Parshas Vaera
The Three Great Lessons
For this time I shall send all My plagues against your heart, and upon
your servants and your people, sot that you shall know that there is none
like Me in all the world.{1}
Rashi: “All my plagues” refers to the killing of the firstborn, which had
the equivalent effect of all the other makos combined.
Maharal: Why would the Torah make reference to makas bechoros in a verse
that introduces the plague of hail? Because of this question, some wish to
explain that bechoros does not mean the firstborn sons, but the first
fruits. In other words, Moshe warns that all produce that appeared and
ripened early (bechoros of the field, so to speak) would be stricken by the
plague of hail, in contradistinction to late-ripening produce that would
survive. But this explanation suffers from a different weakness. Why the
ominous warning about the severity of this makah? Why would the plague of
hail in and of itself visit as much destruction upon the Egyptians as all
the plagues combined? And if it somehow was to be experienced that way, why
was it not successful in convincing the Egyptians to let go of their
stubbornness? Why would the lesser plagues that followed succeed while the
super-plague of hail failed?
One possibility is that “this time” does not refer to the plague at hand,
but to the issue at hand, namely Paroh’s refusal to let the Jews leave. It
is as if Hashem said, “Listen here. You have refused to be moved one time
too many. You might be taking comfort in that the plague of dever targeted
animals, and not people. You may believe that I will not apply more pressure
and target people as well. That would be a mistake on your part. Your
present refusal is now poised to bring down upon your head the greatest of
My plagues – the death of the firstborn. This will not happen immediately.
It will be preceded by a number of other plagues, whose purpose is to
demonstrate that I can do what no one has ever seen; beginning with a plague
of hail whose destruction surpasses anything in memory. These dramatic
demonstrations will all culminate, however, in the one that will finally
cause you to relent – makas bechoros.”
Alternatively, “this time” refers to the next plague to be visited upon
them, together with those that follow. They form a logical entity, just as
the six plagues that occurred previously formed two other such groups. “This
time” refers to the third of three groups of plagues. Each group carried a
different message to the Egyptians. The final group demonstrated the extent
of His power.
The sequence of groups follows:
During the first plagues, Paroh rejected the notion of Hashem’s very
existence. He obstinately believed that they could be explained without
invoking G-d as their cause. Thus, he called in his magicians to replicate
their effect. When they were unable to produce lice, they conceded that a
greater Power stood behind the plague: “It is the finger of G-d!”{2}
The general sweep on the first plagues, however, showed no sharp distinction
between people in the stricken areas. The Egyptians could not see, as it
were, the Hand of G-d punishing the guilty and sparing the innocent. These
makos, then, left much room for error, for imagining that Hashem’s
Providence did not reach to the individual level. Perhaps His actions
differentiated only between large groups, but not between individuals. The
second group of plagues however, sharply differentiated between Jew and
Egyptian, culminating in Paroh’s realization that “I, Hashem, am in the
midst of the land.” {3} Paroh could now discern that His Providence extended to
treating every individual differently.
While the second group demonstrated His presence in the affairs of our
world, it did not make the case for His uniqueness, His unity, His oneness.
The fullness of his power and ability – an outgrowth of His oneness that
encompasses all things and all phenomena within Him – became apparent only
in the third set of makos. Those makos did the unimaginable, such as
allowing fire and water to coexist with a hailstone. Only a G-d Who created
all forces could bring peace between polar opposites. Thus, the summary
statement of this set is “so that you will know that there is none like Me
in all the land.”
These three sets of makos are familiar to us through their famous acronym in
the Pesach Haggadah: דצ"ך עד"ש באח"ב. R. Yehuda divided up the makos this
way to emphasize the three basic lessons about Hashem (existence,
providence, ability) that He taught Klal Yisrael just as the Jewish people
were ready to step out into the world as a national entity forged in emunah..
1.Based on Gur Aryeh, Shemos 9:14
2. Shemos 8:15
3. Shemos 8:18