Aliya Summary: Moshe delivered G‑d's warning to Pharaoh: "At midnight
I will go out in the midst of Egypt. Every firstborn in the land of
Egypt will die, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sits on his throne to
the firstborn of the slave woman..." G‑d then gave the Israelites their
first mitzvah, that of determining the New Moon (Rosh Chodesh) each
month and establishing a lunar calendar. G‑d also told Moshe to instruct
the Israelites to designate a lamb for the Paschal Offering. The
Israelites were to sacrifice this lamb and consume it, together with
matzah and bitter herbs, on the eve of the fifteenth of Nissan. The
blood of the lamb was to be smeared on the lintels and doorposts of the
Israelite residences, and all inside those homes would be spared when
G‑d descended to smite the Egyptian firstborn. G‑d also instructed that
for all future generations this day would signal the beginning of the
seven-day holiday of Passover, during which no leaven can be eaten or
possessed.
The Torah describes the tranquility of the
Jewish area with the statement "a dog didn't even bark". Dogs usually
sense death and instinctively react. To highlight the contrast between
the Egyptians and the Israelites, the dogs were miraculously silent. In
"tribute" to the dogs for their role in bringing greater honor and
appreciation to G-d on the night of the Exodus, the Torah rewards them
by telling us (elsewhere) to throw our non-kosher meat to the dogs (this
applies only when a forbidden food isn't also forbidden to derive other
benefit therefrom.) Thus we have an unusual lesson in acknowledging the
good that another does for you.
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