Esnoga Bet Emunah
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© 2008
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Triennial
Cycle (Triennial Torah Cycle) / Septennial Cycle (Septennial Torah Cycle)
Three and 1/2 year
Lectionary Readings |
First Year
of the Reading Cycle |
Tishri 1, 5770 – September
18/20, 2009 |
Second
Year of the Shmita Cycle |
Happy Rosh Hashanah
(Jewish New Year)
5770!
Candle
Lighting and Havdalah Times:
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 7:23 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
8:17 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
8:15 pm |
San Antonio, Texas, U.S. Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 7:18 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after: 8:10
pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
8:09 pm |
Baton Rouge & Alexandria, Louisiana, U.S. Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 6:49 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
7:42 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
7:40 pm |
Sheboygan
& Manitowoc, Wisconsin US Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 6:39 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
7:38 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
7:36 pm |
Bowling Green & Murray, Kentucky, U.S. Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 6:32 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
7:27 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
7:25 pm |
Brisbane, Australia Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 5:24 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
6:17 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
6:17 pm |
Chattanooga,
& Cleveland Tennessee, US Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 7:27 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
8:21 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
8:20 pm |
Bucharest, Romania Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 7:05 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
8:04 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
8:02 pm |
Miami, Florida, US Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 7:04 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
7:55 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
7:54 pm |
Jakarta, Indonesia Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 5:32 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
6:21 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
6:20 pm |
New London, Connecticut USA Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 6:28 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
7:25 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
7:24 pm |
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 6:53 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
7:42 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
7:41 pm |
Olympia, Washington, U.S. Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 7:01 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
8:02 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
8:00 pm |
Manila
& Cebu, Philippines Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 5:38 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
6:27 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
6:26 pm |
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania USA Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 6:48 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after:
7:44 pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
7:43 pm |
Singapore, Singapore Eve of First day Rosh Hashana Friday, Sept. 18, 2009 Light Candles at: 6:45 pm Eve of Second day Rosh Hashana Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009 Light Candles after: 7:33
pm Sunday, September 20, 2009 Holiday Ends:
7:32 pm |
For other places see: http://chabad.org/calendar/candlelighting.asp
Roll of Honor:
This Torah commentary comes to you courtesy of:
His Honor Rosh Paqid Adon Hillel ben David and
beloved wife HH Giberet Batsheva bat Sarah
His Honor Paqid Adon Mikha ben Hillel
His Honor Paqid Adon David ben Abraham
Her Excellency Giberet Sarai bat Sarah and
beloved family,
His Excellency Adon Barth Lindemann and
beloved family,
His Excellency Adon John Batchelor and
beloved wife,
His Excellency Adon Ezra ben Abraham and
beloved wife HE Giberet Karmela bat Sarah,
Her Excellency Giberet Alitah bat Sarah
His Excellency Adon Stephen Legge and
beloved wife HE Giberet Angela Legge
His Excellency Adon Tracy Osborne and
beloved wife HE Giberet Lynn Osborne
His Excellency Rev. Dr. Adon Chad Foster and
beloved wife HE Giberet Tricia Foster
His Excellency Adon Fred Dominguez and
beloved wife HE Giberet Elisheva bat Sarah
Her Excellency Giberet Laurie Taylor
At
this time of Rosh HaShanah, we pray that in G-d’s mercy, a remembrance come
before G-d, most blessed be He, and remember the regular and sacrificial giving
of the above most honorable Ladies and Gentlemen, providing the best oil for
the lamps, and pray that G-d’s richest blessings be upon their lives and those
of their loved ones, and for a good year full of ample blessings, good health,
and copious prosperity, together with all Yisrael and their Torah Teachers,
amen ve amen!
Also a great thank you and great blessings be upon all
who send comments to the list about the contents and commentary of the weekly
Torah Seder and allied topics.
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
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your E-Mail or the E-Mail addresses of your friends. Toda Rabba!
For further study and information on this festival
please see:
http://www.betemunah.org/teruah.html; http://www.betemunah.org/shofar.html & http://www.betemunah.org/knowday.html
ROSH HASHANAH FIRST DAY
Friday/Saturday September 18/19, 2009
Morning
Service
Torah
Seder: Genesis 21:1-34
Reader
1 – B’Resheet (Gen.) 21:1-4
Reader
2 – B’Resheet (Gen.) 21:5-8
Reader
3 – B’Resheet (Gen.) 21:9-12
Reader
4 – B'Resheet (Gen.) 21:13-17
Reader
5 – B’Resheet (Gen.) 21:18-21
Reader
6 – B’Resheet (Gen.) 21:22-27
Reader
7 – B’Resheet (Gen.) 21:28-34
Maftir: - B’Midbar (Num.) 29:1-6
Ashlamatah:
I Samuel 1:1 – 2:10
Psalm: 81:1-17
N.C.:
Yochanan 1:1-14
Rashi & Targum Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Resheet (Gen.) 21:1-34 & B’Midbar (Num.)
29:1-6
RASHI |
TARGUM PSEUDO JONATHAN |
1. Adonai remembered
Sarah as He had said, and Adonai did for Sarah as He had spoken. |
1. And the Lord
remembered Sarah according to that which He had said to her; and the Lord
wrought a miracle for Sarah like to that for which Abraham had spoken in
prayer for Abimelek. [JERUSALEM. And the Lord wrought miracles for Sarah, as
He had spoken.] |
2. She conceived and
Sarah gave birth to Abraham's son in his old age, at the designated time that
Elohim had declared. |
2. And she conceived,
and Sarah bare to Abraham a son, who was like to himself in his age, at the
time of which the Lord had spoken to him. |
3. Abraham named his
son that was born to him, to which Sarah had borne to him, Yitzchaq. |
3. And Abraham called
the name of his son whom Sarah had borne him Izhak. |
4. Abraham circumcised
his son, Yitzchaq, when he was eight days old, as Elohim had commanded him. |
4. And Abraham
circumcised Izhak his son, when the son of eight days, as the Lord had
commanded him. |
5. Abraham was one
hundred years old when his son Yitzchaq was born to him. |
5. And Abraham was the
son of an hundred years when Izhak his son was born to him. |
6. Sarah said,
"Elohim has given me laughter. All who hear will laugh with me." |
6. And Sarah said, The
Lord has done wondrously for me; all who hear will wonder at me. |
7. She said, "Who
would have said to Abraham, that Sarah would nurse children? For I have given
birth to a son in his old age." |
7. And she said, How
faithful was the messenger who announced to Abraham, and said, Sarah will
nurse children, for she shall bring forth a son in her old age! [JERUSALEM.
And she said, What was the announcement which announced to my lord Abraham at
the beginning, and said, It will be that she will give suck, because she
shall bring forth a son in her old age?] |
8. The child grew and
was weaned. Abraham made a great feast on the day Yitzchaq was weaned. |
8. And the child grew
and was weaned. And Abraham made a great feast on the day when Izhak was
weaned. |
9. Sarah saw that the
son of Hagar, the Egyptian, that she had born to Abraham, was mocking. |
9. And Sarah observed
the son of Hagar the Mizreitha, whom she bare to Abraham, mocking with a
strange worship, and bowing to the Lord. [JERUSALEM. And Sarah observed the
son of Hagar the Mizreitha, whom she bare to Abraham, doing evil works which
are not fitting to be done, mocking in a strange worship.] |
10. She said to
Abraham, "Drive out this slave-woman and her son, for the son of this
slave-woman will not inherit with my son, with Yitzchaq." This thing was
very wrong in the eyes of Abraham, on account of his son. |
10. And she said to
Abraham, Cast out this handmaid and her son: for it is not possible for the
son of this handmaid to inherit with my son; and he to make war with Izhak.
And the thing was very evil in Abraham's eyes, on account of Ishmael his son,
who would practice a strange worship. |
11. |
11. |
12. Elohim said to
Abraham, "Do not consider this wrong in your eyes on account of the boy
and your slave-woman. Regarding all that Sarah tells you, listen to her, for
[only] through Yitzchaq will seed be considered yours. |
12. And the Lord said
to Abraham, Let it not be evil in your eyes on account of the youth who goes
forth from your nurturing, and of your handmaid whom you send away. Hearken
unto all that Sarah says to you, because she is a prophetess; for in Izhak
will sons be called unto you; and this son of the handmaid will not be
genealogized after you. |
13. [But] also the son
of the slave-woman I will make into a nation, for he is [of] your seed." |
13. But the son of the
handmaid have I set for a predatory people (le-am leistim), because he is your
son. |
14. Abraham got up
early in the morning. He took bread and a skin [pouch] of water, and gave it
to Hagar. He placed it on her shoulder with the lad, and sent her away. She
went and lost her way in the desert of Beer Sheba. |
14. And Abraham rose up
in the morning, and took bread and a cruse of water, and gave to Hagar to
bear upon her shoulder, and bound it to her loins, to signify that she was a
servant, and the child, and dismissed her with a letter of divorce
(be-gitta). And she went, and wandered from the way into the desert which was
hard by Beersheba. |
15. The water in the
skin was used up, and she threw the lad under one of the bushes. |
15. And it was when
they came to the entrance of the desert, they remembered to wander after
strange worship; and Ishmael was seized with a burning thirst, and drank of
the water till all the water was consumed from the cruse. And he was dried
up, and withered in his flesh; and she carried him, and was exhausted, and
she cried unto the Fear of his father, and He answered her not; and she laid
the youth down at once under one of the trees. [JERUSALEM. And the water was
consumed from the cruse, and she took up the youth.] |
16. She went and sat
facing him, about [the distance] of a bow-shot away. She said, "Let me
not see the lad die." She sat facing him and wept in a loud voice. |
16. And she went and
sat on one side, and cast away the idol (or the strange worship), and removed
from her son, as the distance of an arrow from the bow; for she said, I am
not able to see the death of the child. And she sat over against her son, and
lifted up her voice and wept. |
17. Elohim heard the
voice of the lad. An angel of G-d called to Hagar from heaven and said to
her, "What is the matter, Hagar? Do not fear. Elohim has heard the voice
of the lad in the place where he is." |
17. And the voice of
the youth was heard before the Lord for the righteousness’/generosity’s sake
of Abraham; and the Angel of the Lord called to Hagar from heaven, and said,
What to you, Hagar? Faint not, for the voice of the youth is heard before the
Lord; neither will judgment be according to the evil which he will do, but
according to the righteousness/generosity of Abraham is mercy upon him in the
place where he is. |
18. "Get up and
lift up the lad. Keep your hand strong on him, for I will make him a great
nation." |
18. Arise, support the
child, and strengthen your hand in him: for I have set him for a great
people. |
19. Elohim opened her
eyes, and she saw a well of water. She went and filled the skin with water,
and gave the lad to drink. |
19. And the Lord
opened her eyes, and showed her a well of water, and she went and filled the
cruse with water, and gave the youth to drink. |
20. Elohim was with
the lad and he grew up. He settled in the wilderness, [where] he became an
expert archer. |
20. And the Word of
the Lord was the helper of the youth, and he grew and dwelt in the
wilderness, and became a skilful master of the bow. |
21. He lived in the
desert of Paran, and his mother took a wife for him from the land of Egypt. |
21. And he dwelt in
the wilderness of Pharan, and took for a wife Adisha, but put her away. And
his mother took for him Phatima to wife, from the land of Mizraim. |
22. It was at this
time, Abimelekh and Pichol, his general spoke to Abraham, saying,
"Elohim is with you in all that you do." |
22. And it was at that
time that Abimelek and Phikol, chief of his host, spoke to Abraham, saying,
The Word of the Lord is in your aid in all whatsoever you do. |
23. "Now, swear
to me here, by Elohim, that you will not deal falsely with me, with my son,
or my grandson. The kindness that I have done to you, do to me and to the
land in which you lived for a while." |
23. And now, swear to
me here, by the Word of the Lord, that you will not be false with me, nor with
my son, nor with the son of my son: according to the kindness which I have
done with you, you will do with me, and with the land in which you dwell. |
24. Abraham said,
"I will swear." |
24. And Abraham said
to him, I swear. |
25. Abraham then
reprimanded Abimelekh regarding the well of water that Abimelekh's servants
had taken by force |
25. And Abraham
remonstrated with Abimelek concerning the well of water of which the servants
of Abimelek had deprived him. |
26. Abimelekh said,
"I do not know who did this thing. You also never told me, and I also
heard nothing of it until today." |
26. And Abimelek said,
I knew not who did this thing; neither have you shown it to me; nor have I
heard it from others, till to-day from yourself. |
27. Abraham took sheep
and cattle and gave them to Abimelekh. The two of them made a covenant. |
27. And Abraham took
sheep and oxen, and gave to Abimelek; and they both made a covenant. |
28. Abraham set seven
ewes apart by themselves. |
28. And Abraham set
seven lambs apart and separated them from the oxen. |
29. Abimelekh said to
Abraham. "What is the reason for these seven ewes that you have set
apart?" |
29. And Abimelek said
to Abraham, What are these seven lambs which you have set apart? |
30. He [Abraham] said,
"Take these seven ewes from my hand so that it will be proof for me,
that I dug this well." |
30. And he said, That
you may take the seven lambs from my hand, to be a testimony for me that I
have dug this well. |
31. Therefore he
called that place Beer Sheba, since the two had made an oath there. |
31. Therefore he
called that well the Well of the Seven Lambs; because there they two did
swear. |
32. They made a
covenant in Beer Sheba. Abimelekh, and Pichol, his general, then rose and
returned to the land of the Philistines. |
32. And they struck a
covenant at the Well of the Seven Lambs. And Abimelek and Phikol the Chief of
his host arose and returned to the land of the Philistaee. |
33. Abraham
planted an eishel [tree] in Beer Sheba, and there he proclaimed the Name
Adonai, Almighty of the universe. |
33. And he
planted a garden, (lit., "a paradise,") at the Well of the Seven
Lambs, and prepared in the midst of it food and drink for them who passed by
and who returned; and he preached to them there, Confess you, and believe in
the Name of the Word of the Lord, the everlasting God. [JERUSALEM. And
Abraham planted a paradise in Beer Sheba, and prepared in the midst of it
food and drink for those who arrived at the border; and they ate and drank,
and sought to give him the price of what they had eaten and drunk, but he
willed not to receive it from them; but our father Abraham discoursed to them
of that which he had said, that the world was by His Word. Pray before your
Father who is in heaven, from whose bounty you have eaten and drunk. And they
stirred not from their place until the time when he had made them proselytes,
and had taught them the way everlasting. And Abraham praised and prayed there
in the name of the Word of the Lord, the God of Eternity.] |
34. Abraham lived in
the land of the Philistines for many days. |
34. |
|
|
1. The first day of
the seventh month shall be a sacred holiday to you when you shall not do any
work of consequence. It shall be a day of sounding the ram's horn. |
1. And in the seventh
month, the month of Tishri, on the first of the month you will have a holy
convocation, you may not do any servile work; it will be to you a day for the
sounding of the trumpet, that by the voice of your trumpets you may disturb
Satan who comes to accuse you. |
2. You shall bring a
burnt-offering of a pleasing aroma to Adonai, [consisting of] one young bull,
one ram, and seven yearling lambs, [all] without blemish. |
2. And you will make a
burnt sacrifice to be received with favor before the Lord; one young bullock,
one ram, lambs of the year seven, unblemished; |
3. Their meal-offering
[shall be] fine flour mixed with [olive] oil, three tenths [of an ephah] for
the bull, two tenths [of an ephah] for the one ram, |
3. and their mincha of
wheaten flour mingled with olive oil, three tenths for the bullock, two
tenths for the ram, |
4. and one tenth [of
an ephah] for each of the seven lambs. |
4. and one tenth for
each of the seven lambs; |
5. [You should also
bring] one he-goat as a sin-offering to make atonement for you. |
5. and one kid of the
goats for a sin offering to make an atonement for you; |
6. Aside from the
[Rosh] Chodesh burnt-offering and its meal-offering, and the constant (daily)
burnt-offering and its required meal-offering and libations, for a pleasing
aroma, a fire-offering to Adonai. |
6. besides the
sacrifice for the beginning of the month and its mincha, and the perpetual
sacrifice and its mincha; and their libations according to the order of their
appointments, an oblation to be received with favor before the Lord. |
|
|
PESIQTA
deRAB KAHANA
PISQA
Twenty-Three – The New Year
In
the seventh month, on the first day of the month, [you will observe a day of
solemn rest, a memorial proclaimed with blast of trumpets] (Lev. 23:24).
XXIII:I
Forever,
O Lord, your word is firmly fixed in the heavens (Ps. 119:89). It was
taught on Tannaite authority in the name of R. Eliezer, “On the twenty-fifth
day of Elul, the world was created.” The following statement of Rab accords
with the view of R. Eliezer, for it has been taught in the verses Rab assembled
to accompany the sounding of the ram's horn on the New Year, This day
[marks] the beginning of your works, a memorial to the first day. For it is a
statue of Israel, an ordinance of the God of Jacob (Ps. 81:4). And
concerning all countries, on that day it is declared, which is destined
fοτ the sword and which for peace, which for famine and which for
plenty. On that day all creatures are judged, to be recorded fοr life or
for death.”
[Since
the New Year is the sixth day following the creation of the world, which took
place on the twenty-fifth of Elul], you find that on the first of Tishri [the
New Year] the first man was created [because he was created on the sixth day of
creation]. In the first hour [the thought of creating him] entered [God's mind],
in the second God consulted the ministering angels, in the third he collected
dust, in the fourth, he kneaded it, in the fifth he wove together the parts, in
the sixth he stood him on his feet as an unformed mass, in the seventh, he blew
into it the breath of life, in the eighth, he put him into the Garden of Eden,
in the ninth God gave him a commandment, in the tenth Adam violated His
commandment, in the eleventh he was judged, in the twelfth God gave him a
pardon.
Said
to him the Holy One, blessed be He, “Adam, lo, you serve as omen for your
children. Just as you came to judgment before Me and I gave you a pardon, so
your children will come before Me in judgment, and 1 will give them a pardon.”
When?
In the seventh month, on the first day of the month (Lev. 23:24).
XXIII:II
R.
Nahman commenced [his discourse by citing the following verse]: “Then fear
not, O Jacob My servant, says the Lord, nor be dismayed, [O Israel, for lo, 1
will save you from afar, and your offspring from the land of their captivity.
Jacob will return and have quiet and ease, and none will make him afraid] (Jer.
30:10).
The
verse speaks of Jacob: And he dreamed that there was a ladder [set up on the
earth, and the top of it reached to heaven, and behold the angels of God were ascending
and descending on it] (Gen. 28:12)." [Mandelbaum: Genesis 28:17 states
"and Jacob feared."] Said R. Samuel b. R. Nahman, “They were the
angelic princes representing the nations of the world.” For R. Samuel b. R.
Nahman said, “This teaches that God showed Jacob the prince of Babylonia going
up seventy steps and then going down, the one of Media going up fifty-two
steps, the one of Greece one hundred eighty steps. And as to the one
representing Edom [Rome], he kept going up and Jacob did not know how many
[steps he was going up, thus how long he would rule]. At that moment our
father, Jacob, was afraid and said, ‘Is it possible that that he is not subject
to decline?’ Said to him the Holy One, blessed be He, “Then fear not, O
Jacob [my servant, says the Lord, nor be dismayed, O Israel, for lo, 1 will
save you from afar, and your offspring from the land of their captivity. Jacob
will return and have quiet and ease, and none shall make him afraid] (Jer.
30:10). Even if you see him sitting beside Me, from there I shall bring him
down!” That is in line with the following verse of Scripture: “Though you
make
your
nest as high as the eagle, and though you set it among the stars, will I bring
you down from there, says the Lord” (Obad. 1:4).
R.
Berekhíah, R. Helbo in the name of R. Simeon b. Menassia in the name of R.
Meir: “This teaches that the Holy One, blessed he He, showed our father, Jacob,
the prince of Babylonia going up and coming down, and the one of Media going up
and coming down, and the one of Greece going up and coming down, and also the
one of Edom going up and coming down.” Said the Holy One, blessed be He, to
him, “Jacob, you too wi1l go up!' At that moment Jacob was afraid, and he said
to Him, 'Is it the case that just as these are subject to decline, so 1 too am
subject to decline?' He said to him, “Then fear not, O Jacob [my servant,
says the Lord, nor be dismayed, O Israel, for lo, I will save you from afar,
and your offspring from the land of their captivity. Jacob will return and have
quiet and ease, and none will make him afraid] (Jer. 30:10). For the (sort
of) ascent that you will make, there is no descent.” Nonetheless, he did not
believe and did not ascend.
R.
Berekhiah, R. Helbo, and R. Simeon b. Yosina: “R. Meir expounded (the following
verse:) Nonetheless they still sinned and did not believe in his wondrous
works (Ps. 78:32). [This verse] speaks of Jacob, who did not believe and so
did not ascend.
Said
to him the Holy One, blessed be He, “[Jacob!] If you had believed and ascended,
you would never again have gone down. Now that you do not believe and did not
ascend, lo, your sons will be enslaved by the four kingdoms in this world,
liable fοr the taxes on crops and herds and exactions and head taxes
[Leviticus Rabbah adds: from Babylonia to Media, from Media to Greece, and from
Greece to Edom].”
[He
said before Him, “Lord of the ages], is it forever?” Said to him the Holy One,
blessed be He, “[Then fear not, O Jacob my servant].. .nor be dismayed, O
Israel, for lo, I will save you from afar
(Jer.
30:10): from Gallia and Aspamea and nearby lands. And your offspring from
the land of their captivity: Jacob will return: from Babylonia. And have
quiet: from Media. And ease: from Greece. And none will make him
afraid: on account of Edom.”
“For
I will make a full end of all the nations (Jer. 30:11): As to the nations
of the world, because they make a full end (when they harvest even the corner
of) their field, concerning them Scripture states: I will make a full end of
all the nations among whom I scattered you. But as to Israel, because they
do not make a full end (when they harvest, fοr they leave the corner of)
their field, therefore: But of you I will not make a full end” (Jer.
30:11).
I
will chasten you in just measure, and I will by no means leave you unpunished (Jer. 30:11). I will
chasten you through suffering in this world, so as to leave you unpunished in
the world to come. When? In the seventh month, [on the first day of the
month] (Lev. 23:24).
ΧΧIII:III
Judah
b. R. Nahmani in the name of R. Simeon b. Laqish commenced [his discourse by
citing the following verse:] “God has gone up with the shofar blast, [the
Lord at the sound of the shofar]” (Ps. 47:5). When the Holy One, blessed be
He, ascends to take his seat on the throne of justice on the New Year, it is
for the sake of strict justice that he ascends. That is in line with the
following verse of Scripture: God has gone up with the shofar blast. But
when Israel take up their shofars and sound them, forthwith: The Lord [the
name of God (Ha-Shem) that refers to the attribute of mercy] at the sound of
the shofar forgives them. [Leviticus Rabbah:] He rises from the throne of
judgment and takes his seat on the throne of mercy. He is filled with mercy for
them and for them turns the measure of justice into the measure of mercy. When?
In the seventh month, [on the first day of the month, you will observe a day
of solemn rest, a memorial proclaimed with blast of trumpets] (Lev. 23:24).
ΧΧΙΙΙ:IV
R.
Josiah commenced [his discourse by citing the following verse:] Blessed is
the people that knows the sound of the shofar blast. O Lord, in the light of
your face do they walk the way (Ps. 89:16). R. Abbahu interpreted the verse
[as follows]: “[It speaks of] five elders when they come together to
intercalate the year. What does the Holy One, blessed be He do? He leaves his
counsellors above and brings His Presence to rest among them below. At that
moment the ministering angels say (the acclamation), ‘Look at this! Look at
this! Is this power! Is this power! Is this ornament! Is this ornament! Should
He, concerning whom it is written, A God in the great council of the holy ones,
great and terrible above all that are round about him (Ps. 89:8) – should such
a one leave His counsellors above and descend and bring His Presence to rest
among the lower beings? But why does He do all this? [He does so for], if they
should make an error, the Holy One, blessed be He, enlightens their eyes fin
deciding the Law in the right] way. O Lord, they walk the way in the light
of Your face” (Ps. 89:16).
Said
R. Josiah, “It is written, Blessed is the people who knows the sound of the
shofar blast (Ps. 89:15). Now do not the nations of the world know how to
make a blast on a trumpet? How many horns, bucinae, and trumpets do they have?
Yet you say, Blessed is the people that knows the sound of the shofar blast!
But: Blessed is the people that knows how to propitiate their Creator
with the sound of the shofar blast. When? In the seventh month, on the
first day of the month, [you will observe a day of solemn rest, a memorial
proclaimed with blast of trumpets] (Lev. 23:24).
XXIII:V
R.
Jeremiah commenced [his discourse by citing the following verse]: The wise
man's path of life leads upward, that he may avoid Sheol beneath (Prov.
15:24). The path of life: The path of life refers only to the words of
the Torah, for it is written, It is a tree of life (Prov. 3:18).
Another
matter: The path of life: The path of life refers only to suffering, as
it is written, The way of life is through rebuke and correction (Prov.
6:23). [The wise man's path] leads upward refers to one who looks deeply
into the Torah's religious duties, [learning how to carry them out properly].
What
then is written just prior to this same matter (of the New Year)? When you
harvest your crop of your land, you will not make a full end of the corner of
your field (Lev. 23:22). The Gentiles, because they make a full end when
they harvest even the corner of their field, [and the rest of the matter is as
is given above: 1 will make a full end of all the nations among whom 1 have
driven you (Jer. 30:11). But Israel, because they do not make a full end
when they harvest, for they leave the corner of their field, therefore, But
of you I will not make a full end (Jer. 30:11). 1 will chasten you in
just measure, and 1 will by no means leave you unpunished (Jer.
30:11)." When? In the seventh month, on the first day of the month,
(you will observe a day of solemn rest, a memorial proclaimed with blast of
trumpets! (l.cv. 23:24).
R.
Berekhiah commenced [his discourse by citing the following verse:] Blow the
shofar horn at the new moon, when it is concealed for our feast day (Ps.
81:4). Now is there not a new moon every lunar month? Rather: when it is
concealed. But is not the new moon concealed every month? Rather: for
our feast day. But, is it not the case that there is the month of Nisan,
moon to begin with is concealed, and in that month, there [namely, Passover]?
[Does one blow the shofar on Nissan of Passover? No!]
However
[the difference is] a month, with a concealed holiday, and the holiday is on
the same day [of the month] And what is that? It is Tishri. Tishri is
interpreted in the sense in which the letters of that word can also mean, ‘release,’
hence, ‘release and forgive all our debts.’ When is that? In the seventh
month, on the first day of the month, [you will observe a day of solemn rest, a
memorial proclaimed with blast of trumpets] (Leν. 23:24).
XXIII:
VII
R.
Levi in the name of R. Hama bar Hanina commenced [his discourse by citing the
following verse of Scripture:] Thus says the Lord, your Redeemer, the Holy
One of Israel: [I am the Lord your God, who trains you to profit, who leads you
in the way you should go] (Is. 48:17). What is the meaning of trains you?
I train you as a herdsman trains an ox.
The
same object bears three names: staff, goad, and lead. Staff (MLMD), because it
shows (MLMD) the way for a cow so as to plough [Leviticus Rabbah: in order to
give sustenance for its owner]. Goad
(MRD'), because it imparts knowledge (MWRH D'H) to the cow. Lead (DREW), for it
provides understanding (MDR BYNH) to the cow.
Said
the Holy One, blessed be He, “[Now is it not an argument a fortiori (Kal
Vachomer)?] If for a cow a man makes a goad, then for his (own) impulse to do
evil, which leads him away from the life of this world and from the life of the
world to come as well, how much the more so (should he make a goad)! Thus: Who
leads you in the way you should go (1s. 48:17)]."
Who
leads you in the way you should go (Is. 48: Ι7). R. Levi in the name of R. Hama
b. R. Hanina: “The matter may be compared to the case of a prince who had to
bring a case before his own father. His father said to him, ‘My son, if you
want to be acquitted before me in this case, retain as your counsel Mr.
So-and-So, and you will be acquitted by me in this case.’ So did the Holy One,
blessed be He, say to Israel, ‘My children, if you want to be acquitted before
me in this case, you should make mention before me the merit accruing on
account of the patriarchs, and you will be acquitted before me in this case.’”
[In
the seventh month,] on the first day [of the month, you will observe a day of
solemn rest, a memorial proclaimed with blast of trumpets] (Leν. 23:24).
The first refers to Abraham, for it is written, Abraham was the first, and
he inherited the land (Ez. 33:24). A memorial proclaimed with the blast
of trumpets (Lev. 23:24): This refers to Isaac, for it is written, And
... looked and behold, a ram caught by its horns (same word as trumpet) in a
bush (Gen. 22:13). A holy convocation (Lev. 23:24): This refers to
Jacob, for it is written, Listen to me O Jacob, and Israel, whom 1 have
convoked (Is. 48:12). When will you make mention before Me of the merit of
the patriarchs and be acquitted before Me in judgment? On the New Year: In
the seventh month, [on the first day of the month, you will observe a day of
solemn rest, a memorial proclaimed with blast of trumpets] (Leν.
23:24).
XXIII:VIII
R.
Hiyya bar Maré in the name of R. Levi commenced [his discourse by citing the
following verse:] Sons of Adam are vanity, and sons of man are a lie; [if
they are placed in the balance, they go up; they are together lighter than a
breath] (Ps. 62:9) [Adam and "man" are the same word in Hebrew]:
Under ordinary circumstances, people say, 'Mr. So-and-so is marrying Miss
Such-and-such.' Sons of men are vanity: [That is, it is a vain act on
the part of men to speak as if they initiate marriage, for it is God who does
it]. Under ordinary circumstances, people say, ‘Miss Such-and-such is married
to Mr. So-and-so.’ The sons of man are a lie: [It is a lie that man
initiates marriage for it is God who does so.]
If
they are placed in the balance, they go up; they are together lighter than
breath: Said
R. Hiyya bar Maré, "Said the Holy One, blessed be He, ‘Even before they
were made of nothing in their mother's womb, I designated them and matched them
for one another.’”
Said
R. Nahman, “All of the vanities and lies that the Israelites do in this world —
Abraham, our father, is worthy of effecting atonement for all of them. What is
the Scriptural proof text? He was the greatest man among the Anakim
(Josh. 14:15). If they are placed in the balance, when does he effect
atonement for them in the scales? It is in the month that is subject to the
constellation of the scales [of Libra]. And which month is subject to the
constellation of Libra? It is Tishri
.
in
the month...
(Ps. 81:4): [Reading the letters of the word for month to spell out the
word for new:] renew your deeds.
..shofar...
: [Reading the letters of the word for shofar to spell out the word for
beautify:] improve your deeds.
Said
the Holy One, blessed be He, “If you improve your deeds before me, lo, I will
become for you like a shofar. Just as a shofar takes in at one side and lets
out at the other, so will I arise from the throne of justice and take my seat
on the throne of mercy and become filled with mercy for you and have mercy on you
and turn the attribute of justice into the attribute of mercy.” When? In the
seventh month, [on the first day of the month, you will observe a day of solemn
rest, a memorial proclaimed with blast of trumpets] (Lev. 23:24).
ΧΧΙΙΙ:ΙΧ
In
the seventh
(SBY'Y,) month, on the first day of the month (Lev. 23:24): A month
which is sated (MSWB') in the performance of religious duties, (for) the shofar
I sounded on the Νew Year is in it, the day of Atonement is in it, [the
religious duty of building a tabernacle is in it, the religious duty of taking]
the palm branch (lulab) and the willow is in it.
Another
matter: In the seventh month (Lev. 23:24): A month which is sated with
all things: the vintage is in it, the threshing floor is in it, all sorts of
delicious things are in it.
Another
matter: In the seventh (SBY'Y) month (Lev. 23:24): R. Berekhiah
would call (that month) the month of the oath (SBW'T'), namely, the month in
which the Holy One, blessed be He, took an oath (NSB`) to our father, Abraham, By
Myself have I taken an oath, says the Lord (Gen. 22:16). What need was
there for this oath? R. Bibi bar Abba in the name of R. Yohanan: “Abraham said
before the Holy One, blessed be He, ‘Lord of the ages! It is perfectly evident
before the throne of Your glory that, when You said to me, Take your son,
your only son, whom you love, Isaac (Gen. 22:2), Ι had in mind what to
answer You and to say to You, Yesterday You said to me, For through Isaac
will seed be called forth for you (Gen. 21:12). And today you say to me, Take
your son, your only son. But just as I had in mind what to answer You, but
made no reply to You, so, when the descendants of Isaac will come to the toils
of transgression and bad deeds, You must remember in their behalf the binding
of Isaac, their father, and therefore effect atonement for them and turn the
attribute of justice to the attribute of mercy for them.” When? In the
seventh month, [on the first day of the month, you will observe a day of solemn
rest, a memorial proclaimed with blast of trumpets] (Lev. 23:24).
ΧΧΙΙΙ:Χ
And
Abraham raised his eyes, and he saw, and behold, a ram (Gen. 22:13). Said R.
Yudan, “That verse teaches that the Holy One, blessed be He, showed Abraham a
ram tearing itself out of one thicket and getting caught in another, over and
over again. He said to him, ‘So will your children be trapped by sins and
entangled among troubles, but in the end they will be redeemed through the horn
of a ram [sounded on the New Year]. Then the Lord will appear over them, and
his arrow go forth like lightning, [the Lord God will sound the trumpet, and
march forth in the whirlwinds of the south. The Lord of hosts will protect
them] (Zech. 9:14-15) [Leviticus Rabbah adds: That is in line with the
following verse of Scripture: And in that day a great trumpet will be blown
(Is. 27:13)].
Said
R. Haninah, “This verse teaches that the Holy One, blessed be He, showed
Abraham a ram tearing itself out of one thicket and getting caught in another,
over and over again. He said to him ‘So will your children be trapped among the
nations and entangled among the kingdoms, and dragged from one kingdom to the
next, from Babylonia to Media, from Media to Greece, from Greece to Edom, but
in the end they will be redeemed through the horn of a ram [sounded on the New
Year].' Then the Lord will appear over them, [and his arrow go forth like
lightning; the Lord God will sound the trumpet, and march forth in the
whirlwinds of the south. The Lord of hosts will protect them] (Zech.
9:14-15).”
In
the seventh month
(Lev. 23:24): Under all circumstances the seventh is preferred. Above in
Heaven, the seventh is preferred. There are seven heavens: the veil, the
firmament, the heights, the most high, the habitation, the established, and the
clouds. Of the last-named, it is written, Cast up a highway for him who
rides through the clouds (Ps. 68:5). Among kinds of land, the seventh is
preferred: land, earth, ground, valley, dry land, territory, and world: And
he will judge the world in righteousness/generosity (Ps. 96:13). Among
generations, the seventh is preferred: Adam, Seth, Enoch, Kenan, Mehallel,
Jered, and Enoch: And [among all seven] Enoch walked with God (Gen.
5:24). Among patriarchs, the seventh is preferred: Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Levi,
Kehath, Amram, and Moses: And Moses went up to God (Ex. 19:3). Among the
sons, the seventy is preferred: Eliab, Abinadab, Shemael, Nethanel, Raddai,
Ozem, and David was the seventh (1 Chron. 2:15). Among kings the seventh
is preferred: Saul, Ishbosheth, David, Solomon, Rehoboam, Abijah, and Asa: And
Asa called to the Lord his God (2 Chron. 14:10). Among years of the
sabbatical cycle the seventh is preferred: And in the seventh there will be
a year of rest (Ex. 23:11). Among days the seventh is preferred: And God
blessed the seventh day (Gen. 2:3). Among months the seventh is preferred: In
the seventh month on the first day of the month (Lev. 23:24).
ΧΧΙΙΙ:ΧΙ
R.
Abba son of R. Pappi and R. Joshua of Sikhnin in the name of R. Levi says, “On
all the other days of the year, the Israelites are taken up with their daily
work, but on the New Year they take up shofars and sound them, and the Holy
One, blessed be He, arises from the throne of strict justice and takes his seat
on the throne of mercy and is filled with mercy for them and turns the
attribute of justice into the attribute of mercy. When? In the seventh
month, on the first day of the month, [you shall observe a day of solemn rest,
a memorial proclaimed with blast of trumpets]” (Lev. 23:24).
XXIII:
XII
It
happened: R. Yohanan and R. Simeon b. Laqish were in session: "We have
learned [at Mishnah Rosh HaSahanh 4:1], In the case of the festival day of
the New Year that coincided with the Sabbath, in the sanctuary they would sound
the shofar horn, but not in the countryside. [When the house of the sanctuary
was destroyed, Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai made the ordinance that they should
sound the shofar horn wherever a court was located.] Now [they said] “if it
is a matter of Torah Law [that the shofar is sounded], then it should override
[the considerations of Sabbath rest even] in the provinces. And if it is not [a
matter of Torah Law], then even in the sanctuary, [sounding the shofar horn]
should not override [the considerations of Sabbath rest].” While they were in
session and raising these difficult questions, Kahana came by. They said, “Lo,
here comes the authority for the tradition. Let us arise and raise our question
for him.” They arose and asked him. He said to them, “One verse of Scripture
states, You will have a day for sounding the horn (Num. 29:1). Another verse
of Scripture says, A Sabbath of remembrance of the sounding of the horn, a
holy convocation (Lev. 23:24). Now how (may the two verses be harmonized)?
On an occasion on which [the holiday] coincides with an ordinary day [not a
Sabbath], You will have a day for sounding the horn (Num. 29:1). On an
occasion on which the holiday coincides with the Sabbath, A Sabbath of
remembrance of the sounding of the horn, a holy convocation (Lev. 23:24),
meaning that they make mention of the sounding of the horn but they do not
sound the horn.”
R.
Zeirah instructed the associates, “Go and listen to R. Levi expounding, because
it is not possible for him to present a passage without instruction in Law.”
They went and he expounded in their presence: “One verse of Scripture states, You
will have a day for sounding the horn (Num. 29:1). Another verse. of
Scripture says, A Sabbath of remembrance of the sounding of the horn, a holy
convocation (Lev. 23:24). Now, how may the two verses be harmonized? On an
occasion on which the holiday coincides with an ordinary day [not a Sabbath], You
will have a day of sounding of the horn (Num. 29:1). On an occasion on
which the holiday coincides with the Sabbath, A Sabbath of remembrance of
the sounding of the horn, a holy convocation (Lev. 23:24), meaning that
they make mention of the sounding of the horn but they do not sound the horn.”
R.
Simeon b. Yohai taught on Tannaite authority, “It should override the Sabbath
restrictions in the sanctuary, where people know the proper time for the
beginning of the new month [of Tishri, so there is no possibility of doubt
about the matter]. But it should not override the restrictions of the Sabbath
in the provinces, where people do not know the proper time for the beginning of
the new month.”
R.
Simeon b. Yohai taught on Tannaite authority, “You will have a day for
sounding the horn, and you will prepare [a burnt-offering] (Num. 29:1-2).
[You therefore sound the horn] where the offerings are prepared.”
Said
R. Tahalipa of Caesarea, “In regard to all other additional offerings, it is
written, And you will offer up (Num. 28:19, 27). But in this regard
(that is, in respect to the New Year), it is written, And you will prepare
[a burnt-offering] (Num. 29:2). Said the Holy One, blessed be He, to
Israel, ‘My children, since you have come before Me to judgment and gone forth
with a pardon, I credit it to you as if on this very day you were made afresh
before Me, as if today I created you as a new creation.’ That is in line with
the following verse of Scripture: For as the new heavens and the new earth
[which I will make will remain before Me, says the Lord, so will your
descendants and your name remain] (Is. 66:22).”
Ketubim: Targum Tehillim (Psalms) 81
JPS TRANSLATION |
TARGUM |
1. For the Leader;
upon the Gittith. A Psalm of Asaph. |
1. For praise; on the lyre that comes from Gath,
composed by Asaph. |
2. Sing aloud unto God
our strength; shout unto the God of Jacob. |
2. Give praise in the presence of God, our strength; shout
in the presence of the God of Jacob. |
3. Take up the melody,
and sound the timbrel, the sweet harp with the psaltery. |
3. Lift up the voice in praise, and set out timbrels, the
lyre whose sound is sweet with harps. |
4. Blow the horn at
the new moon, at the full moon for our feast-day. |
4. Blow the horn in the month of Tishri, in the month in
which the day of our festivals is concealed. |
5. For it is a statute
for Israel, an ordinance of the God of Jacob. |
5. For He made a covenant for Israel; it is a legal ruling
of the God of Jacob. |
6. He appointed it in
Joseph for a testimony, when He went forth against the land of Egypt. The
speech of one that I knew not did I hear: |
6. He made it a testimony for Joseph, who did not go near
the wife of his master; on that day he went out of the prison and ruled over
all the land of Egypt. The tongue I did not know I have taught [and] heard. |
7. I removed his
shoulder from the burden; His hands were freed from the basket. |
7. I have removed his shoulder from servitude; his hands
were taken away from casting clay into a pot. |
8. You did call in
trouble, and I rescued you; I answered you in the secret place of thunder; I
proved you at the waters of Meribah. Selah |
8. In the time of the distress of Egypt, you called and I
delivered you; I made you fast in the secret place where My Presence is,
where wheels of fire call out before him; I tested you by the waters of
Dispute forever. |
9. Hear, O My people,
and I will admonish you: O Israel, if you would hearken unto Me! |
9. Hear, O My people, and I will bear witness for you, O
Israel, if you will accept My Word. |
10. There will no
strange god be in you; neither will you worship any foreign god. |
10. There will not be among you worshippers of a foreign
idol, and you will not bow down to a profane idol. |
11. I am the LORD your
God, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt; open your mouth wide, and I
will fill it. |
11. I am the Lord your God, who brought you up from the
land of Egypt; open wide your mouth with the words of Torah, and I will fill
it with all good things. |
12. But My people
hearkened not to My voice; and Israel would none of Me. |
12. But My people did not receive My voice; and Israel did
not want My Word. |
13. So I let them go
after the stubbornness of their heart, that they might walk in their own
counsels. |
13. And I expelled them for the thoughts of their heart,
they went away in their wicked/lawless counsel. |
14. Oh that My people
would hearken unto Me, that Israel would walk in My ways! |
14. Would that My people had listened to Me – that Israel
would walk in My ways! |
15. I would soon
subdue their enemies, and turn My hand against their adversaries. |
15. In a little while I will humble their enemies, and I
will turn my strong blow against their enemies. |
16. The haters of the
LORD should dwindle away before Him; and their punishment should endure for
ever. |
16. The enemies of the Lord will be false to him; and their
harshness will last forever. |
17. They should also
be fed with the fat of wheat; and with honey out of the rock would I satisfy
you.' |
17. But He will feed him with the best of wheat bread; and
I will satisfy you with honey from the rock. |
|
|
I.
For
the leader; upon the Gittith. [A Psalm] of Asaph. Sing aloud unto God our
strength; shout unto the God of Jacob (Ps. 81:1-2). These words are to
be considered in the light of what Scripture says elsewhere: None has beheld
iniquity/lawlessness in Jacob (Num. 23:21). Why did Balaam choose to
mention Jacob—not Abraham and not Isaac—only Jacob? Because Balaam saw that out
of Abraham had come base metal—Ishmael and all the children of Keturah; and he
also saw that out of Isaac there had come Esau and his princes. But Jacob was
all holiness, for to his sons—All these are the twelve tribes of Israel (Gen.
49:28) — Scripture says, You are all fair, my love (Song 4:7). Hence
Balaam mentioned no Patriarchs other than Jacob when he said None has beheld
iniquity/lawlessness in Jacob. So, too, Asaph said: Seeing that there was
some base metal in all the Patriarchs except Jacob, in whom there was no base
metal at all, I, too, will mention only Jacob. Hence Shout unto the God of
Jacob.
II. Another comment. Why
did Balaam mention Jacob, and not any of the other Patriarchs? Our Masters
taught: In the measure that a man measures out, so is it measured out to him.
For in the verse, In full measure (sè’assë’ah), when You send her away, You
do contend with her (Isa. 27:8), sè’assè’ah, taken as a
reduplicating form, is read se’ah for se’ah—that is “measure for
measure.” This verse would seem to prove that only for a se’ah, a
deed that bulks large, does God give measure for measure. Whence do we know
that also for a tarkab, a half tarkab, a kab, a roba’,
a half roba’, a toman, or an ‘ukla is His measure for
measure given? From Scripture which says, For every sé’on, a so’en is
returned in fierceness (Isa. 9:4). Mark the variety of measures hinted at
in this verse. The reference to them would seem to prove that God measures only
by bulk. Whence do we know, however, that God also measures [by number] by
small coins which can add up to a large sum? From Scripture, which says, Adding
one to one, to find out the sum (Eccles. 7:27).
A
parable of a king who had three friends. Desiring to build a palace for
himself, he sent for the first friend to whom he said: “Behold this place where
I would build me a palace.” The friend replied: “From the very beginning I have
been mindful of this mountain.” The king sent for the second friend and said to
him: “I would build me a palace here.” The friend replied: From the very
beginning I have been mindful of this field.” But when he sent for the third
friend and said: “I would build me a palace here,” the friend replied: “From
the very beginning I have been mindful of this place as a palace.” The king
said to him: “As you live, I will build this palace, and I will call it by your
name.” Even so, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were friends of the Holy One, blessed
be He. But Abraham called the Temple mountain, as is said In the mountain
where the Lord is seen (Gen. 22:14); and Isaac called the Temple field, as
is said See, the smell of my son is as the smell of a field which the Lord
hath blessed (ibid. 27:27); but Jacob called it a house even before it was
built, as is said This is none other than the house of God (ibid.
28:17). Therefore, the Holy One, blessed be He, said to him: “As you live,
because you did call it a house even before it was built, I will call it by
your name,” as is said Come, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord,
to the house of the God of Jacob (Isa. 2:3), and as Jeremiah also said: Behold,
I will turn the captivity of Jacob’s tents (Jer. 30:8). And Asaph
corroborated Balaam’s assertion [that there was no iniquity/lawlessness in
Jacob], for when Asaph spoke of the shouting in the Temple he mentioned only
Jacob, as is said Shout unto the God of Jacob.
III.
Take
up the melody, and sound the timbrel, the sweet harp with the psaltery (Ps. 81:3). R. Hiyya
bar Abba taught: The psaltery and the harp were the same. R. Simeon taught: The
psaltery was one thing, the harp was another; they differed one from the other
in the number of their bass and treble strings. R. Huna said in the name of R.
Asi: Nor did they differ only in the number of their bass and treble strings,
for the skin [of the sounding-board] of one of them was not dressed. And why was
the psaltery called nebel? Because it put to shame (ménabbel)
every other kind of musical instrument.
R.
Judah said in the name of R. Ilai: How many strings were there to the psaltery?
Seven, as is said With seven a day do I praise You (Ps. 119:164). In the
days of the Messiah, however, there will be eight strings to the psaltery, for
it is said For the leader; on the Sheminith (“eight strings”) (Ps.
12:1). And in the time-to-come, the psaltery will be made with ten strings, as
is said Upon an instrument of ten strings, upon the psaltery (Ps. 92:4).
IV. Blow the trumpet
at the new moon, at the full moon (Ps. 81:4). These words are to be
considered in the light of what Scripture says elsewhere: Blessed is the
people that knew the trumpet sound; they walk, O Lord, in the light of Your
countenance (Ps. 89:16). Blessed is the people that knew the trumpet sound:
The generation of the wilderness knew by the sounding of the trumpet when to
pitch camp and when to journey forward, as is said “Make thee two trumpets
of silver . . . and you will use them for the calling of the congregation, and
for the journeying of the camps” (Num. 10:2). Accordingly, the end of the
verse, They walk, O Lord, in the light of Your countenance, is to be
read in the light of the words “And the Lord went before them by day in a
pillar of cloud . . . and by night in a pillar of fire, to give them light”
(Ex. 13:21).
Another
comment: The words Blessed is the people that know the trumpet sound refer
to the people who intercalate the year and designate the day that is the proper
day for the sounding of the trumpet; and the words They walk, O Lord, in the
light of Your countenance mean, according to R. Abbahu, that the Holy One,
blessed be He, conforms to the calendar of the children of Israel.
In
a different interpretation, the words are read Blessed is the people that
know the joyful sound—that is, blessed are the members of the Sanhedrin who
know the joyful sound of the give-and-take of Torah study. They walk, O
Lord, in the light of Your countenance: The Holy One, blessed be He,
conforms to their decisions and makes their faces shine with the radiance of
the Law.
R.
Jose ben Jacob taught in the name of R. Idi who taught it in the name of R.
Aha: The verse Naphtali is a hind let loose: he gives words of a horn
(Gen. 49:21) means that when the children of Naphtali were on a mission of
Torah, they were as swift as the hind. And words of a horn refers to the
fact that the words of Torah were given to Israel with shouts of joy and with
the voice of the horn, as is said “And all the people perceived the
thunderings, and the lightnings. the voice of the trumpet, and the mountain
smoking” (Ex. 20:15). Hence it is said Blow the trumpet at the new moon.
In
a different exposition of Blessed is the people that know the trumpet sound,
R. Josiah said: But the nations of the earth, have they not many trumpets, too?
Have they not many bugles? Have they not many horns? But Blessed is the
people that know the trumpet sound refers to Israel, the people who know
how to propitiate their Creator with their shouts of joy and with the voice of
the trumpet, as when They walk, O Lord, in the light of Your countenance
in the ten days between New Year’s Day and the Day of Atonement.
V. Blow the trumpet
at the new moon (Ps. 81:4). At a particular new moon? Yes, the one that
comes in the time appointed, on our solemn feast day (ibid.). The only
new moon that comes in with a particular feast day, a feast day that arrives at
the new moon, is New Year’s Day.
In
another exposition, the verse is read Trumpet our renewal (hodesh), our
becoming acceptable to God (shofar), at the pardoning (keseh) on our solemn
feast day. Our Masters taught that God meant by this: “Renew your deeds.
Make your deeds acceptable to Me, and on this day I shall pardon your
iniquities/lawlessness,” as is said You have forgiven the
iniquity/lawlessness of Your people, You have pardoned all their sin (Ps.
85:3).
R.
Berechiah bar Abba—some say, R. Berechiah in the name of R. Abba—taught that
God meant: “Renew your deeds. Then, I”—if one may be permitted to speak thus of
God—”like a trumpet into which a man blows from one end and makes the sound
come out of the other, will let in one ear and out of the other the charges
that any accuser whatsoever brings against you before me.” Hence Blow the
trumpet at renewal (Ps. 81:4).
VI. When it is a
statute for Israel, it is an ordinance of the God of Jacob (Ps. 81:5):
Therefore, what is not a statute for Israel, is not—if one be permitted to
speak thus—an ordinance of the God of Jacob. And so R. Hoshaia taught: When an
earthly court decrees, saying: “Today is New Year’s Day,” the Holy One, blessed
be He, tells the ministering angels: “Raise up the dais. Summon the advocates.
Summon the clerks. For the court on earth has decreed and said that today is
New Year’s Day.” If, however, the witnesses of the new moon are delayed in
coming, or if the court has decided to intercalate the year, and to advance New
Year’s Day to the next day, the Holy One, blessed be He, tells the ministering
angels: “Remove the dais, dismiss the advocates, and dismiss the clerks, since
the court on earth has decreed and said: ‘Tomorrow is New Year’s Day.’” And the
proof? When it is a decree for Israel, it is an ordinance of the God of
Jacob.
R.
Phinehas and R. Hilkiah taught in the name of R. Simon: When all the
ministering angels gather before the Holy One, blessed be He, and say, “Master
of the universe, what day is New Year’s Day?” He replies: “Are you asking Me?
Let us, you and I, ask the court on earth.” And the proof? When it is a
decree for Israel, it is an ordinance of the God of Jacob.
VII. In the verse He
appointed it (shamo) in Jehoseph for a testimony (Ps. 81:6), read not shamo,
but shemo, “His name.” Jeh, that is, the name of the Holy One,
blessed be He, [in Jehoseph], testified for Joseph that he had not touched
Potiphar’s wife. The end of the verse, When he went out through the land of
Egypt (ibid.), implies, so our Masters taught, that [pardoned] on New
Year’s Day, Joseph went out from his prison, for the next verse reads: I
removed his shoulder from under the burden [of sin] (Ps. 81:7). What is
meant at the end of this verse by the words his hands were delivered from
the pots (dud)? They mean that he was delivered from being a servant to the
chief of the cooks, for dud is read as in the verse And he struck it
unto the pan or pot (dud) (I Sam. 2:14).
The
Rabbis quote the phrase delivered from the pots as meaning delivered
from the servitude in Egypt, to prove that Joseph’s children were not enslaved
in Egypt. For the verse His firstling bullock, majesty is his (Deut.
33:17) means that like the firstling bullock with which no work is done, as it
is said “You will do no work with the firstling of your bullock” (Deut.
15:19), so the children of Joseph were not enslaved in Egypt. That the pots
(dud) clearly refers to the servitude in Egypt is indicated by the verse In
the land of Egypt, when we sat by the flesh-pots (Ex. 16:3), a word
rendered duda’ in the Aramaic Targum.
Incidentally,
the proof that the children of Israel, when dismissed [from work] to go to
their houses, used to pilfer food from the marts of Egypt, comes from the verse
Remember the fish, which we were wont to eat in Egypt, for nought (Num.
11:5). On the other hand, the verse When we sat by the fleshpots (Ex.
16:3) does not apply to the children of Joseph: They were not enslaved and they
sat not by the flesh-pots, for they were shield-bearers and warriors, as
another verse says of them The children of Ephraim being armed and carrying
bows (Ps. 78:9). Hence it is said of Joseph I removed his shoulder from
under the burden (Ps. 81:7).
Ashlamatah:
I Samuel 1:1-2:10
1.
Now there was a certain man of Ramathaim-zophim, of the hill-country of
Ephraim, and his name was Elkanah, the son of Jeroham, the son of Elihu, the
son of Tohu, the son of Zuph, an Ephraimite.
2.
And he had two wives: the name of the one was Hannah, and the name of the other
Peninnah; and Peninnah had children, but Hannah had no children.
3.
And this man went up out of his city from year to year to worship and to
sacrifice unto the LORD of hosts in Shiloh. And the two sons of Eli, Hophni and
Phinehas, were there priests unto the LORD.
4.
And it came to pass upon a day, when Elkanah sacrificed, that he gave to
Peninnah his wife, and to all her sons and her daughters, portions;
5.
but unto Hannah he gave a double portion; for he loved Hannah, but the LORD had
shut up her womb.
6.
And her rival vexed her sore, to make her fret, because the LORD had shut up her
womb.
7.
And as he did so year by year, when she went up to the house of the LORD, so
she vexed her; therefore she wept, and would not eat.
8.
And Elkanah her husband said unto her: ‘Hannah, why do you weep? And why do you
not eat? And why is your heart grieved? Am not I better to you than ten sons?’
9
So Hannah rose up after they had eaten in Shiloh, and after they had drunk -
now Eli the priest sat upon his seat by the door-post of the temple of the
LORD;
10.
and she was in bitterness of soul - and prayed unto the LORD, and wept sore.
11.
And she vowed a vow, and said: ‘O LORD of hosts, if You will indeed look on the
affliction of Your handmaid, and remember me, and not forget Your handmaid, but
will give unto Your handmaid a man-child, then I will give him unto the LORD
all the days of his life, and there will no razor come upon his head.’
12.
And it came to pass, as she prayed long before the LORD, that Eli watched her
mouth.
13.
Now Hannah, she spoke in her heart; only her lips moved, but her voice could
not be heard; therefore, Eli thought she had been drunken.
14.
And Eli said unto her: ‘How long wilt you be drunk? Put away your wine from
yourself.’
15.
And Hannah answered and said: ‘No, my lord, I am a woman of a sorrowful spirit;
I have drunk neither wine nor strong drink, but I poured out my soul before the
LORD.
16.
Count not your handmaid for a wicked/lawless woman: for out of the abundance of
my complaint and my vexation have I spoken hitherto.’
17.
Then Eli answered and said: ‘Go in Shalom, and the God of Israel grant your
petition that you have asked of Him.’
18.
And she said: ‘Let your servant find favour in your sight.’ So the woman went
her way, and did eat, and her countenance was no more sad.
19.
And they rose up in the morning early, and worshipped before the LORD, and
returned, and came to their house to Ramah; and Elkanah knew Hannah his wife;
and the LORD remembered her.
20.
And it came to pass, when the time was come about, that Hannah conceived, and
bore a son; and she called his name Sh’muel: ‘because I have asked him of the
LORD.’
21.
And the man Elkanah, and all his house, went up to offer unto the LORD the
yearly sacrifice, and his vow.
22.
But Hannah went not up; for she said unto her husband: ‘Until the child be weaned,
when I will bring him, that he may appear before the LORD, and there abide
forever.’
23.
And Elkanah her husband said unto her: ‘Do what seems to you good; wait until you
have weaned him; only the LORD establish His Word.’ So the woman tarried and gave
her son suck, until she weaned him.
24.
And when she had weaned him, she took him up with her, with three bullocks, and
one ephah of meal, and a bottle of wine, and brought him unto the house of the
LORD in Shiloh; and the child was young.
25.
And when the bullock was slain, the child was brought to Eli.
26.
And she said: ‘Oh, my lord, as your soul lives, my lord, I am the woman that
stood by you here, praying unto the LORD.
27.
For this child I prayed; and the LORD has granted me my petition which I asked
of Him;
28.
therefore I also have lent him to the LORD; as long as he lives he is lent to
the LORD.’ And he worshipped the LORD there. {S}
1.
And Hannah prayed, and said: my heart exults in the LORD, my horn is exalted in
the LORD; my mouth is enlarged over mine enemies; because I rejoice in Your
salvation.
2.
There is none holy as the LORD, for there is none beside You; neither is there
any rock like our God.
3.
Multiply not exceeding proud talk; let not arrogance come out of your mouth;
for the LORD is a God of knowledge, and by Him actions are weighed.
4.
The bows of the mighty men are broken, and they that stumbled are girded with
strength.
5.
They that were full have hired out themselves for bread; and they that were
hungry have ceased; while the barren has borne seven, she that had many
children has languished.
6.
The LORD kills, and makes alive; He brings down to the grave, and brings up.
7.
The LORD makes poor, and makes rich; He brings low, He also lifts up.
8.
He raises up the poor out of the dust, He lifts up the needy from the
dung-hill, to make them sit with princes, and inherit the throne of glory; for
the pillars of the earth are the LORD'S, and He has set the world upon them.
9.
He will keep the feet of His holy ones, but the wicked/lawless will be put to
silence in darkness; for not by strength will man prevail.
10.
They that strive with the LORD will be broken to pieces; against them will He
thunder in heaven; the LORD will judge the ends of the earth; and He will give
strength unto His king, and exalt the horn of His anointed (Messiah). {P}
Yochanan
1:1-14
1.
In the beginning [creation] was the Word, and the Word was with [or, in
communion with] God [Ha-Shem], and the Word was a God [Elohim = Judge].
2.
This One was in the beginning [creation] with God [Ha-Shem].
3.
All [things] came to be through him, and without him not even one thing came to
be which has come to be.
4.
In him was life, and the life was the light of the people.
5.
And the Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness cannot comprehend it.
6.
There came a man having been sent from God, [the] name to him [fig., whose name
was] Yochanan [the Immerser].
7.
This one came for a testimony, so that he should testify concerning the Light,
so that all should faithfully obey through him.
8.
That one was not the Light, but [he came] so that he should testify concerning
the Light.
9.
He was the true Light which enlightens every person coming into the world.
10.
He was in the world, and the world came to be through him, and the world did
not know Him.
11.
He came to his own [inheritance – Ps. 2:8], and his own [inheritance – Ps. 2:8]
did not receive him.
12.
But as many as receive Him, He gives to them authority/power to become B’ne
Elohim [i.e. Torah Judges] - to the ones be faithfully obeying though his name
[authority],
13.
who were begotten, not from [or, by] blood, nor from a will of flesh, nor from
a will of a man, but from God [Ha-Shem].
14.
And the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us, and we beheld his glory,
glory as of an only-begotten [first-born] from [the] Father, full of mercy and
truth.
LESHANÁ
TOBÁ TIKATEBÚ VETECHATEMÚ!
For a
good year may you be inscribed and sealed!
¡Para un año bueno sea usted inscrito y sellado!
ROSH
HASHANAH SECOND DAY
Wednesday
October 01, 2008
Morning Service
Torah
Seder: Genesis 22:1-24
Reader 1 - Gen. 22:1-3
Reader
2 - Gen. 22:4-8
Reader
3 - Gen. 22:9-14
Reader
4 - Gen. 22:15-19
Reader
5 - Gen. 22:20-24
Maftir
- Numbers 29:1-6
Ashlamatah:
Jeremiah 31:1-19
Psalm: Proverbs
7:1-27
N.C.
Rashi & Targum Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Resheet (Gen.) 22:1-24 & B’Midbar (Num.)
29:1-6
RASHI |
TARGUM PSEUDO JONATHAN |
1. After these events,
Elohim tested Avraham and said to him, "Avraham!" and he [Avraham]
said, "Here I am." |
1. And it was after
these things that Izhak and Ishmael contended; and Ishmael said, It is right
that I should inherit what is the father's because I am his firstborn son.
And Izhak said, It is right that I should inherit what is the father's,
because I am the son of Sarah his wife, and you are the son of Hagar the
handmaid of my mother. Ishmael answered and said, I am more
righteous/generous than you, because I was circumcised at thirteen years; and
if it had been my will to hinder, they should not have delivered me to be
circumcised; but you were circumcised a child eight days; if you had had
knowledge, perhaps they could not have delivered you to be circumcised. Izhak
responded and said, Behold now, today I am thirty and six years old; and if
the Holy One, blessed be He, were to require all my members, I would not
delay. These words were heard before the Lord of the world, and the Word of
the Lord at once tried Abraham, and said to him, Abraham! And he said, Behold
me. [JERUSALEM. And it was after these things that the Lord tried Abraham
with the tenth trial, and said to him, Abraham! And he said, Behold me.] |
2. He said,
"Please take your son, your only one, who you love---Yitzchaq--- and go
to the land of Moriah. Sacrifice him as a burnt-offering on one of the
mountains which I will designate to you. |
2. And He said, Take
now your son, your only one whom you love, Izhak, and go into the land of
worship, and offer him there, a whole burnt offering, upon one of the
mountains that I will tell you. [JERUSALEM. At Mount Moriah.] |
3. Avraham awoke early
in the morning, saddled his donkey, and took his two attendants with him, and
also his son, Yitzchaq. He split the wood of the burnt-offering, rose, and
went to the place that Elohim had designated to him. |
3. And Abraham rose up
in the morning and saddled his ass, and took two young men with him, Eliezer
and Ishmael, and Izhak his son, and cut the small wood and the figs and the
palm, which are provided for the whole burnt offering, and arose and went to
the land of which the Lord had told him. |
4. On the third day,
Avraham raised his eyes and saw the place from afar. |
4. On the third day
Abraham lifted up his eyes and beheld the cloud of glory fuming on the mount,
and it was discerned by him afar off. |
5. Avraham said to his
attendants, "Remain here with the donkey and I and the lad will go to
that place. We will prostrate ourselves [in worship] and return to you." |
5. And Abraham said to
his young men, Wait you here with the ass, and I and the young man will
proceed yonder, to prove if that which was promised will be established:--So
will be your sons:--and we will worship the Lord of the world, and return to
you. |
6. Avraham took the
wood of the burnt-offering and placed it on his son Yitzchaq. In his hand he
took the fire and the knife, and they both went together. |
6. And Abraham took
the wood of the offering and laid it upon Izhak his son, and in his hand he
took the fire and the knife; and they went both of them together. |
7. Yitzchaq spoke to
Avraham, his father, and said, "Father," and he [Avraham] said,
"Here I am, my son." He said, "Here are the fire and the wood,
but where is the lamb for the burnt-offering?" |
7. And Izhak spoke to
Abraham his father and said, My Father! And he said, I am. And he said,
Behold the fire and the wood: where is the lamb for the offering? |
8. Avraham said,
"Elohim will show the lamb for a burnt-offering, my son." And the
two of them went together. |
8. And Abraham said,
The Lord will choose for Himself a lamb for the offering. And they went both
of them in heart entirely as one. [JERUSALEM. And Abraham said, The Word of
the Lord will prepare for me a lamb; and if not, then you are the offering,
my son! And they went both of them together with a contrite heart.] |
9. They came to the
place that Elohim had designated to him. Avraham built the altar there, and
arranged the wood. He bound his son Yitschaq, and placed him on the altar, on
top of the wood. |
9. And they came to
the place of which the Lord had told him. And Abraham built there the altar
which Adam had built, which had been destroyed by the waters of the deluge,
which Noah has again built, and which had been destroyed in the age of
divisions; and he set the wood in order upon it, and bound Izhak his son, and
laid him on the altar upon the wood. |
10. Avraham extended
his hand and took the knife to slaughter his son. |
10. And Abraham
stretched out his hand, and took the knife to slay his son. And Izhak
answered and said to his father, Bind me properly (aright), lest I tremble
from the affliction of my soul, and be cast into the pit of destruction, and
there be found profaneness in your offering. (Now) the eyes of Abraham looked
on the eyes of Izhak; but the eyes of Izhak looked towards the angels on
high, (and) Izhak beheld them, but Abrahm saw them not. And the angels
answered on high, Come, behold how these solitary ones who are in the world
kill the one the other; he who slays delays not; he who is to be slain
reaches forth his neck. [JERUSALEM. And Abraham stretched out his hand, and
took the knife to slay Izhak his son. Izhak answered and said to Abraham his
father, My father, bind my hands rightly, lest in the hour of my affliction I
tremble and confuse you, and your offering be found profane, and I be cast
into the pit of destruction in the world to come. (Now) the eyes of Abraham
reached unto the eyes of Izhak; but the eyes of Izhak reaching to the angels
on high. And Izhak beheld them, but Abraham saw them not. In that hour came
forth the angels on high, and said, these to these, Come, behold two
righteous/generous ones alone in the midst of the world: the one slays, the
other is slain. He who slays defers not, and he who is to be slain stretches
out his neck.] |
11. An angel of Adonai
called to him from heaven and said, "Avraham, Avraham!" and he
said, "Here I am." |
11. And the Angel of
the Lord called to him from the heavens, and said to him, Abraham! Abraham!
And he said, Behold me. [JERUSALEM. And He said, Abraham! Abraham! And
Abraham answered in the language of the sanctuary, and said, Behold me.] |
12. He [G-d] said,
"Do not touch the lad, nor do anything to [harm] him; for now I know
that you are one who fears Elohim and have not withheld your son, your only
one, from Me." |
12. And He said,
Stretch not out your hand upon the young man, neither do him any evil; for
now it is manifest before Me that you fear the Lord; neither have you
withheld your son the only begotten from Me. |
13. Avraham looked up
and beheld a ram after it had been caught in the thicket by its horns.
Avraham went and took the ram and sacrificed it as a burnt-offering instead
of his son. |
13. And Abraham lifted
up his eyes and saw, and, behold, a certain ram which had been created
between the evenings of the foundation of the world, was held in the
entanglement of a tree by his horns. And Abraham went and took him, and
offered him an offering instead of his son. And Abraham gave thanks and
prayed there, in that place, and said, I pray through the mercies that are
before Thee, O Lord, before whom it is manifest that it was not in the depth
of my heart to turn away from doing Your decree with joy, that when the
children of Izhak my son will offer in the hour of affliction, this may be a
memorial for them; and You may hear them and deliver them, and that all
generations to come may say, In this mountain Abraham bound Izhak his son,
and there the Shekina of the Lord was revealed unto him. |
14. Avraham called the
name of that place, "Adonai will see"; as it is said [to] this day,
"On Adonai's mountain, He will be seen." |
14. [JERUSALEM. And
Abrahm prayed in the name of the Word of the Lord, and said, You are the Lord
who sees, and are not seen. I pray for mercy before You, O Lord. It is wholly
manifest and known before You that in my heart there was no dividing, in the
time that You did command me to offer Izhak my son, and to make him dust and
ashes before You; but that forthwith I arose in the morning and performed
Your Word with joy, and I have fulfilled Your Word. And now I pray for
mercies before You, O Lord God, that when the children of Izhak offer in the
hour of need, the binding of Izhak their father You may remember on their
behalf, and remit and forgive their sins, and deliver them out of all need.
That the generations who are to arise after him may say, In the mountain of
the house of the sanctuary of the Lord did Abraham offer Izhak his son, and
in this mountain of the house of the sanctuary was revealed unto him the
glory of the Shekinah of the Lord.] |
15. An angel of Adonai
called to Avraham, as second time, from heaven. |
15. And the Angel of
the Lord called to Abraham the second time from the heavens, |
16. And said, "
'I have sworn by Myself,' declares Adonai, 'that because you performed this
deed, and did not withhold your only son. |
16. and said, By My
Word have I sworn, says the Lord, forasmuch as you hast done this thing, and
has not withheld your son, your only begotten, |
17. I will greatly
bless you and make your descendants as numerous as the stars of the sky and
like the sand on the seashore. Your descendants will inherit the gate of
their enemies. |
17. that in blessing I
will bless you, and in multiplying I will multiply your sons as the stars of
the heavens, and they will be as the sand which is upon the shore of the sea,
and your sons will inherit the cities before their enemies. |
18. Through your
children, will be blessed all the nations of the world, because you heeded My
voice.' " |
18. And all the
peoples of the earth will be blessed through the righteousness/generosity of your
son, because you have obeyed My Word. |
19. Avraham returned
to his attendants, and they rose and went together to Beer Sheva. Avraham
dwelt in Beer Sheva. |
19. And the angels on
high took Izhak and brought him into the school (medresha) of Shem the Great;
and he was there three years. And in the same day Abraham returned to his
young men; and they arose and went together to the Well of the Seven, and
Abraham dwelt at Beira-desheva. |
20. After these
events, it was told to Avraham, saying, "Behold, Milkah has also born
children to Nachor, your brother." |
20. And it was after
these things, after Abraham had bound Izhak, that Satana came and told unto
Sarah that Abraham had killed Izhak. And Sarah arose, and cried out, and was
strangled, and died from agony. But Abraham had come, and was resting in the
way. And it was told Abraham, saying, Behold, Milcha also has born; she has
enlargement, through the righteousness/ generosity of her sister, for bring
forth sons unto Nachor your brother: |
21. Utz, his first born,
Buz his brother, and Kemuel, the father of Aram. |
21. Uts, his
firstborn, and Booz, his brother, and Kemuel, master of the Aramean
magicians, |
22. [Also] Kesed,
Chazo, Pildash, Yidlaf and Betuel. |
22. and Keshed, and
Chazo, and Pildash, and Jidlaph, and Bethuel. |
23. Betuel fathered
Rivkah. These eight, Milkah bore to Nachor, the brother of Avraham. |
23. And Bethuel begat
Rivekah. These eight bare Milcha to Nacor the brother of Abraham. |
24. His concubine was
named Re'umah. She also gave birth to Tevach, Gacham, Tachash and Ma'achoh. |
24. And his concubine,
whose name was Rëuma, she also bare Tebach, and Gacham, and Tachash, and
Maacha. [JERUSALEM. And his concubine…and her name…] |
|
|
1. The first day of
the seventh month shall be a sacred holiday to you when you shall not do any
work of consequence. It shall be a day of sounding the ram's horn. |
1. And in the seventh
month, the month of Tishri, on the first of the month you will have a holy
convocation, you may not do any servile work; it will be to you a day for the
sounding of the trumpet, that by the voice of your trumpets you may disturb
Satan who comes to accuse you. |
2. You shall bring a
burnt-offering of a pleasing aroma to Adonai, [consisting of] one young bull,
one ram, and seven yearling lambs, [all] without blemish. |
2. And you will make a
burnt sacrifice to be received with favor before the Lord; one young bullock,
one ram, lambs of the year seven, unblemished; |
3. Their meal-offering
[shall be] fine flour mixed with [olive] oil, three tenths [of an ephah] for
the bull, two tenths [of an ephah] for the one ram, |
3. and their mincha of
wheaten flour mingled with olive oil, three tenths for the bullock, two
tenths for the ram, |
4. and one tenth [of
an ephah] for each of the seven lambs. |
4. and one tenth for
each of the seven lambs; |
5. [You should also
bring] one he-goat as a sin-offering to make atonement for you. |
5. and one kid of the
goats for a sin offering to make an atonement for you; |
6. Aside from the
[Rosh] Chodesh burnt-offering and its meal-offering, and the constant (daily)
burnt-offering and its required meal-offering and libations, for a pleasing
aroma, a fire-offering to Adonai. |
6. besides the
sacrifice for the beginning of the month and its mincha, and the perpetual
sacrifice and its mincha; and their libations according to the order of their
appointments, an oblation to be received with favor before the Lord. |
|
|
Midrash Tanhuma Yelammedenu on Beresheet (Genesis)
22:1-24
18. And it came to pass after these words that God did prove
Abraham (Gen. 22:1). What
words were spoken? Ishmael had said to Isaac: I am superior to you, for I
underwent circumcision at the age of thirteen, and underwent the pain (that
accompanied it), while you were merely eight days old at the time of your circumcision
and could feel no pain. Why, even if your father had wished to slaughter you,
you would not have known the difference. If you had been thirteen years old,
you could not have tolerated the anguish that accompanies circumcision. Isaac
retorted: That is not so! Even if the Holy One, blessed be He, should command
my father: “Slaughter your son Isaac,” I would not resist. Immediately
thereafter Scripture states: And it came to pass after these things that God
did prove Abraham.
When the
Holy One, blessed be He, embarked upon the creation of the world, the
ministering angels said to him: What is man, that You are mindful of (lit,
remember) him? (Ps. 8:5). The Holy One, blessed be He, responded: You
have asked me, What is man, that You are mindful of him? because you beheld
the wickedness of the generation of Enosh, but now I will reveal to you the
greatness of Abraham so that you may remember him, as is said: And God
remembered Abraham (Gen. 19:29).
You
(angels) say (to Me), What is man, that You do remember Him? because it
is said The Lord remembered Sarah, but now you are destined to see a
father who is willing to slay his own son, and a son who is willing to be
sacrificed for the sake of My Holy Name.
19. And it came to pass after these words that God did
prove Abraham (Gen. 22:1). Scripture
states elsewhere in reference to this verse: Forasmuch as the king’s word
hath power; and who may say unto him: “What are you doing?” whosoever keeps the
commandment will know no evil thing (Eccles. 8:4-5). What is meant by this
verse? Whatsoever the Holy One, blessed be He, desires to do, He may do, and
none may stay His hand. What then can be the meaning of And who may say unto
Him: “What are you doing?” whosoever keeps the commandment, etc.? These
words whosoever keeps the commandment allude to the righteous/generous
men who perform the commandments of the Holy One, blessed be He. And it is
their decree that He fulfills, as it is written: You will also decree a
thing and it will be established unto you, and the light will shine upon your
ways (Job 22:28). An example of this is what occurred after they made the
golden calf. Though the Holy One, blessed be He, desired to destroy them, our
master, Moses, restrained the Holy One, blessed be He, as though that were possible,
just as a man restrains his companion. Hence the Holy One, blessed be He, said
to him: And now let Me be (Exod. 32:10). We learn this as well from the
verse: Let Me alone that I may destroy them (Deut. 9:14). Therefore
Scripture says: Who may say unto him: “What are you doing?” whosoever keeps
the commandment.
20. And God did prove Abraham (Gen. 22:1). Scripture states elsewhere in
allusion to this verse: The Lord tries the righteous/generous (Ps.
11:5). R. Jonah maintained: If you pound a good-quality flax, its quality will
improve, but if you pound a poor-quality flax, it will crumble. So the Holy
One, blessed be He, tests only the righteous/generous.
R. Judah
the son of Shalum said: A potter never tests a defective vessel for fear that
it might break while being tested, but he always tests a perfect one. Likewise,
the Holy One, blessed be He, tests the righteous/generous but not the wicked,
as it is said: The Lord tries the righteous/generous.
R.
Eleazar declared: If a householder has two cows, one of which is strong while
the other is weak, he places the yoke on the stronger cow and not on the weaker
one. Hence, Scripture says: The Lord tries the righteous/generous and
God did prove Abraham.
21. And God did prove Abraham (Gen. 22:1). Observe this difference between
the earlier generations and the later generations: The earlier generations were
tested by the Holy One, blessed be He, as it is said: And God did prove
Abraham. And Scripture elsewhere states regarding the generation of the
desert: That He might afflict you to prove you, to know what was in your
heart/mind (Deut. 8:2). But later generations were tested by the nations of
the world, for it is said: Now these are the nations which the Lord left, to
prove Israel by them (Judg. 3:1).
Similarly,
you find that though the Holy One, blessed be He, decreed that Daniel and his
companions should eat unclean bread, as it is said: And the Lord said. “Even
thus will the children of Israel eat their bread unclean, among the nations
whither I will drive them” (Ezek. 4:13), nevertheless when Nebuchadnezzar
commanded them to eat his food, as is said: And the king appointed for them
a daily portion of the king’s food and of the wine which he drank (Dan.
1:5), Daniel would not obey. He declared: Even though the Holy One, blessed be
He, has decreed that we should eat unclean food, He did so only to test us. We
will do our part, let Him do His part. Then he said to the chief of the
officers: Try your servants, I beseech you, ten days; and let them give us
pulse to eat, and water to drink. Then let our countenances be looked upon
before you, and the countenance of the youths that eat of the king’s food; and
as you see, deal with your servants (Dan. 1:12-13). The officers retorted:
“Are you descended from nobility that you are able to withstand the test of ten
days without food or wine?”“Yes, indeed,” they replied, “for we are the
descendants of that righteous man who was tried ten times. Perhaps his merit
will assist us. After all, has not the king found us to be ten times as wise as
all his magicians and sorcerers?”
Forthwith,
the Holy One, blessed be He, made the officer feel well disposed toward Daniel:
So he hearkened unto them in this matter and tried them for ten days. And at
the end of ten days their countenances appeared fairer and they were fatter in
flesh, than all the youth that did eat of the king’s food (ibid., vv.
14—15).
22. And He said unto him: “Abraham”; and he said: “Here
am I” (Gen. 22:1). What does
the expression hineni (“here am I”) signify? It signifies meekness and
piety. The meekness of pious men is indicated in every instance by the use of
these words. And He said: “Take, please, your son” (ibid., v. 2). The
word na (“please”) is always used to indicate a request. For example,
there was once a king who was constantly engaged in wars, and he had in his
army a powerful warrior who was victorious in every engagement. At one time a
crucial battle developed, and he said to his mighty warrior: “Stand beside me
now (na), lest my officers say that the earlier battles were minor
engagements.” Similarly, the Holy One, blessed be He, said to Abraham: I have
tried you nine times, and you underwent those trials successfully; now endure
this final trial so that men may not say the earlier trials were of little
consequence.
And He said: “Take now (na) your son, your only son” (ibid.). Abraham asked: “Which
son is that?” The Holy One replied: Your only son. “But,” he said, “one
of my sons is the only son of his mother, and the other is the only son of his mother.”
The son you love, He replied. “I love them both,” Abraham responded. “The one
you love the most,” said God. “Is there a limit in the viscera?” (i.e., Is
there a measure within which a man gauges the love he bears his sons), he
asked. Forthwith, God replied: Isaac.
And get yourself into the land of Moriah (ibid., v. 2). What is suggested
by the word get yourself? It implies that the last trial was similar to
the first. At the first trial, The Lord said unto Abram: “Get yourself out
of your country and from your kindred” (Gen. 12:1), and at the last trial
He said: Get yourself into the land of Moriah.
Forthwith, Abraham arose early in the morning, and
saddled his ass, and took two of his young men with him (ibid. 22:3). How many servants
and maids that righteous/generous man possessed! Yet he saddled the ass
himself. This reveals his eagerness to fulfill God’s command.
On the third day, Abraham lifted up his eyes and saw the
place from afar off (ibid.,
v. 4). Why was he able to see the place on the third day, but not on the first
or second day? Lest the inhabitants of the world assert that he was still in
shock from God’s command and therefore was willing to sacrifice his son.
And he saw the place from afar off. Abraham had asked himself: What
will I do? If I tell Sarah all about it, consider what may happen. After all, a
woman’s mind becomes distraught over insignificant matters; how much more
disturbed would she become if she heard something as shocking as this! However,
if I tell her nothing at all, and simply steal him away from her when she is
not looking, she will kill herself. What did he do? He said to Sarah: “Prepare
some food and drink that we may eat and rejoice.”“But why is this day different
from other days?” she asked. “What are you celebrating?” He replied: “When a
couple our age has a son, it is fitting, indeed, that they should eat, drink,
and rejoice.” Whereupon she prepared the food. While they were eating, he said
to her: “When I was a child of three, I already knew my Creator, yet this child
is growing up and still has had no instruction. There is a place a short
distance away where children are being taught, I will take him there.” She
answered: “Go in peace.”
Immediately: And
Abraham arose early in the morning (ibid., v.3). Why did he arise early in the
morning? He had said to himself: Perhaps Sarah will change her mind and not
permit me to go; I will arise before she does.”
Another
comment on early in the morning: Righteous/generous men are always
anxious to fulfill their religious duties as early as possible. For example,
though Scripture states; And on the eighth day the flesh of his foreskin
will be circumcised (Lev. 21:3), thereby indicating that the entire day is
appropriate for circumcision, a righteous/generous man will fulfill the precept
of circumcision as early in the day as possible.
And he took two of his young men with him (Gen. 22:3). He said to himself:
While I am sacrificing him they will guard the supplies.
Satan
appeared before him on the road in the guise of an old man and asked: “Where
are you going?” Abraham replied: “To pray.”“And why,” Satan retorted, “does one
going to pray carry fire and a knife in his hands, and wood on his
shoulders?”“We may tarry there for several days,” said Abraham, “and slaughter an
animal and cook it.” The old man (Satan) responded: “That is not so; I was
present when the Holy One, blessed be He, ordered you to take your son. Why
should an old man, who begets a son at the age of a hundred, destroy him? Have
you not heard the parable of the man who destroyed his own possessions and then
was forced to beg from others? If you believe that you will have another son,
you are listening to the words of a seducer. And furthermore, if you destroy a
soul, you will be held legally accountable for it.” Abraham answered: “It was
not a seducer, but the Holy One, blessed be He, who told me what I must do, and
I shall not listen to you.”
Satan
departed from him and appeared at Isaac’s right hand in the guise of a youth.
He inquired: “Where are you going?”“To study the law,” Isaac replied. “Alive or
dead?” he retorted. “Is it possible for a man to learn the law after he is
dead?” Isaac queried. He said to him: “Oh, unfortunate son of an unhappy
mother, many days your mother fasted before your birth, and now this demented
old man is about to sacrifice you.” Isaac replied: “Even so, I will not
disregard the will of my Creator, nor the command of my father.” He turned to
his father and said: “Father, do you hear what this man has told me?” He
replied: “Pay no heed to him, he has come only to torment us.” Forthwith, And
Isaac spoke (ibid., v. 7).
On the third day Abraham lifted up his eyes (ibid., v. 4). Since the
distance was extremely short, what delayed them three days? When Satan realized
that they would not pay any attention to him, he went ahead and created a river
in their path. When Abraham stepped into the river, it reached his knees. He
ordered his young men to follow him, and they did so. But in the middle of the
river the water reached his neck. Thereupon, Abraham lifted his eyes heavenward
and cried out: Master of the Universe, You have chosen me; You have instructed
me; You revealed Yourself to me; You have declared: I am one and You are one,
and through You shall my name be made known in My world. You have ordered me:
Offer, Isaac, thy son, as a sacrifice, and I did not refuse; but now, as I am
about to fulfill Your command, these waters endanger my life. If either I or my
son, Isaac, should drown, who will fulfill Your decrees, and who will proclaim
the Unity of Your Name? The Holy One, blessed be He, responded: Be assured that
through you the Unity of My Name will be made known through the world.
Thereupon the Holy One, blessed be He, rebuked the source of the water, and
caused the river to dry up. Once again, they stood on dry land.
What did
Satan do then? He said to Abraham: “Now a word was secretly brought to me
(Job 4:12); that is, I have heard from behind the heavenly curtain that a Iamb
will be sacrificed as a burnt offering instead of Isaac.” Abraham responded;
“It is a liar’s fate that even though he should speak the truth, no one will
believe him.” Immediately, And he saw the place from afar off. How was
he able to see the place from afar off? This verse teaches us that the place
was a valley at the time. However, when the Holy One, blessed be He, decided to
make His Shekhinah hover over it and to make it the site of the Temple, He
observed that it is not fitting for a king to dwell in a valley, but rather in
a lofty and beautiful place, visible to every eye. Thereupon, the Holy One,
blessed be He, called upon the hills in the surrounding area to come together
in order to make a fitting abode for the Shekhinah. Hence, the mountain is
called Moriah, for it was fashioned out of reverence (yirah) for
the Holy One, blessed be He.
23. And he saw the place from afar off (Gen. 22:4). Abraham said to Isaac: “Do you
see what I see?”“I behold a glorious mountain encircled by a cloud,” he
replied. Then he asked his young men: “Do you see anything at all?”“We see only
desert,” they answered. “Then abide with the ass,” he commanded, “for the ass
sees nothing and you see nothing.” Abide here with the ass (ibid., v.
5), for you are like unto them.
And I and the lad will go yonder (ibid.). What is meant by the
word yonder (Heb. koh, which also means “thus, so”)? It means: “Let us
see what will be the final outcome of koh. The Holy One, blessed be He,
promised me: So (koh) will your seed be (Gen. 15:1).” And we will
worship and come back to you (ibid. 22:5). His own mouth foretold him that
they would both return in peace. And he took in his hand fire and a knife
(ibid., v. 6). Why was it called a slaughtering knife (ma’akhelet)?
Because it made food (okhalin) suitable for eating.
Forthwith,
And Isaac spoke unto Abraham, his father and said: “My father.” And he
replied: “Here am I, my son.” Then Isaac asked: “Behold the fire and the wood;
but where is the lamb for a burnt-offering?” (ibid., v. 7). Immediately, an
overpowering fear and violent trembling seized Isaac, for when he saw nothing
to be sacrificed, he realized what was about to transpire. Yet he asked once
again: “Where is the lamb for the burnt-offering?’ And Abraham
responded: “Since you ask, the Holy One, blessed be He, has selected you.”“If
he has chosen me,” Isaac replied, “I will willingly surrender my soul to Him,
but I am gravely concerned about my mother.” Nevertheless, they went both of
them together (ibid., v. 8), of one mind: convinced that one was to
slaughter and the other to be slaughtered. Isaac was thirty-seven years old at
the time of his binding.
And they came to the place which God had told him of. . .
and bound Isaac, his son (ibid.,
v. 9). As Abraham was about to slaughter him, Isaac cried out: “Father, bind my
hands and feet, for the will to live is strong within me, and when I see the
knife descending, I may tremble and the offering may become defective (as a
result of the knife slipping). I implore you not to make me a blemished
offering.” Then Abraham stretched forth his hand and took the knife to slay
his son (ibid., v. 10). Isaac said to him: “Father, do not tell my mother
about this while she is standing at the edge of a pit or a roof lest she hurl
herself down and die.” After they had constructed the altar, Abraham bound Isaac
upon it and took the knife in hand to slaughter him until a fourth of a measure
of blood would flow from his body, Satan appeared and pushed Abraham’s hand,
causing the knife to fall. As he reached out to grasp the knife again, a voice
emanated from heaven, saying: Lay not your hand upon the lad (ibid., w.
13). If this had not happened, Isaac would certainly have been sacrificed.
While all
this was transpiring, Satan visited Sarah in the guise of Isaac. When she saw
him she asked: “What did your father do to you, my son?” He replied: “My father
led me over mountains and through valleys until we finally reached the top of a
certain mountain. There he erected an altar, arranged the firewood, bound me
upon the altar, and took a knife to slaughter me. If the Holy One, blessed be
He, had not called out, Lay not thy hand upon the lad, I would have been
slaughtered.” He had hardly completed relating what had transpired when she
fainted and died, as it is written: And Abraham came to mourn for Sarah, and
to weep for her (ibid. 23:2). From where did he come? From Moriah.
When he
was about to slaughter Isaac, an angel of the Lord called out to him from
heaven, saying: Abraham, Abraham (ibid. 22:11). Why was his name
repeated? Because he was hastening to slaughter him. And He said: Lay not
your hand upon the lad (ibid., v. 12). Abraham asked: “Who are you?” And he
replied: “An angel.’ Thereupon Abraham retorted: “When I was commanded, Take
now your son, it was the Holy One, blessed be He, who spoke to me; if He
now wishes to stop me, let Him tell me so.”
Thereupon,
And the angel of the Lord called unto Abraham out of heaven a second time
(ibid., v. 15), for he had refused to heed the first call. Then Abraham cried
out to the Holy One, blessed be He: “Master of the Universe, a man tests his
companion because he does not know what is in his heart, but You know what is
in the heart and the kidneys, the seat of deliberation. Surely, You did not
need to test me.” He answered: Now, indeed, do I know that you are a God-fearing
man (ibid., v. 12).
Thereupon,
the Holy One, blessed be He, opened the sky and the cloud (surrounding Him) and
said: “By myself have I sworn,” sayd the Lord (ibid., v. 16). “You have
sworn.” Abraham replied, “and now I swear that I will not descend from this
altar until I say what I wish to say.”“Speak,” He answered. “Did You not tell
me,” said Abraham, “Count all the stars, if thou be able to count them; so
will your seed be (Gen. 15:5)?”“Yes,” He replied. “But from whom will my
seed descend?” queried Abraham. “From Isaac,” the Holy One answered. “It was in
my heart, yesterday, to remind You that You told me that Isaac was my seed,
when You said to me: Take him for a burnt-offering. But I restrained
myself and did not challenge You. Therefore, when Isaac’s descendants sin and
are being oppressed, recall the binding of Isaac, reckon it as if his ashes
were piled upon the altar, and pardon them and release them from their
anguish.”
The Holy
One, blessed be He, answered: “You have spoken what was in you heart, now I
will say what I wish to say. In the future Isaac’s descendants will sin against
Me, and I will judge them on Rosh Hashanah. If they want Me to discover
something to their credit, and to recall for their advantage the binding of
Isaac, let them blow upon this shofar.” Abraham asked: “What shofar?” The Holy
One, blessed be He, said: “Turn around. Then it was that Abraham lifted up
his eyes, and looked, and behold, behind a ram caught in the thicket by his
horns (Gen. 22:13). This was one of the ten things that were created at
twilight.’
A ram caught in the thicket by his horns (ibid.). The Holy One, blessed
be He, said to Abraham: “Let them blow upon the ram’s horn to Me, and I will
save them and redeem them from their sins.” This is what David meant when he
sang: My shield and my horn of salvation, my high tower (Ps. 18:3). Then
I will remove the yoke of exile from them and comfort them in the midst of
Zion, as it is said: For the Lord has comforted Zion (Isa. 5 1:3). Amen!
Ketubim: Proverbs 7
1 ¶ My
son, keep My words and treasure up My commandments within you.
2 Keep My
commandments and live, and My law as the pupil of your eye.
3 Tie
them upon your fingers; write them upon the tablet of your heart.
4 Say to
wisdom, You are my sister, and call understanding your kinsman,
5 that
they may keep you from the strange woman, from the foreigner who makes smooth
her words.
6 ¶ For I
looked through my lattice, at the window of my house,
7 and I
saw among the simple ones, I observed among the children a young man lacking
heart,
8 passing
through the street near her corner; and he went the way to her house,
9 in the
twilight, in the evening of the day, in the middle of the darkness of night.
10 And
behold, a woman came to meet him, with the attire of a harlot, and a heart of
secrecy.
11 She is
boisterous and stubborn; her feet do not settle down in her own house.
12 At one
moment she is outside, the next in the streets, and she lies in wait at every
corner.
13 So she
has seized him and kissed him; and with straight face says to him,
14
Regarding my peace offerings, today I have completed my vows;
15
therefore I came out to meet you, earnestly to seek your face, and I have found
you.
16 I have
spread my bed with coverings, with striped cloths of linen from Egypt.
17 I have
sprinkled my bed with myrrh, aloes and cinnamon.
18 Come,
let us take our fill of love until the morning; let us delight ourselves with
lovemaking.
19 For my husband is not at home; he has gone on a long
journey.
20 He has taken in hand a bag of money, and will come
home on the day appointed (the new moon).
21 With
great persuasion she influences him; with her seductive lips she moves him.
22 In an
instant he goes after her, as an ox goes to the slaughter, or as a fool goes to
correction in fetters;
23 till
an arrow strikes through his liver, as a bird hastens to the snare; and does
not realize that it is for his soul.
24 ¶ Now
then, listen to me, O sons, and pay attention to the words of my mouth:
25 Do not
let your heart turn aside to her ways; do not go astray in her paths.
26 For many are the wounded she has caused to
fall, and countless are the ones slain by her.
27 Her house is the way to Sheol, going down to
the rooms of death.
Ashlamatah:
Jeremiah 31:1-19
1.
At that time, says the LORD, will I be the God of all the families of Israel,
and they will be My people.
2.
Thus says the LORD: The people that were left of the sword have found grace in
the wilderness, even Israel, when I go to cause him to rest.
3.
From afar the LORD appeared unto me. Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting
love; therefore with affection have I drawn you.
4.
Again will I build you, and you will be built, O virgin of Israel; again will
you be adorned with your tabrets, and will go forth in the dances of them that
make merry.
5.
Again will you plant vineyards upon the mountains of Samaria; the planters will
plant, and will have the use thereof.
6.
For there will be a day, that the watchmen will call upon the mount Ephraim:
arise, and let us go up to Zion, unto the LORD our God.
7.
For thus says the LORD: Sing with gladness for Jacob, and shout at the head of
the nations; announce, praise, and say: O LORD, save Your people, The remnant
of Israel.
8.
Behold, I will bring them from the north country, and gather them from the
uttermost parts of the earth, and with them the blind and the lame, the woman
with child and her that travails with child together; a great company will they
return hither.
9.
They will come with weeping, and with supplications will I lead them; I will
cause them to walk by rivers of waters, in a straight way wherein they will not
stumble; for I am become a father to Israel, and Ephraim is My first-born.
10.
Hear the word of the LORD, O you Gentiles, and declare it in the isles afar off,
and say: He that scattered Israel does gather him, and keep him, as a shepherd
does his flock.
11.
For the LORD has ransomed Jacob, and He redeems him from the hand of him that
is stronger than he.
12.
And they will come and sing in the height of Zion, and will flow unto the
goodness of the LORD, to the corn, and to the wine, and to the oil, and to the
young of the flock and of the herd; and their soul will be as a watered garden,
and they will not pine any more at all.
13.
Then will the virgin rejoice in the dance, and the young men and the old
together; for I will turn their mourning into joy, and will comfort them, and
make them rejoice from their sorrow.
14.
And I will satiate the soul of the priests with fatness, and My people will be
satisfied with My goodness, says the LORD.
15.
Thus says the LORD: A voice is heard in Ramah, lamentation, and bitter weeping,
Rachel weeping for her children; she refuses to be comforted for her children,
because they are not.
16.
Thus says the LORD: Refrain your voice from weeping, and your eyes from tears;
for your work will be rewarded, says the LORD; and they will come back from the
land of the enemy.
17.
And there is hope for your future, says the LORD; and your children will return
to their own border.
18.
I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself: You have chastised me, and I was
chastised, as a calf untrained; return You me, and I will be returned, for You
are the LORD my God.
19.
Surely after that I was returned, I repented, and after that I was instructed,
I smote upon my thigh; I was ashamed, yes, even confounded, because I did bear
the reproach of my youth.
20.
Is Ephraim a darling son unto Me? Is he a child that is dandled? For as often
as I speak of him, I do earnestly remember him still; Therefore My heart yearns
for him, I will surely have compassion upon him, says the LORD.
LESHANÁ
TOBÁ TIKATEBÚ VETECHATEMÚ!
For a
good year may you be inscribed and sealed!
¡Para un año bueno sea usted inscrito y sellado!
FAST
OF GEDALIAH
Thursday
October 02, 2008
Morning Service:
Torah
Seder: Exodus 32:11-14; 34:1-11
Reader 1 - Ex. 32:11-14
Reader 2 - Ex. 34:1-4
Reader 3 - Ex. 34:6-11
Ashlamatah:
Isaiah 55:6 – 56:8
N.C. Romans
1:18-32
The Murder of Gedaliah: An
Anatomy of Self Destruction
(Jeremiah, Chapters 40-43)
by Prof. Uriel Simon
Department of Talmud, Bar-Ilan University
http://www.biu.ac.il/Spokesman/Tolerance/simon.htm
Four
days of fasting and mourning were decreed by the exiles to Babylon in order to
retain the destruction of the First Temple in our collective memory. (Zechariah
7:3; 8:19) Three of them commemorate the tragedies brought upon us by the
Babylonians -- the onset of the siege, the breach of the wall and the burning of
the Temple. The fourth, the Fast of Gedaliah recalls the two-fold calamity
which we brought upon ourselves: the loss of the last remnant of Jewish
autonomy in Judea and the self-imposed exile to Egypt. Those were the political
results. From the religious point of view, expressed verbally by the prophet of
destruction Jeremiah, the first three are punishment by G-d for the sins of
Judea while the fourth is an entirely new set of sins into which the punishment
is built from the start.
In
the meeting at the city of Ramah between the Babylonian commander Nebuzadran
and the prophet Jeremiah, who was set free from among the bound and chained
captives being led out to Babylon, the destroyer of the Temple and of Jerusalem
speaks in the conceptual terms of the prophet: "Because you have sinned
against the Lord and did not listen to His voice, that is why this has happened
to you"(40:3)! Indirectly it is implied that he is the executor of the
word of G-d to his prophet, and that he must repay Jeremiah for his prophecies
which have been realized. He presents Jeremiah with four options, which are in
fact, really three: "To come with him to Babylon and there receive
preferential status from the government", to go as a private citizen to
any destination he chooses (in the Land of Israel or outside), or to join
Gedaliah Ben Ahikam who was chosen by the King of Babylon as Regent over the
Remnant of Judea and "to dwell" with him in Mitzpah, (which
archaeological findings indicate was not destroyed), "among the
people".
The
starving Jeremiah received an allowance and a meal from his captor and left him
without any word of reply (apparently wishing to escape the bear hug of the
conqueror and oppressor of his people who was being kind to him personally) and
went to join Gedaliah in Mitzpah. When corruption had become rampant in
Jerusalem, the prophet expressed the desire to break off from his people
("Oh, that I were in the wilderness in a lodging for travelers that I
might leave my people and go forth from them, for they are all adulterers, an
assembly of treacherous men!" [9:1]), but during the siege he refrained
from deserting his people though he advised others to do so (37:14; 38:2). Now,
with the fall of the city and destruction of the land, he casts his lot with that
of the Remnant and joins Gedaliah in the work of reconstruction: "and he
dwelled with him among the people who remained in the land" (40:6).
There
is an obvious affinity between the option chosen by the prophet and the
reconstruction plans of Gedaliah, as he presented them to the seven
"captains of the troops in the open country (outside Jerusalem) and their
men" (40:7). He swore to them that they had no reason to fear serving the
Chaldeans (Babylonians) even though they had fought against them previously,
and encouraged them to "dwell in the land" like Jeremiah, rather than
to seek personal resolutions to their troubles abroad. He promised to defend
their rights before the occupation power and encouraged them to insure their
economic well-being by gathering the crops left behind by the exiles and
occupying deserted homes and lands ("and dwell in the cities you have
taken" [40:10]). Their reaction is not given. Instead we are told of the
initial success of the reconstruction plan of Gedaliah: "All the Judeans
returned from all the places to which they were driven (among others -- from
Moab, Ammon and Edom which were not conquered by the Babylonians) and they came
to the Land of Judea, to Gedaliah at Mitzpah, and gathered an abundance of wine
and summer fruits" (40:12).
In
a second meeting between Gedaliah and "all the captains of the
troops" except for Ishmael ben Netaniah, Gedaliah learns from them that
the missing captain intends to murder him: "Do you know that Baalis, king
of Ammon, sent Ishmael ben Netaniah to kill you?" (40:14). But Gedaliah
"believed them not", though there was reason to believe that
commonality of interest existed between the king of Ammon, who had participated
in the rebellion against Babylonia (27:3) and with whom King Zedekiah had apparently
hoped to find refuge in his flight to Jericho (39:4-5), and Ishmael ben
Netaniah who was of "royal seed" (41:1) and could object to the
position of power bestowed upon one who was not of the Davidic Line and
criticize the co-operation with the Babylonians. (Gedaliah was of a family of
long-standing loyalty to the worship of the G-d of Israel and supporting
Jeremiah: His grandfather, Shafan, had been the scribe of King Josiah [Second
Kings 22:3], his father Ahikam, was sent by Josiah to the prophetess Hulda
[Second Kings 22:12] and had saved the life of Jeremiah [Jeremiah 26:24]).
The
second intelligence warning came under cover: one of the most important warrior
chieftains, Yochanan ben Kereach requested permission from Gedaliah to quietly
assassinate Ishmael in order to avert a serious national disaster: "Why
should he kill you and then all the Jews who gathered around you will be
scattered and the remnant of Judea will perish?" (40:15). Gedaliah ignored
the issue of the justification of committing murder to prevent murder and chose
to deny very strongly the verity of the information and the reliability of the
informant: "Do not do this thing, for you speak falsely of
Ishmael"(40:16). The reader, who does not yet know what is about to happen,
asks himself: are the two warnings some part of a conspiracy? Is it reasonable
to assume that Yochanan, motivated by jealousy among the officers, would
falsely accuse Ishmael? Could the complacency of Gedaliah result from his deep
conviction in the correctness of his policies and from his simple belief that
it would be inconceivable that a Judean army officer would even consider
murdering him and thus mortally wound the attempts at rehabilitation of the
"Remnant of Judea"?
Gedaliah
disdained even passive security measures, inviting Ishmael and ten of his
soldiers to share a meal with him. There, during the meal, the guests rose up
against their host and murdered him, declaring their motive as political:
"And they killed him because the King of Babylon had put him in charge of
the land" (41:2). Ishmael, not content with killing the Jewish leader who
had proposed collaboration with the Babylonians, also put to death all those
who were in his immediate entourage -- "all the Judeans who were with
him" as well as the Chaldean soldiers "who were stationed there"
(41:3).
One
iniquity brings on another: the assassinations soon led to slaughter. To
prevent the news of the murder from becoming known outside Mitzpah, Ishmael
massacred the participants in a caravan of eighty men from Schechem, Shiloh and
Samaria who were traveling as penitents "their beards shaven, their
clothing torn and having cut themselves" (41:5) to the Temple Mount to
offer sacrifices and express their deep anguish over the destruction of the
Temple (which took place only two months earlier). In order to convince them to
enter the city Ishmael went out to them and by cynical manipulation of the
power of attraction of the fraternity of mourners he went to them "weeping
as he walked" (41:6) inviting them to be the guests of Gedaliah. Perhaps,
their acceptance proved to him that they agreed to the polices of Gedaliah. In
any case, as soon as they entered the city Ishmael and his men killed seventy
of them and with contempt and disrespect threw their bodies into a huge cistern
which, three hundred years earlier, had been a part of the northern
fortification of the Kingdom of Judea.
This
horrible disregard of the value human life is indicated not only by the act of
mass murder but also by Ishmael sparing the lives of the remaining ten pilgrims
who bought their lives with high priced bribery: "Do not kill us for we
have stores hidden in the fields -- wheat, barley, oil and honey. So he stopped
and did not kill them along with their fellows" (41:8).
Now,
all that Ishmael ben Netaniah was left to do was "to go over to the
Ammonites"(thus confirming after the fact the information about the
Ammonite conspiracy related in the first warning to Gedaliah), taking with him
by force all the survivors of Mitzpah: "and Ishmael carried off all the
remnant of the people" (41:10).
Yochanan
ben Kareach and the other captains were not in Mitzpah during the two days of
massacre. When "all the evil that Ishmael ... had done" (41:11)
became known to them, they regrouped their forces and pursued Ishmael and his
captives. The latter, upon seeing their rescuers approaching, went gladly over
to their side while Ishmael "escaped with eight men from Yochanan and went
to the Ammonites" (41:15). The emphasis on the ridiculous smallness of
this militant band (which presumably had incurred two losses) seems to be an
indication that a very few determined men, devoid of all restraints, can
inflict an enormous, grave historic damage. Yochanan ben Kareach did not return
to Mitzpah, fearing that a Babylonian reprisal force would not distinguish
between friend and foe and punish him for the sins of Ishmael. This is, in
fact, the way of all conquering, imperialist armies which instill terror in the
local population through collective punishment, tending to see the
assassination of their appointed official as an excuse for the cancellation of
the few rights granted previously to the conquered. Just as Yochanan feared
reprisal from the Babylonians for the death of Gedaliah, so he could expect
reward from the Egyptians for the blow dealt by Ishmael to their Babylonian
enemy. He therefore turned, with his entire camp -- soldiers and civilians
alike -- to go down into Egypt.
Only
at this point are we made aware that the prophet Jeremiah was also in the camp
of Yochanan, (but we are not told whether he was among those taken captive in
Mitzpah, or whether he had been outside the city and joined the warrior
chieftains following the murder). In contrast to Gedaliah, who did not consult
Jeremiah concerning the intentions of Ishmael, Yochanan and his fellow
commanders now turned to Jeremiah, requesting that he pray on their behalf and
ask of G-d a clear instruction concerning where to go and what to do. One gets
the impression that the destruction and murder had a deep influence upon them
since this was the first time that the men of Judea acknowledged the presence
of a prophet among them, who could serve as their messenger to G-d. Jeremiah
agreed to pray for them in their hour of distress and also to pass on to them
the Divine answer, hiding nothing. They, on their part, swore to obey the word
of G-d whether or not it would be acceptable to them, "that it may go well
with us when we listen to the voice of the Lord our G-d" (42:6).
Ten
days Jeremiah waited until the word of G-d came to him, proof positive that he
did not answer them on the basis of his own opinion alone. His words indicated
that God demanded of them to continue the policies of Jeremiah and Gedaliah.
This can be deduced from the emphasized use of the verb to dwell: "if you
continue to dwell (Hebrew verb root used twice for emphasis!) in this land I
will build you and not destroy I will plant you and not uproot; for I regret
the evil I have done to you" (42:10). G-d informed them that the time of
retribution was over and a period of Divine Grace was at hand. Clearly
referring to the terms of the prophetic dedication of Jeremiah, He told them
that from this time forth He would cease "to uproot and pull down, to
overthrow and destroy", and would begin "to build and to plant"
(1:10). Gedaliah had told these military officers "Do not be afraid to
serve the Chaldeans" (40:9) and G-d now broadens the scope of this
encouragement to include the expected reprisal by the Chaldeans after the
murder: "Do not fear the King of Babylonia...for I am with you to save you
and I will dispose him to be merciful to you; he shall show you mercy and
return you to your own land" (42:11-12). These last words echo those of
Gedaliah "And dwell in the cities you have captured."(40:10), as does
the Divine warning "if you turn your faces to come to Egypt and you come
to live there..." (42:15) echo the first option rejected by Jeremiah (when
it was offered by Nebuzadran): "if it seems good to you to come with me to
Babylon, come" (40:4). They are forbidden to escape to Egypt because, with
the end of the era of punishment, voluntary exile is sinful, and if rebellion
and disobedience continue, so will punishment continue: "As My anger and
wrath poured down upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem, so will My wrath pour down
upon you if you go to Egypt..."(42:18).
In
stark contrast to their previous commitment to obey the word of G-d, the two
most important of the commanders -- Azariah and Yochanan -- "and all the
arrogant men" (43:2) refused to keep their promise. They claimed that
Jeremiah had presented his own political views (formed under the influence of
Baruch ben Neriah) as the word of G-d, and that if they were to listen to him
some of them would be executed by the Babylonians and the others would exiled
to Babylon: "You speak falsehood! The Lord our G-d did not send
you...rather Baruch ben Neriah is inciting you against us to deliver us into
the hands of the Chaldeans to be killed or exiled to Babylon"(43:2-3).
This grave accusation echoes that of Gedaliah to Yochanan: "You speak
falsely of Ishmael!"(40:16). Gedaliah, out of an inflated sense of
security, refused to believe the warning of Yochanan (which proved true several
days later) and Yochanan and his companions, out of fear and poor judgment, did
not believe the word of G-d as related to them by Jeremiah (which proved true
several years later with the conquest of Egypt by Nebuchadnezzar).
Lack
of caution on the part of Gedaliah made his murder possible along with the
murders of many others with him. Lack of faith on the part of Yochanan and his
companions led to voluntary exile and the wrath of G-d. Though they had seen
the prophecies of destruction of Jeremiah proven true, the Remnant of Judea
could not accept his present prophecies as the true word of G-d. Their
inability to draw proper conclusions from the destruction of Jerusalem and the
Temple brought a further destruction upon them.
The
three central figures in this sad story of self-destruction were: the killer,
Ishmael ben Netaniah, his victim, Gedaliah ben Achikam and his successor,
Yochanan ben Kereach.
The
killer was motivated by a combination of disgraceful opportunism and a zealous
loyalty to a specific political doctrine which may have had some legitimacy
before the destruction but was totally unrealistic afterwards. His short term
way of thinking made it impossible for him to consider either the immediate
results of his actions (the reprisal by the military chieftains) or to predict
the long-term damage (cessation of the reconstruction process and the return to
the Land, the loss of the remainder of Jewish autonomy under Babylonian rule
and the increased flow of the remaining Jewish population into exile). The
complete lack of moral restraints prevented him from understanding that
political assassination, which dramatically shatters the taboo of the sanctity
of human life, would result in a terrifying chain reaction of bloodshed.
The
victim was warned in advance concerning his murder and the destruction of his
efforts in national reconstruction but his moral-political naivety caused his
downfall and the murders of those who had chosen to cast their lot with his
leadership. Our Sages, displaying extreme moral sensitivity, attach to Gedaliah
the blame for the disastrous results of his failure: "Since he should have
paid attention to the advice of Yochanan ben Kereach and did not do so,
Scripture sees him as havkilled them (the seventy men who were thrown into the
cistern)" (Bavli, Niddah, 61a). From here Rava derives the maxim:
"Though one must not accept slander -- one must be cautious because of
it".
The
successor, onto whose shoulders fell the responsibility for the fate of the
remnant of the people after the murder of Gedaliah and the rescue of the
captives, panicked as a result of the act of terror committed by his rival. He
knew enough to ask the word of G-d from Jeremiah but lacked the courage to
follow it. His cowardice, lack of judgment and paucity of faith made him an
accomplice to self-destruction since he compounded it by voluntary exile.
In
our two thousand years of exile we became "merciful sons of merciful
fathers", unable to commit murder. With our return to our own land we once
again possess the means and our souls have the ability to spill blood. The Fast
of Gedaliah is meant to give us the opportunity to stand face to face with the
horrors of our past so that we may muster the strength to prevent their
repetition in the present.
LESHANÁ
TOBÁ TIKATEBÚ VETECHATEMÚ!
For a
good year may you be inscribed and sealed!
¡Para
un año bueno sea usted inscrito y sellado!
Next Shabbat:
Shabbat Shuvah – Sabbath of
Returning
For further study see: http://www.betemunah.org/awesome.doc
Shabbat |
Torah
Reading: |
Weekday
Torah Reading: |
וְאֵלֶּה
שְׁמוֹת |
|
|
“V’Eleh Sh’mot” |
Reader 1 – Sh’mot 1:1–7 |
Reader 1 – Sh’mot 3:1-3 |
“And these are the names” |
Reader 2 – Sh’mot 1:8-12 |
Reader 2 – Sh’mot 3:4-6 |
“Y estos son
los nombres” |
Reader 3 – Sh’mot 1:13-22 |
Reader 3 – Sh’mot 3:7-10 |
Shemot
(Exodus) 1:1 – 2:25 |
Reader 4 – Sh’mot 2:1-4 |
|
Ashlamatah: Isaiah
27:6-13 + 28:1,5 |
Reader 5 – Sh’mot 2:5-10 |
|
* Special
Ashlamatah: Hosea 14:2-10; Micah 7:18-20 |
Reader 6 – Sh’mot 2:11-15 |
Reader 1 – Sh’mot 3:1-3 |
Psalm
42:1-11 |
Reader 7 – Sh’mot 2:16-25 |
Reader 2 – Sh’mot 3:4-6 |
|
Maftir – Sh’mot 2:23-25 |
Reader 3 – Sh’mot 3:7-10 |
N.C.: Mark 6:1-6a |
Hosea 14:2-10; Micah 7:18-20* |
|
*
This Ashlamatah should be read by the greatest Torah Scholar available to the
congregation.
Hakham
Dr. Yosef ben Haggai
Paqid
Adon Mikha ben Hillel