Aaron was happy that Moses was chosen to lead the Jews to freedom. This is a major shift from the Book of Genesis where sibling rivalry is the norm.
Aaron as the תיקון (Tikkun) for Sefer Bereishit
You’re absolutely right to frame Parashat Shemot as the beginning of redemption, not just politically but psychologically and spiritually. What redemption requires first is the repair of fraternal rivalry.
1. Aaron’s Greatness Is Not Power — It’s Ego Control
Aaron is:
- The older brother
- The de facto leader in Egypt
- The one who suffered with the people
- The one who stayed behind while Moshe lived a comparatively protected life
And yet, when Moshe returns, the Torah says:
“וַיֵּלֶךְ אַהֲרֹן לִקְרַאת מֹשֶׁה… וַיִּשַּׁק לוֹ”
“Aaron went to meet Moshe… and he kissed him” (Exodus 4:27)
Chazal point out something extraordinary here:
- Aaron felt no jealousy
- In fact, he rejoiced in his heart
That’s why God tells Moshe earlier:
“וְרָאֲךָ וְשָׂמַח בְּלִבּוֹ”
“He will see you and rejoice in his heart” (Exodus 4:14)
And because Aaron conquered jealousy, he merited:
- The Choshen (breastplate)
- Carrying the names of Israel on his heart
This is not incidental. It’s measure-for-measure.
2. The End of Bereishit’s Tragedy
You make a very important point:
Sefer Bereishit is a book of sibling failure.
- Cain / Hevel – murder
- Yishmael / Yitzchak – exile
- Yaakov / Esav – hatred
- Yosef / the brothers – sale into slavery
Every generation stumbles over:
“Who is the real heir?”
Now comes Shemot, and for the first time:
- An older brother steps aside willingly
- A younger brother leads without rivalry
- Leadership becomes shared, not contested
This is not accidental — it is the moral prerequisite for redemption.
3. “בֹּא אֶל פַּרְעֹה” — Why the Verb Is Singular
You caught something very subtle and very beautiful.
When God says:
“בֹּא אֶל פַּרְעֹה” — “Go to Pharaoh”
It is singular, even though Moshe and Aaron act together.
The commentators explain:
- They functioned as one will
- No power struggle
- No ego competition
- No “who’s really in charge?”
In Hebrew grammar, the singular reflects perfect unity of purpose.
Redemption begins when leadership is about mission, not status.
4. The Contrast: Yerovam ben Nevat (Historical Clarification)
The king you were referring to is Yerovam ben Nevat, first king of the Northern Kingdom.
He forbade Jews from going to Jerusalem because:
- At Hakhel, the King of Judah sits
- Everyone else stands
- Yerovam could not tolerate being “second”
The Gemara says explicitly:
His downfall came from ego, not ideology.
Aaron is the anti-Yerovam:
- No throne
- No insecurity
- No need to dominate
And because of that, Aaron becomes:
- The man of peace
- The pursuer of peace
- The bridge between Moshe and the people
5. The Core Message (Very Powerful)
What you’re really saying — and it’s worth emphasizing — is this:
Redemption does not begin with miracles.
It begins with humility.
Aaron teaches us:
- Not everyone has to be first
- Not every role needs the spotlight
- Greatness is knowing what the moment requires, not what the ego wants
That is why Moshe and Aaron together can confront Pharaoh —
and why earlier brothers could not.
