Irreligious Fearers of God
Rabbi Yaakov Bieler
Parshat VaEira, 5764
During the course of the seventh plague, hail, the Tora makes reference to the “fearers of God” among the servants of Pharoah (Exodus 9:20). These people take the precaution of seeking shelter for their slaves and animals, thereby saving their property from being destroyed by the supernatural hailstorm that is unleashed against
Amos Chacham, in Da’at Mikra, does not think that the group of people being referred to as God fearing is being singled out for any particularly remarkable theological position. “The implication of the phrase “HaYareh Et Devar HaShem” simply refers to those who had suspicions and worries that the Divine Predictions concerning the hail would come true, but there is no inherent assumption that there was acknowledgement on the parts of these people of the Divinity of the Jewish God.” (2)
Meshech Chachma posits that Pharoah’s representatives and servants, as an act of bravado and defiance against the warning about the impending hail, were insisting that everyone ignore Moshe’s threat and refuse to bring their slaves and animals in out of the fields. 9:20 then refers to the group of individuals who decided to heed God’s Warning rather than the instructions that they were receiving from Pharoah’s minions. It is possible that members of the same group who ended up heeding Moshe’s predictions and saving their property, are the people who later say to Pharoah (10:7) “For how long will this (the policy refusing to permit the Jews to leave (3)) be for us a trap? Send forth the men and allow them to serve ‘Yud-Keh-Vav-Keh’ their god. Do you not yet know that Egypt is lost?” However, it is still possible to maintain Da’at Mikra’s point that these decisions were pragmatic rather than theological in nature.
A far more compelling and evocative interpretation with regard to who is being referred to by the phrase in question, this time with clear theological implications, is found in Talmud Yerushalmi Masechet Sota 5:6. “R. Yishmael taught: Iyov (Job) was one of the servants of Pharoah and an influential member of his court. The Tora says in this instance, ‘HaYareh Et Devar HaShem’ and with respect to Iyov is written, (1:8) ‘Ish Tam VeYashar Yareh Elokim VeSar MeiRa (a man who was whole and good, FEARER OF GOD and removed from evil).’” Consequently, the Aggada understands the text as referring to a single individual, rather than to an entire group of people. “HaYareh” lends itself to be understood as not only possibly connoting a generic trait shared by many individuals, i.e., “those who fear” but also the singular, representing a single example, i.e., “the one who fears”. (4)
In fact, several Rabbinic sources place the mysterious Iyov (5) in the period of the Egyptian exile. A particularly well-known Midrash suggesting a connection between Iyov and Pharoah appears in Shemot Rabba 1:9. “Said R. Chiya in the name of R. Simon: ‘Three participated in that consultation (see Shemot 1:10), Bila’am, Iyov, and Yitro. Bila’am who contributed advice, was eventually killed (6); Iyov who remained silent, was judged to undergo afflictions as a punishment for his lack of protest (7); Yitro who fled (8), his children received reward and they sat in the Office of Hewn Stone (Divrei HaYamim I 2:55; Shoftim 1:16).”
Yet, I would argue that more sharply drawn lessons for contemporary life can be derived if we accept Amos Chacham’s and Meshech Chachma’s contention that we are dealing with an entire cadre of individuals, rather than a single person, in light of the following Rabbinic source. This Midrash exacerbates the role played by Pharoah’s God-fearing servants when it attributes to them a significant part in the pursuit of the Jews that culminates with the destruction of Pharoah and his horsemen at Yam Suf. Midrash Tanchuma, Parshat BeShalach #8: (on Shemot 14:7) relates the following: “And he (Pharoah) took 600 choice chariots”—Whose were the horses (that pulled these chariots)? If you say that they belonged to the Egyptians, it already stated, (9:6) “And all of the herds of Egypt died.” If you say that these were Pharoah’s animals, it already stated, (9:3) “The Hand of God will be raised against your herds.” And if you say these were the animals belonging to the Jews, it already stated, (10:26) “And also our herds will accompany us.” But rather these are the animals belonging to the “fearers of the Word of God” from amongst the servants of Pharoah. We learn therefore that the “fearers of the Word of God” proved to be a stumbling block to Israel. From here it was said, “The best of the Egyptians destroy; the best of the snakes, crush him.”
While one could maintain in the defense of the people who provided the horses that their animals were nationalized and appropriated against their will for use by the Egyptian army, the final comment in the Midrash suggests that they were willing participants in the pursuit and intended to aid and abet the destruction of the fleeing Jews. Such an approach would render the term “fearers of the Word of God” as little more than cynical and self-serving. If what motivates religious observance is the avoidance of negative consequences, then as soon as fear of such consequences is mitigated, irreligious and even anti-religious courses of action become options.
Furthermore, as soon as one additionally considers that the fearers of God among Pharoah’s servants were not low-level functionaries, but rather advisors to his inner court, individuals who had reputations for being morally exemplary in terms of their personal lives, questions arise not only regarding their role in offering animals to Pharoah’s cavalry. Understanding how these same individuals denoted as God-fearing could quietly stand by while the Jewish people were systematically maltreated in a steadily escalating fashion, becomes quite difficult. Should we attribute this phenomenon to compartmentalization, i.e., their professional lives were starkly separated from their religious and ethical sensibilities, so that they would be able to rise through the ranks and attain power and prestige? Did they feel that they had to judiciously decide where and when to fight their battles with regard to trying to insert higher standards of ethical conduct within government procedures, and a calculation was made that this was not achievable within the context of official policy as to how the Jews were to be treated in Egypt? Did these people suffer from a type of xenophobia which allowed them to adopt a double standard concerning how their Egyptian native countrymen, as opposed to Jewish immigrants deserved to be treated? Hannah Arendt’s discussion of the banality of evil regarding the Nazi bureaucrats who participated in the Final Solution comes starkly to mind when reflecting on these “Yarei Et Devar HaShem”.
Shabbat Shalom, and let us strive for the type of Yirat HaShem that does not only serve our personal interests of survival and acquisition and retention of property, but propels us to always do that which is “Right and Good in the Eyes of God” (Devarim 6:18).
(1) See e.g., Beraishit 20:3, 11; 21:17, 19, 22; 23:6; 31:24, 50; 41:16, 25, 28, 32, 38, 39; 42:18*; 44:16*; Shemot 1:17**; 8:15; BaMidbar 22:9, 10, 12, 20. (*Although Yosef is involved in these two verses, this is before he has identified himself as Yaakov’s lost son, and is playing the role of an Egyptian. **There is a controversy concerning whether the midwives were Jewish or Egyptian. If the latter is the case, then the use of Elokim would be consistent with other instances of non-Jews’ interactions with the Jewish God.)
(2) The individuals being described could be said to be comparable to ChaZaL’s depiction of
(3) Rabbeinu Bachaye suggests two other possible interpretations for the pronoun “Zeh” (this): Moshe; HaShem, in the sense of “Zeh Keili VeAnveihu” (This is My God and I will glorify Him) (Shemot 15:2).
(4) Other instances where the Rabbis prefer to understand the text as describing a single individual or very few individuals, as opposed to a larger group, include:
a) RaShI on Beraishit 14:14, where it is maintained that rather than taking with him a large retinue of soldiers to fight against the kings that had captured
b) Beraishit 37:19; 42:21, 28 where even though the pronouns could refer to any one of Yaakov’s sons, the Rabbis claim that the chief plotters are Shimon and Levi in light of what they did to Shechem in 34:25;
c) Shemot 2:13; 14:11; 16:20,27 which all could refer to just about anyone in the Jewish encampment, are understood by ChaZaL as referring to Datan and Aviram, a pair of individuals who cause Moshe problems during the rebellion of Korach in BaMidbar 16:1, 24, 25.
On the one hand, there is a certain satisfaction of being able to connect a name to an ambiguous pronoun and be able to put a specific action into a broader context once the identity of the perpetrator(s) is established. On the other hand, by removing the anonymity from negative events, the Rabbis are suggesting that the actual “rotten apples” were fewer than might otherwise have been surmised, with the same limited number of troublemakers acting out time and again. In the case of something good, as with Eliezer, this interpretation heightens the miraculous nature of the event.
(5) Bava Batra 15a-b places Iyov during the times of Moshe, the spies, the judges, Achashveirosh, the Queen of Sheba, Yaakov, etc. In the book of Iyov, no clear indication is given during which he period he might have lived, and the Talmud even entertains the possibility that he in fact never existed, but was a figment of the imagination in an epic parable.
(6) BaMidbar 31:8. Bila’am dying in the war with Midian suggested to the Rabbis that it was his idea to try to corrupt the Jews by means of seducing them to engage in idolatry by means of sexual seduction on the part of the daughters of Midian and Moav (BaMidbar 25, particularly verses 1and 6). The Midrashic train of thought assumes that if Bila’am was active in advising how to destroy the Jews at this later juncture, he could have been equally involved in the Egyptian plotting against the Jews at the beginning of Shemot.
(7) In addition to simply understanding the afflictions as a punishment for Iyov’s not standing up for justice and morality—his silence could have been attributable to his not wishing to oppose Pharoah and thereby endanger his privileged status within the court—there might be a literary parallelism with respect to his relative loquaciousness in the book of Iyov, compared to the silence that is attributed to him when life-and-death decisions were being made in Pharoah’s cabinet.
(8) Yitro’s potential for serving as a valued advisor is exemplified in Shemot 18. The fact that his descendents serve in the Sanhedrin whose seat while the Beit HaMikdash was functioning was in the Lishkat HaGazit, further parallels the advice that he gave Moshe concerning a restructuring of judicial procedures. It is also of interest to note that he does not remain as an advisor for the Jewish people either, according to one set of interpretations of Shemot 18:27 and BaMidbar 10:30.