Moses’ second
question to G‑d at the burning bush was, Who are you? “So I will go to the
Israelites and say, ‘Your fathers’ G‑d sent me to you.’ They will immediately
ask me what His name is. What shall I say to them?”1 G‑d’s
reply, Ehyeh asher ehyeh, wrongly translated in almost every Christian
Bible as something like “I am that I am,” deserves an essay in its own right (I
deal with it in my books Future Tense and The Great Partnership).
His first
question, though, was, Mi anochi2,
“Who am I?”
“Who
am I that I should go to Pharaoh?” said Moses to G‑d. “And how can I possibly
get the Israelites out of Egypt?” On the surface the meaning is clear. Moses is
asking two things. The first: who I am to be worthy of so great a mission? The
second: how can I possibly succeed?
G‑d
answers the second. “Because I will be with you.” You will succeed because I am
not asking you to do it alone. I am not really asking you to do it at all. I
will be doing it for you. I want you to be My representative, My mouthpiece, My
emissary and My voice.
…the people who turn out to be the most worthy are the ones who deny they are worthy at all.
G‑d
never answered the first question. Perhaps in a strange way Moses answered
himself. In Tanakh as a whole, the people who turn out to be the most worthy
are the ones who deny they are worthy at all. The prophet Isaiah, when charged
with his mission, said, ‘I am a man of unclean lips3’.
Jeremiah said, ‘I cannot speak, for I am a child’4. David,
Israel’s greatest king, echoed Moses’ words, ‘Who am I?5’. Jonah,
sent on a mission by G‑d, tried to run away. According to Rashbam, Jacob was
about to run away when he found his way blocked by the man/angel with whom he
wrestled at night6.
The heroes of the
Bible are not figures from Greek or any other kind of mythology. They are not
people possessed of a sense of destiny, determined from an early age to achieve
fame. They do not have what the Greeks called megalopsychia, a proper
sense of their own worth, a gracious and lightly worn superiority. They did not
go to Eton or Oxford. They were not born to rule. They were people who doubted
their own abilities. There were times when they felt like giving up. Moses,
Elijah, Jeremiah and Jonah reached points of such despair that they prayed to
die. They became heroes of the moral life against their will. There was work to
be done – G‑d told them so – and they did it. It is almost as if a sense of
smallness is a sign of greatness. So G‑d never answered Moses’ question, “Why
me?”
But there is
another question within the question. “Who am I?” can be not just a
question about worthiness. It can also be a question about identity. Moses,
alone on Mount Horeb/Sinai, summoned by G‑d to lead the Israelites out of
Egypt, is not just speaking to G‑d when he says those words. He is also
speaking to himself. “Who am I?”
He may have been Jewish by birth, but he had not suffered the fate of his people.
There are two
possible answers. The first: Moses is a prince of Egypt. He had been adopted as
a baby by Pharaoh’s daughter. He had grown up in the royal palace. He dressed
like an Egyptian, looked and spoke like an Egyptian. When he rescued Jethro’s
daughters from some rough shepherds, they go back and tell their father, “An
Egyptian saved us7.”
His very name, Moses, was given to him by Pharaoh’s daughter8. It was,
presumably, an Egyptian name (in fact, Moses, as in Ramses, is the
ancient Egyptian word for “child”. The etymology given in the Torah, that Moses
means “I drew him from the water,” tells us what the word suggested to Hebrew
speakers). So the first answer is that Moses was an Egyptian prince.
The second was
that he was a Midianite. For, although he was Egyptian by upbringing, he had
been forced to leave. He had made his home in Midian, married a Midianite woman
Zipporah, daughter of a Midianite priest and was “content to live” there,
quietly as a shepherd. We tend to forget that he spent many years there. He
left Egypt as a young man and was already eighty years old at the start of his
mission when he first stood before Pharaoh9. He must
have spent the overwhelming majority of his adult life in Midian, far away from
the Israelites on the one hand and the Egyptians on the other. Moses was a
Midianite.
So when Moses
asks, “Who am I?” it is not just that he feels himself unworthy. He feels
himself uninvolved. He may have been Jewish by birth, but he had not suffered
the fate of his people. He had not grown up as a Jew. He had not lived among
Jews. He had good reason to doubt that the Israelites would even recognize him
as one of them. How, then, could he become their leader? More penetratingly,
why should he even think of becoming their leader? Their fate was not his. He
was not part of it. He was not responsible for it. He did not suffer from it.
He was not implicated in it.
What is more, the
one time he had actually tried to intervene in their affairs – he killed an
Egyptian taskmaster who had killed an Israelite slave, and the next day tried
to stop two Israelites from fighting one another – his intervention was not
welcomed. “Who made you ruler and judge over us?” they said to him. These are
the first recorded words of an Israelite to Moses. He had not yet dreamed of
being a leader and already his leadership was being challenged.
Consider, now, the
choices Moses faced in his life. On the one hand he could have lived as a prince
of Egypt, in luxury and at ease. That might have been his fate had he not
intervened. Even afterward, having been forced to flee, he could have lived out
his days quietly as a shepherd, at peace with the Midianite family into which
he had married. It is not surprising that when G‑d invited him to lead the
Israelites to freedom, he resisted.
Why then did he
accept? Why did G‑d know that he was the man for the task? One hint is
contained in the name he gave his first son. He called him Gershom because, he
said, “I am a stranger in a foreign land10.” He
did not feel at home in Midian. That was where he was but not who
he was.
But the real clue
is contained in an earlier verse, the prelude to his first intervention. “When
Moses was grown,
he began to go out to his own people, and he saw their hard labor11.” These
people were his people. He may have looked like an Egyptian but he knew
that ultimately he was not. It was a transforming moment, not unlike when the
Moabite Ruth said to her Israelite mother in law Naomi, “Your people will be my
people and your G‑d my G‑d12.” Ruth
was un-Jewish by birth. Moses was un-Jewish by upbringing. But both knew that
they, when they saw suffering and identified with the sufferer, they could not
walk away.
When I see my people suffer I am, and cannot be other than, Moses the Jew.
Rabbi Joseph
Soloveitchik called this a covenant of fate, brit goral. It lies at the
heart of Jewish identity to this day. There are Jews who believe and those who
don’t. There are Jews who practice and those who don’t. But there are few Jews
indeed who, when their people are suffering, can walk away saying, “This has
nothing to do with me.”
Maimonides, who
defines this as “separating yourself from the community13,” says
that it is one of the sins for which you are denied a share in the world to
come. This is what the Hagaddah means when it says of the wicked son that
“because he excludes himself from the collective, he denies a fundamental
principle of faith.” What fundamental principle of faith? Faith in the
collective fate and destiny of the Jewish people.
Who am I? asked
Moses, but in his heart he knew the answer. I am not Moses the Egyptian or
Moses the Midianite. When I see my people suffer I am, and cannot be other
than, Moses the Jew. And if that imposes responsibilities on me, then I must
shoulder them. For I am who I am because my people are who they are.
That is Jewish
identity, then and now.