Shemot Summaries
Shemot 5770-2010"In Those Days, In These Times" In a single generation, unbridled adulation for Joseph turns into the enslavement of the entire Jewish people. How did it happen? Are Jews possibly facing a similar future in North America today? link to full |
Shemot 5769-2008 In parashat Shemot, Moses seems to disagree with, indeed contradict, G-d. Despite G-d’s explicit statement that, “They shall harken to thy voice,” Moses responds, that “They will not believe me, nor harken to my voice.” Our rabbis struggle over whether Moses spoke to G-d unbeffitingly, or whether G-d and Moses were simply referring to different issues when they each spoke. |
Shemot 5768-2007 How did the Jews turn from acclaimed heroes in the time of Joseph into despised enemies in the period of only 100 years? Who exactly were the heroic midwives who risked their lives by defying Pharaoh and saving the Jewish male children? |
Shemot 5767-2007"The Etiquette of Evil" |
Shemot 5766-2006"And G-d Built Them Houses"
According to tradition, the midwives who refused to follow Pharaoh's orders and kill the male Hebrew children, were Jochebed and Miriam, mother and sister of Moses and Aaron. The commentaries suggest that when Scripture notes that G-d rewards them by building them "houses," it refers not to real houses, but rather to the dynasties of the Priesthood and Levites and the monarchy of King David. It is NJOP's hope that many NJOP students who never knew that they were Priests and Levites will return to their Priestly and Levitic functions, and that in the time of Messiah, the Al-mighty will see fit to choose one of those students, a descendant of the tribe of Judah, to lead His people to full redemption. Link to full |
Shemot 5765-2005"In the Merit of Miriam"
In this week's parasha we learn of the birth and development of Moses. We also learn, albeit anonymously, of his mother, father and sister. The Midrash however builds up the role of Miriam (Moses's sister), portraying her as a formidable savior and heroine of her people. Link to full |
Shemot 5764-2004"The Message of the Burning Bush"
Why does G-d choose to reveal Himself to the world's greatest prophet from the midst of a burning bush? What lessons reside in the endowments of a small thornbush that are reflected in the manifestation of the Divine presence? It is a message of humility on G-d's part, and a means of elevating all of His people. Link to full |
Shemot 5763-2003 Who is the child Moses and how does he merit to become the “savior” of Israel? Both the biblical texts and the Midrashic elaborations give us hints to help us understand how a child who is raised in Pharaoh’s court, becomes a devoted and dynamic Jewish leader. The fact that he is raised by his biological mother, Yocheved, until he is weaned, is undoubtedly a critical factor. Although tradition is purposely ambiguous, Moses not only receives his rearing from his mother and his sister as a young child, but also from Bitya, the daughter of Pharaoh, who may very well be the secret heroine in Moses’s life and consequently a key player in the destiny of the Jewish people. |
Shemot 5762-2002 Moses has been summoned by G-d at the burning bush to return to Egypt and lead the people of Israel out of Egypt. Beginning his journey back to the land of Pharaoh together with his wife and his sons, he stops at an inn where he is encountered by G-d, who seeks to kill him. Moses’s wife immediately takes a flint stone and circumscizes the youngest child. What is the message that is communicated by this strange and eerie encounter? |
Shemot 5761-2001 When the sons of Jacob and their families arrive in Egypt, they are sent to live separately from the Egyptians in the land of Goshen. Nevertheless, Pharaoh and the Egyptians are threatened by them and decide to deal wisely with the Jews, eventually resulting in the Hebrews’ brutal enslavement. How was Pharaoh able to convince the Egyptian citizens to enslave the Jews, descendants of Joseph, who, less than 100 years before, had saved all the Egyptian people from starvation? |
Shemot 5760-2000 “Give me four years to teach the children, and the seed I will have sown will never be uprooted.” Thus spoke the communist leader, V.I. Lenin. Could it be that Moses’s formative rearing at the hands of his mother Yocheved and sister Miriam made the difference? It is highly probable that his early childhood experience, supplemented by his stepmother Bitya’s effective rearing, leads to Moses’s exalted sense of Jewish identity and his emergence as a great Jewish leader. |