**********************************************************************
In loving memory of Channa Schreiber (Channa Rivka bat Yosef v' Yocheved) z"l,
with wishes for consolation and comfort to her dear children
Yossi and Mona, Yitzchak and Carmit, and their families,
along with all who mourn for Tzion and Yerushalayim.
**********************************************************************
Dedicated in memory of my grandmother, Szore bath Simen Leib (Weinberger),
whose yahrzeit is on the 18th of Tevet.
May her soul be among the Righteous in Gan Eden. – from those who remember her.
*************************************************************************************
PARASHAT SHEMOT
The Missing Years
By Rav Yair Kahn
I. An Ethiopian Monarch?
In Parashat Shemot, we are introduced to the main Biblical figure, Moshe
Rabbeinu. The Torah gives a detailed description of his birth, and we are
informed of his childhood and youth, growing up in the
palace
of Pharaoh as an Egyptian,
but nonetheless aware of his Hebraic roots. The Torah describes how he left the
palace and encountered the suffering of his brethren and how he slayed the
Egyptian taskmaster and was forced to flee. Moshe escapes to Midyan, saves
Yitro’s daughters, and eventually marries Tzippora. Then the Torah seems to press
“fast-forward,” picking up the story only when
Hashem appears to Moshe at the
burning bush. At this point, Moshe is already eighty years old! Despite the
detailed account of Moshe’s biography found in the Torah, there is a gap of
around sixty years.
On the one hand, the Torah is neither history nor biography, and we shouldn’t be
surprised by the absence of details that are not relevant to the Torah's
narrative. Nevertheless, these missing years, some of which may have been
formative, arouse more than curiosity.
In fact, the missing years ignited the imagination of many. There is an entire
genre of stories that tell of Moshe’s various adventures after he fled Egypt and before he arrived in Midyan.
Some sources attribute the invention of the alphabet to Moshe; according to
others, Moshe taught wisdom to the original Greek philosophers. The most famous
source (Chronicles of Moshe), which found its way into the Yalkut Shimoni and is
loosely based on Josephus' Antiquities, claims that Moshe initially ran away to
Ethiopia, was appointed king, and helped
suppress a revolution instigated by Bilaam.
According to this source, Moshe reigned in Ethiopia for forty
years.
These stories, albeit fascinating, appear totally fictional, grounded neither in
Scripture nor in tradition. The Ibn Ezra already noted: “And regarding that
which is written in the Chronicles of Moshe, don’t believe. As a rule I tell
you, any book not written by the prophets or the sages and which is based on
tradition, don’t trust” (Shemot 2;22; however, see the Ibn Ezra on
Bamidbar 12;1 as well as the Rashbam’s commentary there). It is not our
intention to dwell on these imaginative, but unfounded stories. Perhaps if we
explore the Torah itself, we may discover subtle hints that can help us fill in
some of the blanks.
II. Va-yo’el Moshe
Peshuto shel mikra
(a straightforward literary reading of Scripture) indicates that Moshe arrived
in Midyan immediately after escaping
Egypt. In other words, during most of the
missing sixty years, Moshe was in Midyan tending to Yitro’s flock. The Torah
describes this period with a very enigmatic phrase: “Va-yo’el Moshe
la-shevet et ha-ish” (2:21). The term “va-yo’el” is rarely used in
Scripture and refers to agreement - Moshe agreed to dwell with the man (Yitro).
Our sages (Nedarim 65a), playing on the root of "va-yo'el" –
interpreted this pasuk as
referring to an “ala,” which means oath. Thus, Moshe took an oath that he
would dwell with Yitro. However, the purpose and significance of this oath is
not immediately clear.
The oath is referred to in a midrash that at first glance seems
incomprehensible. The Torah relates that Moshe called his son Gershom, “For I
was a ger (alien) in eretz nochriya (a foreign land)” (18:3). The Mekhilta comments:
R. Elazar the Modai said: “In eretz nochriya” – Moshe said: Since [all
the people in] the entire world are idolaters, shall I worship before He that
said “Let the world be”? For when Moshe asked Yitro for Tzippora’s hand in
marriage, Yitro told him: Accept upon yourself that which I shall tell you and I
shall give her to you as a wife. He said to him: What is it? He answered: The
first son you have will be for avoda zara - from then on, for
Hashem’s name. And he accepted it, as it is stated: “Va-yo’el
Moshe” - the term ala refers only to an oath, as it says: “Va-yo’el
Shaul…” Therefore, the heavenly angel came to kill Moshe immediately, and
Tzippora took a flint and cut the foreskin of her son and the angel backed down.
What caused our sages to charge Moshe Rabbeinu with such a harsh and seemingly
baseless accusation? How could they even entertain the possibility that Moshe,
the father of all prophets, allowed his firstborn to worship avoda zara?
Can one place so much weight on the term nochriya?
Let us take a closer look at the pesukim at the beginning of parashat
Yitro that the Mekhilta is based on.
And her [Tzippora’s] two children, the name of the first being Gershom, for he
said, “I was a ger in a foreign land.” And the name of the other being
Eliezer, for “the Lord of my father was my aid and he saved me from the sword of
Pharaoh.” (18:3-4).
There is something odd about
these two names - they are out of sequence. First, Moshe was saved from the
sword of Pharaoh; only later did he become a fugitive and foreigner in a strange
land. Why didn’t Moshe commemorate his salvation with the birth of his eldest
son?
Perhaps, the order of the names is reflective of different phases in Moshe’s
life. Initially Moshe viewed himself as no more than a fugitive who managed to
escape Egypt. He viewed the
events that occurred in his flight from Egypt not as salvation, but as forced
exile. He had to flee Egypt so as not to
be executed by Pharaoh. He was cut off, both from his Hebrew brethren as well as
from Pharaoh's court. He was a nomad, without any roots. He was an alien in a
foreign land. There was no indication that he would ever return. Yitro agreed to adopt this rootless
man, and in return, “Va-yo’el Moshe” – Moshe agreed to stay with Yitro.
He had no other viable options. Of course, this doesn't suggest any lack of
faith on Moshe's part. Nevertheless, for the next sixty years, Moshe was
convinced that he had been cut off from the children of Israel and that
there was no road back.
However, one day everything changed. Moshe took his father in-law’s flock to
graze on the mountainside of Chorev. According to tradition, Moshe followed a
stray sheep and came upon an amazing sight, a bush on fire that was not devoured
by the flames. The voice of God called out to him and announced: “I am the Lord
of your father, the Lord of Avraham the Lord of Yitzchak and the Lord of Yaakov”
(3:6). Hashem had seen all the
injustice and suffering of Moshe’s brethren and the time for salvation had
arrived. Moreover, Moshe was elected
to be sent to Egypt to free the
Hebrews from bondage. All of a sudden, there was new direction to Moshe’s life.
He would return to his brethren in Egypt, and he would be instrumental in
freeing them from bondage and leading them to the Promised Land. After sixty
years of estrangement, Moshe was once again firmly rooted.
The revelation at Chorev not only gave Moshe a new direction for the future, but
gave him a new perspective on the past as well. After all, it was at the burning
bush that Moshe was introduced to the Lord of his fathers, “the Lord of Avraham
the Lord of Yitzchak and the Lord of Yaakov." He could now look back at those
same events which appeared previously as forced exile and realize that, in fact,
it was the hand of God. It was only after the burning bush that Moshe could look
back and say, “For the Lord of my father was my aid and he saved me from the
sword of Pharaoh."
III. Gershom and Eliezer
Gershom and Eliezer were born in different phases of Moshe’s life. Gershom was born when Moshe was
totally cut off from his roots and his heritage. It was a period of despair,
when Moshe was convinced that there was no path of return. It was a point in
Moshe’s life when his dreams and aspirations exhausted themselves upon the
plains of Midyan. It was a phase that can be summed up by two sentences: “I was
an alien in a foreign land” and “Va-yo’el Moshe la-shevet et ha-ish."
We are informed of Moshe's second child only after the vision of the burning
bush (see 4:20). Apparently, Eliezer was born after
Hashem had revealed himself at
Chorev. This was a period of mission and direction. It was a stage when Moshe
was forced to reevaluate the events of his entire life from a new and exciting
perspective. It was a point in Moshe’s life when he was made to understand that
the strange circumstances of infancy and childhood were all part of a divine
plan. It was a phase in which he was introduced to the Lord of his fathers and
realized that it was He who had saved him from Pharaoh’s sword to in turn bring
salvation to the children of Israel.
The Torah tells a very enigmatic story that took place during Moshe's return to Egypt. They stopped
at an inn, "and the
Lord met him and sought to kill him. Then Tzippora took a flint
and cut off the foreskin of her son and cast it at his feet …
So He let him alone" (4:24-26). Many
commentators explain that these pesukim are a reference to the
circumcision of the newborn Eliezer.
However, according to the Mekhilta we quoted above, the reference is to the
circumcision of Gershom (also see Pseudo Yonatan 4:24). In other words, Eliezer,
who was born after the revelation at Chorev, was circumcised immediately.
However, Gershom, who was born years before, at a stage in Moshe's life
when he was totally cut off from the children of
Israel, had not been circumcised until this
point.
After Parashat Yitro, there are no more explicit references to the
children of Moshe. However, they do reappear later in Tanakh. In Sefer
Shoftim, there is a vague reference to a Levite who served an idol as a
priest in the house of Mikha, named Yehonatan son of Gershom son of Menashe (Shoftim
18:30). The nun of Menashe’s name is written as a small letter,
suggesting it doesn't really belong. In other words, Yehonatan, who served as an
idolatrous priest, was actually the son of Gershom and grandson of Moshe. There
are a number of textual references that may support this connection. The most
significant from our perspective is, "Va-yo'el ha-Levi la-shevet et ha-ish"
(17:11), which mirrors the verse referring to Moshe's stay in Midyan and the
birth of Gershom (see Shemot 2:21-22). The gemara in Bava Batra
(109b) comments: "Is he [Gershom] the son of Menashe? He is the son of Moshe! …
Rather, since acted in the way of Menashe [an idolatrous king of Yehuda],
Scripture connected him to Menashe." (For more on Yehonatan ben Gershom, see
Yerushalmi Berakhot 9:2).
There is a more explicit reference in I Divrei Ha-yamim: "The sons of Moshe:
Gershom and Eliezer. The sons of Gershom: Shevuel the chief.
And the sons of Eliezer were: Rechavia the chief. And Eliezer had no other sons,
but the sons of Rechavia were very many” (23:15-17). The gemara
in Berakhot (7a) makes the following comment (See also Pseudo Yonatan on
the verse in Divrei Ha-yamim).
:
R. Yochanan said in the name of R. Yossi: Every single word that came out of the
mouth of Ha-Kadosh Barukh Hu is for good. Even if uttered
conditionally, He will not go back on it. How do we know? From Moshe Rabbeinu,
as it says: "Leave Me
alone, that I may destroy them and blot out their name from under heaven; and I
will make of you a nation mightier and greater than they." Even
though Moshe pleaded and nullified the decree, nevertheless it [the word of
Hashem] was fulfilled through
his offspring, as it is stated, "The sons of Moshe: Gershom and Eliezer. The sons of
Gershom: Shevuel the chief. And the sons of Eliezer were: Rechavia the chief.
And Eliezer had no other sons; but the sons of Rechavia were very many." And R.
Yosef taught: [Rechavia had] more than six hundred thousand… It
says here “[The sons of
Rechavia] were very many,” and it says there, “The children of Israel were fruitful
and increased and multiplied."
We find a sharp contrast between the descendants of Gershom and those of
Eliezer. While Yehonatan deteriorates towards idolatry, Rechavia thrives and
prospers. Moreover, we find in the Pseudo Yonatan (I Divrei Ha-yamim
2:55) superlatives about the Torah and prophecy of the family of Rechavia. What
led to this discrepancy? Perhaps it is connected to the diverse circumstances
that began with their respective births. Each of Moshe's children had a distinct
point of departure and travelled on a different trajectory, which led to
divergent destinations and destinies. Of course, every person has free will to
break the confines of surrounding influences. Nevertheless, those confines do
exist, and if not broken, they may have a powerful effect.
According to a literal reading of the Mekhilta, Moshe’s oath may have led to the
corruption of Yehonatan. On the
other hand, perhaps, the Mekhilta is not to be taken as a reference to a literal
oath, but rather to the reality in which Moshe lived during those sixty years of
alienation. These were sixty years of being a stranger in a foreign land; sixty
years of rootlessness, having no one to turn to but a priest of Midyan; sixty
years of "Va-yo'el Moshe la-shevet et ha-ish," which eventually led to "Va-yo'el
ha-Levi la-shevet et ha-ish."
In summary, we suggested that the sixty missing years of Moshe's life was a dark
period of total alienation from the children of Israel, with no hope of return. We tried
to support this thesis through a nuanced reading of the Torah and a number of
midrashic statements. Perhaps this is the reason that these years are not
documented in the Torah. On the other hand, based on this thesis, Moshe's
ability to turn around his entire life after the vision of the burning bush is
an impressive testimony to the greatness of Moshe Rabbeinu, the greatest of all
prophets.
|