Esnoga Bet Emunah
227 Millset Chase - San Antonio, Texas 78253
Telephone: (210) 277 8649 - United States of
America © 2007
E-Mail: gkilli@aol.com
Triennial
Cycle (Triennial Torah Cycle) / Septennial Cycle (Septennial Torah Cycle)
Three and 1/2 year
Lectionary Readings |
Fourth
Year of the Reading Cycle |
II Adar 08, 5768 – March
14/15, 2008 |
Seventh
Year of the Shmita Cycle |
Shabbat Zakhor
Sabbath of Remembering Amalek
Candle Lighting and Havdalah Times
Olympia, Washington, U.S.
Friday Mar. 14, 2008 – Candles at 6:58 PM
Saturday Mar. 15, 2008 – Havdalah 8:03 PM
San Antonio, Texas, U.S. Brisbane, Australia:
Friday Mar. 14, 2008 – Candles at 7:24 PM Friday Mar. 14, 2008 –
Candles at 5:48 PM
Saturday Mar. 15, 2008 – Havdalah 8:18 PM Saturday
Mar. 15, 2008 – Havdalah 6:40 PM
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. Singapore,
Singapore
Friday Mar. 14, 2008 – Candles at 7:27 PM Friday Mar. 14, 2008 –
Candles at 6:59 PM
Saturday Mar. 15, 2008 – Havdalah 8:23 PM Saturday Mar. 15, 2008 –
Havdalah 7:07 PM
Cebu, Philippines Jakarta,
Indonesia
Friday Mar. 14, 2008 – Candles at 5:48 PM Friday Mar. 14, 2008 –
Candles at 5:48 PM
Saturday Mar. 15, 2008 – Havdalah 6:38 PM Saturday Mar. 15, 2008 –
Havdalah 6:37 PM
For other places see: http://chabad.org/calendar/candlelighting.asp
Coming Festivals: Fast of Esther & Purim
Evening Wed. March 19 – Evening Shabbat March 22
For further study see: http://www.betemunah.org/esther.html ;
http://www.betemunah.org/allegories.html ; http://www.betemunah.org/purim.html &
http://www.betemunah.org/r2r.html
Shabbat |
Torah
Reading: |
Weekday
Torah Reading: |
זָכוֹר |
|
|
“Zakhor” |
Reader 1 – D’barim 24:19-22 |
Reader 1 – D’barim 1:1-5 |
“Remember” |
Reader 2 – D’barim 25:1-4 |
Reader 2 – D’barim 1:6-12 |
“Acuérdate” |
Reader 3 – D’barim 25:5-7 |
Reader 3 – D’barim 1:13-18 |
D’barim (Deut.) 24:19 – 25:19 |
Reader 4 – D’barim 25:8-10 |
|
Ashlamatah: I
Samuel 15:1-34 |
Reader 5 – D’barim 25:11-13 |
|
|
Reader 6 – D’barim 25:13-16 |
Reader 1 – D’barim 1:1-5 |
Psalm: 83:1-18 |
Reader 7 – D’barim 25:17-19 |
Reader 2 – D’barim 1:6-12 |
|
Maftir – D’barim 25:17-19 |
Reader 3 – D’barim 1:13-18 |
N.C.:
Matityahu 26:14-16 |
I Samuel
15:1-34 |
|
Roll of Honor:
This Torah commentary comes to you courtesy of His
Honor Rosh Paqid Adon Hillel ben David and most beloved family, and that of His
Honor Paqid Adon David ben Abraham, and that of Her Excellency Giberet Sarai
bat Sarah and beloved family, as well as that of His Excellency Adon Barth
Lindemann and beloved family and that of His Excellency Adon John Batchelor and
beloved wife, and that of His Excellency Adon Ezra ben Abraham and his beloved
wife Giberet Karmela bat Sarah, as well as Her Excellency Giberet Hannah bat
Sarah and beloved family. For their regular and sacrificial giving, providing
the best oil for the lamps, we pray that G-d’s richest blessings be upon their
lives and those of their loved ones, together with all Yisrael, amen ve amen!
Also a great thank you to all who send comments to
the list about the contents and commentary of the weekly Seder.
If you want to subscribe to our list and ensure
that you never lose any of our commentaries, or would like your friends also to
receive this commentary, please do send me an E-Mail to ravybh@optusnet.com.au with
your E-Mail or the E-Mail addresses of your friends. Toda Rabba!
Barukh Dayan Emet!
This Torah Seder Commentary is dedicated in loving
memory of the youths who died in the massacre at the Yeshivah Mercaz HaRav. We join their families in their
sorrow and mourning for their sons who were callously murdered, and pray that
The All Merciful G-d of Israel, most blessed be He, grant their families and
all of our most noble people of Israel a miraculous consolation and the
strength to continue our mission as Jews to spread the rule of Torah and
Messiah to all men and women of good will, and that their death may be not in
vain, amen ve amen!
Pictures of Some of the Children Who Were Killed
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Unarmed Youthful Students of Mercaz HaRav Who
Were Shot Down in Cold blood for being Jewish |
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For Names and Short Biographical Details go to
Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs site and click on the pictures:
The Quiet Hero
Captain David
Shapira |
As the
tragic events of Thursday began to become more clear, it became increasingly
obvious that the hero of the evening was Paratroopers Capt. David Shapira, a
father of two young children who proved to be the right man in the right place
during the bloody attack. Shapira was supposed to have been at his base, but he
left to perform errands for his battalion, trading places with another officer
for the weekend.
The 29-year-old operations officer in the 890th Battalion had just bathed his
children, and had put one of them to sleep when he heard explosions coming from
the Mercaz Harav Yeshiva across the street. Although he first thought the noise
was from pre-Purim firecrackers, he quickly realized that the explosions were
gunshots. Grabbing his service weapon, he ran out of the house toward the
yeshiva where he himself had studied.
At the entrance to the yeshiva in
the capital's Kiryat Moshe neighborhood, Shapira ran into a group of police
officers who were standing outside the building, listening to the gunshots from
inside. They warned him not to go in, but Shapira pushed them aside and
entered. The officer tracked the terrorist to the library, and, according to
his own account, got within two to three meters of his target. Shapira shot 16
bullets at the terrorist, immediately neutralizing him.
And then - like any good officer
- Shapira notified his commander. He called the head of the 890th Battalion,
and informed him that he had neutralized the terrorist - and was searching the
area to make sure that other terrorists had not taken cover in the building. And
with that - at least from the perspective of the young officer - his role was
over. He and his wife, Hodaya, who is in the late stages of pregnancy, planned
a quiet weekend together.
But on Friday, Shapira received a
phone call from an admirer with roots deep in the Paratrooper's long time
rival, the Golani Brigade. Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi
called to express his admiration for Shapira's actions - and to hear firsthand
an account of the events of the night before.
Ashkenazi expressed admiration for the "fast and correct" way in
which the captain responded to the attack, adding that this is how he expects
"any officer to behave, whether in his unit, on the roads or on
leave." "In your actions," Ashkenazi told Shapira, "you
brought expression to the values of the spirit of the IDF. You demonstrated
personal leadership, determination, calmness, bravery and pursuit of your enemy
until he was neutralized."
Rashi & Targum
Pseudo Jonathan
for: D’barim
(Deuteronomy) 24:19 – 25:19
RASHI |
TARGUM PSEUDO
JONATHAN |
19. When you reap your
reaping in your field, and you forget a sheaf in the field, you may not
return to take it; for the proselyte,
for the orphan, and for the widow let it be; in order that Adonai, your G-d,
will bless you in all your endeavours. |
19. When you have
reaped your harvests in your fields, and have forgotten a sheaf in the
field, you will not return to take it; let
it be for the stranger, the orphan, and the widow, that the Word of the Lord
your God may bless you in all the works of your hands. |
20. When you harvest your olive tree, you may
not strip it of its glory behind you, for
the proselyte, for the orphan, and for the widow let it be. |
20. When you beat your olive trees, you will
not search them after (you have done it); for
the stranger, the orphan, and widow, let it be. [JERUSALEM. When you beat your olive trees, search them not
afterward; let them be for the
stranger, the orphan, and the widow.] |
21. When you harvest
your vineyard you may not harvest pygmy vines behind you; for the proselyte, for the orphan, and for the
widow let it be. |
21. When you gather in your vineyard, you will
not glean the branches after you; they
will be for the stranger, the orphan, and widow. [JERUSALEM. When you gather your vines, search not their branches
afterwards let them be for the
stranger and the widow.] |
22. Remember that you were a slave in the land of
Egypt; that is why I am commanding you to do this thing. |
22. So remember that you were bondservants in the
land of Mizraim; therefore I command you to do this thing. |
|
|
1. If a quarrel should
occur among men and they bring it to court and they judge them and they
determine who is righteous/generous and they convict the villain. |
1. If there be a
controversy, between two men, then they will come to the judges, and they will
judge them, and give the decision (or outweighing of)
righteousness/generosity to the innocent, and of condemnation to the guilty.
|
2. Should the wicked/lawless
one deserve flogging, the judge will incline him and have him flogged before
him in the amount befitting his crime, with the number near. |
2. And if the
wicked/lawless deserve stripes, the judge will make him lie down, and they will
scourge him in his presence by his judgment, according to the measure of his
guilt. [JERUSALEM. And if it be needful to scourge the guilty, the judge will
make him lie down, and they will smite him in his presence, according to the
measure of his guilt, by number.] |
3. Forty is he to have
him flogged, he may not add; lest he additionally flog him over these, a
great flogging, when your brother
will be slighted before you. |
3. Forty (stripes) may
be laid upon him, but with one less will he be beaten, (the full number) will
not be completed, lest he should add
to smite him beyond those thirty and nine, exorbitantly, and he be in danger
; and that your brother may not be made despicable in your sight. |
4. You may not muzzle
an ox while it threshes. |
4. You will not muzzle the mouth of the ox in
the time of his treading out; [JERUSALEM. Sons of Israel, My people, you will
not muzzle the ox in the hour of his treading;] nor the wife of the
(deceased) brother, who would be mated with one smitten with an ulcer, and
who is poorly related, shalt thou tie up with him. |
5. If brothers reside
together, and one of them dies having no son, let the wife of the dead man
not marry outside [the family] to a strange man; her brother-in-law will
consummate with her thus marrying her to be his wife, and perform levirate
marriage with her. |
5. When brethren from
the (same) father inhabit this world at the same time, and have the same
inheritance, the wife of one of them, who may have died, will not go forth
into the street to marry a stranger; her brother-in-law will go to her, and
take her to wife, and become her husband. |
6. It shall be that the
firstborn, when she is capable of bearing children, shall be established in
place of his deceased brother, so that his name
may not be obliterated from Yisrael. |
6. And the first-born
whom she bears will stand in the inheritance in the name of the deceased
brother, that his name may not be
blotted out from Israel. |
7. But if the man will
not want to marry his sister-in-law; his sister-in-law must go up to the
portal, to the judges, and say, "My brother-in-law refuses to establish
for his brother a name in Yisrael; he is unwilling to do perform levirate
marriage with me." |
7. But if the man be
not willing, to take his sister-in-law, then will his sister-in-law go up to
the gate of the bet din before five of the sages, three of whom will be
judges and two of them witnesses, and let her say before them in the holy
language: My husband's brother refuses to keep up the name of his brother in
Israel, he not being willing to marry me. |
8. The judges of his
city will call him and converse with him. He shall stand and say, "I do
not want to marry her." |
8. And the elders of
his city will call him and speak with him, with true counsel; and he may
rise up in the house of justice, and say in the holy tongue, I am not willing
to take her. |
9. And his
sister-in-law will approach him in the sight of the judges, and she will
remove his shoe from upon his foot, and spit before him; and she will say
aloud, "This is done to the
man who will not build his brother's family." |
9. Then will his
sister-in-law come to him before the sages, and there will be a shoe upon
the foot of the brother-in-law, a heeled sandal whose lachets are tied, the
latchets at the opening of the sandal being fastened; and he will stamp on
the ground with his foot; and the woman will arise and untie the latchet,
and draw off the sandal from his foot, and afterward spit before him, as
much spittle as may be seen by the sages, and will answer and say, So is it fit to be done to the man who would not
build up the house of his brother. |
10. And it will be
entitled in Yisrael, the house of the divestiture of the shoe. |
10. And all who are
standing there will exclaim against him, and call his name in Israel the
House of the Unshod. [JERUSALEM. And his name in Israel will be called the
House of him whose shoe was loosed, and who made void the law of Yeboom. ] |
11. If men engage in an
altercation, a man and his brother, and the wife of one approaches to save
her husband from his assailant, and she puts out her hand and grasps his
genitals, |
11. While men are
striving together, if the wife of one of them approach to rescue her husband
from the hand of him who smites him, and putting forth her hand lays hold of
the place of his shame, [JERUSALEM. If she put forth her hand, and lay hold
by the place of his shame.] |
12. You shall sever her
hand; you are not to have compassion. |
12. you will cut off
her hand; your eyes will not pity. |
13. You are not to have
for yourself in your pouch varying weight-stones, large and small. |
13. You will not have
in your bag weights that are deceitful; great weights to buy with, and less
weights to sell with. |
14. You shall not have
in your house varying measures, large and small. |
14. Nor will you have
in your houses measures that deceive; great measures to buy with, and less
measures to sell with. [JERUSALEM. You will not have in your houses measures
and measures; great .ones for buying with, and small ones to sell with.] |
15. A fully accurate,
just weight, you shall have, you are to have whole and honest measures; in order that you live long on the land that Adonai,
your G-d, is giving you. |
15. Perfect weights,
and true balances shalt thou have, perfect measures and scales that are true
will be yours, that your days may
be multiplied on the land which the Lord your God gives you. |
16. Because Adonai,
your G-d's abomination, are all who do these [things]; all who do falsehood. |
16. For whosoever
commits these frauds, every one who acts falsely in trade, is an abomination
before the Lord. |
17. Remember what Amalek perpetrated against you on
the way when you were going out of Egypt. |
17. Keep in mind what the house of Amalek did unto
you in the way, on your coming up out of Mizraim; |
18. When they chanced upon you en route struck down
your appendage--- all the feeble ones behind you--- and you were exhausted
and wearied, and they had no fear of G-d. |
18. how they overtook
you in the way, and slew every one of those among you who were thinking to
go aside from My Word; the men of the tribe of the house of Dan, in whose
hands were idols (or things. of strange worship), and the clouds overcast
them, and they of the house of Amalek took them and mutilated them, and they
were cast up: but you, O house of Israel, were faint and weary from great
servitude of the Mizraee, and the terrors of the waves of the sea through
the midst of which you had passed. Nor were the house of Amalek afraid
before the Lord. [JERUSALEM. Who overtook you in the way, and slew among you
those who were thinking to desist from My Word, the cloud overcast him, and
they of the house of Amalek took him and slew him. But you, people of the
sons of Israel, were weary and faint; nor were they of the house of Amalek
afraid before the Lord.] |
19. When Adonai, your
G-d, has given you repose from all your enemies around, in the land that
Adonai, your G-d, is giving you as territory to inherit, you shall obliterate the memory of Amalek from
beneath the sky; do not forget. |
19. Therefore, when the
Lord hath given you rest from all your enemies round about in the land that
the Lord Your God gives you to inherit for a possession, you will blot out the memory of Amalek from under
the heavens; but of the days of the King Messiah you will not be unmindful. |
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Midrash Mekhilta Attributed to Rabbi Ishmael – Amalek I-IV
Amalek
1
XLIII:I
“Then
came Amalek [and fought with Israel at Rephidim]:” R. Joshua and R. Eleazar
Hisma say, “This verse of Scripture is worked out as allegory and articulated
by Job: “Can the rush shoot up without mire? Can the reed-grass grow without
water?’ (Job 8:11). Now is it possible for rush to develop with neither muck
nor water? And can reed-grass survive without water? So too it is not possible
for the Israelites to exist unless they occupy themselves with teachings of the
Torah. And it is because they abandoned teachings of the Torah the enemy came
against them. For the enemy comes only on account of sin and transgression.
That is why it is said, “Then came Amalek [and fought with Israel at
Rephidim].”
R.
Eleazar the Modiite says, “Then came Amalek [and fought with Israel at
Rephidim]:” It is because Amalek would enter under the wings of the cloud and
kidnap Israelite people and kill them: “How he met you by the way ... and did
not fear God” (Dt. 25:18). Others say, “...and did not fear God” speaks of
Israel, which was without religious duties to their credit.”
R.
Eliezer says, “Then came Amalek [and fought with Israel at Rephidim]:” He came
impudently. For all the attacks that he made were only in secret: “How he met
you by the way” (Dt. 25:18). But in this attack he came only impudently.
Therefore Scripture says, “Then came Amalek [and fought with Israel at
Rephidim].” He came impudently.
R.
Yost b. Halafta says, “Then came Amalek [and fought with Israel at Rephidim]:”
He came with forethought. For Amalek gathered all the nations and said to them,
‘Come and help me against Israel.’ They said to him, ‘We will not be able to
withstand them. Pharaoh could not withstand them, for the Holy One blessed be
he drowned him in the Red Sea: “And he overthrew Pharaoh and his host in the
Red Sea” (Ps. 136:15). How then will we be able to withstand them?’ He said to
them, ‘Come and I will give you a plan for what you should do. If they defeat
me, you can flee, and if not, come and help me against Israel.’ That is why it
is said, “Then came Amalek [and fought with Israel at Rephidim]:” He came with
forethought.
R.
Judah the Patriarch says, Through five peoples did Amalek have to make his way
to come and make war against Israel: “Amalek dwells in the land of the south”
(Num. 13:29): he was beyond all of them [to the south].” R. Nathan says,
“Amalek came only from Mount Seir. Through four hundred parasangs he made his
way to come and make war against Israel.
Others
say, Let Amalek, an ingrate, come and exact punishment of the ingrate people.
Along these same lines: And these are the ones who conspired against him:
Zabad, son of Shimeath the Ammonitess, and Jehozabad, the son of Shimrith the
Moabitess” (2 Chr. 24:26). Let these ingrates come and exact punishment from
the ingrate, Joash: “Thus Joash the king did not remember the kindness which
Jehoiada his father had done to him but slew his son. And when he died, he
said, “The Lord look upon it and require it” (2 Chr. 24:22). How was he punished?
“And it came to pass, when the year was up, that the army of the Aramaeans came
up against him” (2 Chr. 24:23). “And the Lord delivered a very great host into
their hand” (2Chr.24:24)—why? “Because they had forsaken the Lord, the God of
their fathers. So they executed judgment upon Joash” (2 Chr. 24:24).
[“So
they executed judgment upon Joash” (2 Chr. 24:24):] Do not read “judgment” bit
“sport.” What sport did they make with him? They say that they set up harsh
guards in charge of him, who had never in their lives known a woman, and they
tortured him with pederasty, in line with this verse: “And restored the pride
of Israel” (Hos. 5:5). And it is written, “And when they left him, for they
left him in great diseases, his own servants conspired against him for the
blood of the sons of Jehoiada the priest and killed him on his bed and he died”
(2 Chr. 24:25).
“[Then
came Arnalek] and fought with Israel at Rephidim:” Said R. Hananiah, This
matter did I ask to R. Eleazar, who was in the major session: ‘What is the
meaning of ‘Rephidim’? He said to me, ‘It is meant literally.’
And
further did R. Hananiah say, “I asked R. Eleazar, ‘How come Israelites redeem
the first born of asses but not the first born of horses and camels?’ He said
to me, ‘It is a decree of the king. Furthermore, the Israelites at that time
only had asses. For you have none in Israel who did not bring up with him
ninety asses bearing silver and gold.’
Others
say, “[As to the meaning of ‘Rephidim,’] the word refers only to a weakening of
the hands [since the word for ‘weakening uses the same consonants]. It is
because the Israelites allowed their hands to weaken [their grasp upon]
teachings of the Torah. Therefore the enemy came against them. For the enemy
comes only on account of allowing the hands to weaken [their grasp upon]
teachings of the Torah. “And it came to pass when the kingdom of Rehoboam was
established and he was strong that he abandoned the Torah of the Lord and
Israel with him’ (2 Chr. 12:1). And the punishment? “And it came to pass in the
fifth year of King Rehoboam that Shishak, king of Egypt, came up against
Jerusalem; and he took away the treasures of the house of the Lord” (1 Kgs.
14:25-26).
This
is one of three things that returned to their place. The exile of Judah came back
to its original place: “Your fathers dwelt of old time beyond the river” (Josh.
24:2); “Who destroyed this house and carried the people away into Babylonia”
(Ezra 5:12). The heavenly writing returned to its place: “Will you set your
eyes upon it? It is gone” (Prov. 23:5). The silver of Egypt returned to its
original place: “And it came to pass in the fifth year of King Rehoboam that
Shishak, king of Egypt, came up against Jerusalem; and he took away the
treasures of the house of the Lord” (1 Kgs. 14:25-26).
XLIII:II
“And
Moses said to Joshua, ‘Choose for us men:” In this connection [we observe] that
Moses treated him as an equal. Let everyone learn proper conduct from Moses,
who did not say to Joshua, “Choose for me men,” but “choose for us men.” [Cf.
Fathers According to Rabbi Nathan XXVII:XI. “R. Eleazar b. Shammua says,
“The honor owing to your disciple should be as precious to you as yours. And
the honor owing to your Torah study partner should be like the reverence owing
to your master. And the reverence owing to your master should be like the awe
owing to Heaven.” How do we know that the honor owing to one’s disciple
should be as precious to one as his own? Let everyone learn from the case
of our lord, Moses, who said to Joshua, “Choose men for us” (Ex. 17:9). He did
not say to him, “Choose men for me,” but for us, teaching that he treated him
like himself [as an equal], even though he was his master and Joshua was his
disciple.] How do we know that the honor owing to one’s Torah study partner
should be like the reverence owing to his master? As it is said, “And Aaron
said to Moses, Please, my lord” (Num. 12:11). But was he not his elder brother?
[ARN: Now was Moses not younger than he?] But he treated him as his master. And
how do we know that the reverence owing to one’s master should be like the
awe owing to Heaven? As it is said, “And Joshua b. Nun, servant of Moses
from his youth, answered and said, My lord, Moses, destroy them” (Num. 11:28),
so treating Moses as though he were equal [in power] to the Presence of God. He
said to him, “My lord, Moses, just as the Omnipresent has shut them in, so you
shut them in. And so you find in the case of Gehazi: When Elisha said to
Gehazi, “Gird up your loins and take my staff in your hand” (2 Kgs. 4:29), he
began to lean on his staff and go along. They said to him, ‘Where are you
going, Gehazi?’ He said to them, ‘To resurrect the dead.’ They said to him,
‘And can you resurrect the dead? And is it not the Holy One, blessed be he, who
resurrects the dead? “The Lord kills and brings to life” (1 Sam. 2:6).’ He said
to them, ‘So too my lord can kill and bring back to life.’
“And
Moses said to Joshua, ‘Choose for us men:” R. Joshua says, ‘Choose for us
heroes, men who fear sin.’ R. Eleazar the Modiite says, ‘Choose for us those
who fear sin, mighty men.’
“and
go out, fight with Amalek:” R. Joshua says, “Moses said to him, ‘Joshua, Go out
from under the cloud and do battle with Amalek.’ R. Eleazar the Modiite says,
Said Moses to him, ‘Joshua, why are you guarding your head? Is it not for a
crown? Then go out from under the cloud and do battle with Amalek.’
“tomorrow
I will stand [on top of the hill with the rod of God in my hand]:” ‘Tomorrow we
shall be ready to stand.’
“on
top of the hill:” ‘Literally,’ the words of R. Joshua. R. Eleazar the Modiite
says, ‘Tomorrow we shall make a decree for a fast and we shall rely on the
deeds of the patriarchs. “top” refers to the deeds of the patriarchs. “hill”
refers to the deeds of the matriarchs.
“with
the rod of God in my hand:” Said Moses before the Omnipresent, ‘Lord of the
world, with this rod you took the Israelites out of Egypt, with this rod you
split the sea for them, with this rod you did wonders and acts of might, with
this rod do wonders and acts of might even now.’
Issi
b. Judah says, ‘There are these five passages in the Torah in which the
syntactical construction is not certain: “shall it not be lifted up,” “cursed,”
“tomorrow,” “made like almond blossoms,” and “rise up.” “shall it not be lifted
up:” “If you do well, shall it not be lifted up” (Gen. 4:7) also can be read,
“shall it not be lifted up, and even if you do not do well.” “cursed;” “cursed
be their anger, because it is fierce” (Gen. 49:7) also can be read, “for in
their anger they slew men and in their self-will they houghed oxen cursed”
(Gen. 47:6-7). “tomorrow:” “tomorrow I will stand upon the top of the hill” can
be read, ‘Choose us out men and go out, fight with Amalek tomorrow.” “‘made
like almond blossoms:” “Made like almond blossoms the knops thereof and the
flowers thereof” (Ex. 25:34) can be read, “And in the candlestick four cups
made like almond blossoms.” and “rise up:” “And this people will rise up and go
astray’ (Dt. 31:16) can be read, “Behold you are about to sleep with your
fathers and rise up.” Thus there are these five passages in the Torah in which
the syntactical construction is not certain.”
“So Joshua did as Moses told him:” What he was
commanded to do. He did not violate the decree of Moses.
“[and
fought with Amalek;] and Moses, Aaron, and Hur went up to the top of the hill:”
This is in line with what we have said. It serves to call to mind the deeds of
the patriarchs and the deeds of the matriarchs: “For from the top of the rocks
I see him, and from the hills I behold him” (Num. 23:9).
XLIII:III
“Whenever
Moses held up his hand, [Israel prevailed; and whenever he lowered his hand,
Amalek prevailed]:” Now is it really so that the hands of Moses made the
Israelites win or the hands of Moses broke Amalek? But all the time that Moses
raised up his hands to the heaven, the Israelites looked to him and believed in
the One who had commanded Moses to do it that way, and the Omnipresent then did
wonders and acts of might for them.
Along
these same lines: “The Lord said to Moses, Make yourself a fiery serpent” (Num.
2 1:8): Now could the snake kill or bring to life? But all the time that Moses
did so, the Israelites looked to him and believed in the One who had commanded
Moses to do it that way, and the Omnipresent then sent healing to them.
Along
these same lines: “And the blood will be to you as a token” (Ex. 12:13): Now
what value did the blood have for the angel or for the Israelites for that
matter? But all the time that the Israelites did so, putting blood on their
doors, the Holy One, blessed be he, had mercy on them: “The Lord will pass
over” (Ex. 12:23).
R.
Eliezer says, What is the point of the statement, “Whenever Moses held up his
hand, Israel prevailed,” and what is the point of the statement, “and whenever
he lowered his hand, Amalek prevailed”? So long as Moses raised his hands
upward, the Israelites were destined to be strengthened through teachings of
the Torah which were going to be given through his hands. So long as Moses
lowered his hands, the Israelites were destined to lower themselves from words
of the Torah which were going to be given through his hands.
“But
Moses’ hands grew weary:” In this connection [we learn that] one should not
postpone doing religious duties. For had Moses not said to Joshua, “Choose men for
us,” he would not have been distressed in this way.
They
said that at that moment the hands of Moses were heavy. It was like a man who
had two jugs of water hanging from his hands.
“so
they took a stone and put it under him [and he sat upon it]:” Didn’t they have
some sort of pillow or cushion or bolster to put under Moses? But Moses
said...[this alludes to a pericope that is not cited here].
“and
Aaron and Hur held up his hands, [one on one side, and the other on the other
side]:” For he would raise and lower them.
“so
his hands were steady until the going down of the sun:” This indicates that
they were observing a fast [to sunset], the words of R. Joshua. R. Eleazar the
Modiite says, “Sin at that moment weighed heavily on Moses’s hands. He could not
withstand it. What did he do? He turned to the deeds of the patriarchs: “so
they took a stone and put it under him:” this refers to the deeds of the
patriarchs. “and he sat upon it:” this refers to the deeds of the matriarchs.
“and
Aaron and Hur held up his hands, [one on one side, and the other on the other
side]:” Why does Scripture say, “one on one side, and the other on the other
side”? It is because Aaron would call to mind the deeds of Judah, and Hur would
call to mind the deeds of Levi. In this connection sages say, “They have no
fewer than three persons passing before the ark on the day of a public fast.
“so
his hands were steady:” With one hand [he called attention to the fact that] he
had not received a thing from the Israelites. And with the other hand Moses
said before the Holy One, blessed be he, ‘Lord of the world! Through my hands
you brought the Israelites out of Egypt, through my hands you split the Red Sea
for them, through my hands you did wonder and acts of might for them, and so
too, through my hands you should now do wonders and acts of might for them.’
“[so
his hands were steady] until the going down of the sun:” Since we have learned
in connection with all the other kingdoms that they make war only to the sixth
hour of the day. But as to this culpable kingdom, it made war from dawn to
dusk.
“And
Joshua mowed down Amalek and his people [with the edge of the sword]:” R.
Joshua says, He went down and chopped off the heads of the heroes who were with
him standing at the head of the battle lines. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, [The
word for “mowed down”] serves as an acronym: he made them sick, he made them
tremble, he crushed them.”
“Amalek:”
This means Amalek literally. The use of the accusative particle serves to
encompass his wife and children. “his people:” this refers to his troops who
were with him. And when the word “and” is added, it serves to encompass the
troops with his sons.
“with
the edge of the sword:” R. Joshua says, He did not disfigure them but judged
them with mercy.
R.
Eliezer says, “with the edge of the sword:” why is this said? We learned that
this war was carried out only at the instruction of the Almighty.
Others
say, This verse of Scripture was carried out in their regard: “Therefore as I
live, says the Lord God, I will prepare you for blood, and blood shall pursue
you; surely you have hated your own blood, therefore blood shall pursue you”
(Ezekiel 35:6).
Amalek
2
XLIV:I
“And
the Lord said to Moses, ‘Write this as a memorial in a book:” The earlier
elders say, This is the measure that runs through all generations: The scourge
with which the Israelites are smitten in the end will smite [others]. Let
everyone learn the rule of the world from the case of Amalek, who came to do
injury to the Israelites, so the Omnipresent destroyed him from the life of
this world and from the life of the world to come: “that I will utterly blot
out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven.” So in the case of Pharaoh,
who came to do injury to the Israelites, so the Holy One, blessed be he,
drowned him in the Red Sea: “But He overthrew Pharaoh and his host in the Red
Sea’ (Ps. 136:15). So in the case of every nation and empire that comes to do
harm to Israel will God always judge in accord with this rule: “Now I know that
the Lord is greater than all gods, because He delivered the people from under
the hand of the Egyptians when they dealt arrogantly with them” (Ex. 18:11).
“Write
this as a memorial in a book:” “This” speaks of what is written in this book.
“as a memorial” refers to what is written in the prophetic writings. “in a
book” refers to what is written in the Esther-scroll.
“and
recite it in the ears of Joshua:” This indicates that on that day Joshua was
anointed,” the words of R. Joshua. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, This is one of
four righteous men to whom a hint [of what was coming] was given. Two of them
perceived, and two of them did not perceive it. To Moses a hint was given, but
he did not perceive it. To Jacob a hint was given, but he did not perceive it.
To David and Mordecai hints were given, and they perceived them.
How
do we know the case of Moses? It is said, “and recite it in the ears of
Joshua.” He so said to him, “Joshua will bring about Israel’s inheritance of
the land.” But in the end, Moses stood and pleaded: “And I besought the Lord”
(Dt. 3:23). To what may the matter be likened? To the case of a king who made a
decree concerning his son that he not come into his palace with him. He entered
the first gate, but people kept silence, the second, but people kept silence,
the third, and people rebuked him, saying to him, “It is enough for you! To
this point!” So too when Moses had conquered the territory of the two peoples,
the land of Sihon and Og, and gave it to the tribe of Reuben and of Gad and the
half-tribe of Manasseh, they said to him, It appears that the decree has been
made only conditionally. So too, we have been judged only conditionally. Said
Moses before the Holy One, blessed be He, ‘Lord of the age, perhaps Your way is
like the way of a mortal. If an administrator makes a decree, a prefect can
force its revocation. If a prefect makes a decree, a commander can force its
revocation. If a commander makes a decree, a general can force its revocation.
When a general makes a decree, a governor can force him to revoke it. When a
governor makes a decree, a viceroy can make him revoke it. When a viceroy makes
a decree, the principal ruler can make him revoke it. For all of them are
appointed, one above the next in succession’: “For one higher than the high watches”
(Eccl. 5:7). “Are Your ways like their ways?”
“For
what God is there in heaven or on earth who can do according to Your works and
according to Your mighty deeds” (Dt. 3:24). “like your works” in Egypt, and
“like your mighty deeds” at the sea. “like your works” at the sea, and “like
your mighty deeds” at the rivers of Arnon.
“Let
me go over, I ask you [na] (Dt. 3:24):” The word “I ask you” is only a usage
that indicates beseeching.
“And
see the good land” (Dt. 3:24): the Land of Israel.
“that
goodly hill” (Dt. 3:24): the royal mountain.
“and
Lebanon” (Dt. 3:24): that is the temple: “Open your doors, Lebanon” (Zech.
11:1); “And Lebanon will fall by a mighty one” (Is. 10:34).
“But
the Lord was angry with me on your account:” R. Eleazar b. R. Simeon says,
“[Moses said,] ‘With me He spoke in a harsh way,’ which is not possible for a
mortal to say. [Moses continues,] ‘Perhaps you might suppose that it was on my
account?’ Scripture is explicit: ‘on your account,’ meaning, ‘on your account,
not on my account.’ ‘You are the ones who caused me not to enter the land of
Israel.’
“And
the Lord said to me, ‘It is enough for you” (Dt. 3:24): He said to him, “It is
enough for you! To this point!”
[“And
the Lord said to me, ‘It is enough for you” (Dt. 3:24):] R. Joshua says, “It is
enough for you:” It is enough for you to have the world to come.
Now
Moses was yet standing and pleading, setting forth all those pleas. Said Moses
before Him, ‘Lord of the world, was a decree made that I personally will not
enter the land?’ “Therefore you will not bring this assembly’ (Num. 20:12): ‘as
ruler I will not enter, let me enter as a commoner.’ He said to him, ‘A king
may never thereafter enter as a commoner.’ Now Moses was yet standing and
pleading, setting forth all those pleas. Said Moses before Him, ‘Lord of the
world, since a decree has been made that I will not enter the land either as
king or as commoner, let me enter it by the cave of Caesarion below Paneas.’ He
said to him, “But you shall not go over there” (Dt. 34:4). He said before Him,
‘Lord of the world, since a decree has been issued that I will not enter the
land either as king or as commoner, not even by the cave of Caesarion below
Paneas, then at least let my bones cross the Jordan.’ He said to him, “But you
will not go over this Jordan” (Dt. 3:27).
R.
Simeon b. Yohai says, It is hardly necessary to demonstrate matters in this
way. Is it not in fact said: ‘But I must die in this land, I must not go over
the Jordan’ (Dt. 4:22)? How is it possible for a corpse to cross? Rather, they
said to Moses, ‘Even your bones are not going to cross the Jordan.’
R.
Hananiah b. Iddi says, Moses was weeping for himself: “But I must die in this
land, I must not go over the Jordan” (Dt. 4:22). “For you are to pass over the
Jordan” (Dt. 11:31). ‘You are going to cross the Jordan but I am not going to.’
Others
say, Moses was bending over the feet of Eleazar, saying to him, ‘Eleazar, son
of my brother, seek mercy for me as I sought mercy for your father, Aaron.’
“Moreover the Lord was very angry with Aaron to have destroyed him, but I
prayed for Aaron also” (Dt. 9:20).
He
said before Him, “Lord of the world, if so, let me at least see it from a
distance.” And as to that matter, he said to him, “Go up to the top of Pisgah”
(Dt. 3:27).
R.
Hananiah b. Aqabia says, The view given to Abraham our father was more
accommodating than the view accorded to Moses. For as to Abraham, he was not
put to any trouble, while Moses was put to trouble. In the case of Abraham:
“Lift up your eyes and look from the place where you are located, northward,
southward, eastward, and westward” (Gen. 13:15). In the case of Moses: “Go up
to the top of Pisgah and lift up your eyes westward, northward, southward, and
eastward, and look with your eyes” (Dt. 3:27). ‘Go up there, look around, and
only then will you see.’
How
do we know that whatever Moses asked to see, the Holy One, blessed be he,
showed him? “And the Lord showed him all the land” (Dt. 34:1), that is, the
land of Israel. He wanted to see the house of the sanctuary, and he showed it
to him: “Even Gilead” (Dt. 34:1), which only means the Temple, “Gilead, you are
to me the head of Lebanon” (Jer. 22:6). How do we know that he showed him
Samson, son of Manoah? “As far as Dan” (Dt. 34:1); “And there was a man of
Zorah, of the family of Dan, whose name was Manoah” (Judges 13:2).
Another
interpretation of the phrase, “As far as Dan” (Dt. 34:1): The tribes had not
yet entered the land, and the land of Israel had not yet been divided among the
Israelites, so how can Scripture say, “As far as Dan” (Dt. 34:1)? He had
earlier said to Abraham, “Twelve tribes are destined to come forth from your
loins, and this is the portion of one of them.”
Along
these same lines: “And pursued as far as Dan” (Gen. 14:14): The tribes had not
yet entered the land, and the land of Israel had not yet been divided among the
Israelites, so how can Scripture say, “And pursued as far as Dan” (Gen. 14:14)?
The Holy One, blessed be He, said to our father, Abraham, “In this place your descendants
are destined to worship an idol.” Abraham’s strength then failed him.
And
how do we know that he showed him Barak, son of Abinoam? “And all Naphtali”
(Dt. 34:2); “And she sent and called Barak, son of Abinoam, out of
Kedesh-naphtali” (Judges 4:6).
And
how do we know that he showed him Joshua as king? “And the land of Ephraim”
(Dt. 34:2); “of the tribe of Epbraim, Hoshea son of Nun” (Num. 13:8).
And
how do we know that he showed him Gideon, son of Joash? And Manasseh” (Dt.
34:2); “Behold, my family is the poorest in Manasseh” (Judges 6:15).
And
how do we know that he showed him David as king? “And all the land of Judah”
(Dt. 34:2); “Howbeit the Lord, the God of Israel, chose me out of all the house
of my father to be king over Israel for ever; for He has chosen Judah to be
prince, and in the house of Judah, the house of my father, and among the sons
of my father He took pleasure in me to make me king over all Israel” (1 Chr.
28:4).
And
how do we know that he showed him the whole west? “As far as the distant sea”
(Dt. 34:2).
And
how do we know that he showed him the graves of the patriarchs? “and the south”
(Dt. 34:2). And how do we know that the graves of the patriarchs are in the
south? “And they went up to the south and came to Hebron” (Num. 13:22).
And
how do we know that he showed him the ruins of Sodom and Gomorrah? “And the
plain” (Dt. 34:2); “And he overthrew those cities and all the plain” (Gen.
19:25).
And
how do we know that he showed him Gog and his multitude? “and the valley of Jericho”
(Dt. 34:2). And we have learned that Gog and his multitude are destined to go
up and fall in the valley of Jericho.
Another
interpretation of the phrase, “and the valley of Jericho” (Dt. 34:2): Cannot
anyone easily see the valley of Jericho [so why did God have to show it to
Moses]? Just as a valley is cultivated, with a field filled with wheat, another
field filled with barley, so He showed him the whole of the land of Israel
cultivated like the valley of Jericho.
And
how do we know that he showed him Deborah? “the city of palm trees” (Dt. 34:2);
“And she sat under the palm tree of Deborah” (Judges 4:5).
And
how do we know that he showed him Lot’s wife? “as far as Zoar” (Dt. 34:2); “The
sun was risen upon the earth when Lot came to Zoar” (Gen. 19:23).
‘To
Jacob a hint was given, but he did not perceive it:’ “And behold, I am with you
and I shall guard you” (Gen. 28:15): Still, in the end he was afraid: “Then
Jacob was greatly afraid and distressed” (Gen. 32:8). How can a man to whom the
Holy One, blessed be He, had given assurances nonetheless have been greatly
afraid and distressed? Our father Jacob thought, ‘Woe is me, perhaps sin may
bring about [disaster nonetheless]!’
‘To
David a hint was given, and he did perceive it:’ “Your servant smote both the
lion and the bear” (1 Sam. 17:36): Thought David, “Why am I so special that I
could smite these noxious beasts? It is because in the future something is
going to happen to Israel and they are destined to be rescued by me.”
‘To
Mordecai a hint was given, and he did perceive it:’ “And Mordecai walked every
day” (Est. 2:11): Mordecai thought, ‘Is it possible that that pious woman
should be married to a wicked, uncircumcised man such as that! It is because in
the future something is going to happen to Israel and they are destined to be
rescued by her.’
XLIV:II
“that
I will utterly blot out [the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven):” [The
use of the duplicated verb, “blotting out, I will blot out”] covers both this
world and the world to come.
“the
remembrance of Amalek [from under heaven]:” “The remembrance:” this speaks of
Haman. “of Amalek:” this is to be interpreted literally
Another
interpretation of the verse, “that I will utterly blot out [the remembrance of
Amalek from under heaven]:” [The use of the duplicated verb, ‘blotting out, I
will blot out’] covers both him and all his descendants, him and all his
family,” the words of R. Joshua. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, The remembrance’
speaks of Agag; ‘Amalek’ is to be interpreted literally. “blotting out’ speaks
of him and all his descendants; “I will blot out” speaks of him and all that
generation in particular.
“from
under heaven:” The meaning is that there will never be for Amalek offspring or
posterity under the canopy of heaven.
R.
Joshua says, When Amalek came so to injure Israel as to remove them from under
the wings of their Father who is in heaven, said Moses before the Holy One,
blessed be he, ‘Lord of the world, this wicked man is coming to destroy your
children from under your wings. As to the scroll of the Torah that you have
given to them, who then will read in it?’ R. Eleazar the Modiite says, When
Amalek came so to injure Israel as to remove them from under the wings of their
Father who is in heaven, said Moses before the Holy One, blessed be he, ‘Lord
of the world, your children, whom you are destined to scatter to the four winds
of heaven, as it is said, “For I have spread you abroad to the four winds of
heaven” Zech. 2:10) — this wicked man is coming to destroy your children from
under your wings. As to the scroll of the Torah that you have given to them,
who then will read in it?’
[“that
I will utterly blot out [the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven:”] R.
Eleazar says, “When indeed will the name of those perish? When idolatry will be
uprooted, that and those who worship it, and when the Omnipresent will be
unique in the world, and God’s rule will be established forever. At that time:
“the Lord will go forth and fight” (Zech. 14:3), “and the Lord will be king”
(Zech. 14:9); “you will pursue them in anger and destroy them” (Lam. 3:66).
R.
Nathan says, Haman serves only as a reminder to generations to come: “And that
these days of Purim shall not fail from among the Jews, or the memorial of them
perish from their seed’ (Est. 9:28).”
“And
Moses built an altar and called the name of it, The Lord is my miracle:” R.
Joshua says, “Moses called it “...my miracle.” R. Eleazar the Modiite says, God
called it “my miracle,” as it is said, “the Lord called the name of it, My
miracle.”
Moses
said, ‘This miracle that the Omnipresent has done — it is for Himself that He
has done it. And so you find that whenever Israelis subject to a miracle, it is
as if the miracle is before Him [that is, for God’s sake as well]: Thus: “The
Lord, My miracle.” And whenever Israel has trouble, then it is as if there is
trouble before Him: “In all their affliction He was afflicted” (Is. 63:9). If
Israel has joy, it is as if there is joy before Him: “Because I rejoice in your
salvation” (1 Sam. 2:1).’
“saying,
A hand upon the miracle of the Lord! The Lord will have war [with Amalek from
generation to generation]:” R. Joshua says, When the Holy One, blessed be He,
sits upon the throne of His kingdom and dominion is His, then will come “the
Lord will have war with Amalek.” R. Eleazar the Modiite says, The Holy One,
blessed be he, took an oath by his throne of glory, ‘...that I will leave
neither offspring nor progeny to Amalek under the entire canopy of heaven.’ So
that people should not say, ‘This camel belongs to Amalek,’‘that ewe lamb
belongs to Amalek.’ R. Eliezer says, The Omnipresent took an oath by his throne
of glory, ‘...that if someone of any of the nations of the world comes to be
converted, the Israelites should accept him, but as to the household of Amalek,
they shall not accept him.’ For so it is said, “And David said to the young man
who told him, ‘Where do you come from?’ And he answered, ‘I am the son of an
Arnalekite convert” (2 Sam. 1:13). David then remembered what had been said to
our lord, Moses, namely, [The Omnipresent took an oath by his throne of glory,]
‘...that if someone of any of the nations of the world comes to be converted,
the Israelites should accept him, but as to the household of Arnalek, they
shall not accept him.’ Thus: “And David said to him, ‘Your blood be upon your
head, for your mouth has testified against you’” (2 Sam. 1:16). That is why it
is said, “from generation to generation.”
Another
interpretation of the phrase, “[saying, A hand upon the miracle of the Lord!
The Lord will have war with Amalek] from generation to generation:” R. Joshua
says, “from generation:’ this refers to the life of this world. “to
generation:” this refers to the life of the world to come. R. Eleazar the
Modiite says, “From the generation” of Moses and “from the generation” of
Samuel. R. Eliezer says, “From the generation” of the Messiah, which consists
of three generations. And how do we know that the generation of the Messiah
consists of three generations? “They will fear You while the sun endures and so
long as the moon, a generation and two generations’ (Ps. 72:5).”
Amalek
3
XLV:I
“Jethro,
the priest of Midian, Moses’ father-in-law, heard:” What had he heard that made
him come? He heard about the war of Amalek and came, as is written in the
immediately prior passage, the words of R. Joshua. R. Eleazar the Modiite says,
“He heard about the giving of the Torah and therefore came along.”
When
the Holy One, blessed be He, revealed Himself to give the Torah, all the kings
of the world shook in their palaces, as it is said: “The voice of the Lord is
upon the waters... The voice of the Lord is mighty” (Ps. 29:3-4). At that time
all the nations of the world collected around the wicked Balaam and said to
him, ‘Balaam, perhaps the Omnipresent is going to do to us as he did to the
generation of the flood, as it is said, “The Lord sat enthroned at the flood”
(Ps. 29:10).’ He said to them, ‘Fools, the Holy One, blessed be He, has taken
an oath to Noah that He will not bring a flood into the world, for it is said,
“For this is as the waters of Noah to Me; for as I have sworn that the waters
of Noah will no more go over the earth...” (Is. 54:9).’ They said, ‘Perhaps He
will not bring a flood of water, but He may bring a flood of fire?’ He said to
them, ‘He is going to bring neither a flood of water nor a flood of fire. It is
Torah that He is giving to His people: “The Lord is giving strength to His
people” (Ps. 29:11).”’ When they had heard that from his mouth, they all turned
around and each one went to his place.
R.
Eliezer says, It was the splitting of the Red Sea that he heard, so he came
along. For when the Red Sea was split open for Israel, the sound was heard from
one end of the world to the other: “And it came to pass, when all the kings of
the Amorites...heard” (Josh. 5:1) “And so Rahab the whore said to Joshua’s
messengers, “For we have heard how the Lord dried up the water of the Red Sea
before you, when you came out of Egypt...and as soon as we had heard it, our
hearts melted, and no spirit remained in any one, because of you” (Josh.
2:10-11).
They
say that Rahab was ten years old when the Israelites went forth from Egypt.
During all those forty years that the Israelites were in the wilderness, she
was a hooker. At the end of her fiftieth year, she converted, and she said
before the Holy One, blessed be He, ‘Lord of the world, in three matters I have
sinned. In three ways forgive me: on account of the cord, the window, and the
wall: “Then she let them down by a cord
through the window, for her house was upon the side of the wall, and she dwelt
upon the wall” (Josh. 2:15).
“Jethro,
the priest of Midian, Moses’ father-in-law, heard:” He had seven names: Jether,
Jethro, Heber, Hobab, Ben Reuel, Putiel, Keni. Jether: because he added a
passage to the Torah. Jethro: because he abounded in good deeds. Heber: because
he joined himself to the Omnipresent. Hobab: because he was precious to the
Omnipresent. Ben: because he was like a son to the Omnipresent. Reuel: because
he was like a friend to the Omnipresent. Putiel: because he freed himself from
idolatry. Keni: because he was zealous for Heaven and acquired for himself the
Torah.
Another
interpretation of the phrase, “Jethro, the priest of Midian, Moses’
father-in-law, heard:” To begin with they called him only Jether: “And Moses
went and returned to Jether his father-in-law” (Ex. 4:18). When he had done
some good deeds, they added a letter to his name and he was called “Jethro.”
So
you find in the case of Abraham. To begin with he was called only Abram. When
he had done some good deeds, they added a letter to his name and he was called
“Abraham.”
So
you find in the case of Sarah. To begin with she was called only Sarai.
C.
When she had done some good deeds, they added a larger letter to her name and
she was called “Sarah.”
So
you find in the case of Joshua. To begin with he was called Hoshea. When he had
done some good deeds, they added a letter to his name and he was called
“Joshua: “And Moses called Hoshea the son of Nun Joshua” (Num. 13:16).
And
there are others from whose names a letter was taken away. You may learn that
fact from the case of Ephron. For to begin with people called him Ephrone. But
after he took the money from our father, Abraham, they took away a letter from
his name, specifically an “o” [i.e., a vav.] Specifically, it is written,
“Abraham agreed with Ephron; and Abraham weighed out for Ephron...” The second
reference to
Ephron
is written without the “o” [i.e., the vav].
So
you find in the case of Jonadab. For to begin with, people called him
Jehonadab. But when he came to that incident, they took away a letter from his
name, and he was called Jonadab. In this
regard sages said, ‘A person should not buddy up with an evil person, even with
the intent of drawing him near to the Torah.’
“the
priest of Midian:” R. Joshua says, He was a priest serving an idol: And
Jonathan, son of Gershom, son of Manasseh, he and his sons were priests’
(Judges 18:30). R. Eleazar the Modiite says, “It means that he was a prince:
“And the sons of David were priests [meaning, princes]” (2 Sam. 8:18).
“Moses’
father-in-law:” To begin with, Moses would pay honor to his father-in-law: “And
Moses went and return to Jethro, his father in law” (Ex. 4:18). Now, his father
paid honor to him. They said to him, ‘What is your station?’ He said to them,
‘I am the father-in-law of Moses.’
“of
all that God had done for Moses and for Israel his people:” Moses weighed in
the balance as equal to the Israelites, and the Israelites as equal to Moses.
The master was equal to the disciple, the disciple to the master.
“how
the Lord had brought Israel out of Egypt:” This indicates that the exodus from
Egypt is equivalent to all of the other miracles and acts of might that the
Holy One, blessed be He, had done for Israel.
“Now
Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law, had taken Zipporah, Moses’ wife, after he had
sent her away:” R. Joshua says, After he had sent her away from him through a
writ of divorce. Here we find the word “send” and elsewhere [at Dt. 24:1] the
same term appears. Just as in that other context, we speak of a writ of
divorce, so here too we speak of a write of divorce. R. Eleazar the Modiite
says, After he had sent her away through a mere statement. For when the
Omnipresent said to Moses, “Go and take out My people, the children of Israel,
from Egypt,” as it is said, “Come now, therefore, and I will send you to
Pharaoh” (Ex. 3:10), at that time Moses took his wife and two sons and was
bringing them to Egypt: “And Moses took his wife and his sons and set them upon
an ass and returned to the land of Egypt” (Ex. 4:20). At that same time Aaron
was instructed, “Go into the wilderness to meet Moses” (Ex. 4:27). He went
forth to meet him and hugged him, embraced him, kissed him, and said to him,
‘Moses, my brother, where were you all these years?’ He said to him, ‘In
Midian.’ He said to him, ‘who are the children and women that are with you?’ He
said to him, ‘My wife and my children.’ He said to him, ‘Where are you leading
them?’ He said to him, ‘To Egypt.’ He said to him, ‘Now we are distressed about
the ones who originally went down there, and now are you going to bring us new
ones [to worry about]?’ At that moment, Moses said to Zipporah, ‘Go to your
father’s house.’ She took her two sons and went her way. That is the sense of
the statement, “after he had sent her away.”
“and
her two sons, of whom the name of the one was Gershom (for he said, ‘I have
been a sojourner in a foreign land’):” R. Joshua says, It was a strange land,
certainly strange to him. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, It was a strange land,
estranged from the Lord.
Said
Moses, ‘Since the whole world is serving idols, whom will I worship? “Him who
spoke and brought the world into being.” For at the time that Moses had said to
Jethro, “Give me Zipporah, your daughter, as a wife,” Jethro said to him,
‘Agree to one thing which I will tell you, and I will give her to you for a
wife.’ He said to him, ‘What is it?’ He said to him, ‘The first son whom you
will have will be for idolatry, and from that point onward, they will be for
the sake of Heaven.’ Moses agreed to that thing. He said to him, ‘Take an oath
to me.’ So he took an oath to him: “And he adjured Moses” (Ex. 2:21), and the
word used for “adjure” only means taking an oath: “But Saul adjured the people”
(1 Sam. 14:24); “Be adjured to take two talents” 2 Kings 5:23). Therefore the
angel took action to kill Moses. Forthwith: “Zipporah took a flint and cut off
the foreskin of her son...so he let him alone” (Ex. 4:25-26).
R.
Eleazar b. Azariah says, “Detestable is uncircumcision, for the wicked/lawless
are reproached with it: “For all the nations are uncircumcised” (Jer. 9:25).”
R. Ishmael says, Great is circumcision, for thirteen covenants were made
through it. R. Yosé the Galilean says, Great is circumcision, for it overrides
the restrictions of the Sabbath, which is a weighty matter, on account of the
violation of which the penalty of
extirpation
is incurred. R. Joshua b. Qorhah says, Great is circumcision, for the merit
accruing to Moses did not suspend that requirement even for a full hour. R.
Nehemiah says, Great is circumcision, for it overrides the laws concerning
plagues. Rabbi [Judah the Patriarchi says, Great is circumcision, for all of
the merits of Moses did not protect him at the moment that that matter pressed
upon him. He was going to bring Israel out of Egypt, but because he had been
slothful about circumcision for even a single hour, the angel wanted to kill
him: “And it came to pass on the way at the lodging place” (Ex. 4:24). R. Yosé
says, God forbid that such a righteous man should be slothful about
circumcision for even a single hour. But if
he
performed the rite and forthwith went on the journey, there is danger to life.
Should he tarry and perform the right, the Omnipresent had instructed him, “Go
and bring the Israelites out of Egypt.” It was because he had taken his leisure
in spending the night prior to the act of circumcision that the angel sought to
kill him: “And it came to pass on the way at the lodging place” (Ex. 4:24).
Rabban Simeon b. Gamaliel says, The angel wanted to kill not Moses but the
infant: “Surely a bridegroom of blood you are to me” (Ex. 4:25). Now say: go
and see who is called the bridegroom? Moses or the infant? You must conclude,
it is the infant.
“and
the name of the other, Eliezer (for he said, ‘The God of my father was my help
and delivered me from the sword of Pharaoh’):” R. Joshua says, “When did the
Omnipresent deliver him? It was at the moment at which Dathan [Ex. 2:13, “two
Hebrews striving together,” identifying the one as Dathan, the other as
Abirani] said to him, “Who made you ruler and judge...now when Pharaoh heard
this thing” (Ex. 2:14-15). They say that they seized Moses and brought him up
to the platform, tied him up, and put a sword on his throat. At that moment an
angel came down and appeared to them in Moses’s guise. They seized the angel
and let Moses go. R. Eliezer says, As to the people who seized Moses, the
Omnipresent turned them into isolated bands. Some he made dumb, some deaf, some
blind. They would say to the dumb ones, ‘Where is Moses?’ but they could not
speak; to the deaf ones, and they could not hear; to the blind ones and they
did not see. That is in line with this verse: “And the Lord said to him, “Who
has made a man’s mouth or makes a man dumb” (Ex. 4:11). That is the sense of
the verse, “The God of my father was my help and delivered me from the sword of
Pharaoh.”
XLV:II
“And
Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law, came with his sons and his wife [to Moses in the
wilderness where he was encamped at the mountain of God]:” Has it not been
said, “and your wife and her two sons with her” (Ex. 17:6)? I might then have
inferred that they were her sons from another source. Scripture therefore says,
“his sons and his wife [to Moses].” They were the sons of Moses, and not her
Sons from another source.
“in
the wilderness:” In this way Scripture expresses the remarkable character of
[Jethro’s action], for he was ensconced in a place of worldly honor, yet
desired to go out into the empty wilderness, in which there is nothing. That is
why Scripture emphasizes, “in the wilderness.”
“And
he said to Moses, [‘Lo, your father-in-law Jethro is coming to you, with your
wife and her two sons with her’]: R. Joshua says, He wrote him a letter [saying
he was coming]. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, He sent Kim a messenger, saying
‘Do it [come greet me] for my sake, and if you do not do it for my sake, then
do it for the sake of your wife, and if you do not do it for the sake of your
wife, do it for the sake of your children.’ That is why it is said, ‘And he
said to Moses, [“Lo, your father-in- law Jethro is coming to you, with your
wife and her two sons with her”].”
R.
Eliezer says, It was said to Moses, ‘I, I who am the one who spoke and brought
the world into being, I am the one who draws near, not the one who drives
away.’ So it is said, “Behold, I am a God who brings near, says the Lord, and
not a God who drives away” (Jer. 23:23). ‘I am the one who drew Jethro near,
and I did not drive him out.’ You too, when someone comes to you to convert and
comes only for the sake of Heaven, you too draw him near and do not drive him
away. In this connection you learn that one should push away with the left hand
and draw near with the right, not like Gehazi’s treatment by Elisha, who drove
him out for all time.
“Moses went out to meet his father-in-law:”
They say that Moses went out along with Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of
the elders of Israel. Some say, ‘Even the Presence of God went forth with
them.’
“and
did obeisance and kissed him:” I do not know who bowed down to whom, or who
kissed whom. When Scripture says, “And they asked, a man of his fellow, after
their welfare,” — now whom is called “a man”? Is it not Moses: “And the man,
Moses, was very meek” (Num. 12:3)? One must conclude that only Moses bowed down
to and kissed his father-in-law. In this connection we learn that a man must
treat his father-in-law with respect.
“went
into the tent:” This refers to the house of study.
“Then
Moses told his father-in-law:” this was to draw him forth and bring him near to
the Torah.
“all
that the Lord had done to Pharaoh and to the Egyptians for Israel’s sake:” That
He had given the Torah to His people, Israel.
“all
the hardship:” in Egypt.
“that
had come upon them in the way:” in the war with Amalek.
“and
how the Lord had delivered them:” the Omnipresent had saved them from all of
them.
“And
Jethro rejoiced [for all the good which the Lord had done to Israel, in that he
had delivered them out of the hand of the Egyptians]:” R. Joshua says, It is in
regard to the benefit of giving the manna that Scripture speaks. He said to
him,’ In this manna that the Omnipresent has given to us we detect the flavor
of bread, the flavor of meat, the flavor of fish, the flavor of locusts, the flavor
of all the delicacies in the world, for Scripture says not only “good,” or “the
good,” or “all the good” but “for all the good.” R. Eleazar the Modiite says,
It is in regard to the benefit of the well that Scripture speaks. He said to
him, ‘In this well that the Omnipresent has given us we detect the taste of old
wine, the taste of new wine, the taste of milk, the taste of honey, the taste
of all delicious drinks in the world, for Scripture says not only ‘good,’ or
‘the good,’ or ‘all the good’ but “for all the good.” R. Eliezer says, It is in
regard to the benefit of the land of Israel that Scripture speaks. He said to
him, ‘The Omnipresent is going to give us six measures of benefits: the land of
Israel, the age to come, the new world, the monarch of the house of David, the
priesthood, the Levites, for Scripture says not only ‘good,’ or ‘the good,’ or
‘all the good’ but “for all the good.” Forthwith: “And Jethro said, ‘Blessed be
the Lord, [who has delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians and out of
the hand of Pharaoh. Now I know that the Lord is greater than all gods, because
He delivered the people from under the hand of the Egyptians when they dealt
arrogantly with them.]”
XL:III
“And
Jethro said, Blessed be the Lord:” Said R. Pappyas, “Scripture speaks in a
disparaging way about Israel. “For lo, there were 600,000 men there, but not
one of them went and blessed the Omnipresent, until Jethro came and blessed the
Omnipresent. For it is said, “And Jethro said, Blessed be the Lord who has delivered
you out of the hand of the Egyptians and out of the hand of Pharaoh:” From the
hand of that great dragon, of whom it is said, “The great dragon that lies in
the midst of his rivers, who has said, My river is my own and I have made it
for myself” (Ez. 29:3).
“out
of the hand of the Egyptians:” out of the subjugation to the Egyptians.
“Now
I know [that the Lord is greater than all gods]:” Up to now he had not
confessed the matter.
“that
the Lord is greater [than all gods]:” They say that to begin with no slave had
been able to escape from Egypt, but now the Holy One, blessed be He, has taken
out six hundred thousand men from Egypt. That is why it is said, “that the Lord
is greater.”
“than
all gods:” They say that Jethro had not neglected a single idol in the world,
that he had not gone after and worshipped: “Behold now, I know that there is no
God in all the earth but in Israel” (2 Kgs. 5:15). So too Rahab the whore says,
“For the Lord your God, he is God in heaven above and on earth beneath” (Josh.
2:11).
“because
he delivered the people from under the hand of the Egyptians when they dealt
arrogantly with them:” I knew Him in the past, and now all the more so, for His
name has been made great in the world. For with the very plan that the
Egyptians had devised to destroy Israel with that very thing the Omnipresent
inflicted punishment upon them, as it is said, “Yes, for with the very thing
with which they acted presumptuously against them.”
“And
Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law offered a burnt offering and sacrifices to God:”
In this way Scripture expresses the remarkable character of [Jethro’s action],
for here was a man who had been worshipping idols, sacrificing, burning
incense, making libation offerings, bowing down to his idol. And now he offered
a burnt offering and sacrifices to the Lord.
“and
Aaron came with all the elders of Israel to eat bread with Moses’ father-in-law
before God:” Where had Moses gone? Had he not gone forth in the first place to
meet him: “And Moses went out to meet his father-in-law” (Ex. 17:7)? And now
where did he go? This teaches that he was standing and serving them. Whence did
he learn to do so? From Abraham our father.
They
say that R. Isaac expounded this matter and said, “When Rabban Gamaliel made a
banquet for sages, all the sages were seated, reclining with him. Rabban
Gamaliel went and served them. They said, ‘We are not in the right that Rabban
Gamaliel should serve us.’ R. Joshua said to them, ‘Let him do his service. We
find a greater man than Rabban Gamaliel who served people.’ They said to him,
‘Who was that?’ He said to them, ‘It was our father Abraham [who was the
greatest man of the age but] served the ministering angels, even though he
thought that they were idol-worshipping Arabs.’ All the more so should Rabban
Gamaliel serve sages, sons of Torah.’ Said to them R. Sadoq, ‘Let him do his
service. We find a greater man than Rabban Gamaliel and than Abraham our
father, who served people.’ They said to him, ‘Who was that?’ He said to them,
‘It was the Holy One, blessed be He, who supplies every one his needs, and
everybody what is needed, and not only to suitable people but even to
wicked/lawless people, people who worship idols. All the more so should Rabban
Gamaliel serves sages, sons of Torah.
“and
Aaron came with all the elders of Israel to eat bread with Moses’ father-in-law
before God:” Why “before God”? It teaches that whoever welcomes a fellow is as
if one welcomed the face of the Presence of God.
Amalek
4
XLVI:I
“On
the morrow [Moses sat to judge the people, and the people stood about Moses
from morning till evening]:” on the morrow, after the Day of Atonement.
“Moses
sat to judge the people, and the people stood about Moses from morning till
evening:” Was Moses really in session and judging the Israelites from morning
to night? Is it not the fact that judges do their work only up to meal time?
Why does Scripture then say, “from morning till evening”? It teaches that
whoever produces an accurate judgment is credited as though he were partner
with the Holy One, blessed be he, in the works of Scripture. Here it is
written, “from morning till evening,” and elsewhere, “And there was evening and
there was morning” (Gen. 1:5).
“When
Moses’ father-in-law saw [all that he was doing for the people]:” What did he see?
He sat that he was like a king, sitting on his throne, with everyone standing
around him. He said to him, “What is this that you are doing to the people?
‘Why do you sit alone, and all the people stand about you from morning
until
evening?” (Ex. 18:14).
“And
Moses said to his father-in-law, ‘Because the people come to me to inquire of
God:” They say that Judah of Kefar Akko asked the following of Rabban Gamaliel:
‘How come Moses said, Because the people come to me to inquire of God’? He said
to him, If not, then what should he have said? He said to him, Let him say,
Because the people come to inquire of God. He said to him, “Since he does say,
‘to inquire of God,’ he has phrased matters quite felicitously.
“when
they have a dispute they come to me”: in respect to matters of uncleanness and
cleanness. And “I decide between a man:” this refers to a judgment without
arbitration. “and his neighbor:” this refers to a judgment based upon
arbitration, indicating that both of them part from one another as friends.
“and I make them know the statutes of God:” this refers to exegesis. “and his
decisions:” this refers to instructions, the words of R. Joshua. R. Eleazar the
Modiite says, “statutes” refers to the prohibition of incest, as it is said,
“That you do not do any of these abominable statutes’ (Lev. 18:30), “and his
decisions” refers to instructions.
“Moses’
father-in-law said to him, ‘What you are doing is not good. Also you and the
people with you will wear yourselves out:” R. Joshua says, They will wear you
out and make you fall away. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, They will make you
fade and will criticize you, like a fig the leaves of which fade: “As the leaf
falls off from the vine and as a falling fig from the fig tree” (Is. 34:4).
“Also
you and the people with you will wear yourselves out:” “you” refers to Moses.
“Also” refers to Aaron. “and the people with you” speaks of the seventy
elders,” the words of R. Joshua. E. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, “you” refers
to Moses. “Also” refers to Aaron. “and also” speaks of Nadab and Abihu. “and
the people with you” speaks of the seventy elders.”
“for
the thing is too heavy for you:” He said to him, “Look at a beam. When it is
still moist, two or three
get
under it but cannot to stand under its weight. If four or five get under it,
they can hold it up. “...for the thing is too heavy for you; you are not able
to perform it alone.”
“Listen
now to my voice:” If you listen to me, it will be good for you.
“I
will give you counsel and God be with you!:” Go and take counsel with the
Almighty.
“You
will represent the people before God [and bring their cases to God]:” Be for
them like a pot full of words [of God].
“and
bring their cases to God:” words that you hear you will bring and set them
forth.
“and
you will teach them the statutes and the decisions:” “the statutes:” this
refers to exegesis. “and decisions:” this refers to instructions the words of
R. Joshua. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, “...statutes” refers to the prohibition
of incest, as it is said, “That you do not do any of these abominable statutes”
(Lev. 18:30). ...and “...decisions” refers to instructions.”
“and
make them know the way in which they must walk:” this refers to the study of
Torah. “and what they must do:” this refers to good deeds, the words of R.
Joshua. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, “and make them know:” teach them how to
live. “the way:” this refers to visiting the sick. “in which they must walk:”
this refers to burying the dead. “in which:” this refers to acts of loving
kindness. “and what:” this refers to the strict requirements of the law. “they
must do:” this refers to what falls beyond the limits of strict justice.
“Moreover
choose [able men from all the people]:” You will see them through prophecy.
“able men:” rich and substantial. “such as fear God:” these are those who fear
the Omnipresent when sitting in court. “men who are trustworthy:” these are
those who are reliable. “and who hate a bribe:” these are those who hate to
take money when judging a case, the words of R. Joshua. R. Eleazar the Modiite
says, “Moreover choose able men from all the people:” see them through use of
the mirror, with the glass through which kings peer. “able men:” these are
reliable men. “such as fear God:” these are those who arbitrate when making a
decision. “men who are trustworthy:” these are men like R. Hanina b. Dosa and
his colleagues. “and who hate a bribe:” these are those who hate their own
money, all the more the money of others.
“and
place such men over the people as rulers of thousands, of hundreds, of fifties,
and of tens:” There were six hundred rulers of thousand, six thousand rulers of
hundreds, twelve thousand rulers of fifties, sixty thousand rulers of tens. So
in all there were 78,600 princes of Israel.
“And
let them judge the people at all times:” R. Joshua says, They are to be people
able to take their time away from their work. Let them judge the people at all
times. R. Eleazar the Modiite say, They are to be people who are able to take
time from their own work and occupy themselves with teachings of the Torah. Let
them judge the people at all times.
“every
great matter they will bring to you, but any small matter they shall decide
themselves:” Major matters they will bring to you. That is what you say. But
perhaps the sense is, matters that pertain to important persons do they bring
to you, while matters that pertain to unimportant persons they are to judge on
their own? When Scripture says, “The hard cases they brought to Moses” (Ex.
18:26), it means that Scripture speaks not of the status of persons but of the
character of the cases.
“so
it will be easier for you, and they will bear the burden with you:” if you do
this thing, and “God so commands you:” Go and take counsel with the Almighty.
“and
God so commands you, then you will be able to endure:” If He concurs, you will
be able to endure, and if not, you will not be able to endure.
“and
all this people also [will go to their place in peace]:” This speaks of Aaron,
Nadab and Abihu, and the seventy elders, who “will go to their place in peace.”
XLVI:II
“So
Moses gave heed to the voice of his father-in-law:’ literally. “and did all
that he had said:” whatever his father in law said to him, the words of R.
Joshua. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, “So Moses gave heed to the voice of his father-in-law:’
literally. “and did all that He had said:” whatever God said.
“[Moses
chose able men out of all Israel and made them heads of thousands, of hundreds,
of fifties, and of tens. And they judged the people at all times; every great
matter they brought to Moses, but any small matter they decided themselves.]
Then Moses let his father-in-law depart:” R. Joshua says, He sent him out with
the worldly honor that was coming to him. R. Eleazar the Modiite says, He gave
him many gifts. For from the answer that he gave to Moses, you can learn, for
it is said, He said, “Do not leave us, I ask you” (Num. 10:31). You have given
us good advice and valuable advice and the Omnipresent concurs with your views.
“Do not leave us, I ask you.” He said to him, ‘Is a lamp useful except in a
dark place? Is a lamp useful between sun and moon? Now you are the sun and
Aaron is the moon. What is a lamp going to do between the sun and the moon. But
lo, I am going to go to my country and tell everybody and convert everybody in
my town and bring them to the study of the Torah and draw them near under the
wings of the presence of God.’
Might
one suppose that he went along and did nothing? Scripture says, “And the
children of the Kenite, Moses’ father-in- law, went up out of the city of palm
trees with the children of Judah into the wilderness of Judah, which is in the
south of Arab; and they went and dwelt with the people” (Judges 1:16). “People”
means only wisdom, in line with this usage: “No doubt you are the people and
with you is the perfection of wisdom” (Job 12:2). Do not read the letters as
though they spelled “perfection” but rather “cessation.” So long as a sage
endures, his wisdom endures with him. When the sage dies, his wisdom dies with
him. So we find that when R. Nathan died, his wisdom died with him.
They
went and dwelled with those living at Jabez. Were there people living there at
that time? But they were disciples of Jabez, as it is said, “The clans of the
scribes living at Jabez: Tirathites, Shimeathites, and Suchathites. These were
Kenites who were connected by marriage with the ancestor of the Rechabites” (1
Chr. 2:55). They were called Tirathites, because when they sounded the horn in
supplication, they were answered; Shimeathites, because they heard the alarm-note
[which in Hebrew uses the same consonants] from Mount Sinai; Suchathites
because they lived in tents: “But we have lived in tents and have obeyed and
acted in accord with all that Jonadab, our father, commanded us” (Jer. 35:10).
There
was the case of someone who said, “Today is the offering of the sons of those
who drink water.” A heavenly echo came forth from the house of the Holy of
Holies and said, “He who accepted their offerings in the wilderness is the one
who will accept their offerings at this time.”
R.
Nathan says, “Greater is the covenant that was made with Jonadab b. Rahab than
the one made with David. For the covenant made with David was made with him
only conditionally: “If your children keep My covenant” (Ps. 132:12), and if
not: “Then I will visit their transgression with the rod” (Ps. 89:33). But the
covenant made with Jonadab b. Rechab was not conditional: To the Rechabites
Jeremiah said, “These are the words of the Lord of Hosts, the God of Israel:
Because you have kept the command of Jonadab your ancestor and obeyed all his
instructions and carried out all that he told you to do, therefore these are
the words of the Lord of Hosts, the God of Israel: Jonadab son of Rahab will
not want a descendant to stand before Me for all time” (Jer. 35:18-19).
Three
things were given conditionally: the land of Israel, the house of the
sanctuary, and the monarchy of the house of David, thus excepting the scroll of
the Torah, the covenant of Abraham, which were not given conditionally. The
land of Israel: “Take heed of yourselves lest your heart be deceived...and the
anger of the Lord be kindled against you” (Dt. 11:6-17). The house of the
sanctuary: “As for this house which you are building, if you walk in my
statutes and carry out my ordinances and keep all My commandments to walk in
them, then I will establish My word with you, which I spoke to David your
father” (1 Kgs. 6:12); and if not, “And this house which is so high will become
desolate and every one who passes by it will be astonished” (1 Kgs. 9:8). And
the monarchy of the house of David: “If your children keep My covenant” (Ps.
132:12), and if not: “Then I will visit their transgression with the rod” (Ps.
89:33). How do we know that the scroll of the Torah was not given
conditionally? “The Torah which Moses commanded us is an inheritance” (Dt.
33:4). How do we know that the covenant of Abraham was not given conditionally?
“It is an everlasting covenant of salt” (Num. 18:19); “And it shall be to him
and to his seed after him the covenant of an everlasting priesthood” (Num.
25:13).
And
how do we know that the descendants of Jethro are the descendants of Jonadab
son of Rechab? As it is said, “These were Kenites who were connected by
marriage with the ancestor of the Rechabites” (1 Chr. 2:55). They were looking
for a teacher, and Jabez was looking for disciples: Jabez called upon the God
of Israel and said, “I pray You, bless me and grant me wide territories. May
Your hand be with me, and do me no harm, I pray You, and let me be free from
pain. And God granted his petition” (1 Chr. 4:10). “I pray You, bless me:” with
the study of the Torah. “and grant me wide territories:” with disciples. “May
Your hand be with me:” so that the impulse to do evil should not so distress me
as to stop me from occupying myself in your Torah. “And God granted his
petition:” indicating that He gave him what he had asked, and gave them what
they had asked.
For
it is said, “The poor man and the one of means meet together; the Lord gives
light to the eyes of both” (Prov. 29:13); “The rich and the poor meet together,
the Lord is the maker of them all” (Prov. 22:2). How so? If a disciple serves
the master, and the master wants to teach him, “the Lord gives light to the
eyes of both,” for this one acquires the life of the age to come, and that one
acquires the life of the age to come. But if a disciple serves the master,
while the master does not want to teach him “the Lord is the maker of them
all:” the one who made this one a sage will in the end make him an idiot, and
the one who made this one an idiot in the end will make him a sage.
Along
these same lines you find the rule for those who give to charity. How so? A
poor man who stretched out his hand to the householder, and the house holder
wants to give him: “the Lord gives light to the eyes of both.” But if a poor
man who stretched out his hand to the householder, and the house holder does
not want to give him: “the Lord is the maker of them all:” The one who made the
one poor in the end will make him rich, and the one who made the other rich in
the end will make him poor.
R.
Judah the Patriarch says, Lo, Scripture says, “Jabez called upon the God of
Israel and said, I pray You, bless me:” with children. “and grant me wide
territories:” with sons and daughters. “May Your hand be with me:” in business.
“and do me no harm, I pray You, and let me be free from pain:” as to the life
that You have given me, may it be free from belly ache, eye pain, head aches.
“and let me be free from pain:” but if not, I will go down in grief to the
grave. “And God granted his petition:” He gave him what he wanted.
R.
Hananiah b. Gamaliel says, “Why were all these figures given [“Moses chose able
men out of all Israel and made them heads of thousands, of hundreds, of
fifties, and of tens”]? They were stated only in the second year, at the time
that Moses wanted to set appoint magistrates’ assistants over the Israelites:
“By their father’s houses, every man with his own standard, according to the
ensigns’ (Num. 2:2).”
Pesiqta
deRab Kahana
Midrashic
sermons for Shabbat Zakhor
Pisqa
Three
Remember
[what the Amalekites did to you on your way out of Egypt, how they met you on
the road when you were faint and weary and cut off your rear, which was lagging
behind exhausted; they showed no fear of God. When the Lord your God gives you
peace from your enemies on every side, in the land which he is giving you to
occupy as your patrimony, you shall not fail to blot out the memory of the
Amalekites from under heaven] (Deut. 25:17-19).
III:I
“Remember
[what the Amalekites did to you on your way out of Egypt, how they met you on
the road when you were faint and weary and cut off your rear, which was lagging
behind exhausted; they showed no fear of God. When the Lord your God gives you
peace from your enemies on every side, in the land which he is giving you to
occupy as your patrimony, you shall not fail to blot out the memory of the
Amalekites from under heaven]” (Deut. 25:17-19). “May the sins of his
forefathers be remembered [and his mother’s wickedness/lawlessness never be
wiped out! May they remain on record before the Lord but may He extinguish
their name from the earth]” (Ps. 109:14-15). [Since Ps. 109:17 refers to one’s
not delighting in the blessing, and since, as we shall see, Amalek is identified
with Esau, we assume that the cited passage refers to Esau, who rejected the
birthright, and so ask:] now were the forebears of Esau wicked/lawless? Were
they not utterly righteous/generous? Abraham, after all, was his grandfather,
Isaac his father, and yet you say, May the sins of his forefathers be
remembered! But [the sense is,] the sin that he committed was against his
forefathers. And what is the sin that he committed against his forefathers? You
find that Isaac represented Abraham. Now Isaac lived a hundred and eighty
years, while Abraham lived only one hundred seventy-five years. [We shall now
see that the loss of those five years to Abraham’s loss is attributed to the
behavior of Esau.] R. Yudan in the name of R. Aibu, R. Phineas in the name of R.
Levi: ‘In the five years that were withheld from the life of Abraham, Esau,
that wicked man, committed two severe transgressions. He had sexual relations
with a betrothed maiden, and he committed murder.’ [Abraham then was taken away
five years earlier than he should have been, so that he would not have to witness these sins, and
Isaac suffered in like manner on that same account.] That is in line with this
verse: “Esau came from the field” (Gen. 25:29), and the word “field” stands
only for a betrothed maiden, as it is said, “and f it is in the field that the
man found the betrothed maiden” (Deut. 22:25). “And he was tired” (Gen. 25:29),
and. the word tired stands only for murder, as it is said, “For my soul is
tired like the soul of a murderer” (Jer. 4:31). R. Zakkai the Elder says, ‘He
also had stolen.’ Said the Holy One, blessed be He, I promised Abraham, “And
you will come to your fathers in peace” (Gen. 15:15). Would it be a good old
age for this man to see his son’s son fornicating, murdering, and stealing? Is
that good old age? It is better for that righteous/generous man to be gathered
up in peace: “For your loving-kindness is better than life” (Ps. 63:4). And
what is the sin that he committed against his father? He caused his eyes to
weaken. On the basis of that case, they have said: ‘Whoever brings up a
wicked/lawless son or a wicked/lawless disciple in the end will suffer from
weak eyes.’ The case of the wicked/lawless son derives from our father, Isaac:
“And when Isaac got old, his eyes grew so weak that he could not see” (Gen.
27:1). Why? Because he had raised a wicked/lawless son, Esau. The rule of the
wicked/lawless disciple comes from the case of Ahiah the Shilonite: “And Ahiah
the Shilonite could not see, because his eyes had grown weak on account of old
age” (1 Kgs. 14:4). Why? Because he had raised a wicked/lawless disciple. And
who was it? It was Jeroboam son of Nabat, who committed sin and who caused the
Israelites to sin. Therefore his eyes grew dim.
What
was the sin that he committed against his mother [to whom reference is made in
the intersecting-verse, . ..and his mother’s wickedness never be wiped out]? R.
Tanhum bar Abun and R. Judah and R. Nehemiah and rabbis: R. Judah says, When he
was coming out of his mother’s womb, he cut off her uterus, so that she should
not give birth again. That is in line with this verse of Scripture [in the
translation of Braude and Kapstein]: “Because he pursued his brother with a
sword, he destroyed the womb whence he came” (Amos 1:11). Said R. Berekhiah, You
should not conclude that it was merely [adventitious, that is,] because he was
coming forth from his mother’s womb, but as he was coming out of his mother’s
womb, his fist was [deliberately] stretched out toward [his brother, and this
was intentional]. What verse of Scripture so indicates? [In the translation of
Braude and Kapstein:] “The wicked have a fist from the womb, liars go astray as
soon as they are born” (Ps. 58:4). R. Nehemiah says, “He caused her not to
produce the twelve tribes. For R. Huna said, Rebecca was worthy of producing
all the twelve tribes, a fact indicated by this verse: And the Lord said to
her, “Two nations are in your womb” (Gen. 25:23). Lo, there are two. “And two
peoples will separate from your belly” (Gen. 25:23), thus four. “One people
shall be stronger than the other” — so six; “the elder shall serve the younger”
— eight; “And when her days to be delivered were fulfilled, behold there were
twins in her womb,” then ten; “And the first came forth. ...and after that came
forth his brother...” — twelve in all.” There are those who prove the same
proposition from this verse of Scripture: “If this is the way my childbearing
is to go, why should I bear this” (Gen. 25:22). The word for this is composed
of the letters Z and H, the numerical value of which is seven and five,
respectively, thus twelve. And rabbis say, [Esau] caused her bier not to be
carried out in public. You find that when Rebecca died, people said, ‘Who is
going to go forth before the bier? Abraham is dead, Isaac is blind and stays at
home, Jacob has fled before Esau. Will the wicked Esau be permitted to go forth
before her bier?’ People will say, ‘Cursed be the teats that suckled that one.’
What did they do? They brought out her bier by night [without public display].
Said R. Yose bar Haninah, And since her bier was not carried out in public,
Scripture too dealt with her death only obliquely: “Deborah, Rebecca’s nurse
died. ...and was buried below Beth-el under the oak, which was called
allon-bacuth [bacuth being understood to mean weeping] (Gen. 35:8).” What is
the meaning of allon? R. Simeon bar Nahman in the name of R. Jonathan, It is a
word in Greek, meaning, another. [Hence the sense of the name of the oak is,
another weeping. The first, then, was for Rebecca. So it is only obliquely that
we learn that she had died, as is made clear in the immediately-following verse
of Scripture.] While Jacob was sitting and observing the lamentation for his
nursemaid, news came to him about his mother: “God appeared to Jacob again when
he came from Paddan-aram and blessed him” (Gen. 35:9). What is the blessing
that he bestowed on him? R. Aha in the name of R. Jonathan, It was the blessing
that is bestowed upon mourners.
Said
the Holy One, His father could have paid him back with evil, his mother could
have paid him back with evil, his brother [Jacob] could have paid him back with
evil, his grandfather could have paid him back with evil. Now you [Israel] pay
him back with evil, so will I pay him back with evil. You make mention of his
name down below, and I will wipe out his name up above: May they remain on
record before the Lord but may He extinguish their name from the earth.
“Remember what the Amalekites did to you.”
III:II
R.
Tarthum bar Hanilai opened [discourse by citing the following
intersecting-verse]: “Your memorials will be like unto ashes, your eminences to
eminences of clay” [New English Bible: “your pompous talk is dust and ashes,
your defenses will crumble like clay”] [Braude and Kapstein, p. 46: Your acts
of remembering Amalek, followed by repentance for your sins, will be like
‘ashes,’ but when you deserve visitation [for sin], visitation in ‘clay’ will
be your punishment] (Job 13:12). Said the Holy One, blessed be He, to Israel
[with reference to the verse’s statement about memorials, that is, acts of
remembering], As to those two acts of remembrance that I inscribed for you in
Scripture, be meticulous about them: “Blot out the memory of Amalek” (Deut.
25:19), “For I shall certainly blot out the memory of Amalek” (Ex. 17:14).
“...will be like unto ashes:” that is, are comparable to ashes. If you have
acquired merit, lo, you are the children of Abraham, the one who compared
himself to ashes: “For I am dust and ashes” (Gen. 18:27). And if not: “your
eminences to eminences of clay,” that is, prepare yourselves for the
subjugation of Egypt. For what is written with respect to Egypt: “They
embittered their lives with hard work in clay” (Ex. 1:14).
III:III
R.
Judah in the name of R. Aibu opened discourse by citing the following verse of
Scripture: Do not behave like horse or mule, unreasoning creatures, whose
course must be checked with bit and bridle. [Many are the torments of the
ungodly; but unfailing love enfolds him who trusts in the Lord] (Ps. 32:9-10).
Six matters have been stated with reference to a horse: it eats a lot, excretes
a little, loves fornication, loves war, despises sleep, and displays arrogance.
And some say, “In battle it also kills its owner.” Do not behave like horse: as
to a horse, when you bridle it, it kicks, when you pat it, it kicks, when you
ornament it, it kicks, when you feed it barley, it kicks If you do not get near
it, it kicks. You should not be like that. Rather, be conscientious about
responding to good with good, and responding to evil with evil. Paying back
good with good: “You will not abominate the Edomites” (Deut. 23:8). Paying back
evil with evil: “Remember what Amalek did to you” (Deut. 25:17).
III:IV
R.
Banai in the name of R. Huna commenced discourse by citing the following verse:
“A false balance is an abomination to the Lord [but a just weight is his
delight. When pride comes, then comes disgrace] (Prov. 11:1-2).” Said R. Banai
in the name of R. Huna, If you have seen a generation, the measures of which
are perverted, know that the government is going to come and declare war
against that generation. What verse of Scripture so indicates? “A false balance
is an abomination to the Lord.” And what is written immediately following?
“When pride comes, then comes disgrace” [Braude and Kapstein: “The insolent
(kingdom) will come and bring humiliation (to Israel)”].
R.
Berekhiah in the name of R. Abba bar Kahana, “It is written: “Will I acquit the
man with wicked scales and with a bag of deceitful weights” (Micah 6:11). “Will
I acquit the man with wicked scales:” is it possible even to imagine that God
would acquit one with perverted scales? But: “a bag of deceitful weights”
[means, even in your own bag, they will remain deceitful weights].
Said R. Levi, So Moses gave an
indication to Israel in the Torah: “You will not have in your bag a large stone
and a small one, you will not have in your house two ephah-measures, one large,
one small” (Deut.
25:13-14). If you have done so,
know that the government is going to come and declare war against that
generation. What verse of Scripture so indicates? “A false balance is an
abomination to the Lord.” And what is written immediately following [Deut.
25:13-14]? “Remember what Amalek did to you” (Deut. 25:17).
III:V
R.
Levi commenced discourse by citing the following verse of Scripture: “You have
rebuked the nations, You have destroyed the wicked/lawless, You have blotted
out their name forever and ever (Ps. 9:5): “You have rebuked the nations”
refers to Amalek, concerning whom it is written: “Amalek was the first of the
gentiles” (Num. 24:20). “...You have destroyed the wicked/lawless,” refers to
the wicked/lawless Esau, concerning whom it is written, “Edom will be called
the border of wickedness/lawlessness” (Mal. 1:4). If one would say to you, even
Jacob is covered by that statement, say to him, “You have destroyed the
wicked/lawless,” [which cannot possibly speak of Jacob, for] what is written is
not wicked/lawless ones, in the plural, but the wicked/lawless one, in the
singular, which refers to the wicked/lawless Esau. “...You have blotted out
their name forever and ever:” [this speaks of Amalek, as it is said,] “Blot out
the remembrance of Amalek” (Deut. 25:17).
III:
VI
“Return
sevenfold into the bosom of our neighbors the taunts with which they have
taunted You, O Lord (Ps. 79:12): R. Judah bar Guria said, Let what they did to
us in respect to the circumcision, which was assigned to the bosom of Abraham,
be remembered against them. This accords with that which R. Hinenah bar Silqah,
R. Joshua of Silchnin, and R. Levi in the name of R. Yohanan said, What were
the members of the household of Amalek doing? They cut off the circumcised
penises of the Israelites and tossing them upward, saying. ‘Is this what you
have chosen? Here is what you have chosen!’
And
R. Joshua b. Levi: Let what they did to us with respect to the Torah be
remembered against them. For concerning the Torah it is written: “It is refined
seven times” (Ps. 12:7). So: “Return sevenfold into the bosom of our neighbors
the taunts with which they have taunted You, O Lord” (Ps. 79:12).
Rabbis
say, Let what they did to us with regard to the sanctuary, which is set in the
bosom of the world, be remembered against them [for they razed the Temple to
its foundations, which are at the bosom of the earth (Braude and Kapstein, p.
48). For R. Huna said, From the bottom of the ground (bosom of the earth, to
the lower settle will be two cubits” (Ez. 43:14).
Now
Samuel came along and paid them back: “Samuel cut Agag apart before the Lord in
Gilgal” (1 Sam. 15:33). What did he do to him? R. Abba bar Kahana said, He
chopped off his flesh in small bits, the size of an olive’s bulk, and fed it to
the ostriches: “Pieces of his body will be devoured, yes, the firstborn of
death shall devour pieces of his flesh” (Job 18:13). He chose for him a bitter
form of death. And rabbis say, He set up four stakes in the ground and tied him
on them. [Agag] was saying, “Surely the most bitter of deaths is at hand” (1
Sam. 15:32). Do people put princes to death in such a way, with so harsh a form
of death?
R.
Samuel bar Abidimi said, They judged him in accord with the law of the nations
of the world, that is, without appropriately cross-examined testimony of
witnesses, and without an admonition in advance. R. Isaac said, They castrated
him: Samuel said, “As your sword has made women childless, so shall your mother
be childless among women” (1 Sam. 15:33), reading the word for mother as if the
letters meant penis, hence, the penis of that man [shall not produce children].
Said R. Levi, So in the Torah
Moses gave an indication of the same matter to Israel: When men fight with one
another and the wife of the one draws near to rescue her husband from the hand
of him who is beating him and puts out her hand and seizes him by the private
parts, then you shall cut off her hand; your eye shall have no pity (Deut.
25:11-12). What is written thereafter: “Remember what Amalek did to you on the
way as you came out of Egypt” (Deut. 25:17).
III:
VII
“Remember
[what Amalek did to you on the way as you came out of Egypt]” (Deut. 25:17):
Said R. Berekhiah, You say to us, “Remember!” You do the remembering. For we
are often forgetful, but You, who are never forgetful, You are the one to do
the remembering “of what Amalek did to you on the way as you came out of Egypt”
(Deut. 25:17).
“[Remember]
what [Amalek] did to you [on the way as you came out of Egypt]” (Deut. 25:17):
Said R. Isaac, Did he do it to us and not to You? “Remember, O Lord, against
the children of Edom, the day of Jerusalem [the day they said, raze it, raze
it]” (Ps. 137:7).
“[Remember,
O Lord, against the children of Edom, the day of Jerusalem the day they said,]
raze it, raze it” (Ps. 137:7): R. Abba bar Kahana said, The meaning of the
Hebrew word translated “raze it” follows the sense of the same word as it
occurs in the following verse: “The broad walls of Babylon will be utterly
razed” (Jer. 51:58). R. Levi said, The meaning of the Hebrew word translated
“raze it” should be rendered as “empty it, empty it,” for it follows the sense
of the same word as it occurs in the following verse: “She hastened and emptied
her pitcher into the trough” (Gen. 24:20). In the view of R. Abba bar Kahana,
who holds that the word means “raze it, raze it,” the sense is that they went
down to the very foundations, to the base. In the view of R. Levi, who holds
that the word means, “empty it out, empty it out,” the sense is that they cut
away the foundations, taking them away.
III:
VIII
“[Remember
what] the Amalekites [did to you on your way out of Egypt, how they met you on
the road when you were faint and weary and cut off your rear, which was lagging
behind exhausted; they showed no fear of God. When the Lord your God gives you
peace from your enemies on every side, in the land which he is giving you to
occupy as your patrimony, you shall not fail to blot out the memory of the
Amalekires from under heaven]” (Deut. 25:17-19): The word for “Amalek” is to be
divided into two components, bearing the meanings “am” = people, and “yeleq,” =
locust. It flew down like the zahla-locust. Another interpretation: the nation
of Amalek came down to lick up the blood of Israel like a dog.
R.
Levi in the name of R. Simeon b. Halapta: To what may Amalek be compared? To a
fly that was lusting for an open wound. So Amalek was lusting after Israel like
a dog.
It
was taught in the name of R. Nathan, Four hundred parasangs did Amalek leap in
coming to make war against Israel at Rephidim.
III:IX
“Remember
[what the Amalekites did to you] on your way out of Egypt, how they me: you on
the road when you were faint and weary and cut off your rear, which was lagging
behind exhausted; they showed no fear of God. When the Lord your God gives you
peace from your enemies on every side, in the land which he is giving you to
occupy as your patrimony, you shall not fail to blot out the memory of the
Amalekites from under heaven]” (Deut. 25:17-19): Said R. Levi, They came
against you on the way like highwaymen. The matter may be compared to the case
of a king who had a vineyard, and he surrounded it with a wall and the king put
in the vineyard a vicious dog. Said the king, The dog will bite anyone who
comes and breaks through the wall. Then the son of the king came along and
broke through the wall, and the dog bit him. Whenever the king wanted to remind
the son about the sin that he had committed in the vineyard, he said to him,
Remember how the dog bit you. So whenever the Holy One, blessed be He, wanted
to remind the Israelites of the sin that they had committed in Rephidim,
saying, “Whether God is in our midst or not” (Ex. 17:7), He says to them,
“Remember what Amalek did to you” (Deut. 25:17).
III:X
“Remember
[what the Amalekites did to you on your way out of Egypt, how they met you on
the road when you were faint and weary and cut off your rear, which was lagging
behind exhausted; they showed no fear of God. When the Lord your God gives you
peace from your enemies on every side, in the land which he is giving you to
occupy as your patrimony, you shall not fail to blot out the memory of the
Amalekites from under heaven]” (Deut. 25:17-19): R. Judah, R. Nehemiah, and
rabbis: R. Judah said, The letters for words, “how they met you,” can be read,
how they made you unclean [Mandelbaum: through pederasty], in line with this
verse, in which the same letters bear that meaning: “Any man who is not clean
because of a seminal emission by night” (Deut. 23:11). R. Nehemiah says, The
letters for words, “how they met you,” can be read to mean read, thus: “They
read up on you.” What did Amalek do? He went into the archives in Egypt and
took the volumes of genealogies of the tribes which were located there in their
names. He came and stood outside of the cloud and announced, ‘Reuben. Simeon,
Levi, Judah, I am your brother. Come out, for I want to do business with you.’
When one of them came out, he would kill him. Rabbis say, The letters for
words, “how they met you,” can be read to mean, “to cool,” that is, he made
them look cold [and not heated up for battle and good fighters] before the
nations of the world. Said R. Hunia, The matter may be compared to the case of
a scalding-hot bath, into which no one could dip himself. One son of Beliel
came along and jumped in; even though he was burned, he made it appear cool for
others [who followed him in and got burned]. So when the Israelites had gone
forth from Egypt, “fear of them fell upon all the nations of the world: Then
were the chiefs of Edom frightened...terror and dread fell on them” (Ex.
15:15-16). But when Amalek attacked them and made war against them, even though
he got his from them, he made them look cold before the nations of the world.
III:XI
“Remember
(what the Amalekites did to you on your way out of Egypt, how they met you on
the road when you were faint and weary] and cut off your rear, which was
lagging behind exhausted; they showed no fear of God. When the Lord your God
gives you peace from your enemies on every side, in the land which he is giving
you to occupy as your patrimony, you shall not fail to blot out the memory of
the Amalekites from under heaven]” (Deut. 25:17-19): [The word, “how he cut off
your rear,” means] how we smote you with a blow to the “tail” [penis]. This
accords with that which R. Hinenah bar Silqah, R. Joshua of Sikhnin, and R.
Levi in the name of R. Yohanan said, What were the members of the household of
Amalek doing? They cut off the circumcised penises of the Israelites and
tossing them upward, saying, ‘Is this what you have chosen? Here is what you
have chosen!’ For the Israelites did not know about the character of the
“branch”: Lo, they put the branch to their nose (Ez. 8:17). When Amalek came
along, he taught it to them. From whom had he learned it? From our forefather
Esau: “Is he not rightly named Jacob” (Gen. 27:36). He cleared his throat and
produced the “branch” [penis, as a gesture of disrespect].
III:XII
“Remember
[what the Amalekites did to you on your way out of Egypt, how they met you on
the road when you were faint and weary and cut off your rear, which was lagging
behind exhausted; they showed no fear of God. When the Lord your God gives you
peace from your enemies on every side, in the land which he is giving you to
occupy as your patrimony, you shall not fail to blot out the memory of the
Amalekites from under heaven]” (Deut. 25:17-19): R. Judah, R. Nehemiah, and
rabbis: R. Judah said, Whoever hung back was cut off. R. Nehemiah said,
Whomever the cloud expelled was cut off. Rabbis say, This refers to the tribe
of Dan, which the cloud expelled. For all of them worshipped idolatry.
Another
interpretation of the clause: “... [when you were faint and weary and cut off
your rear,] which was lagging behind exhausted:” Said R. Isaac, All those who
were whispering in Your rear [against You, that is, against God, as will now be
spelled out].
R.
Judah, R. Nehemiah, and Rabbis: R. Judah said, They said, ‘If He is the lord of
all His works as He is lord over us, we will worship Him, and if not, we will
rebel against Him.’ R. Nehemiah said, They said, ‘If He provides our food the
way a king does in his capital, so that the city lacks nothing, we shall
worship Him, and if not, we shall rebel against Him.’ And rabbis say, They
said, ‘If we reflect in our hearts and He knows what we are thinking, we shall
serve Him, and if not, we shall rebel against Him.’
R.
Berekhiah in the name of R. Levi: In their hearts they would reflect, and the
Holy One would give them what they wanted. What verse of Scripture shows it?
“And in their hearts they tested God, asking food for their soul” (Ps. 78:18).
What then is written there? “And they ate and were most sated because He
brought them what they craved” (Ps. 78:29).
III:XIII
“Remember
[what the Amalekites did to you on your way out of Egypt, how they met you on
the road] when you were faint and weary [and cut off your rear, which was
lagging behind exhausted; they showed no fear of God. When the Lord your God
gives you peace from your enemies on every side, in the land which he is giving
you to occupy as your patrimony, you shall not fail to blot out the memory of
the Amalekites from under heaven]” (Deut. 25:17-19): “faint:” from thirst. “and
weary:” from the journey.
“they
showed no fear of God:” R. Phineas in the name of R. Samuel bar Nahman, There
is a tradition concerning the narrative that the seed of Esau will fall only by
the hand of the sons of Rachel. “Surely the youngest of the flock shall drag
them” (Jer. 49:20). Why does he refer to them as “the youngest of the flock”?
Because they were the youngest of all the tribes. [Now we shall see the connection
to the downfall of Esau=Amalek=Rome:] This one is called “a youth,” and that
one is called “young.” This one is called “a youth:” “And he was a youth” (Gen.
37:2). And that one is called “young:” “Lo, I have made you the youngest among
the nations” (Ob. 1:2). This one [Esaul grew up between two righteous/generous
men and did not act like them, and that one [Joseph] grew up between two
wicked/lawless men and did not act like them. Let this one come and fall by the
hand of the other. This one showed concern for the honor owing to his master,
and that one treated with disdain the honor owning to his master. Let this one
come and fall by the hand of the other. In connection with this one it is
written, “And he did not fear God” (Deut. 25:18), and in connection with that
one it is written, “And I fear God” (Gen. 42:18). Let this one come and fall by
the hand of that one.
III:XIV
“...When
the Lord your God gives you peace from your enemies on every side, in the land
which he is giving you to occupy as your patrimony, you shall not fail to blot
out the memory of the Amalekites from under heaven” (Deut. 25:17-19): R.
Azariah, R. Judah bar Simon in the name of R. Judah bar Ilai: When the
Israelites entered the Land, they were commanded in three matters: to appoint a
king, to build the chosen house, “And they shall make me a sanctuary” (Ex.
25:8), and to wipe out the memory of Amalek.
III:XV
R.
Joshua b. Levi in the name of R. Alexandri: One verse of Scripture says, “You
will not fail to blot out the memory of the Amalekites from under heaven”
(Deut. 25:17-19), and another verse of Scripture says, “For I will surely wipe
out the memory of Amalek” (Ex. 17:14). How can both verses be carried out?
[Either Israel will do it or God will do it.] Before Amalek laid his hand on
God’s throne [with reference to And Moses built an altar and called the name of
it, The Lord is My banner, saying, “A hand upon the throne of the Lord. The
Lord will have war with Amalek from generation to generation” (Ex. 17:15-16)],
“You will not fail to blot out the memory of the Amalekites.” Alter he had laid
hands on God’s throne, For “I will surely wipe out the memory of Amalek” [God
is victim of Amalek, as much as Israel is.] Now is it really possible for a
mortal to lay hands on the throne of the Holy One, blessed be He? But because
he was going to destroy Jerusalem, concerning which it is written, “At that
time Jerusalem will be called the throne of the Lord” (Jer. 50:17), therefore:
“For I will surely wipe out the memory of Amalek” (Ex. 17:14).
III:XVI
“[And
Moses built an altar and called the name of it, The Lord is my banner,] saying,
A hand upon the throne of the Lord. The Lord will have war with Amalek from
generation to generation” (Ex. 17:15-16): It was taught in the name of R. Ilai:
The Holy One, blessed be He, took an oath: ‘By my right hand, by my right hand,
by my throne, by my throne, if proselytes come from any of the nations of the
world, I will accept them, but if they come from the seed of Amalek I will
never accept them.’ And so was the case with David: “And David said to the
youth who told him [that Saul and Jonathan had died], Where do you come from?
And he said, I am the son of an Amalekite convert” (2 Sam. 1:13). Said R.
Isaac, He was Doeg the Edomite. “And David said to him, Your blood be upon your
own head” (2 Sam. 1:16). Said R. Isaac, What is written is, “your bloods,”
meaning, he said to him, ‘You [Doeg] have shed much blood in Nob, city of the
priests.’
“...from
generation to generation” (Ex. 17:15-16): Said the Holy One, blessed be He,
‘From one generation to the next I am after him, for generations.’
R.
Eliezer, R. Joshua, and R. Yose: R. Eliezer says, It was from the generation of
Moses to the generation of Samuel [but not beyond that point]. R. Joshua says,
It was from the generation of Samuel to the generation of Mordecai and Esther.
R. Yose says, ‘It was from the generation of Mordecai and Esther to the
generation of the Messiah-King, which is three generations.’ And how do we know
that to the generation of the Messiah-King it is three generations? As it is
written, “They will fear you while the sun endures, and as long as the moon, a
generation, generations” (Ps. 72:5). A generation — one, then generations —
two, lo, three in all.
R.
Berekhiah in the name of R. Abba bar Kahana: So long as the seed of Amalek
endures in the world, it is as if a wing covers the face [of God]. When the
seed of Amakk perishes from the world, Your teacher will not hide himself any
more, but your eyes shall see your teacher (Is. 30:20).
R.
Levi in the name of R. Huna bar Hanina: So long as the seed of Amalek endures
in the world, the Name of God is not whole, and the throne is not whole. When
the seed of Amalek perishes from the world, the Name of God is whole, and the
throne is whole. What verse of Scripture indicates it? “The enemy have vanished
in everlasting ruins, their cities you have rooted out, the very memory of them
has perished” (Ps. 9:6). What is written immediately therefore: “But the Lord
sits enthroned for ever, He has established His throne for judgment, [and He
judges the world with righteousness/generosity, He judges the peoples with
equity]” (Ps. 9:7-8).
Ketubim: Targum Tehillim (Psalms) 89:1-16
JPS Translation |
TARGUM |
1. A Song, a
Psalm of Asaph. |
A song and psalm composed by Asaph. |
2.
O God, keep not silence; hold not Your peace, and be
not still, O God. |
2. God, do not become silent; do not be uncaring,
and do not be quiet, O God. |
3.
For, behold, Your enemies are in an uproar; and they
that hate You have lifted up the head. |
3. For, behold, Your enemies are stirred up, and
Your foes have lifted their head. |
4.
They hold crafty converse against Your people, and take
counsel against Your treasured ones. |
4. Against Your people they have contrived a secret
plan, and they take counsel together against things hidden in Your
treasuries. |
5.
They have said: 'Come, and let us cut them off from
being a nation; that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance.' |
5. They say, “Come, let us conceal them from being a
people, and the name of Israel will not be mentioned again.” |
6.
For they have consulted together with one consent;
against You do they make a covenant; |
6. For they take counsel together against You with
all their heart, and make a covenant on Your account. |
7.
The tents of Edom and the Ishmaelites; Moab, and the
Hagrites; |
7. The tents of the Edomites and Arabs, the Moabites
and Hungarites. |
8.
Gebal, and Ammon, and Amalek; Philistia with the
inhabitants of Tyre; |
8. The Gublites and Ammonites and Amalekites, the
Philistines with the inhabitants of Tyre. |
9.
Assyria also is joined with them; they have been an arm
to the children of Lot. Selah |
9. Also Sennacherib, king of Assyria, allied himself
with them; they became a support for the sons of Lot forever. |
10.
Do You unto them as unto Midian; as to Sisera, as to
Jabin, at the brook Kishon; |
10. Do to
them as You did to Midian, to Sisera, and as You did to Jabin at the stream
of Kishon. |
11.
Who were destroyed at En-dor; they became as dung for
the earth. |
11. They were
destroyed at the spring of Dor; they were as dung that is trampled on the
earth. |
12.
Make their nobles like Oreb and Zeeb, and like Zebah
and Zalmunna all their princes; |
12. Make them
and their chiefs like Oreb and like Zeeb; and all their kings like Zeba and
Zalmunna. |
13.
Who said: 'Let us take to ourselves in possession the habitations of God.' |
13. Who had
said, “We will inherit for ourselves all the fields of the god Elohim.” |
14.
O my God, make them like the whirling dust; as stubble
before the wind. |
14. O my God, make them like a wheel that keeps on
rolling and does not stop, down a slope; and like straw before a storm. |
15.
As the fire that burns the forest, and as the flame
that sets the mountains ablaze; |
15. Like fire that burns in the forest, and like the
flame that ignites the plants of the mountains. |
16.
So pursue them with Your tempest, and frighten them
with Your storm. |
16. Thus will You pursue them with Your storm wind,
and You will frighten them with Your gale. |
17.
Fill their faces with shame; that they may seek Your
name, O LORD. |
17. Fill their faces with shame, and they will seek
Your name, O Lord. |
18.
Let them be ashamed and affrighted for ever; yea, let
them be abashed and perish; |
18. They will be ashamed and terrified for ages upon
ages; and they will be disgraced and will perish. |
19.
That they may know that it is You alone whose name is
the LORD, the Most High over all the earth. |
19. And they will know that You, Your name the Lord,
are alone supreme over all the inhabitants of the earth. |
|
|
Ashlamatah: I Samuel 15:1-34
1
And Samuel said unto Saul: 'The LORD sent me to anoint thee to be king over His
people, over Israel; now therefore hearken thou unto the voice of the words of
the LORD. {S}
2
Thus says the LORD of hosts: I remember that which Amalek did to Israel, how he
set himself against him in the way, when he came up out of Egypt.
3
Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them
not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and
ass.' {S}
4
And Saul summoned the people, and numbered them in Telaim, two hundred thousand
footmen, and ten thousand men of Judah.
5
And Saul came to the city of Amalek, and lay in wait in the valley.
6
And Saul said unto the Kenites: 'Go, depart, get you down from among the
Amalekites, lest I destroy you with them; for you showed kindness to all the
children of Israel, when they came up out of Egypt.' So the Kenites departed
from among the Amalekites.
7
And Saul smote the Amalekites, from Havilah as you go to Shur, that is in front
of Egypt.
8
And he took Agag the king of the Amalekites alive, and utterly destroyed all
the people with the edge of the sword.
9
But Saul and the people spared Agag, and the best of the sheep, and of the
oxen, even the young of the second birth, and the lambs, and all that was good,
and would not utterly destroy them; but every thing that was of no account and
feeble, that they destroyed utterly. {P}
10
Then came the word of the LORD unto Samuel, saying:
11
'It repents Me that I have set up Saul to be king; for he is turned back from
following Me, and has not performed My commandments.' And it grieved Samuel;
and he cried unto the LORD all night.
12
And Samuel rose early to meet Saul in the morning; and it was told Samuel,
saying: 'Saul came to Carmel, and, behold, he is setting him up a monument, and
is gone about, and passed on, and gone down to Gilgal.'
13
And Samuel came to Saul; and Saul said unto him: 'Blessed be you of the LORD; I
have performed the commandment of the LORD.'
14
And Samuel said: 'What means then this bleating of the sheep in mine ears, and
the lowing of the oxen which I hear?'
15
And Saul said: 'They have brought them from the Amalekites; for the people
spared the best of the sheep and of the oxen, to sacrifice unto the LORD your
God; and the rest we have utterly destroyed.' {P}
16
Then Samuel said unto Saul: 'Stay, and I will tell you what the LORD has said
to me this night.' And he said unto him: 'Say on.' {S}
17
And Samuel said: 'Though you be little in your own sight, art you not head of
the tribes of Israel? And the LORD anointed you king over Israel;
18
and the LORD sent you on a journey, and said: Go and utterly destroy the
sinners the Amalekites, and fight against them until they be consumed.
19
Wherefore then did you not hearken to the voice of the LORD, but did fly upon
the spoil, and did that which was evil in the sight of the LORD?' {S}
20
And Saul said unto Samuel: 'Yes, I have hearkened to the voice of the LORD, and
have gone the way which the LORD sent me, and have brought Agag the king of
Amalek, and have utterly destroyed the Amalekites.
21
But the people took of the spoil, sheep and oxen, the chief of the devoted
things, to sacrifice unto the LORD your God in Gilgal.' {S}
22
And Samuel said: 'Has the LORD as great delight in burnt-offerings and
sacrifices, as in hearkening to the voice of the LORD? Behold, to obey is
better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams.
23
For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as
idolatry and teraphim. Because you have rejected the word of the LORD,
He has also rejected you from being king.' {S}
24
And Saul said unto Samuel: 'I have sinned; for I have transgressed the
commandment of the LORD, and your words; because I feared the people, and
hearkened to their voice.
25
Now therefore, I pray, pardon my sin, and return with me, that I may worship
the LORD.'
26
And Samuel said unto Saul: 'I will not return with you; for you have rejected
the word of the LORD, and the LORD has rejected you from being king over
Israel.' {S}
27
And as Samuel turned about to go away, he laid hold upon the skirt of his robe,
and it rent. {S}
28
And Samuel said unto him: 'The LORD has rent the kingdom of Israel from you
this day, and has given it to a neighbor of yours, that is better than you. {S}
29
And also the Glory of Israel will not lie nor repent; for He is not a man, that
He should repent.'
30
Then he said: 'I have sinned; yet honor me now, I pray, before the elders of my
people, and before Israel, and return with me, that I may worship the LORD your
God.'
31
So Samuel returned after Saul; and Saul worshipped the LORD. {S}
32
Then said Samuel: 'Bring hither to me Agag the king of the Amalekites.' And
Agag came unto him in chains. And Agag said: 'Surely the bitterness of death is
at hand.' {S}
33
And Samuel said: As your sword has made women childless, so shall your mother
be childless among women. And Samuel hewed Agag in pieces before the LORD in
Gilgal. {S}
34
Then Samuel went to Ramah; and Saul went up to his house to Gibeath-shaul.
35
And Samuel never beheld Saul again until the day of his death; for Samuel
mourned for Saul; and the LORD repented that He had made Saul king over Israel.
{P}
Midrash of Matityahu (Matthew) 26:14-16
14.
Then
one of the Twelve [Talmidm], who was called Yehudah Ish Keriot, went to the
[Greco-Roman oriented Sadducee] chief priests of the Bet HaMiqdash (Temple).
15.
And
said, “What are you willing to give me if I deliver him over to you? And they
negotiated out thirty [Temple] silver shekalim.
16.
And
from then on he sought a fitting opportunity to betray him [and deliver him
over].
Shabbat
Shalom!
Hakham
Dr. Yosef ben Haggai