Shemot Ch. 9
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In this episode, we uncover a deep structural key to understanding all the plagues in Shemot: the distinction between makot—afflictive punishments—and moftim—demonstrative signs. Focusing on the plague of blood, the text presents two contradictory commands: Moshe is told to strike the Nile with his staff, while Aharon is told to stretch out his staff over all the waters of Egypt. Rather than a scribal inconsistency, this duality reflects two parallel divine actions. Moshe’s strike becomes the maka, the humanitarian disaster that destroys the Nile and deprives Egypt of drinkable water. Aharon’s action is the mofet, a ritual demonstration that invites the Egyptian magicians into a theological contest. This doubled plague becomes a blueprint for the rest of the Exodus narrative.Once this pattern is recognized, the entire plague cycle comes into focus. Makot escalate suffering and coercive pressure on Pharaoh, validating Moshe’s prophetic warnings through fulfilled disaster. Moftim, performed by Aharon, serve as public religious proofs of divine supremacy, provoking responses from the chartumim until their powers fail and they concede, “This is the finger of God.” Moshe and Aharon thus embody two modes of divine engagement: the prophet who enacts judgment and the priest who stages miraculous demonstration. Together, they form a dual strategy—affliction and revelation—that ultimately forces Egypt to acknowledge the God of Israel.