So God showing up the gods of Egypt was not literal?
While the truth of God’s victory over the gods of Egypt is preserved in Scripture, it was often preserved using language that taught the religious lesson regarding what the event meant.
For instance, if the
way it was written is meant to be literal, then you have to explain how Egypt’s animals died and rose and died and rose and died again from the Fifth to the Tenth Plague. If it is a literal retelling, then how does Scripture explain this?
The Exodus account is not written as literal history, but as a religious drama between YHWH and the gods of Egypt. Interestingly, Exodus is
not the only preservation of this story. Jews have also preserved it in a varied form in their Tradition, in their liturgical customs associated with the Passover Seder and the Haggadah. Like Apostolic Tradition, this form of Jewish Tradition makes up a single deposit of faith in Judaism which consists of all that was handed down from Moses and the great teachers of Israel along with the written Hebrew Scriptures. In the Haggadah and the Traditions associated with the Passover Seder there are differences and additional details regarding God’s redemption of Israel not found in Exodus but accepted as being just as valid.
Why the differences? Exodus is part of Torah, the Law Code and instruction given to Israel as part of the Covenant between the Lord and the children of Abraham and Sarah. Torah is not the complete story of our salvation from Egypt. It is only complete when combined with the Litrugical actions and Tradition handed down from our fathers, similar to how Catholics view Scripture in connection with Apostolic Tradition.
So God did show up the gods of Egypt, but the genre or manner of narrative in Torah, in Exodus, employs a language that preserves and highlights the religious truths learned by the historic events over the actual details as they literally happened. If they were written down like a literal retelling of the events, it would read like a Wikipedia entry, as a news report and not as the religious instruction in Jewish law that it was meant to be. And you would have to explain the rising and dying and rising and dying and rising and dying of the animals of Egypt as recorded in the text.
The Church does not discourage a literal reading of the events, but it does caution against adopting the literalness common to Fundamentalism. The Catholic Church recognizes that the inspired text is first and foremost a religious one, and there are often levels of meaning and religious truth that cannot be properly tapped from a surface reading of the text at face value. This agrees with the way the text is handled in Judaism theology.