I. The Impact of Darkness
“For the Egyptians, darkness is chaos, blindness, death. More strangely, for the Israelites, too, it is terror, imprisonment, blood as well as redemption.” In other words, the gloom of the night is not merely experienced by the enemy. Nor is the darkness in the Exodus story wholly virulent. There is a redemptive quality to the night."
How were the Israelites impacted by the darkness?
"Thus the Israelites, while.protected by their blood-soaked doors, are still subject to the demons of the night. This fright-filled evening is intensified by the purposeful dramatization of panic in the eating of the Pesach sacrifice. It is difficult to imagine eating at all during a night in which death-seeking angels brush by your door and loud screams emit from all corners of Egypt. Nevertheless, the Israelites are commanded to eat, and to eat in a frenzy: “This is how you shall eat it: your loins girded, your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand; and you shall eat it in haste ( b’hipazon ). It is a Passover offering to the Lord. For that night I will go through the land of Egypt and strike down every first-born in the land of Egypt..” (Exodus 12:11-13)."..Darkness has entrapped them both. However, in one house the darkness spells death and destruction, while in the other it spells the dream of a new future. The Israelites are poised on the verge of a journey. While darkness is a grave for Egypt, it also serves as the birthplace of a liberated people.
This night, pregnant with the promise of salvation, is described by the Torah as leyl shimurim , “a night of watching” (Exodus 12:42). As Ibn Ezra explains, God “watched over the Israelites and did not allow the destroyer to come into their homes.” God holds a vigil for the Israelites during this night of terror and panic. The night is, thus, redeemed. To this day, the traditional Jewish bedtime liturgy includes the comforting image of God’s constant vigil: “Behold the One Who watches over Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps” (Psalm 121: 4). Each night that holds the fear of darkness also holds the hope of God’s loving shelter."
The Gemara asks: And how does Reish Lakish interpret this verse cited by Rabbi Yoḥanan? The Gemara answers that he requires that verse for that which Rabbi Ḥanina bar Pappa taught. As Rabbi Ḥanina bar Pappa interpreted that verse in the following manner: That angel that is appointed over conception is called: Night. And that angel takes the drop of semen from which a person will be formed and presents it before the Holy One, Blessed be He, and says before Him: Master of the Universe, what will be of this drop? Will the person fashioned from it be mighty or weak? Will he be clever or stupid? Will he be wealthy or poor?
and would not destroy;
He restrained His wrath time and again
and did not give full vent to His fury;
"Interestingly, the verse with which we open the ma’ariv service is taken from a dramatic retelling of the birth of ancient Israel. For the Psalmist, destiny came calling in a cascade of miracles that sprang Israel from slavery and sustained it through the wilderness and beyond. Yet time and again Israel repaid boundless grace with vile ingratitude and betrayal. Nevertheless as our verse makes clear, the covenant goes unruptured. Compassion tempers wrath. God is willing to try again. The location of our verse near the middle of the psalm seems to imply that the historic relationship between God and Israel turns on unrequited loyalty and love. Divine compassion makes up for human frailty. By the same token, the Talmud observes that our verse (78:38) constitutes the epicenter in terms of verses of the entire Psalter, the quintessential biblical expression of an I-Thou relationship (BT Kiddushin 30a). Nothing but God’s infinite mercy can bridge the gap between our need and merit.
That faith in a compassionate Creator, I believe also helps to account for the unconventional fact that in Judaism the day as a unit of twenty-four hours begins with nightfall. It is at dawn that we are in our diurnal prime. Yet we greet the new day as our strength wanes because in the darkness we detect the light to come. With God by our side, we can defy the obvious and affirm the mystery that informs all existence.
The Pregnant Darkness- Parallels to Birth Process ( from my students!)
- staying inside a dark place
-blood on the outside
- splitting of the sea/ birth canal
- Miriam as doula! Singing, encouraging.
II. Did B'nai Yisrael Steal from the Egyptians? ( Why does G-d command deceit and theft in the process of leaving Egypt...?)
רבינו חננאל
אין שאלה זו כשאלה האמורה בכלים (פ' משפטים כ"ב י"ג) שהוא שאלה על מנת להחזיר. אלא צוה שישאלו מהם במתנה. והקדוש ב"ה יתן להם חן בעיני המצרים ויתנו להם. ואין זה גנבת דעת שיצוה בה הקדוש ב"ה חס ושלום. אבל היה הדבר מותר להם שהרי העבודה שעשו להם אין לה ערך ואין לשכר המלאכה ולשוויה סוף ותכלית.
Rabenu Hananel ( North Africa, 1,000 years ago)
This does not mean to borrow the way one would borrow an item on condition to return it. Rather, God told them to request these items as gifts.
