The
last three plagues prior to the Exodus from Egypt came with a deeper
awareness of the Creator as the One and only cause and effect of His
Creation.
Each
plague corresponds to a particular level of consciousness that we
must awaken in order to have a complete awareness of Him in our life
and in the material world. We are His creatures, and anything we may
think or believe we are or have comes from Him and belongs to Him:
“Naked I came from my mother's womb, and naked I will depart. The
Lord gave and the Lord has taken away, may the Name of the Lord be
praised.” (Job 1:21) and this is the first step to start the
process of getting to know Him.
The
plague of the locusts represents the Creator's ownership of our
nourishment both material and spiritual, and the verse of its arrival
is juxtaposed to His Commandment for Israel to serve Him:
“Let
My people go, and they will serve Me. For if you refuse to let [them]
go, behold, tomorrow I am going to bring locusts into your borders.”
(Exodus 10:3-4)
The
awareness of His absolute ownership and control is a premise to
relate to Him according to His will, which is to serve Him. The main
obstacle to assimilate and adopt this premise is ego and its desires,
represented by Pharaoh and Egypt. The following plague, darkness, is
the material and spiritual experience of the complete absence of
God's Presence in our consciousness, which is also a direct
consequence of ego's blindness to give in to God's Love from where
His Creation comes:
“They
[the Egyptians] did not see each other, and no one rose [moved] from
his place for three days; but for all the children of Israel there
was light in their dwellings.” (10:23)
This
awareness (the Light in the dwellings of the Israelites) of God's
Presence in His Creation makes the difference between darkness and
Light. In this context ego is one dimension of consciousness that we
also must direct to our full awareness of the Creator's will:
“And
Moses said [to Pharaoh], 'You too shall give sacrifices and burnt
offerings into our hands, and we will make them for the Lord our
God'.” (10:25)
In
our positive actions and deeds (“our hands”) we serve and honor
God's Love, and ego is successfully directed not by good intentions
but by good deeds. When we act in Love's ways and attributes, our
positive actions don't leave any room for materialistic fantasies and
illusions. These seduce ego to take control of our life and lead us
back to darkness, where we can't see beyond ourselves.
Darkness
is the result of ego's agenda to make the world spin around its
desires. In this sense, darkness is the worst of all the plagues
because it prevents us to see beyond of who we think we are. In
darkness we are really lost, and in this predicament we have no
choice but to seek the Light in order to be truly redeemed. This was
the Creator's preordained experience for us to move our consciousness
towards the Truth. Our Sages teach that the darkness of exile is the
beginning to search for the Light of Redemption.
The
tenth and final plague is the death of the firstborn of those who
denied the Creator's ownership of His Creation. The firstborn
represents our primary intention in life along with its values,
principles and goals, like the first fruits of the land that we must
bring as offerings in the Temple. The Egyptians' firstborns were
inexorably dedicated to submit their lives to materialism without
creating anything beyond the futility of ego's illusions.
The
firstborn is the first expansion of our human essence, as a
reaffirmation of God's Love as the cause and effect of everything,
including life. In this sense, we have to consecrate such expansion
to Love's ways and attributes as the material manifestations of God's
Love:
“Sanctify
to Me every firstborn, every one that opens the womb among the
children of Israel, among man and among animals; it is Mine.”
(13:2)
After
all, everything belongs to Him. When we consecrate our extensions to
ego's rule we are indeed “dead” before God's Love. The experience
of our closeness to God's Love is the beginning of our freedom, and
it is our first Commandment as Jews to commemorate the first of the
months as a memorial of our liberation from darkness. The New Moon as
the beginning of the months (see our commentary on Hanukah in
December 2011 in this blog)
because we realize our true Essence and identity when we reveal Light
out of darkness:
“And
this day shall be for you as a memorial, and you shall celebrate it
as a festival for the Lord; throughout your generations, you shall
celebrate it as an everlasting statute.” (12:14)
This
is the experience and legacy of our exile and bondage in darkness: to
live the blessing of revealing
Light
as our true identity when we cry out loud to God's Love to lead every
aspect and dimension of consciousness in His ways and attributes.
Mystic Sages explain that the seven-day period to celebrate Pesach
and Succot represents a continuing process through which we correct
and elevate the seven primordial emotions known as loving
kindness as
compassion, power
as
self-control, truthfulness
as
enlightenment, perseverance as triumph,
honor as glory,
righteousness
as the foundation
of
justice, and prevalence as sovereignty.
When
we are committed to practice these qualities on a daily basis as a
moment to moment expression or our true identity, we are serving the
Creator in order to fully reveal His Presence in the material world.
This
knowledge we must have every moment, not only as a Commandment: “And
it shall be for a sign upon your hand (in what we do) and for
ornaments between your eyes (in what we think, see and learn), for
with a mighty hand did the Lord take us out of Egypt.” (13:16)
The
permanent awareness of God's Love as our Creator and sole owner of
all that exists. This includes the Light He gives us to return to Him
when we realize that we don't belong to darkness in the realm of
illusion, but to His Love as the realm of Truth. As individuals we
must have the courage to “come to Pharaoh (ego)” and confront it
with the full awareness that Love is the real ruler of life from its
beginning to its end, as God's Love is the ruler of His Creation.
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