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Pharaoh saw that there was a relief, and kept making his heart stubborn. He did not heed them. (8:11)

Every time Pharaoh was down and the plagues were getting to him, he ran to Moshe Rabbeinu and implored him to pray to Hashem.  The instant he experienced relief, he forgot who Moshe was, he forgot that Hashem could just as well send another devastating plague.  He did not care.  He experienced relief at that moment.  The Midrash claims that this is the way of the wicked.  When it hurts, they cry.  When circumstances change and life becomes tolerable, they forget about Hashem and immediately proceed to revert to their old ways. One of the gedolei ha’mussar after citing this…

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Aharon cast down his staff before Pharaoh…and it became a snake…and they too, the magicians of Egypt, did so with their incantations…and the staff of Aharon swallowed their staffs. (7:10, 11, 12)

Moshe came before Pharaoh and demanded that the Jews be released from slavery, so that they might serve Hashem.  Pharaoh responded in the expected manner, questioning who is Hashem who is and what powers He has that would impress him.  Moshe asked Aharon to throw his staff down before Pharaoh, and it was transformed into a snake.  Pharaoh was not impressed.  Indeed, he called out his magicians, who duplicated Aharon’s miracle.  Egypt was the center of magic and necromancy.  Such a feat was child’s play for the Egyptians.  To prove this point, Pharaoh called out his wife, who transformed a…

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I shall take you out from under the burdens of Egypt…and I shall redeem you. (6:6)

It was not enough that Hashem was prepared to take the Jews out of Egypt; it was also necessary for them to want to leave.  Perhaps they had become complacent with their way of life, albeit miserable, but it was the only one they knew.  Indeed, they might even have wanted to stay in Egypt.  They might not have been able to accept a lifestyle so different from their accustomed one.  The story is told about Horav Nochum M’Chernobel, who once spent a night at an inn owned by a Jewish couple.  It was chatzos, midnight, when Rav Nachum arose…

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Hashem spoke to Moshe and said to him, “I am Hashem.” (6:2)

The opening pasuk of this week’s parsha serves as a response to Moshe Rabbeinu’s question/demand of Hashem which ended the previous parsha.  Moshe asked Hashem why He intensified Klal Yisroel’s workload after his arrival in Egypt as Hashem’s emissary.  It is as if his arrival had made things worse.  Hashem said to Moshe, “I am Hashem,” which is interpreted to mean that Hashem has a cheshbon, reckoning, for everything that occurs.  Pharaoh will receive his punishment in due time.  Moshe’s arrival in Egypt had a specific purpose – even if Moshe did not understand the implications.   In truth, the response…

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