The Israelites’ exodus from Egypt marks the process by which the people of Israel are trained to distinguish itself from Egypt. The Egypt civilization, the Torah suggests, mistakes God’s magnificent creations for the deity itself. Rather than worshiping an unseen god which transcends and controls nature, the Egyptians worship gods who control individual natural domains, such as the sun, the sky and the Nile river. These irascible gods require constant attention and care so as not to unleash their unsuppressed rage upon humankind. These gods do not care to remain in the realm of the unknown. Instead, they can be embodied in physical form. The Egyptians, in turn, worship these visible embodiments of the gods who provide them with sustenance, and they worship Pharaoh as the medium connecting them to these gods. But if the gods whom the Egyptians worship can be appeased and manipulated by the Egyptians themselves, then the worship of those gods is tantamount to self-worship. The Egyptians who worship the gods that they control ultimately worship themselves.
Pharaoh mocks the Israelites’ worship of the unseen god as absurd and insane. He cannot accept Israel’s ludicrous desire to worship an unseen God. In our first encounter with this ruler, we hear him mock this so-called god to his entire court. Who is this God, Pharaoh asks, that I should listen to him? I have never known this God. The God that Moses claims to represent is unseen and unknowable. And yet, all people are expected to strive to know this god. The key word of Exodus story the Hebrew world for knowledge. The process of exodus and redemption will bring the knowledge of this unseen God to all people. Pharaoh’s continual denial of the one true God is a denial of the unknowable. It is a denial of unseen forces that humanity cannot manipulate through homage and service.
Because Egypt worships its own resources and elevates its own leaders as deities, because Egypt worships what is in front of it and not what is beyond it, Egypt does not self-interrogate the moral nature of its society. Egypt does not have an ethos of communal responsibility for the individual. Egypt does not look for the hidden meaning behind natural phenomena in search of meaningful patterns. On the cusp of existential crisis, Pharaoh hires Joseph, who sees patterns in Egypt’s agricultural cycle, plans for the future, and saves Egypt. But when Joseph dies, the memories of his accomplishments die with him. The wac-a-mole approach to crisis resolution extends into the Exodus story. Pharaoh’s response to each plague that assaults Egypt is grounded in his refusal to see a meaningful pattern of events controlled by an omnipotent and uncontrollable god who is responding to sins taking place in his own society. Pharaoh’s infallible semi-divine status means that, by definition, Pharaoh cannot be responsible for the ills pervading his society. The source of the problem had to have come from the outside. The source of the problem has to lie with the Israelites themselves.
For this reason, Pharaoh is unable to learn a lesson from the ten plagues wreaked upon Egypt. To his mind, the pain and suffering caused the plagues cannot accumulate. The plagues cannot not represent anything meaningful to Pharaoh beyond his own understanding of the visible, material world, which he is empowered to control. The moment that a plague departs, Pharaoh hardens his heart once again, just as he had done at the very beginning. Each plague, Pharaoh reasons, can only represent the work of a sorcerous, nefarious, outside group at odds with the society that they had built. The Israelites are not victims. They are the source of the problem.
The God of the Israelites expects the covenantal people to detect patterns in the visible world around them and interpret them as the work of a deity which has power over them, which cannot be subject to their own manipulations, and which nevertheless desires a relationship with them. The people of Israel cannot, therefore, tolerate idolatry, or the civilization which nurtures self-worship by empowering humans with the ability to control the divine. But the Israelites’ initial failure to humbly submit to the unknowable eventually leads to their own slide into idolatry. While awaiting Moses’ return from Mount Sinai’s peak, they have to reckon with the unseen, and in a panic, in a desire to construct a god that they can control, they resort to idolatry. The consequences of this sin are dire because if there is anything that the Israelites are meant to learn, is it that when something goes wrong in the Israelite community, the Israelites must submit to the one True god and recognize its own fallibility, rather than its own divinity. The lesson of the forty years in the wilderness is that when one person goes astray, or when one person suffers, the entire community must reckon with this sin or suffering as a systemic problem.
Israel is asked to recognize that, while everything we do impacts the Unknowable, we can manipulate the perfect God. As active members of a dynamic covenantal relationship, we have to believe that, contradictorily, God is both transcendant and personally engaged in our lives. We resolve this dualism by bringing the Seen into alignment with the Unseen by focusing on ethical concern in all aspects of our lives, in order to bring our existence into sync with the unseen.
The rabbis mock the literalism of the Egyptians, their insistence of self-worship which led to a continual performance of self-delusion where breaking character meant compromising the very ethos of its civilization. As a child, I delighted in the midrashic story that Pharaoh secretly urinated into the Nile each morning. The Egyptians, this midrash presumes, would not have accepted that he needed to relieve himself. But they also likely were in on the game. The dual portrayal of the Egyptians as so intentionally dim-witted that they triumphally permit the desecration of one divine being at the expense of another speaks to the hall of mirrors the Egyptians constructed: when they looked at a god, they saw themselves.
Unlike the gods of the Egyptians, the God of Israel does not tolerate the Israelites’ dismissal of social suffering in its community. When this takes place, we are not permitted to attribute this suffering to dangerous outside forces that are not to be trusted. We are only allowed to ask: What internal systemic problem is this crisis the result of? What does this tell us about the health of our community?
If we are to ask what the internal systemic problem the crises this past week are a result from, the answer is very simple. We silo women into their own category so that we can ignore the problem that women are not treated with integrity. When something goes terribly wrong – when a woman is raped, when she complains about the assault and is ignored, when she is bribed into silence – the most important question is rarely asked:
What are we doing as a community that is protecting and facilitating this sin?
Instead of asking this question, we follow Pharaoh’s example by engaging in self-worship. The sin at hand is recognized, but treated as a perversion, a blight, an external impairment that attacks from the outside, and not as a cancer that grows within. The sin is taken as a tragedy that is peripheral to our identity and one that has nothing to say about our community. We cut off the perpetrating source. We write petitions and rip up books and make promises and talk to ourselves. But mostly, we ignore the question of how the source germinated and took root in the body itself.
We do not treat abuse against women as a central crisis which every leader of our community needs to solve. The reason for this is that we don’t treat women as central to our community. Like the ancient Egyptians’ treatment of the Israelites, we confuse the malady with the victim. We insist that what is broken is something that our corporal body can survive without. We cannot face the possibility that the suffering before us is suffering that we have caused, suffering that represents something deeply broken, suffering of the heart. We silo sexual abuse and sexual misconduct into its own category because we silo women into their own category. We treat problems related to women as problems unrelated to everything around it. The only way to solve the question of women’s welfare in the Jewish community is to stop treating women as a separate category.
Looking straight at women’s roles only exacerbates the problem because treating women’s problems as belonging to women continues to isolate it. Like illusory floaters that one might see in their peripheral vision, but which moves when they try to look it in the face, talking about the “woman question” – whether in the contexts of the abuse of women, or the study of women or the legal practices around women – only exacerbates the problem by turning women’s issues into something separate, outside, unrelated to who we are.
Something has gone very wrong, and now we stand at a fork in the road. Will we insist, like Pharaoh, that there cannot be something wrong with our own system, that the problem must lie with the evil individual who was not created by us but colonized us, perpetrating our pure authentic ancient normative system, will we treat the incident as an aberrance, will we perceive this human suffering as having nothing to do with us, will we ignore the patterns of history and sit tight until the next crisis, until the next rape, until the next suicide of a teenage girl whose voice wasn’t heard? The way to talk about women is to stop talking about women as a category, and to see the suffering of those in are community as reflective of a systemic internal problem. Healing will begin when we stop talking about the physical welfare of women as an issue sequestered, and start talking about the spiritual welfare of our community. The call to self-interrogate lies, to treat every person as a meaningful member of our community, lies at the heart of our nationhood. We don’t see patterns when problems occur with women because we think of women as being separate. To refuse to self-interrogate, to consider how crises in our community might reflect systemic problems that we perpetuate, is to engage in self-worship.
The Torah calls on its readers to look for patterns in history, and in society, to look for patterns of sin and suffering, to take responsibility for these patterns, rather than to blame human outsiders or divine outsiders for this suffering. As inheritors of the covenant, we are called upon to humble ourselves in the encounter with the Unknowable, to recognize that human power is an illusion, but that human suffering is anything but illusory. We are called to affirm the truth that to deny the reality of human suffering, and to deny our role in perpetuating it, is the gravest of sins. To recognize this is to experience true redemption.