Pharaoh's Hardened Heart: Some Christian
Readings
Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity
School
As far as I am concerned this is all Peter Ochs'
fault. I should not be doing this. I am, of course,
sympathetic to what the Society of Scriptural
Reasoning is about. My only problem is that I know so
little scripture. Notice I did not say I know so
little about scripture. Like most people educated in
the regimes of knowledge known as Protestant
liberalism, I actually know quite a bit about
scripture. My problem, like most Protestant liberals,
is that I do not know the text of scripture, which is
an embarrassing admission for anyone from the South
to make. If only I knew the text of scripture the way
Southern fundamentalists know scripture.
Of course one of the advantages of being a
theologian is the ability it gives you to turn a
failure into a virtue. Thus my argument in
Unleashing the Scriptures: Freeing the Bible from
Captivity to America that fundamentalism and
historical criticism are but two sides of the same
coin. They are, in quite different ways, reading
strategies sponsored by Enlightenment politics to
divorce the scripture from the church. This
development, of course, is at least partly due to the
Protestant heresy of sola scriptura which,
through the invention of the printing press, became
sola text. This results in the distinction
between what it meant and what it means, a
distinction necessary to underwrite the authority of
the guilds of biblical scholars. Even worse these
guilds often assume that the texts of scripture have
a meaning. Against these developments I take my stand
with the Catholics arguing for the authority of the
tradition. All of which may be an elaborate
self-justification for my failure to know as well as
use the scripture as the heart of any theological
argument.
However, Peter told me I have to do this and I
think you have to do what your rabbi tells you to do.
I do not know if this is or is not a violation of my
"free will," but that is not a great problem for me
since I have never been convinced that the notion of
free will does any useful work. I know it certainly
does no useful work for helping me understand my
life. Anything I may be that is any good I have never
chosen, but rather has been forced on me. Like
Pharaoh I have a hard heart that only responds by
having the shit kicked out of it. Yet if Shaul's
account of the reading of the hardening of Pharaoh's
heart by Jewish sources is correct, my lack of
concern about free will may indicate I represent the
habits of Christian readers.
It is not for me to question Shaul's account of
Jewish readings of this text as representing a
"philosophical problem" concerning free will, but I
would like to know more about why God's covenant with
Israel requires the presumption that "all human
beings are created in the image of God with free
will." Shaul notes, for example, that Nahmanides
recognizes the need to justify God's action in a way
Rashi does not, but he (Nahmanides) does not see the
need to justify God's action outside this particular
narrative. But I should have thought that is the
whole point - why would you ever be led as a reader
of scripture to think the creature can assume a
stance that puts God in the dock? Surely that is why,
as Shaul teaches us, Maimonides saw that freedom is
never absolute. "To be in a covenantal relationship
with God is to live knowing that retribution of
willful acts may include the loss of the will to act.
In this, Pharaoh is our teacher."
Origen, I think, has a position quite like
Maimonides. He begins (Exodus Homily IV)
noting that in the first five plagues Pharaoh is said
to have hardened his heart, but in the last plagues
God is said to have "hardened Pharaoh's heart."
Origen is also quite well aware of Exodus 4:2l.
Origen observes that we should not regard the divine
spirit so lowly as to suppose this distinction was
made by chance. Yet he notes that he is "not fit or
able in such difference to pry into the secrets of
divine wisdom," but he thinks Paul is. Appealing to
Romans 9:l4ff, Origen quotes Paul's claim that "it
depends not on human will or exertion, but on God who
shows mercy. For the scripture says to Pharaoh, 'I
have raised you up for the very purpose of showing my
power in you, so that my name may be proclaimed in
all the earth.' So then he has mercy on whomever he
chooses, and he hardens the heart of whomever he
chooses." Origen observes that Paul rightly
refuses to provide a "solution" to anyone that might
think they stand in a position to question God's
action. Therefore Paul concludes his argument by
observing in Romans 9:20, "But who indeed are you, a
human being, to argue with God? Will what is molded
say to the one who molds it, 'Why have you made me
like this?'" It should, therefore, be sufficient for
us to observe and examine these things and to have
shown how many things in the divine Law have been
submerged in deep mysteries before which we ought to
pray: "From the depths I have cried to you, Lord"
(Ps. l29.l). Augustine also begins his discussion of
the hardening of Pharaoh's heart by appealing to
Romans 9:l8. He comments that when we hear that the
Lord has "deceived the prophet" (Ezekiel 14:9) we
should believe that in the case of those whom God
permits to be deceived or hardened, their evil deeds
have deserved the judgment. Therefore, according to
Augustine, we should not take away from Pharaoh free
will because in some of the passages God says "I have
hardened Pharaoh." For "it does not by any means
follow that Pharaoh did not, on this account harden
his own heart. For this, too, is said of him, after
the removal of the fly-plague from the Egyptians, in
these words of the Scripture: 'And Pharaoh hardened
his heart at this time also; neither would he let the
people go.' Thus it was that both God hardened him by
his just judgment, and Pharaoh by his own free will."
(On Grace and Free Will)
In his Commentary on the Psalms, Augustine
comments on Psalm 78 and in particular how that Psalm
harkens to Exodus 4:21. According to Augustine "when
God is said to made this most iniquitous and
malignant obstinacy, He maketh it not by suggesting
and inspiring, but by forsaking, so that they work in
the sons of unbelief that which God doth duly and
justly permit." He elaborates this judgment by
quoting Romans 1:24, "God gave them over into the
lusts of their heart, that they should do things
which are not convenient." God, therefore, punished
the ungodliness of the Egyptians with "hidden
justice" which is inflicted on the offenders by the
"power of evil angels." Nothing can deliver men from
the power of such angels except the grace of God. The
same grace of which the Apostle speaks in Colossians
1:13, that is, the grace that "'hath delivered us
from the power of darkness, and hath translated us
into the kingdom of the Son of His love:' of which
things that people did bear the figure, when they
were delivered from the power of the Egyptians, and
translated into the kingdom of the land of promise
flowing with milk and honey, which doth signify the
sweetness of grace."
What I find fascinating about Origen's and
Augustine's accounts is their refusal to let the
issue of "free will" get in the way of their telling
of the story. Put differently, they assume that the
story itself in the context of the total narrative of
scripture, which of course includes the New
Testament, determines what and how we will think of
God's justice and how that justice shapes our
understanding of our status as creatures. In his
Systematic Theology, Volume I, Robert Jenson
makes some acute comments that I think confirm this
way of reading. He observes that it is the
metaphysically fundamental fact of Israel's and the
church's faith that its God is freely, but truly,
self-identified with temporal events. He
continues:
The Lord is the one who rescued Israel from Egypt.
It is therefore proper to ask, What if the Pharaoh
had held out? We may want to say that if the Lord
is God, of course he could not have been defeated.
But that is to spoil Exodus' story, which has its
whole interest as a tale of contested victory.
Again the biblical God is the Father of Jesus; what
if Jesus had capitulated in the desert or the
garden? We want to say this could not have
happened, since the dogma of Nicea Jesus is of one
being with the Father, and God cannot despair. But
that again is to violate these stories of struggle
and overcoming. The church must indeed read the
stories of the temptation and the garden by the
dogma, but if their narrative character is honored
what they then tell is that deity might at those
moments have broken - whatever metaphysical sense
we are to make of this. The heart of the matter is
that Jesus' Resurrection appears in the New
Testament not as an obvious consequence of his
deity but as his Father's amazing triumph. [1]
That God raised Israel from Egypt by the hardening
of Pharaoh's heart I suspect Jenson would think must
be read with the same kind of realism he finds in the
resurrection. A realism that might be summed up quite
simply by observing when everything is said and done
the story is what matters. Of course the crucial
question is "what is the story?" Where does it begin
and does it have an end? How do the isolated
sub-plots relate to other parts of the wider
narrative? Difference between Jewish, Islamic, and
Christian readings surely will be found in the
retellings that stories like the hardening of
Pharaoh's heart require.
Origen is quite interesting in this respect
because he goes into quite detailed descriptions of
each plague, noting who was the instrument of the
plague, i.e., Aaron or Moses, and what the nature of
the plague suggests for how we understand Pharaoh's
reaction. Thus when the waters are turned into blood
Pharaoh is not persuaded, but yields a bit when he
has to deal with the frogs. Origen comments on each
plague suggesting why the particular challenge they
presented to the Pharaoh resulted in his response. In
other words in his initial reading of the text he
simply reads the story as it is given.
Yet after he has performed that task he suggests
that, as far as he can perceive, the rod Moses used
to strike Egypt with ten plagues "is the law of God
which was given to this world that it might reprove
and correct it with the ten plagues, that is the ten
commandments which are contained in the Decalogue."
(I did find it interesting that Origen presupposes
the rod is the law even though the law has not yet
been given. One might think he might use this as an
opportunity to say if and how the law may be written
on each person's heart, but he does not.) "But the
rod by which all these things are done, by which
Egypt is subjugated and Pharaoh overcome, is the
cross of Christ by which this world is conquered and
the 'ruler of this world' with the principalities and
powers are led in triumph." Origen so to speak
defends this reading by noting that when the rod is
cast down it becomes a "dragon or serpent" and
devours the serpents of the Egyptian magicians. That
the rod becomes a serpent representing wisdom is
indicated in scripture where Jesus tells us to be as
"wise as serpents" (Mathew l0: l6).
Origen thinks the songs of poets are indicated by
the second plagues of frogs. He does so because the
poets create empty and puffed up melodies that
introduce deceptive stories to this world as if by
sounds and songs of frogs. "For," as Origen observes
"that animal is useless except that it produces an
inferior harsh sound." In contrast the mosquitoes are
so fine and small that we can barely see it except
when it sits on the body and bores with the sharpest
sting. Accordingly this animal can be compared with
the art of dialectic, which bores souls with minute
and subtle stinging words so shrewdly that the one
who is has been deceived neither sees nor understands
the deceptions. The plague of mosquitoes can,
therefore, be compared to the sect of the Cynics who
in addition to other depravities of their deception
proclaim pleasure and lust as the highest good.
These examples of Origen's "four fold method" of
reading scripture (David Dawson in his Allegorical
Readers and Cultural Revision in Ancient
Alexandria questions, rightly I think, whether
Origen's mode of reading should be called a method.)
direct our attention away from the question of the
hardening of Pharaoh's heart, but I provide them to
indicate that Origen's (or Augustine's) reading of
this story is not focused on the question of the
hardening of Pharaoh's heart. They read the narrative
in relation to other stories in the scripture, which
allows them to weave the stories of scripture into an
ongoing narrative. We should not be surprised,
therefore, that the "rule of faith," which we now
call the Apostles' Creed, was the outline the church
discovered for testing the many readings they knew
scripture required.
Christians would, therefore, deny that such
readings are "imposed" on the scripture. Rather they
simply are following the mode of reading exemplified
in scripture itself. For example, in Deuteronomy
28:27 - surely some of the most chilling warnings we
can find in the Bible - Israel is threatened "with
the boils of Egypt" if she does not obey the
commandments. Does this mean that Israel can become
like Egypt in her unfaithfulness? I would be
fascinated to know if and how the Rabbis commented on
this text. Can Israel's heart, like the heart of
Pharaoh, be hardened? Christians could, I believe,
learn a great deal from such readings particularly if
you believe as I do that Christian reading of
scripture has for too long been shaped by Christian
political power not unlike that of the Pharaoh.
I should like to end on that note, but I feel I
need to raise one last issue that cannot help but be
painful to Christian and Jew alike. The last and most
horrible plague, the death of the firstborn, which
finally it seems got Pharaoh's attention cannot help
but haunt us. Of course God is to harden Pharaoh's
heart one more time, but nonetheless we cannot help
after the Shoah to feel the horror of the last
plague. A Christian reading of the last plague is
made even more difficult by our scripture. "When
Herod saw that he had been tricked by the wise men,
he was infuriated, and he sent and killed all the
children in and around Bethlehem who were two years
old or under, according to the time that he had
learned from the wise men" (Matthew 2:l6). If Jesus
is the rod of Moses it seems those who have had to
pay the price from the time of his birth are Jewish
children. If I were Jewish I think I would find it
very hard not to think of Christianity as one long
plague.
Christians, of course, believe that Jesus is the
blood that has been painted over the lintels and
doorposts of the church. Yet as a homeless people
desperate for security we have, I believe, far too
often made Jewish children pay the price for our
attempt to find a home in this world. Such a reading
may be too "foreign" to questions surrounding the
hardening of Pharaoh's heart, but in these times I do
not believe Christians can afford not to raise them.
If we Christians fail to recognize the way we have
become Pharaoh to the Jews we risk not recognizing
the hardness of our hearts--a recognition that seems
unavoidable given God's gracious gift of plagues.
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