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Show Notes
The Ten Plagues — A War Against the Gods of Egypt
Most people read the Ten Plagues as punishments. That is true—but it is not the whole truth. The Torah itself says, “וּבְכָל־אֱלֹהֵי מִצְרַיִם אֶעֱשֶׂה שְׁפָטִים”—“Against all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgment.” This was not merely a contest between Moshe and Pharaoh, or even between Israel and Egypt. It was a direct assault on the entire Egyptian worldview. The Nile, the earth, the animals, the sky, the sun, even Pharaoh himself—everything Egypt trusted, feared, and worshipped was exposed, one plague at a time, as powerless before HaShem.
In this morning’s Breakfast & a Class, we examine the plagues not as random blows, but as a systematic war against illusion, idolatry, and false power. Each makah was a message. Each strike tore down another pillar of Egyptian belief and showed that what looked permanent, natural, and divine was nothing of the sort. And that is the deeper purpose of Yetziat Mitzrayim: not only to take the Jews out of Egypt, but to take Egypt out of the Jews. Because redemption is not complete when you leave the place of bondage. It is complete when you stop believing in the gods of the place that enslaved you.