This
week’s Torah portion, Bo, takes us into the heart of darkness. It opens with the
eighth plague—swarms of locusts that darkened the land. Then Egypt is engulfed
in a “thick darkness” so palpable that it renders the Egyptians incapable
of movement for three days. All of this opaque imagery builds to the final
plague when, at the stroke of midnight, God strikes down the firstborn in every
Egyptian household. At last, as all of Egypt wails in the darkness, Pharaoh
“summoned Moses and Aaron in the night and said, ‘Up, depart from among my
people, you and the Israelites with you!’”
The darkness of Bo is
inseparable from devastation and death. It is, therefore, a source of intense
trepidation, not only for the Egyptians, but also for our Israelite
ancestors—and for us. When, on the journeys of our lives, we find ourselves
cast into dim places, we tend to reach desperately for light. The descent of
darkness shatters our illusions of control and reminds us of our own mortality.
Yet Parashat Bo reminds
us that darkness is also the incubator of hope, the place where redemption is
born. In Egypt, the Jewish people become a nation. We are conceived in the
darkness of bondage and delivered in the middle of God’s eternal night of
vigil. This ancient poem from the Passover Haggadah recounts our story of
miracles fashioned amidst the darkness: Unto
God let praise be brought / For the wonders God has wrought / At the solemn
hour of midnight.
It is natural to fear the dark.
Nightfall is frightening. Still, if we, like our forebears, wish to grow from our
experiences, we must learn to embrace the liberating power of darkness. In her
book, When the Heart Waits, Sue Monk Kidd asks: “Could it be that seeking real light comes
only by dwelling for a time in the dark? Whenever new life grows, darkness is
crucial to the process. . . . So why have we made God into a rescuer rather
than a midwife?”
Parashat Bo challenges us to imagine
God as a midwife, to embrace our night vision. The poet Theodore Roethke
writes: “In a dark time, the eye begins
to see.” In their Egyptian midnight, our terrified ancestors caught their
first glimpse of freedom. In our own midnights, we, too, begin to see—but only
if we find the faith to hold our ground despite our fear, to wait patiently in
the shadows rather than running prematurely for the light.
**********
Bruce Springsteen’s superb
fourth album, “Darkness on the Edge of Town” is an extended meditation on this
theme. Over the course of its ten
tracks, including “Something in the Night,” “Prove it All Night,” and the title
tune, which closes the work, The Boss shares his struggle with depression with
great poignancy and power. Yet it is in
the opener, “Badlands”, that he most fully connects the challenges of darkness
with the possibilities for growth and reemerging light.
In a 2005 interview with Terry
Gross, Springsteen reminds his listeners that to properly understand his songs,
one must pay close attention to both the verses and the chorus: In my songs, the spiritual part, the hope part,
is in the choruses. And your daily
realities. . . the details of what the song is moving to transcend—are almost
always contained in the verses.
This is certainly true in “Badlands.” The song begins in darkness: Lights out tonight/Trouble in the
heartland.
The parallels with portion Bo are striking; the narrator is living in a kind of dim,
terrifying time, filled with anxious anticipation: Talk about a dream/Try to make it real/You wake up in the night/With a
fear so real/Spend your life waiting/For a moment that just don’t come.
We hear echoes of the brutal struggle of the Israelite
slaves and the insatiable lust for power that governs every would-be
Pharaoh. Sadly, over three thousand
years later, not enough has changed.
Life is still hard. Unjust.
Dark.
Working in the fields
‘Til you get your back
burned
Working ‘neath the
wheel
‘Til you get your
facts learned
Baby I got my facts
Learned real good
right now.
Poor man want to be
rich
Rich man want to be
king
And the king ain’t
satisfied
‘Til he rules
everything
And yet. . .If we can
avoid the temptation to numb ourselves, to lie and distract ourselves—if we can
muster the courage to confront the darkness head on and push through—then hope
and light beckon in the chorus. When it
comes, with the E-Street Band cranking into overdrive, joining Bruce on the
vocals with deep-felt urgency, the light is irresistible. You hear it with your ears and feel it with
every bone of your body:
I believe in the love
that you gave me
I believe in the hope
that can save me
I believe in the faith
and I pray
That some day it may
raise me
Badlands, you gotta
live it every day
Let the broken hearts
stand
As the price you’ve
gotta pay
We’ll keep pushing
‘til it’s understood
And these badlands
start treating us good
**********
Three months after the Exodus
described in Parashat Bo, the Israelites arrive at Mount Sinai.
There, too, they encounter thick darkness, in the form of the “dense
cloud” that falls upon the mountain. Torah tells us that this is precisely
where God is to be found. Moses bravely enters that divine darkness, twice. He
returns bearing the tablets inscribed with God’s black fire.
Out of the darkness—through the
darkness—comes both liberation and law. Without the night and all of its
terrors, there can be no Torah. Wisdom comes out of the Badlands. This is the legacy of Parashat Bo.
For a great live version from
shortly after the song’s release in 1978:
1 comment:
"Bo" echos your sermon at your December 28 Shabbat.
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