After
securing Moses’ agreement to do his part in freeing the Israelites, God checks
in with Moses’ brother Aaron and tells him to go out to meet Moses. So they
meet up, and Moses explains the marching orders to his brother. Then they go
and meet up with the elders of Israel and do their little magic show to
convince them to go along.
Next
stop is Pharaoh, to inform him that Yahweh has given orders that the Israelites
are to go out into the wilderness for three days to worship him. Pharaoh is
like “Who’s this Yahweh character, and
why should I care what he has to say?” Then he goes on to say that clearly the
Israelites clearly have too much time on their hands if they’re worried about
taking three days off to worship their god, so the solution is to give them more
work to do. So he orders the overseers, who had previously supplied the
Israelites with straw to use in making bricks, to tell the slaves to gather
their own damn straw without lowering the brick quota at all. Then he had the
Israelite foremen beaten when they couldn’t keep up with the work. The result
was that the Israelites got pissed at Moses and Aaron for bringing the
punishment on them.
So Moses
turns around and whines to God about about how could he bring such evil on his
people. And God basically says words to the effect of “Just you wait. I’m a
total badass and I’m about to bust Pharaoh up something good. Then you guys
will finally get the land of Canaan that I promised your ancestors. Go tell the
Israelites that,” (except that in the Bible he takes a lot more words to say
it). But the Israelites didn’t believe it because the Egyptians had crushed
their spirits.
God then
tells Moses to go back to Pharaoh to demand his people’s release again. Moses
protests that if the Israelites won’t even believe him, how the hell will he
convince Pharaoh? But God will hear nothing of it, and sends him anyway.
Next,
totally out of the blue, the narrative is interrupted to spend about fifteen
verses on the genealogy of Moses and Aaron. And when the text finally gets back
to God sending Moses and Aaron to talk to Pharaoh we get this verse:
“Ex 7:1 And Yahweh said to Moses ‘See,
I have made you like God to Pharaoh, and your brother shall be your prophet. 2
You shall speak all that I command you, and your brother Aaron shall tell Pharaoh
to let the people of Israel go out of his land. 3 But I will harden Pharaoh’s
heart, and though I multiply my signs and wonders in the land of Egypt, 4
Pharaoh will not listen to you. Then I will lay my hand on Egypt and bring my
host, my people the children of Israel, out of the land of Egypt by great acts
of Judgment.’”
Remember
in my last post where I put up a verse in which God promised to take away
Pharaoh’s ability to choose to let the Israelites go, and then punish him for
not letting them go? Well, just in case you thought that verse was an anomaly,
here we see that promise repeated again. And later, you will see him explicitly
fulfill it.
Now, I’d
like you to take a moment to think about the implications. When this God
character feels he has a point to make, he is perfectly willing to fuck with
people’s minds to change their thoughts and decisions. Ironically, I’ve often
heard Christians claim that they can have absolute certainty because of God.
But this tells us the exact opposite is true – a world that contains this God
would be a world in which your thoughts and decisions can be arbitrarily
changed at the whim of this deity. And what’s more, your holy book explicitly
states that he does do this. And that he punishes people for the decisions that
he forces them to make! This is an arbitrary, horrific, Orwellian nightmare of
a world!
Speaking
of Orwell, how many of you have read 1984? There’s a scene where the bad
guy is explaining to the protagonist about how the most important thing in the world
is power. He then goes on to say that it is by making people suffer that you
demonstrate power, because they would wish to stop you from doing it and be
unable to. Think about that as we go through the Exodus story, because it’s
pretty much the same philosophy.
Back to
the Bible: Moses and Aaron go back to the Pharaoh who demands that they prove
they represent their god by performing a miracle. So Aaron throws down his
staff and it becomes a snake. But Pharaoh’s magicians turn their own staffs
into snakes to show that there’s nothing special about Aaron’s trick. And even
though Aaron’s snake then eats theirs, the Pharaoh remains unconvinced.
Now we
start getting into the plagues. God has Moses and Aaron confront Pharaoh in the
morning when he goes down to the river and wave their staff over the Nile to
turn it to blood. Which they do. And according to the text not only does all
the water in the Nile turn to blood but so does all the water throughout Egypt “even
in vessels of wood and in vessels of stone,” (Ex 7:19) But then the Pharaoh’s
magicians “did the same by their secret arts’ (Ex 7:22), though how the hell
they could turn all the water in Egypt into blood when all the water in Egypt
was already blood is never really explained (because the author is a crap
storyteller, as I may already have mentioned). So Pharaoh is unconvinced of Yahweh’s
power and still refuses to let the Israelites go.
Seven
days later, Yahweh orders Moses and Aaron to go tell Pharaoh that if he doesn’t
let the people go, he will plague the land with frogs. The narrative then skips
any mention of them actually talking to Pharaoh and/or him refusing to let the
people go, jumping straight to God giving Aaron the order to commence the
plague. So Aaron waves his staff about, plagues of frogs wash over the land,
and then the Pharaoh’s magicians do the same thing again (how the hell did anyone
tell the difference between Yahweh’s plague of frogs and the magicians’ plague
of frogs?).
Pharaoh
then calls in Moses and Aaron and tells them he’ll let the Israelites go make their
sacrifices to God if they’ll plead with Yahweh to end the plague of frogs. So
they plead with God, he kills all the frogs (leaving everyone to clean up
mounds of rotting frog corpses), and Pharaoh immediately reneges on his word.
So
Yahweh orders Moses to tell Aaron to strike the dust of the earth with his
staff and turn it into gnats. Which he does. The magicians, who are able to
turns vast quantities of water into blood and produces plagues of frogs, for
some reason are unable to make gnats. So now they finally believe the plagues
are from God because Moses and Aaron had a trick they didn’t. But Pharaoh still
wouldn’t listen.
Next
came the plague of flies. And now Pharaoh seems to be bending – he tries to
negotiate with Moses and Aaron by saying the Israelites can take time off to
make their sacrifices, they just aren’t allowed to leave Egypt to do it. Moses
replies that their sacrifices are so repugnant to the Egyptian people that they’d
be stoned to death if they did them where the Egyptians could see, so they
really do need to leave Egypt to do them. Pharaoh acquiesces, Moses talks to
God, and the plague of flies ends. Then the Pharaoh goes back on his word
again. I’d say he’s being a dick and/or exceptionally thick, but recall that
these constant refusals are the result of God “hardening his heart.”
So
Yahweh sends Moses and Aaron to warn Pharaoh that he’s going to kill all the
Egyptian livestock. Which he does, while sparing all the Israelite livestock.
Of course, Pharaoh the meat puppet continues to play his role and refuse to let
the Israelites go.
Next,
Moses and Aaron are sent to Pharaoh with handfuls of soot from a kiln, which
they throw up in the air and it spreads out over all of Egypt, causing everyone
it touches to erupt into boils. After which:
“Ex 9:12 But Yahweh hardened the
heart of Pharaoh, and he did not listen to them, as Yahweh had spoken to Moses.”
These
repeated warnings and demands issued to Pharaoh have become a sad farce. A
stupid, scripted little puppet play in which Yahweh sends Moses and Aaron to
issue demands and punishments to a man whom Yahweh himself is preventing from
complying. It’s both pathetic, and sick.
The next
plague is hail, which somehow manages to kill Egyptian livestock in the fields
despite the fact that all of the Egyptian livestock was summarily killed two
plagues ago. And once again the sad farce of Pharaoh pleading with Moses to end
the plague in exchange for letting the Israelites go sacrifice to Yahweh,
followed by Pharaoh once more having his heart hardened and going back on the
promise so Yahweh can punish him some more.
I can’t
believe there are people who find this shit inspirational.
Eighth
plague. Unheeded warning issued to Pharaoh, plague of locusts devour all the
crops, Pharaoh pleads for plague to end, plague ends, Yahweh makes Pharaoh go
back on his word yet again. Do you see yet why I found this book so depressing?
Ninth
plague is darkness. Lather, rinse, repeat.
If you’re
at all familiar with the story, you know what’s coming. If not, wait for tomorrow
– I’ve typed long enough for today, and frankly it’s starting to get me down.
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