G-d of course has
no literal throne and doesn’t need a place to sit. What is the Midrash trying to tell us? Imagine you come to a house, look inside, and
you see the place is bereft of furniture.
Your first thought is that the place is abandoned. The President or the Queen of England may
have just left that house a moment before you peeked in the door, but as far as
you are concerned, the house is just an empty shell. Now imagine you come to a house and peek
inside and there is a throne sitting right in the center of the room. First thought: this is a palace of some
kind. A king must live here! No matter that there is nobody home at that
moment – as far as you are concerned, this must be a special place.
The Ne’os Desheh
(Ishbitz) explains that the Avos taught the world about G-d, but the world
forgot the lesson just as soon as the Avos were out of sight. The Torah tells us that Yitzchak found that the
Plishtim filled in and covered the wells which Avraham had dug just as soon as
he was off the scene. Pharaoh forgot
about Ya’akov Avinu and Yosef and their G-d as soon as they were gone. Out of sight, out of mind. When the king has no throne, as soon as he is
out of the room, people just see an empty building – they forget that there is
someone in charge. But when the king has a throne, even if the
king is not present, that chair is a reminder of his presence. Yetiz’as Mitzrayim and the splitting of Yam
Suf made such an impression even on the nations of the world that they could no
longer forget that there was a G-d – even if they couldn’t see him, the events
that happened were like the throne that stands in the middle of the room
reminding everyone that this is the palace of the king, not an abandoned
building.
With this idea in
mind I think we can better understand the end of the parsha as well. Chazal comment on the words “ki yad al keis
K-h” that the missing letter aleph in kisei, chair, indicates that Hashem’s
throne is not complete so long as Amalek is present in the world. When Amalek runs wild, then people think the
house is abandoned and they can do what they want.