Page:Eight chapters of Maimonides on ethics.djvu/114

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THE ETHICS OF MAIMONIDES

breakers [in the Torah] that he who desecrates the Sabbath was compelled to violate it, no more can we maintain that because certain maledictions occur there that those who practised idolatry, and upon whom these curses consequently fell, were predestined to be idol-worshippers. On the contrary, every one who practised idolatry did so of his own volition, and so received due punishment, in consonance with the passage, "Yea they have made a choice of their own ways ... so will I also make choice of their misfortune".[1]

As regards, however, the words of God, "and I will harden the heart of Pharaoh",[2] afterwards punishing him with death, there is much to be said, and from which there may be deduced an important principle. Weigh well what I say in this matter, reflect upon it, compare it with the words of others,[3] and give preference to that which is best. If Pharaoh and his counsellors had committed no other sin than that of not permitting Israel to depart, I admit that the matter would be open to great doubt, for God had prevented them from releasing Israel according to the words, "For I have hardened his heart and the hearts of his servants".[4] After that, to demand of Pharaoh that he send them forth while he was forced to do the contrary, and then to punish him because he did not dismiss them, finally putting him and all his followers to death, would undoubtedly be unjust, and would completely contradict all that we have previously said. Such, however, was not the real state of affairs, for Pharaoh and his followers, already of their own free will, without any constraint whatever, had rebelled by oppressing the strangers who were in their midst, having tyrannized over them with great injustice, as Scripture plainly states, "And he said unto his people, Behold, the people of the children of Israel is more numerous and mightier than we, come let us deal wisely with it".[5] This they did through the dictates of their own free will and the evil passions of their hearts, without any external constraint forcing them thereto. The punish-


  1. Isa. LXVI, 3. 4.
  2. Ex. XIV, 4.
  3. M. probably means Abraham ibn Ezra and Ibn Baud. See Rosin, Ethik, p. 24.
  4. Ex., X, 1.
  5. Ibid., I, 9, 10.