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Triennial
Cycle (Triennial Torah Cycle) / Septennial Cycle (Septennial Torah Cycle)
Three and 1/2 year
Lectionary Readings |
Second
Year of the Reading Cycle |
Adar 20, 5770 – March 05/06 ,
2010 |
Second
Year of the Shmita Cycle |
Candle Lighting
and Havdalah Times:
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 6:19 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 7:15 PM |
Baton Rouge &
Alexandria, LA., U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:48 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:42 PM |
Bowling Green, Kentucky,
U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:25 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:23 PM |
Brisbane, Australia Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:59 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:51 PM |
Bucharest, Romania Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:50 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:52 PM |
Chattanooga, & Cleveland, TN, U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 6:22 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 7:18 PM |
Jakarta,
Indonesia Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:53 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:41 PM |
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 7:09 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 7:58 PM |
Manila & Cebu, Philippines Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:47 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:37 PM |
Miami,
FL, U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 6:06 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:59 PM |
New London, CT, U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:17 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:17 PM |
Olympia, WA, U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:44 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:49 PM |
Murray, KY, & Paris,
TN. U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:34 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:31 PM |
Philadelphia,
PA, U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:38 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:37 PM |
San Antonio, TX,
U.S. Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 6:18 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 7:12 PM |
Sheboygan & Manitowoc, WI, US Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 5:26 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 6:28 PM |
Singapore, Singapore Fri. Mar. 05, 2010 – Candles at 7:01 PM Sat. Mar. 06, 2010 – Havdalah 7:50 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 & beloved
family
His Excellency Adon Barth Lindemann & beloved
family
His Excellency Adon John Batchelor & 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 Yoel ben Abraham and beloved wife
HE Giberet Miryam bat Sarah
His Excellency Dr. Adon Yeshayahu ben Yosef and beloved
wife HE Giberet Tricia Foster
His Excellency Adon Yisrael ben Abraham and beloved
wife HE Giberet Elisheba bat Sarah
Her Excellency Giberet Laurie Taylor
His Excellency Dr. Adon Eliyahu ben Abraham and
beloved wife HE Giberet Dr. Elisheba bat Sarah
For their regular and sacrificial giving, providing
the best oil for the lamps, we pray that G-d’s richest blessings be upon their
lives and those of their loved ones, together with all Yisrael and her Torah
Scholars, amen ve amen!
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Shabbat |
Torah Reading: |
Weekday Torah
Reading: |
פָרָה
אֲדֻמָּה |
|
|
“Parah
Adumah” |
Reader 1 – B’Midbar 19:1-3 |
Reader 1 –
Sh’mot 26:31-33 |
“a red heifer” |
Reader 2 – B’Midbar 19:4-6 |
Reader 2 –
Sh’mot 26:34-36 |
“una vaca bermeja” |
Reader 3 – B’Midbar 19:7-10 |
Reader 3 –
Sh’mot 26:35-37 |
B’midbar
(Numbers) 19:1 – 20:13 |
Reader 4 – B’Midbar 19:11-16 |
|
Ashlamatah:
Ezekiel 36:16-38 |
Reader 5 – B’Midbar 19:17-22 |
|
|
Reader 6 – B’Midbar 20:1-6 |
Reader 1 –
Sh’mot 26:31-33 |
Psalm
110:1-7 |
Reader 7 – B’Midbar 20:7-13 |
Reader 1 –
Sh’mot 26:34-36 |
|
Maftir – B’Midbar 20:7-13 |
Reader 1 –
Sh’mot 26:35-37 |
N.C.:
Bereans (Hebrews) 8:1 – 9:14 |
Ezekiel
36:16-38 |
|
Rashi & Targum Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar (Num.) 19:1 – 20:13
RASHI |
TARGUM PSEUDO JONATHAN |
1 ¶ Adonai spoke to Moshe
and Aharon, saying. |
1 AND the Lord spoke with Mosheh and Aharon,
saying: |
2
This is the statute of the Torah which Adonai commanded, saying; speak to
B’ne Yisrael that they will take to you a red, perfect cow without a
blemish, upon which no yoke was laid. |
2
This is the decree, the publication of the law which the Lord has commanded,
saying; Speak to the sons of Israel, that they bring to you from the
separation of the fold a red heifer, two years old, in which there is
neither spot nor white hair, on which no male has come, nor the burden of
any work been imposed, neither hurt by the thong, nor grieved by the goad or
prick, nor collar (band) or any like yoke. |
3
Give it to Eleazar the kohen; he will take it outside the camp, and someone
will slaughter it in his presence. |
3
And you will give her unto Elazar, the chief of the priests, who will lead
her alone without the camp, and set round about her a railing (border) of
the branches of fig trees; and another priest will slay her with the two
signs before him, after the manner of other animals, and examine her by the
eighteen kinds of divisions. |
4
Eleazar the kohen will take some of its blood with his finger and sprinkle
it directly facing the Tent of Meeting, some of its blood seven times. |
4
And Elazar, in his priestly dress, will take of her blood with the finger of
his right hand, without (first) containing it in a vessel, and will sprinkle
the border of fig branches, and (afterwards) from the midst of a vessel on
one side towards the tabernacle of ordinance, with one dipping, seven times
(will he sprinkle). |
5
Someone will burn the cow in his presence; its skin, flesh, blood, with its
waste (that are in its intestines) will be burned. |
5
And they will bring her out from the midst of the railing and another
priest, while Elazar looks on, will burn the heifer, her skin, flesh, and
blood, with her dung will he burn. |
6
The kohen will take a piece of cedar wood, hyssop, and crimson wool, and
throw them into the burning of the cow. |
6
And another priest will take a piece of cedar wood and hyssop, and (wool)
whose colour has been changed to scarlet, and throw them into the midst of
the burning of the heifer; and he will enlarge the burning, that the ashes
may be increased. [JERUSALEM. And throw into the midst of the ashes of the
burning heifer.] |
7
Then the kohen will wash his garments and bathe his body in water, and
afterwards he may enter the camp; [however,] the kohen will be impure until
the evening. |
7
And the priest who slew the heifer will wash his dress in forty satas of
water, and afterwards he may go into the camp; but the priest before his
ablution will be unclean until the evening |
8
Also, the one who burns it must wash his garments and bathe his body in
water; he will remain unclean until the evening. |
8
And the priest who was employed in the burning will wash his dress in forty
satas of water, and his flesh in forty satas, and before his ablution will
be unclean until the evening |
9
A ritually clean person will gather the cow's ashes and place [it] outside
the camp in a clean place; it will remain a keepsake for the community of
B’ne Yisrael for sprinkling water for purification. |
9
And a man, a priest who is clean, will gather up the ashes of the heifer in
an earthenware receptacle, its opening covered round about with clay; and
will divide the ashes into three portions, of which one will be placed
within the wall (of Jerusalem), another in the Mount of Olives, and the
third portion be in the custody of the Levites; and it will be for the
congregation of Israel, for the Water of Sprinkling: it is the heifer
(immolated) for the remission of sins. |
10
The one who gathers the cow's ashes will wash his garments, and remain
unclean until the evening; it will be for B’ne Yisrael and for the proselyte
who lives among them an eternal statute. |
10
And the priest who gathered up the ashes of the heifer will wash his
clothes, and before his ablution be unclean till the evening. And this will
be for the cleansing of the children of Israel, a statute forever. |
|
|
11
¶ One who touches the corpse of any [human] soul will become unclean
for seven days. |
11
Whoever touches the body of a dead man, or of a child of some months old,
either his body or his blood, will be unclean seven days. |
12
He will cleanse himself with it on the third day and on the seventh
day, so that he may become clean; if he does not have himself cleansed on
the third day and on the seventh day, he will not become clean. |
12
He will sprinkle himself with this water of the ashes on the third day, and
on the seventh day he will be clean. But if he sprinkle not himself on the
third day, his uncleanness will remain upon him, and he will not be clean on
the seventh day. |
13
Whoever touches a corpse of a [human] soul, who died and does not have
himself cleansed defiles the Mishkan of Adonai (if he enters it), that soul
will be cut off from Yisrael; because the sprinkling water was not sprinkled
on him, he will be impure his impurity remains. |
13
Whoever has touched the body of a dead man, or of a child nine months old,
either the body or the blood, and will not sprinkle himself, he has defiled
the tabernacle of the Lord, and that man will be cut off from Israel;
forasmuch as the water of sprinkling is not sprinkled upon him, he is
unclean, his uncleanness is yet on him, until he will sprinkle himself; yet
may he sprinkle and make ablution on the seventh evening. |
14
This is the law [regarding] a person who dies in a tent; anyone who enters
the tent and everything that is in the tent will be unclean for seven days. |
14
This is the indication of the law concerning a man when he has died under
the outspread tent everyone who enters into the tent by the way of the door,
but not from its side, when its door is open, (or when one has opened its
door,) and whatever is in the tent, its floor, stone, wood, and vessels,
will be unclean seven days. |
15
Any open utensil that has no cover fastened to it, will be unclean. |
15
And every earthen vessel which has no covering fastened upon its mouth,
which would have kept it separate from the uncleanness, is defiled by the
uncleanness of the air which touches its mouth, and its interior, and not
the outside of it (only). [JERUSALEM. And every open vessel which has no
covering of stone upon it will be unclean.] |
16 Anyone who touches, in
an open field, one slain by the sword, a corpse, human bone, or grave, will
be unclean for seven days. |
16
And whoever will touch not one who has died in his mother's womb, but who
has been slain with the sword on the face of the field, or the sword with
which he was slain, or the dead man himself, or a bone of his, or the hair,
or the bone of a living man which has been separated from him, or a grave,
or a shroud, or the bier, will be unclean seven days. |
17
They will take for the unclean person of the ashes from the burnt purification-offering
and he will place upon them living [spring] water in a vessel. |
17
And for him who is unclean, they will take of the ashes of the burnt sin
offering, and put spring water upon them in an earthen vessel. |
18
He will take hyssop and dip it into the water; [this is done by] a ritually
clean person, he will sprinkle it on the tent, on all the utensils and
people that were there, and on anyone who touched the bone, murder victim,
corpse, or grave. |
18
And let a man, a priest, who is clean, take three branches of hyssop bound.
together, and dip (them) in the water at the time of receiving the
uncleanness, and sprinkle the tent and all its vessels, and the men who are
in it, or upon him who has touched the bone of a living man that has been severed
from him, and has fallen, or him who has been slain with the sword, or has
died by the plague, or a grave, or a wrapper, or a bier. |
19
The ritually clean person will sprinkle upon the unclean person on the third
day and on the seventh day; he will purify him on the seventh day when he
must wash his garments and bathe in water, and then he becomes clean in the
evening. |
19
And the priest who is clean will sprinkle upon the unclean man on the, third
day, and on the seventh day, and will make him clean on the seventh day; and
he will sprinkle his clothes, and wash himself with water, and at eventide
be clean. |
20
A person who became ritually unclean [and enters the Sanctuary] without
purifying himself, that soul will be cut off from the community; for he defiled
the Sanctuary of Adonai, the sprinkling water was not sprinkled upon him, he
remains unclean. |
20
But the unclean man who will not be sprinkled, that man will be cut off from
among the congregation, because he has defiled the sanctuary of the Lord; the
water of sprinkling has not been sprinkled upon him, he is unclean. |
21
This will be the statute for all times; one who sprinkles the
sprinkling waters will wash his garments, and one who touches the sprinkling
waters will remain unclean until the evening. |
21
And it will be unto you an everlasting statute. The priest, also, who
sprinkles the water of sprinkling will sprinkle his clothes, and he who
touches the water of sprinkling will be unclean until evening. |
22
Anything which the unclean person touches, will become unclean; and anyone
touching him will be ritually unclean until the evening. |
22
And whatever the unclean person has touched, though he carry it not, will be
unclean; and the clean man who touches him will be unclean till evening. |
|
|
1
¶ The entire community of B’ne Yisrael came to the wilderness of Tzin, in
the first month. The people settled in Kodesh, and Miriam died and was
buried there. |
1
And the whole congregation of the children of Israel came to the desert of
Zin on the tenth day of the month Nisan. And Miriam died there, and was
buried there. |
2
There was no water for the community, and they assembled against Moshe and
Aharon. |
2
And as on account of the innocence of Miriam a well had been given, so when
she died the well was hidden, and the congregation had no water. And they
gathered against Mosheh and Aharon, |
3
The people quarreled with Moshe and said, "Would that we had died by
our brothers' death before Adonai. |
3
and the people contended with Mosheh, and said, Would that we had died when
our brethren died before the Lord! |
4
Why did you bring the congregation of Adonai into this wilderness for us and
our livestock to die there? |
4
And why have you brought the congregation of the Lord into this desert, that
we and our cattle may die here? |
5
Why did you take us out of Egypt and bring us to this terrible place?
It is not a place of seed, figs, grapes, or pomegranates; and there is no
water to drink"! |
5
And why did you make us come up out of Mizraim, to bring us to this
evil place, a place which is not fit for sowing, or for planting fig trees,
or vines, or pomegranates, and where there is no water to drink? |
6
Moshe and Aharon moved away from the assembly to the entrance of the Tent of
Meeting, and fell on their faces; the glory of Adonai appeared to them. |
6
And Mosheh and Aharon went from the face of the murmuring congregation to
the door of the tabernacle of ordinance, and bowed upon their faces, and the
Glory of the Lord's Shekinah was revealed to them. |
7 Adonai spoke to Moshe,
saying. |
7
And the Lord spoke with Mosheh, saying: |
8
"Take the staff and assemble the community, you and Aharon your
brother, and speak to the rock in their presence that it may give forth its
water; you will then bring forth for them water from the rock, and give
drink [to] the community and their livestock." |
8
Take the rod of the miracles, and gather the congregation, you, and Aharon your
brother, and both of you adjure the rock, by the Great and manifested Name,
while they look on, and it will give forth its waters: but if it refuse to
bring forth, smite it once with the rod that is in your hand, and you will
bring out water for them from the rock, that the congregation and their
cattle may drink. |
9
Moshe took the staff from before Adonai, as He instructed him. |
9
And Mosheh took the rod of the miracles from before the Lord, as he had
commanded him. |
10
Moshe and Aharon assembled the community before the rock; [Moshe] said to
them, "Listen, you rebels! Can we extract water from this
rock for you"? |
10
And Mosheh and Aharon gathered the congregation together before the rock.
And Mosheh said to them, Hear now, rebels: is it possible for
us to bring forth water for you from this rock? |
11
And Moshe raised his hand and struck the rock with his staff twice; water
rushed out abundantly, and the community and their livestock drank. |
11
And Mosheh lifted up [JERUSALEM. And Mosheh lifted up] his hand, and with
his rod struck the rock two times: at the first time it dropped blood; but
at the second time there came forth a multitude of waters. And the
congregation and their cattle drank. |
12
Adonai said to Moshe and Aharon, "Because you did not believe in
Me to sanctify Me in the presence of B’ne Yisrael; therefore, you will not
bring this congregation into the land that I have given them." |
12
But the Lord spoke to Mosheh and Aharon with the oath, Because you
have not believed in My Word, to sanctify Me in the sight of the children of
Israel, therefore you will not bring this congregation into the land that I
will give them. |
13
They are the waters of dispute where B’ne Yisrael contended with Adonai, and
He was sanctified through them. |
13
These are the Waters of Contention, where the sons of Israel contended
before the Lord on account of the well that had been hidden; and He was
sanctified in them, in Mosheh and Aharon, when (the waters) were given to
them. |
|
|
Welcome to the
World of P’shat Exegesis
In order to understand the
finished work of the P’shat mode of interpretation of the Torah, one needs to
take into account that the P’shat is intended to produce a catechetical output,
whereby a question/s is/are raised and an answer/a is/are given using the seven
Hermeneutic Laws of R. Hillel and as well as the laws of Hebrew Grammar and
Hebrew expression.
The Seven Hermeneutic Laws of R.
Hillel are as follows
[cf. http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=472&letter=R]:
1. Ḳal va-ḥomer: "Argumentum a
minori ad majus" or "a majori ad minus"; corresponding to the
scholastic proof a fortiori.
2. Gezerah shavah: Argument from
analogy. Biblical passages containing synonyms or homonyms are subject, however
much they differ in other respects, to identical definitions and applications.
3. Binyan ab mi-katub eḥad: Application of a
provision found in one passage only to passages which are related to the first
in content but do not contain the provision in question.
4. Binyan ab mi-shene ketubim: The same as the
preceding, except that the provision is generalized from two Biblical passages.
5. Kelal u-Peraṭ and Peraṭ
u-kelal:
Definition of the general by the particular, and of the particular by the
general.
6. Ka-yoẓe bo mi-maḳom
aḥer:
Similarity in content to another Scriptural passage.
7. Dabar ha-lamed me-'inyano: Interpretation
deduced from the context.
Rashi Commentary for: B’Midbar (Num.) 19:1 – 20:13
2 This is the statute of the Torah Because
Satan and the nations of the world taunt Israel, saying, “ What is this
commandment, and what purpose does it have?” Therefore, the Torah uses the term
“statute.” I have decreed it; You have no right to challenge it.-[Yoma 67b]
and have them take for you It will
always be called on your name; 'the cow which Moses prepared in the
desert.’-[Mid. Tanchuma Chukath 8, see Etz Yosef]
perfectly red Heb. אֲדֻמָּה תְּמִימָה , lit., red, perfect. It shall be perfect in
redness, so that two black hairs disqualify it.-[Sifrei Chukath 5]
3 Eleazar The mitzvah was performed by the deputy [to the kohen
gadol].-[Sifrei Chukath 8] outside the camp Outside all three
camps.-[Yoma 68a] and slaughter it in his presence A non-kohen
slaughters it while Eleazar watches.-[Yoma 42a]
4 toward the front of the Tent of Meeting [In
later generations, when this rite will be performed outside the Temple in
Jerusalem,] he is to stand to the east of Jerusalem and to direct his gaze
toward the entrance to the Temple while sprinkling the blood.-[Sifrei Chukath
14]
7 enter the camp The camp of the Divine
Presence, because no ritually unclean person is banished from two camps, except
one who experienced a flow, one who experienced a seminal emission, or one
afflicted with tzara’ath. [Hence, he is admitted to the one camp from which he
was banished.] -[Pes. 67a]
and the kohen shall be unclean until evening
Transpose it [the verse] and explain it [thus]: He shall be unclean until
evening, and then he may enter the camp.
9 and place them outside the camp He
divided it into three parts; one was put on the Mount of Olives, one was
divided among all the watches, and one who put on the rampart surrounding the
Temple area. The one given to the watches was outside the courtyard, allowing
access to it for the inhabitants of outlying cities, whoever needed to purify
himself. The one on the Mount of Olives was for the kohanim gedolim to sanctify
themselves from it for use with other [red] cows. The one put on the rampart
was kept as a keepsake by Scriptural ruling, as it says, "It shall be as a
keepsake for the congregation of Israel.-[Sifrei Chukath 30, Parah 3:11 Tosefta
Parah 3:8]
for sprinkling water Heb. לְמֵי
נִדָּה , water used for sprinkling, as in, “they cast (וַיַּדּוּ) a stone at me” (Lam. 3:53); “to cast down (לְיַדּוֹת) the horns of the nations” (Zech. 2:4); an
expression denoting throwing.
for purification - חַטָּאת , an expression of cleansing (חִטּוּי) , according to its simple meaning, but according to its
halachoth, Scripture calls it חַטָּאת , “sin-offering,” to tell us that it is like holy
objects, and using it for personal benefit is forbidden.-[Sifrei Chukath 34]
12 He shall cleanse himself with it With
these ashes. - [Sifrei Chukath 39]
13 corpse of a human soul Which
type of corpse? That of a human soul, to exclude an animal, that its
uncleanness does not require sprinkling. Another explanation: “Of a human soul”
refers to a quarter [of a log] of blood [necessary for maintaining life]
-[Chul. 72a]
he has defiled the Mishkan of the Lord If he
enters the courtyard even after [ritual] immersion, without having been
sprinkled on both the third and seventh days.-[Sifrei Chukath 45]
his uncleanness remains Although
he [ritually] immersed himself. -[Sifrei Chukath 45]
14 anyone entering the tent while the
corpse is inside.
15 any open vessel Scripture refers to an
earthenware vessel, whose exterior does not accept contamination, only its
interior. Thus, if the seal around its top is not securely fastened, it becomes
contaminated. But if there is a securely fastened seal, it remains clean. -
[Sifrei Chukath 50, Chul. 25a]
fastened Heb. פָּתִיל , an expression meaning “fastened” in Hebrew.
Similarly, “[With] divine bonds נִפְתַּלְתּי , I have been joined, with my sister” (Gen. 30:8).
16 in an open field The Sages expounded [on
this phrase] to include the top and side of a coffin (Sifrei Chukath 56, Chul.
72a). But the simple meaning is that in an open field, where there is no tent,
a corpse contaminates through contact.
19 and he shall cleanse him This
consummates his cleansing.
20 If a person becomes unclean... If
“Sanctuary” is stated [here], why need it say “ Mishkan ...” [in verse 13]? The
answer is that if it would say “ Mishkan,” I would say that the person is
punished with excision only if he enters the Mishkan in a state of uncleanness
because the Mishkan was anointed with the anointing oil, but if he enters the
Temple in a state of uncleanness, he would not be punished since the Temple was
not anointed with the anointing oil. If it would say, “Sanctuary,” denoting the
Temple, I would say that only for entering the Temple in a state of
uncleanness, would he be punished by excision because its sanctity is
permanent, but for entering the Mishkan in a state of uncleanness, he would not
be punished because its sanctity was temporary. Therefore, it was necessary to
mention both,]... as it is stated in [Tractate] Shevuoth [16b].
21 and the one who sprinkles the sprinkling waters Our
Rabbis said that the one who sprinkles is actually ritually clean, but this
teaches us that the one who carries the purifying waters becomes defiled with a
stringent uncleanness, for even the clothes he is wearing are contaminated,
unlike the one who merely touches [the sprinkling waters]. Scripture uses the
expression מַזֵּה , “the one who sprinkles” to teach that the waters
do not contaminate until there is an amount of water adequate for
sprinkling.-[Yoma 14a]
and the one who touches... shall be unclean but he
is not required to wash his clothes.
22 Whatever the unclean one touches I.e.,
this unclean one who was defiled by a corpse [touches], “becomes unclean.”
and anyone touching him, that is,
the one defiled by a corpse-
shall be unclean until evening From
here we derive that a corpse is the supreme source of contamination, whereas
one touching it is a primary source of contamination, who can in turn defile
another person [through contact]. This is the explanation [of this passage]
according to its literal meaning and the laws associated with it.
I have transcribed a homiletic interpretation from the
commentary of R. Moshe HaDarshan [the preacher], which is as follows:
[2] and have them take for you From their own
[possessions]; just as they removed their own golden earrings for the [golden]
calf, so shall they bring this [cow] from their own [possessions] in
atonement.-[Midrash Aggadah]
a red cow This can be compared to the son of a maidservant who
soiled the king’s palace. They said, “Let his mother come and clean up the
mess.” Similarly, let the cow come and atone for the calf.-[Midrash Aggadah and
Tanchuma Chukath 8]
red Alluding to [the verse], “if they [your sins]
prove to be as red as crimson dye” (Isa. 1:18), for sin is described as
[being] ‘red.’ -[Midrash Aggadah]
perfectly An allusion to the Israelites, who were perfect,
but became blemished. Let this come and atone for them so that they regain
their perfection.-[See Midrash Aggadah.]
and upon which no yoke was laid Just
as they cast off from themselves the yoke of Heaven.-[Midrash Aggadah]
[3] to Eleazar the kohen -just as they
assembled against Aaron, who was a kohen, to make the calf, but because
Aaron made the calf, this service was not performed through him, for the
prosecution cannot serve as the defense.-[Midrash Aggadah]
[5] The cow shall then be burned just as the
calf was burned. -[Midrash Aggadah
a piece of cedar wood, hyssop, and of crimson wool These
three types [of objects] correspond to the three thousand men who fell because
of the [sin of the golden] calf. The cedar is the highest of all trees, and
the hyssop is the lowest of them all. This symbolizes that the one of high
standing who acts haughtily and sins should lower himself like a hyssop and a
worm [for the תּוֹלַעַת means ‘worm’ as well as ‘crimson.’ See Rashi on Isa.
1:18], and he will then gain atonement. -[Midrash Aggadah]
[9] a keepsake Just as the transgression of the
calf is preserved throughout the generations for retribution, for there is
no reckoning [punishment] which does include a reckoning for the calf, as it
says, “But on the day I make an accounting [of sins upon them], I will bring
their sin to account...” (Exod. 32:34). Just as the calf defiled all those
who were involved in it, so does the cow render unclean all those involved with
it. And just as they were cleansed through its ashes, as it says, “[he]
scattered [the ashes of the burned calf] upon the surface of the water” (ibid.
20), so [with the cow], “They shall take for that unclean person from the ashes
of the burnt purification offering...” (verse 17). -[Midrash Aggadah]
Chapter 20
1 The entire congregation The
complete congregation, for the ones destined to die in the desert had already
died and these were assigned for life.- [Midrash Tanchuma Chukath 14]
Miriam died there Why is the passage
relating Miriam’s death juxtaposed with the passage of the Red Cow? To teach
you that just as sacrifices bring atonement, so the death of the righteous
secure atonement.-[M.K. 28a].
Miriam died there She too died through a kiss
[from God’s mouth rather than by the angel of death]. Why does it not say “by
God’s mouth” [as it does with Moses]? Because it is not respectful to speak of
the Most High in this way (M.K. 28a). Concerning Aaron it does say “by God’s
mouth” in [the portion beginning] “These are the Journeys” (33:38).
2 had no water From here [we learn
that] all forty years they had the well in Miriam’s merit.-[Ta’anith 9a]
3 If only we had died We wish
that we had died.-[Onkelos]
with the death of our brothers With the
death of our brothers from plague. This teaches us that death from thirst is
more dreadful than it [death by plague].
with the death Heb. בִּגְוַע
אַחֵינוּ . This is a noun, like בְּמִיתַת אַחֵינוּ , with our brothers’ death [that is, in the way
they died]. But it is incorrect to explain it as meaning, ‘ when our brothers
died’ for in that case, Scripture would have punctuated it בִּגְוֽעַ .
8 and their livestock From
here we learn that the Holy One, blessed is He, has regard for the property of
Israel.-[Midrash Tanchuma Chukath 9, Lev. Rabbah 10:9, Num. Rabbah 19:9]
10 assembled This is one of the places where we find that a small
area held a large number [of people].-[Midrash Tanchuma Chukath 9, Lev. Rabbah
10:9, Num. Rabbah 19:9]
Shall we draw water... from this rock? Since
they did not recognize it, for the rock had gone and settled among the other
rocks when the well departed. The Israelites said to them, “What difference is
it to you from which rock you draw water for us?” Therefore, he said to them, הַמּוֹרִים , obstinate ones; in Greek,
‘fools,’ those who teach (מוֹרִים) their teachers. [He
said,] “Can we draw water from this rock regarding which we were not
commanded?”-[Midrash Tanchuma Chukath 9, Num. Rabbah 19:9]
11 twice Because the first time he drew out only a few drops,
since God had not commanded him to strike it, but, “you shall speak to the
rock.” However, they spoke to a different rock, and nothing came out. They
said, “Perhaps we ought to strike it first,” as it says, “and strike the rock”
(Exod. 17:6). They came upon that very rock and struck it.-[Midrash Tanchuma
Chukath 9, Num. Rabbah 19:9]
12 Since you did not have faith [faithful obedience] in
Me Scripture reveals that if it were not for this sin alone, they would
have entered the Land, so that it should not be said of them, “The sin of Moses
and Aaron was like the sin of the generation of the desert against whom it was
decreed that they should not enter [the Land].” But was not [the question asked
by Moses] “If sheep and cattle were slaughtered for them...” (11:22) [a] more
grievous [sin] than this? However, there he [Moses] said it in private, so
Scripture spares him [and refrains from punishing him]. Here, on the other
hand, it was said in the presence of all Israel, so Scripture does not spare
him because of the sanctification of the Name.-[Tanchuma Chukath 10, Num.
Rabbah 19:10]
to sanctify Me For had you spoken to the
rock and it had given forth [water], I would have been sanctified in the eyes
of the congregation. They would have said, "If this rock, which neither
speaks nor hears, and does not require sustenance, fulfills the word of the
Omnipresent, how much more should we! -[Midrash Aggadah]
therefore, you shall not bring Heb. לָכֵן , by an oath, as in, “Therefore (וְלָכֵן) , I have sworn to the house of Eli” (I Sam. 3:14)
[Tanchuma Va’era 2]. He hurried to take an oath so that they should not engage
in lengthy prayer concerning it [i.e. to repeal the decree].
13 These are the waters of dispute These
are the ones mentioned elsewhere. Pharaoh’s astrologers saw these [when they
foresaw that] the savior of Israel would be smitten through water, and that is
why they decreed: "Every son who is born you shall cast into the
Nile.-[Sanh. 101b] and He was sanctified through them For Moses and Aaron died
because of them. When God judges His holy ones, He is feared and sanctified by
mankind. Similarly, it says, “You are awesome, O God, because of Your holy
ones” (Ps. 68:36). And likewise it says, “I am sanctified by those close to Me”
(Lev. 10:3) -[Zev. 115b]
Pesiqta
deRab Kahana
Midrashic
Homilies for Shabbat Parah Adumah
Pisqa
Four
[Now
the Lord said to Moses and to Aaron, “This is the statute of the Torah which
the Lord has commanded: Tell the people of Israel to bring you] a red heifer
[without defect, in which there is no blemish, and upon which a yoke has never
come...And a man who is clean shall gather up the ashes of the heifer and
deposit them outside the camp in a clean place; and they shall be kept for the
congregation of the people of Israel for the water for impurity, for the
removal of sin. And he who gathers the ashes of the heifer shall wash his
clothes and be unclean until evening...He who touches the dead body of any
person shall be unclean seven days; he shall cleanse hi mself with the water on
the third day and on the seventh day and so be clean; but if he does not
cleanse himself on the third day and on the seventh day he will not become
clean. Whoever touches a dead person...and does not cleanse himself defiles the
tabernacle of the Lord, and that person shall be cut off from Israel, because
the water for impurity was not thrown upon him, he will be unclean; his
uncleanness is still on him’ (Num.
19:1-13, pass.).
IV:1
Who
can bring forth something clean out of something unclean? Is it not the One?
(Job 14:4) [that is, the One God]: for examples [of bringing the clean out of
the unclean]: Abraham from Terah, Hezekiah from Ahaz, Mordecai from Shimei,
Israel from the nations, the world to come from this world. Who has done so?
Who has commanded so? Who has decreed so? Is it not the One, is it not the
Unique One of the world?
There
we have learned: If a white spot the size of a bean [is on a person’s flesh],
he is unclean. But if it flowered throughout the person’s body, he is clean [M. Neg. 8:2]. Who has done
so? Who has commanded so? Who has decreed so? Is it not the One, is it not the
Unique One of the world?
There
we have learned: In the case of a woman whose fetus has died In her womb, If
the midwife stuck in her hand and touched it, the midwife Is unclean with an
uncleanness that lasts for seven days [by reason of touching the corpse], while
the woman remains in a state of cleanness until the offspring comes forth [M.
Hul. 4:3]. While the corpse is in the “house,” [that is, the womb, the woman’s
body], it is clean, but when it comes forth there from, lo, it is unclean. Who
has done so? Who has commanded so? Who has decreed so? Is it not the One, is it
not the Unique One of the world?
And we
have learned there: All those who are engaged in the work of preparing the
ashes of the red cow from beginning to end impart uncleanness to clothing
[M. Par. 4:4], while the cow itself effects purification. [Supply:] Who has
done so? Who has commanded so? Who has decreed so? Is it not the One, is it not
the Unique One of the world?
Said
the Holy One, blessed be He, “An ordinance have I ordained, a decree have I
made, and you have no right to transgress my decrees: Now the Lord said to
Moses and to Aaron, This is the stature of the Torah which the Lord has
commanded: [Tell the people of Israel to bring you a red heifer without defect,
in which there is no blemish, and upon which a yoke has never come... And a man
who is clean shall gather up the ashes of the heifer and deposit them outside
the camp in a clean place; and they shall be kept for the congregation of the
people of Israel for the water for impurity, for the removal of sin. And he who
gathers the ashes of the heifer shall wash his clothes and be unclean until
evening...He who touches the dead body of any person shall be unclean seven
days; he shall cleanse himself with the water on the third day and on the
seventh day and so be clean; but if he does not cleanse himself on the third
day and on the seventh day he will not become clean. Whoever touches a dead
person.. .and does not cleanse himself defiles the tabernacle of the Lord, and
that person shall be cut off from Israel, because the water for impurity was
not thrown upon him, he shall be unclean; his uncleanness is still on him] (Num.
19:1-13, pass.).
IV:II
R.
Tanhum b. R. Hanilai opened discourse by citing the following verse of
Scripture: “The sayings of the Lord are pure sayings” (Ps. 12:7). The
sayings of the Lord are sayings, but the sayings of mortals are not. Under
ordinary circumstances, when a mortal king comes into a town and the townsfolk
laud him, if their praise pleases him, he says to them: ‘Tomorrow I am going to
build public baths and bathhouses for you, tomorrow I am going to bring a water
pipe for fresh water for you.’ Then he goes to sleep and does not wake up in
the morning. So where is he and where are his sayings? But the Holy One,
blessed be He, is not like that. Rather: The Lord God is truth (Jer.
10:10). What is the meaning of truth? Said R. Abin, It means that he
is the living God and eternal king (Jer. 10:10).
The
sayings of the Lord are pure (Ps.
12:7): R. Yudan in the name of R. Isaac, R. Berekhiah in the name of R.
Eleazar, R. Jacob of Kefar Hanin in the name of R. Joshua b. Levi: We find that
Scripture rearranged two or three words as a circumlocution in the Torah so as
not to bring an unseemly word out of God’s mouth. That is in line with the
following verse of Scripture: Of every clean beast you will take for
yourself seven, male and female, and from every beast that is not clean (Gen.
7:2). ‘And from every unclean beast’ is not what is written here, but rather, Of
every beast that is not clean, two, male and female (Gen. 7:2). Said R.
Yudan b. R. Manasseh, Even when Scripture came to introduce the marks of
unclean beasts, Scripture commenced only with the marks of clean beasts, as in
the following cases: ‘The camel, because it does not part the hoof’ is not what
is written here, but rather, Because it chews the cud but does not...(Lev.
11:4). ‘The rock badger, because it does not part the hoof’ is not what is
written here, but rather, Because it chews the cud but does not… (Lev.
11:5). ‘The hare, because it does not part the hoof,’ is not what is written
here, but rather Because it chews the cud but does not... (Lev. 11:6).
‘The pig, because it does not chew the cud’ is not what is written here, but
rather, Because it chews the cud but does not… (Lev. 11:7).”
R.
Yose of Malehayya and R. Joshua of Sikhnin in the name of R. Levi: Children in
David’s time, before they had tasted the taste of sin [reaching sexual
maturity] were able to expound the Torah in forty-nine different ways to reach
a decision on uncleanness and in forty-nine different ways to reach a decision
on cleanness. And David prayed for them: You O Lord protect them (Ps.
122:7). Preserve their learning in their heart. Protect them forever from
this generation (Ps. 12:7). From the generation that deserves destruction.
And
after all this praise [for their achievements, and David’s prayer for them],
that generation of disciples went out to war and fell. It was because there
were renegades among them. That is in line with what David says, My soul is
in the midst of lions, I lie down among them that are aflame, sons of men whose
teeth are spears and arrows, their tongues sharp swords (Ps. 57:4). My
soul is in the midst of lions refers to Abner and Amasa, who were lions in
the Torah. I lie down among them that are aflame refers to Doeg and
Ahitophel, who were burning up with gossip. Sons of men whose teeth are
spears and arrows refers to the men of Keilah: Will the men of Keilah
hand me over (1 Sam. 32:11). Their tongues are sharp swords refers
to the Ziphites: When the Ziphites came and said to Saul, Does David not
hide himself with us (1 Sam. 23:19). At that moment said David, “Now what
is the presence of God doing in the world? Be exalted, O God, above the heavens
(Ps. 57:5). Remove your Presence from their midst! But the generation of Ahab,
even though it was made up of idolaters, because there were no renegades among
them, would go out to war and won.
That
is in line with what Obadiah said to Elijah: Has it not been told my lord
what I did when Jezebel killed the prophets of the Lord, how I hid a hundred
men of the Lord’s prophets by fifties in a cave and fed them with bread and
water? (1 Kgs. 18:13). If bread, why water? this teaches that it was harder
to bring water than bread. Elijah announced on Mount Carmel, saying, And I
alone remain as a prophet to the Lord (1 Kings. 18:23). Now the entire
people knew full well [that there are other prophets who had survived] but they
did not reveal it to the king.
Said
R. Samuel bar Nahman, They said to the snake, ‘On what account are you commonly
found among fences?’ He said to them, ‘Because I broke down the fence of the
world [causing man to sin]. ‘On what account do you go along with your tongue
on the ground?’ He said to them, ‘Because my tongue made it happen to me.’ They
said to him, ‘Now what pleasure do you have form it all? A lion tramples but
also devours the prey, a wolf tears but also devours, while you bite and kill
but do not devour what you kill.’ He said to them, ‘Does the snake bite
without a charm’ (Eccl. 10:11)? ‘Is it possible that I do anything that was
not commanded to me from on high?’ ‘And on what account do you bite a single
limb, while all the limbs feel it?’ He said to them, ‘Now are you saying that
to me? Speak to the slanderer, who says something here and kills his victim in
Rome, says something in Rome and kills his victim at the other end of the
world.’
And
why is the slanderer called “the third party”? Because he kills three: the one
who speaks slander, the one who receives it, and the one about whom it is said.
But in the time of Saul, slander killed four: Doeg, who said it, Saul, who
received it, Abimelech, about whom it was said, and Abner. And why was Abner
killed? R. Joshua b. Levi said, Because he made a joke out of the shedding of
the blood of young men. That is in line with this verse of Scripture: And
Abner said to Joab, let the young men get up and play before us (I Sam.
2:14). R. Simeon b. Laqish said, Because he put his name before David’s name.
That is in line with this verse of Scripture: And Abner sent messengers to
David right away, saying, Whose is the land (1 Sam. 3:12). He wrote, ‘From
Abner to David.’
Rabbis
say, It was because he did not wait for Saul to become reconciled with David.
That is in line with the following verse of Scripture: Moreover, my father,
see, yes, see the skirt of your robe in my hand (1 Sam. 24:112). Abner said
to him, ‘What do you want of this man’s boasting! The cloth was caught in a
thorn-bush.’ When they came within the barricade, he said to him, ‘Will you not
answer, Abner’ (1 Sam. 26:14). And there are those who say, It was because he
had had the power to protest against Saul in regard to Nob, the city of
priests, and he did not do so.
R. Hanan
bar Pazzi interpreted the cited verse [The sayings of the Lord are pure
sayings (Ps. 12:7)] to apply to the pericope of the Red Cow, which contains
seven times seven [references to matters of purification, thus:] seven times is
the red cow mentioned, seven times the burning, seven times the sprinkling,
seven times the laundering of garments, seven times the matter of uncleanness,
seven times the matter of cleanness, seven times the matter of priests. And if
someone should say to you that in fact they are lacking [in not mentioning the
priests seven times,] say to him, “Moses and Aaron count.” Now the Lord said
to Moses and to Aaron, ‘This is the statute of the law which the Lord has
commanded (Num. 19:1-13, pass.).
IV:IIII
R.
Isaac opened discourse by citing this verse: All this have I proved in
wisdom; I say, Would I could get wisdom, yet it is far from me (Eccl.
7:29). It is written, God gave Solomon wisdom and understanding in large
measure...even as the sand that is on the seashore (1 Kgs. 5:9).” R. Levi
and rabbis: Rabbis say, He gave him as much wisdom as all the rest of Israel
had put together. Said R. Levi, Just as the sand serves as the fence for the
sea, so wisdom served as the fence for Solomon. A proverb says, If you have
acquired knowledge, what do you lack, if you lack knowledge, what do you have?
Such a one is a city that is breached and without a wall, Like a city broken
down and without a wall, so is he whose spirit is without restraint (Prov.
25:28).
It is
written, Solomon’s wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the children of the
east (1 Kgs. 5:10). What constituted the wisdom of the children of the
east? For they were well informed about the stars and clever at (Braude &
Kapstein, p. 65:] ornithomancy.
Said
Rabban Simeon b. Gamaliel, ‘On three counts I admire the children of the east:
because they do not put a kiss on the mouth but on the hand, because they do
not bite at a piece of bread but cut it with a knife, because they take counsel
only in a broad place [where none can overhear], as it is said concerning our
father, Jacob, And Jacob sent and called Rachel and Leah to the field, to
his flock (Gen. 3 1:4), a broad place.
Solomon’s
wisdom excelled all the wisdom of Egypt (1 Kgs. 5:10): What constituted the wisdom of Egypt? You
find that when Solomon planned to build the house of the sanctuary, he sent to
Pharaoh Neccho, saying to him, “Send me craftsmen, for a salary. For I am
planning to build the house of the sanctuary.” What did he do? He gathered all
the astrologers of his court, who looked into the matter and picked out those
men who were going to die in that year, and those he sent to him [collecting
their wage for work not in fact carried out]. And when they came to Solomon, he
looked into the matter through the Holy Spirit, realizing that they were going
to die in that year, and he gave them shrouds and sent them back to him. He
sent and wrote to him, saying to him, “Did you not have enough shrouds in Egypt
to bury your dead? Here are they, here are their shrouds.”
He was
wiser than all man (1
Kgs. 5:11): [Since the verse uses for man the word Adam, we conclude that]
this refers to the first Man. And what constituted the wisdom of the first
Man? You find that when the Holy One, blessed be He, planned to create the
first Man, he took counsel with the ministering angels, saying to them, “Shall
we make man” (Gen. 1:26). They said to him, Lord of the ages, what is man
that you remember him, and the son of man that you think of him (Ps. 8:5).
He said to them, This man whom I am planning to create in my world has wisdom
greater than yours. What did he do? He collected all the domesticated beasts
and the wild beasts and fowl and brought them before them and said to them,
What are the names of these? But they did not know. When he created the first
Man, he collected all the domesticated beasts and the wild beasts and fowl and
brought them to him and said to him, What are the names of these? He said, This
one it is proper to call, ‘horse,’ and that one it is proper to call, ‘lion,’
and that one it is proper to call, ‘camel,’ and that one it is proper to call,
‘ox,’ and that one it is proper to call, ‘eagle,’ and that one it is proper to
call, ‘ass.’ That is in line with this verse: And Man assigned names to all
domesticated beasts and wild beasts and fowl (Gen. 2:20). He said to him,
And as to you, what is your name? He said to Him, ‘Man.’ He said to him, ‘Why?’
He said to Him, ‘Because I have been created from the earth [adam, adamah,
respectively].’ He said to him: And what is “My name? He said to Him, ‘The
Lord,’ R. He said to him, ‘Why?’ He said to Him, ‘For you are the Lord over all
those things that you have created.’
Said
R. Aha, Said the Holy One, blessed be He, I am the Lord, that is My name (Is.
42:8). That is the name that the first Man gave to Me, that is the name for
which I stipulated to Myself, that is the name for which I stipulated with the
ministering angels.
[Solomon
was wiser than] Ethan the Ezrahite (and Heman and Calcol and Darda the sons of
Mahol] (1 Kgs. 5:11): Ethan
is the same as our father, Abraham, as it is written, A maskil of Ethan the
Ezrahite (Ps. 89:1). Heman [trustworthy] is the same as Moses, Not
so is my servant Moses, he is trusted in all My house (Num. 12:7). Calcol
[the provider] is the same as Joseph, And Joseph provided for his father
(Gen. 47:12). The Egyptians said, Is it not so that this slave has become king
over us merely because of his wisdom? What did they do? They took seventy slips
and wrote on them words in seventy languages and threw them before him, and he
would read each one in its original language. And not only so, but he also
spoke Hebrew, which they could not understand. That is in line with this verse
of Scripture: A testimony of Joseph, that is his name, when he went forth to
rule Egypt. I understand what is written (Ps. 81:6). Darda is the
same as the generation of the wilderness. Why does he call that generation Darda?
Because they were all filled with knowledge (deah). The sons of Mahol:
these are the Israelites, sons whom the Presence of God forgave on account of
the sin of the making of the calf.
He
uttered three thousand proverbs, [and his songs numbered a thousand and five.
He discoursed of trees, from the cedar of Lebanon down to the marjoram that
grows out of the wall, of beasts and birds, of reptiles and fishes. Men of all
races came to listen to the wisdom of Solomon, and from all the kings of the
earth who had heard of his wisdom he received gifts] (1 Kgs. 4:32-34): Said R.
Samuel bar Nahman, “We have reviewed the whole of Scripture and have found that
Solomon prophesied only about eight hundred verses, and yet you say, He uttered
three thousand proverbs? This teaches that each and every verse of Scripture
that he prophesied contains two or three reasons, in line with this verse: As
an earring of gold and also as an ornament of gold, so is the wise reprover
(Prov. 25:12). And rabbis say, “There were three thousand parables for each
verse, a thousand and five reasons for each parable. What is written is not,
‘And the song of Solomon,’ but rather, ‘And its application’ [yielding a
thousand and five reasons behind each of the parables].
[He
uttered three thousand proverbs, and his songs numbered a thousand and five.]
He discoursed on trees, [from the cedar of Lebanon down to the marjoram that
grows out of the wall, of beasts and birds, of reptiles and fishes. Men of all
races came to listen to the wisdom of Solomon, and from all the kings of the
earth who had heard of his wisdom he received gifts] (1 Kgs. 4:32-34): Is it
possible for a person to speak on trees [from the cedar of Lebanon down to the
marjoram that grows out of the wall]? [The point is that he derived lessons
from trees, for example,] Solomon said, “On what account is one afflicted with
the skin-disease [described at Leviticus 13-14] purified by the use of a branch
from the highest of the high and the lowest of the low [that is, cedar and
hyssop, respectively]? It is to indicate that just as this man has raised
himself up like a cedar and so has been smitten by the cedar [with the
skin-ailment] and now has humbled himself like the hyssop, let him be healed by
the hyssop.
… of
beasts and birds, of reptiles and fishes: Now is it possible for a person to speak on domesticated
beasts and fowl? Said Solomon, “On what account is a beast permitted [for
Israelite use] only if it is properly slaughtered as to two indicators of
fitness [both the windpipe and the gullet having to be properly cut], while, in
the case of fowl, only a single such indicator is required [either the windpipe
or the gullet has to be properly cut]? But as to the domesticated beast, it was
created from dry land, while in the case of the fowl, one verse of Scripture
indicates that it was from dry land, and another, from the sea. One verse of
Scripture indicates that it was from dry land: And the Lord God created from
the earth all beasts of the field (Gen. 2:19). Another verse of Scripture
indicates that it was from the sea: And God said, Let the waters swarm
(Gen. 1:20).
Bar
Qappara says, “Fowl were created from sea mud.” R. Abun in the name of Samuel
of Cappodocia: “Nonetheless, the feet of the chicken are like [Braude and
Kapstein, p. 69:] the scale-covered skin of fish [and so fowl are considered
fish-like].
… of
reptiles and fishes: Now
is it possible for a person to speak on reptiles and fishes? Said Solomon, “On
what account is it the rule that as to the eight creeping things that are
listed in the Torah, one who hunts them and does injury to them is liable [to
compensate the owner for his loss], but as to all other abominated things and
creeping things, one who does injury to them is exempt from liability? Because
the former have valuable hides.
… and
fishes: Now is
it possible for a person to speak on fishes? Said Solomon, Why is it the
rule that domesticated cattle, wild beasts, and fowl, all have to be subjected
to a proper act of slaughter, while fish do not have to be properly slaughtered
[but may be eaten even if they expire on their own]?” [This question is
answered in the pericope that follows.]
Jacob
of Kefar Naborayya gave a ruling in Tyre that fish require an act of proper
slaughter. R. Haggai heard and sent and had him brought before him. He said to
him, Where did you learn this rule? He said to him, From that which is written:
And God said, Let the waters swarm with living things, the wild beast and
fowl (Gen. 1:20). Just as fowl requires an act of slaughter, so fish should
be subjected to slaughter. He said, Bend over, to receive your beating [for
presenting an improper ruling]. He said to him, Is someone who has given a
teaching of the Torah going to be flogged? He said to him, The verse of the
Torah is inappropriate. [You did not give a valid ruling.] He said to him, And
which one is appropriate? He said to him, This verse of Scripture: Shall the
flocks and the herds be slaughtered for them? Or shall all the fish of the sea
be gathered for them? (Num. 11:22). What is written is not, ‘Shall all the
fish of the sea be slaughtered for them,’ but, shall all the fish of the sea
be gathered for them? He said to him, Administer your strokes, for it is an
appropriate flogging.
Jacob
of Kefar Naborayya gave a ruling in Tyre that the son of a gentile woman may be
circumcised on the Sabbath [as though he were an Israelite, on account of whom
one sets aside the prohibitions of the Sabbath in order to effect the
circumcision]. R. Haggai heard and sent and had him brought before him. He said
to him, Where did you learn this rule? He said to him, From that which is
written: They declared their pedigrees after their families, by their
fathers’ household [so the child of a Jewish man and a gentile woman is valid
as an Israelite, since he is given the status of the father, not the mother] (Num.
1:18). And it is written, On the eighth day will every male be circumcised (Gen.
17:12). He said, Bend over, to receive your beating [for presenting an improper
ruling]. He said to him, Is someone who has given a teaching of the Torah going
to be flogged? He said to him, The verse of the Torah is inappropriate. [You
did not give a valid ruling.] He said to him, And which one is appropriate? He
said, First bend over, then listen. He said to him, If a gentile should come to
you and say to you, ‘I want to be made into a Jew, on condition that I be
circumcised on the Sabbath day or on the Day of Atonement,’ will they profane
those days on his account? He said to him, No, they do not profane those days
on his account, but only on account of the son of an Israelite. He said to him,
And what verse of Scripture applies? Now therefore let us make a covenant
with our God to put away all the wives and such as are born of them according
to the counsel of the Lord (Ezra 10:3) [so the children are in the status
of the mother, therefore gentile]. He said to him, Are you going to administer
a flogging to me because of what is taught [not in the Torah but in a book in
the category of mere] tradition? He said to him, It is written in that same
passage, And it is treated like the Torah (Ezra 10:3). He said to him,
In accord with which [passage of] the Torah? He said to him, It is in line with
this teaching of R,. Yohanan in the name of R. Simeon b. Yohai: Neither
shall you make marriages with them, your daughter you shall not give to his son
(Deut. 7:3). Why so? For he will turn away your son from following Me
(Deut. 7:4). ‘Your son’ born of a Israelite woman is called your son, but ‘your
son’ born of a gentile woman is not called your son. He said to him, Administer
your strokes, for it is an appropriate flogging.
Said
Solomon, “I have fully grasped all of these other matters, but as to the
passage about the Red Cow, when I came to it, I investigated it and studied it,
but I say, ‘Would I could get wisdom,’ yet it is far from me (Eccl.
7:29).”
IV:IV
Who is
wise enough for all this? Who knows the meaning of anything? Wisdom lights up a
man’s face, [and the strength of his face is changed] (Eccl. 8:1): Who is wise
enough for all this: this refers to the Holy One, blessed be He, concerning
whom it is written: The Lord by wisdom founded the earth, by understanding
he established the heavens (Prov. 3:19). Who knows the meaning of
anything: for he explained the meaning of the Torah to Israel.
Wisdom
lights up a man’s face: Said
R. Yudan, Great is the power of the prophets, who compare the likeness of the
Almighty above to the likeness of man. [For example:] And I heard the voice
of a man between the banks of Ulai (Dan. 8:16). Said R. Judah b. R. Simon,
[To prove that point] there are still better verses of Scripture than that one:
And upon the likeness of the throne was the likeness of the appearance of a
man (Ez. 1:26). And the strength of his face is changed (Eccl. 8:1),
for it is changed on account of Israel from that of the attribute of strict
justice to that of the attribute of mercy.
Another
comment on the verse: Who is wise enough for all this? [Who knows the
meaning of anything? Wisdom lights up a man’s face, and the strength of his
face is changed] (Eccl. 8:1): Who is wise enough for all this: this
speaks of the first Man. For it is written, You seal most accurate, full of
wisdom and perfect in beauty (Ez. 28:12). And who knows the meaning of
anything: for he explained the names of every creature: And Man assigned
names (Gen. 2:20). Wisdom lights up a man’s face: R. Levi in the
name of R. Simeon b. Menassia: The round part of the first Man’s heal outshone
the orb of the sun. And do not find that fact surprising, for in ordinary
practice a person makes for himself two salvers, one for himself and one for a
member of his household. Which of the two is the finer? Is it not his own? So
the first Man was created for the service of the Holy One, blessed be He, while
the orb of the sun was created only for the service of the created world. Is it
not an argument a fortiori that the round part of the first Man’s heal outshone
the orb of the sun. And the countenance of his face all the more so!
R.
Levi in the name of R. Hamah bar Hanina: Thirteen marriage canopies did the
Holy One, blessed be He, weave for him in the Garden of Eden. That is in line
with this verse of Scripture: You were in Eden, the Garden of God, every
kind of precious stone was your covering: the carnelian, the topaz, and the
emerald, the beryl, the onyx, and the jasper, the sapphire, the carbuncle, and
the smaragd, and gold (Ez. 28:13). R. Simeon b. Laqish says, There were
eleven. Rabbis say, There were ten. But there is no dispute among them. One who
maintains that there were thirteen treats each precious stone, every kind, and
was your covering to encompass three more. The one who maintains that there
were eleven counts the phrase, every kind of precious stone, to indicate there
was one more. And the one who counts ten treats every precious stone as a
general clause.
Now
despite all of this glory: For you are dust and to dust you return (Gen.
3:19). ... and the strength of his face is changed: When he said to him,
The woman whom you gave me... (Gen. 3:12), then the Holy One, blessed be
He, changed his face and drove him out of the Garden of Eden. For it is
written, You change his face and send him away (Job 14:20). And
Scripture states, The Lord God sent him away from the Garden of Eden
(Gen. 3:23).
Another
comment on the verse: Who is wise enough for all this? [Who knows the
meaning of anything? Wisdom lights up a man’s face, and the strength of his
face is changed] (Eccl. 8:1): Who is wise enough for all this: this
speaks of Israel, concerning whom it is written, Surely this great nation is
a wise and understanding people (Deut. 4:6). And who knows the
meaning of anything: for they know how to explain the Torah in forty-nine
ways to reach a ruling for uncleanness, and in forty-nine ways to reach a
conclusion in favor of cleanness. Wisdom lights up a man’s face: R.
Zakkai of Sheab in the name of R. Samuel bar Nahman, You find that, when the
Israelites stood at Mount Sinai and said, All which the Lord has spoken we
shall do and hear (Ex. 24:7), he imparted to them part of the splendor of
the Presence of God above. That is in line with this verse of Scripture: And
your renown went forth among the nations for your beauty, for it was perfect,
through My splendor which I placed on you (Ez. 16:14). But when they made
the statement to that thing: This is your god, O Israel (Ex. 32:4,) they
turned into the enemies of the Holy One, blessed be He. That is in line with
this verse of Scripture: ... and the strength of his face is changed. The
letters for the word changed may be read hated. Then the Holy
One, blessed be He, changed [his plans] for them: Therefore like man you
will die, and like one of the princes you will fall (Ps. 82:7).
Another
comment on the verse: Who is wise enough for all this? [Who knows the
meaning of anything? Wisdom lights up a man’s face, And the strength of his
face is changed] (Eccl. 8:1): Who is wise enough for all this: this
speaks of a disciple of sages. And who knows the meaning of anything:
when he knows how to explain the Mishnah-passage that is his. Wisdom
lights up a man’s face: when he receives a question and answers it
properly. ... and the strength of his face is changed: when he
receives a question and cannot answer it correctly.
Rabbi
was in session and teaching, How do we know that one cannot effect a valid
exchange of one beast for another in the case of a firstling [so that if one
says, ‘This beast is in the place of that beast,’ the first beast, of which he
made the statement, is unaffected and does not enter the status of the
firstling]? Bar Pedaiah’s face lit up. [Rabbi said,] This one knows the sense
of that which I am here in session and teaching.
A
gentile saw that the face of R. Judah bar Ilai was shining and said, As to this
man, one of the following three rules applies to him: Either he is lending at
usurious interest, or he’s raising pigs, or he has drunk wine. R. Judah bar
Ilai heard the statement and said, May that man’s wind burst, for none of those
categories applies to me. I assuredly do not lend at usurious interest, for it
is written, You shall not lend interest to your brother, interest of money,
interest of food, interest of anything that is lent on interest (Deut.
23:20). I certainly do not raise pigs, for it is forbidden for any Israelite to
raise pigs, for we have learned in the Mishnah: An Israelite may not raise
pigs anywhere (M. Baba Qamma 7:7). And I do not drink wine, for merely on
account of the four cups of wine which I drink on the night of Passover, I have
to hold my head from Passover to Pentecost. (R. Mana has to hold his head on
that same account from Passover to Tabernacles.) He said to him, Then why is
your face glowing? He said to him, It is the Torah that illuminates me. For it
is written, Wisdom lights up a man’s face.
R.
Abbahu went to Caesarea and he came from there with his face glowing. His
disciples saw him. They went and told R. Yohanan, Lo, R. Abbahu has found a
treasure. He said to them, Why so? They said to him, Because his face is
glowing. He said to them, Perhaps he has learned a new teaching of the Torah.
He went to him. He said to him, What new teaching of the Torah have you
learned? He said to him, An ancient passage of the Tosefta has been stated. He
recited in his regard: Wisdom lights up a man’s face.
Another
comment on the verse: Who is wise enough for all this? [Who knows the
meaning of anything? Wisdom lights up a man’s face, And the strength of his
face is changed] (Eccl. 8:1): Who is wise enough for all this: this
speaks of Moses, concerning whom it is written, A wise man scales the city
of the mighty [and brings down the strength [that is, the Torah] wherein it
trusts] (Prov. 21:22). And who knows the meaning of anything: for he
explained the Torah to Israel. Wisdom lights up a man’s face: R. Mani of Sheab, R. Joshua of Sikhnin in the
name of R. Levi: Concerning each item that the Holy One, blessed be He,
discussed with Moses, He told him about how it becomes unclean and how it may
be made clean. When He reached the passage, Speak to the priests (Lev. 21:1),
he said to Him, ‘Lord of the ages, If a priest should become unclean, how will
he be made clean?’ But He did not reply to him. At that moment our lord Moses’s
face grew dark, in line with this verse: and the strength of his face is
changed. But when he reached the passage concerning the red cow, the Holy
One, blessed be He, said to him, ‘Moses, as to that statement that I made to
you, Speak to the priests (Lev. 21:1), on which occasion you said to Me,
‘Lord of the ages, If a priest should become unclean, how will he be made
clean?’ and I gave you no answer — this is the means by which he will be made
clean: For such uncleanness they shall take some of the ash from the burnt
mass of the sin offering and add fresh water to it in a utensil (Num.
19:17). And what then is that answer [that God gave to Moses]? That is the
ordinance of the Torah (Num. 19:2).
IV:V
Moses
and Aaron among his priests, and Samuel among those who call on his name,
[called to the Lord and he answered. He spoke to them in a pillar of cloud;
they followed his teaching and kept the statute that he gave them] (Ps. 99:6-7): R. Yudan in the
name of R. Joseph bar Judah, R. Berekhiah in the name of R. Joshua b. Qorhah:
During all those forty years that the Israelites spent in the wilderness, Moses
did not refrain from serving in the high priesthood. That is in line with this
verse of Scripture: Moses and Aaron among his priests, and Samuel among
those who call on his name. R. Berekhiah in the name of R. Simeon derived
the same fact from this verse: And the sons of Amram, Aaron and Moses, and
Aaron was separated, that he should be sanctified as most holy (1 Chr.
23:13). What follows immediately afterward? And Moses, man of God. But his
sons were assigned to the tribe of Levi (1 Chr. 23:14).
Said
R. Eleazar bar Joseph, It is quite clear to us that in the wilderness Moses
served in the white garments. Said R. Tanhum bar Yudan, and it has been taught
on Tannaite authority, All the seven days of dedication [of the tabernacle]
Moses served in the high priesthood, and the Presence of God did not come to
rest on his account. When Aaron came and served in the high priesthood,
however, the Presence of God came to rest on his account. That is in line with
this verse: For on this day the Lord has appeared to you (Lev. 9:4).”
...
called to the Lord and he answered: this
one called and was answered, and that one called and was answered. He spoke
to them in a pillar of cloud: We find in the case of Moses that he spoke
with Him in a cloud, for it is written, And the Lord came down in a cloud
and stood (Ex. 34:5). And the Lord came down in a cloud and spoke
(Num. 11:25). In the case of Aaron He spoke with him in a pillar of cloud: And
the Lord came down in a pillar of cloud and stood at the tent of meeting and
called Aaron (Num. 12:5). But in the case of Samuel, we have found no such
case. And where have we heard of such an instance? And they answered them
and said, he is, behold he is before you (1 Sam. 9:12). R. Yudan in the
name of R. Man bar Jacob: The women said to them, ‘Do you not see the cloud
that is affixed above his courtyard? This is only the cloud, concerning which
it is written, And so it was when the cloud was upon the tabernacle
(Num. 9:20).
...
they followed his teaching and kept the statute that he gave them: We have heard in the case of
Moses that the Torah was written in his name: Remember the Torah of Moses,
my servant (Malachi 3:22). And we have heard the same in the case of
Samuel, that a book was written for him, as it is written, And he wrote in a
book and laid it before the Lord (1 Sam. 10:25). But in the case of Aaron,
we have found no such matter. This teaches that a particular passage was given
to him, that it not depart from him or his sons or his sons’ sons forever for
all generations, and what is that? It is the passage beginning: This is the
statute of the Torah (Num. 19:2).
IV:VI
R.
Joshua of Sikhnin in the name of R. Levi: There are four matters concerning
which the impulse to do evil brings doubts, and in the case of all of them, the
word statute occurs. These are they: the rules governing the prohibition of
marrying a brother’s wife, the prohibition of mixed species, the rule governing
the goat that is sent forth [on the Day of Atonement] and the rule governing
the red cow. As to the matter of the brother’s wife: You will not uncover
the nakedness of your brother’s wife (Lev. 18:16). But it is also written, Her
levir will have sexual relations [and take her as his wife] (Deut. 25:5).
When the brother is alive, she is forbidden, but when he dies without children,
she is permitted to him, and in that case the word statute occurs: You
will guard my statutes and my judgments, which one will do and live (Lev.
18:5). As to the matter of mixed species: You will not wear mixed
species [wool and linen together] (Deut. 22:11), but the case of a woolen
cloak bearing linen show-fringes is one in which it is permitted to do just
that. And in that case too the word statute occurs: You will keep my
statutes (Lev. 19:19). As to the matter of the goat that is sent away: The
one who sends the goat to Azazel shall wash his clothes (Lev. 16:26). The
goat itself effects atonement for others [yet imparts uncleanness]. And in that
regard, the word statute occurs: And you shall have this rule as an
eternal statute (Lev. 16:29).And as to the red cow: there we have
learned in the Mishnah, All those who are occupied with the work of burning
the red cow from beginning to end impart uncleanness to clothing. The cow’s
ashes themselves effect purification for the unclean [and yet those who burn
the cow are unclean]. And the word statute occurs in context: This is the
statute of the Torah (Num. 19:23).”
IV:
VII
... Tell the people of Israel to bring you a
red heifer [without defect, in which there is no blemish, and upon which a yoke
has never come]: Lulianus
bar Tiberias in the name of R. Isaac: “[Braude & Kapstein, p. 79, citing E.
E. Urbach:] You initiate the rite.
R.
Azariah said in the name of R. Isaac, and R. Yose bar Hanina: Said to him the
Holy One, blessed be He, Moses, to you I am revealing the duties of burning the
red cow, but to others they will stand as a statute [lacking all explanation].
For R. Huna said, At the set time which I appoint, I will judge with equity
(Ps. 75:2). And it shall come to pass in that day that there shall be not
light but heavy clouds and thick ones (Zech. 14:6). The word for thick
ones is written so as to be read [Braude and Kapstein, p. 79:], perspicuous
thus matters which are hidden from you in this world are destined to be as
clear as crystal to you. That is in line with this verse of Scripture: I
will bring the blind in a way that they have not known. I will make darkness light
before them...These things I have done (Is. 42:16). What is written is not,
‘These things I shall do,’ but, These things I have done, and I shall not
abandon them (Is. 42:16). I have already done them for Rabbi Aqiba and his
colleagues [explaining to him secrets of the Torah]. For R. Aha said, Matters
which were not revealed to Moses at Sinai were revealed to R. Aqiba and his
colleagues. And his eye sees every precious thing (Job 28:10) — this is
R. Aqiba.
[...Tell
the people of Israel to bring you a red heifer:] Said R. Yose bar Hanina, [In
saying, bring you,] he gave an indication that all the red cows will
ultimately be null, but yours will endure. R. Aha in the name of R. Yose bar
Haninah: When Moses went up to the highest heaven, he heard the voice of the
Holy One, blessed be He, in session and engaged in teaching the passage of the
red cow, saying a law in the name of the authority who laid it down: R.
Eliezer says, A heifer whose neck is broken is to be a year old and a red cow,
two years old [M. Par. 1:1]. Moses said before the Holy One, blessed be He,
‘Lord of the ages, All beings above and below are in your dominion, and yet you
go into session and teach a law in the name of the authority who laid it down!’
Said to him the Holy One, blessed be He, ‘Moses, a righteous/generous man is
destined to arise in my world and destined to open discourse with the passage
on the red cow: R. Eliezer says, A heifer whose neck is broken is to be a
year old and a red cow, two years old [M. Par. 1:1].’ He said before Him,
‘Lord of the ages, may it please You that such a one come from my loins.’ He
said to him, ‘By your life, he will come from your loins.’ That is in line with
this verse of Scripture: And the name of one of them was Eliezer (Ex.
18:4). And the name of that distinguished figure was Eliezer.
There
we have learned in the Mishnah: Abba Saul says, As to the ramp for the cow
[to be brought to the altar,] the high priests made it out of their own funds.
One of them would not bring out the red cow that he was going to prepare on the
ramp belonging to his fellow. But he would destroy the old one and go and build
a new one out of his own resources [M. Sheq. 4:2]. R. Aha in the name of R.
Hanina: He would spend more than sixty talents of gold. And lo, it has been
taught on Tannaite authority: Simeon the Righteous/Generous prepared two red
cows, and it was not on the ramp that he brought out the first of the two that
he brought out the second [cf. M. Sheq. 4:3]. Can you say of that
righteous/generous man that he was so wasteful? R. Abun in the name of R.
Eleazar: It was on account of the meticulous rules applying to the red cow
[that he did so].
A
gentile asked Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai, saying to him, These rites that you
carry out look like witchcraft. You bring a cow and slaughter it, burn it,
crush the remains, take the dust, and if one of you contracts corpse
uncleanness, you sprinkle on him two or three times and say to him, ‘You are
clean.’ He said to him, Has a wandering spirit never entered you? He said to
him, No. He said to him, And have you ever seen someone into whom a wandering
spirit entered? He said to him, Yes. He said to him, And what do you do? He
said to him, People bring roots and smoke them under him and sprinkle water on
the spirit and it flees. He said to him, And should your ears not hear what
your mouth speaks? So this spirit is the spirit of uncleanness, as it is
written, I will cause prophets as well as the spirit of uncleanness to flee
from the land (Zech. 13:2). After the man had gone his way, his disciples
said to him, My lord, this one you have pushed off with a mere reed. To us what
will you reply? He said to them, By your lives! It is not the corpse that
imparts uncleanness nor the water that effects cleanness. But it is a decree of
the Holy One, blessed be He. Said the Holy One, blessed be He, A statute have I
enacted, a decree have I made, and you are not at liberty to transgress my
decree: This is the statute of the Torah (Num. 19:1).
IV:VIII
On
what account are the animals used for all other offerings to be males, while,
in this case, the animal is a female? B. Said R. Aibu, The matter may be
compared to the case of a slave girl’s son who took a crap in the royal palace.
Said the king, Let his mother come and wipe up the shit that her nursling made.
So said the Holy One, blessed be He, Let the red cow come and effect
atonement for the sin of making the golden calf.
IV:IX
a
heifer: this refers to Egypt: Egypt
is a very fair heifer (Jer. 46:20). ... red: this refers to
Babylonia: You are the head of gold (Dan. 2:38). ... without defect:
this refers to Media. Said R. Hiyya bar Abba, The kings of Media were without
fault. The sole complaint that the Holy One, blessed be He, has against them is
idolatry, which, in any case, they inherited from their ancestors. in which
there is no blemish: this refers to Greece. When Alexander of Macedonia saw
Simeon the Righteous/Generous, he stood on his feet and said, “Blessed be the
God of Simeon the Righteous/Generous.” His courtiers said to him, Are you
standing up before a Jew? He said to them, When I go into battle, I see his
face and conquer. ... and upon which a yoke has never come: this refers
to the wicked Edom, which did not accept upon itself the yoke of the Holy One,
blessed be He. And it was not sufficient for Edom that it did not accept upon
itself the yoke, but it also blasphemed and cursed and said, Whom do I have
in heaven (Ps. 73:25).
You
shall give it to Eleazar the priest, [and it shall be taken outside the camp
and slaughtered to the east of it. Eleazar the priest shall take some of the
blood on his finger and sprinkle it seven times toward the front of the Tent of
the Presence. The cow shall be burnt in his sight, skin, flesh and blood,
together with the offal. The priest shall then take cedar- wood, marjoram, and
scarlet thread and throw them into the heart of the fire in which the cow is
burning] (Num.
19:3-6). Eleazar: [the name means] “God, who is a priest, helps.” ...
and it shall be taken outside the camp: for [God] is going to push [Edom’s]
priest outside of the pale [of his encampment]. ... and slaughtered to the
east of it: For the Lord has a sacrifice in Bosrah [place of refuge
of the prince of Edom (Braude and Kapstein, p. 83, n.110)] and a great
slaughter in the land of Edom (Is. 34:6). Said R. Berekhiah, The slaughter
of a great one will take place in the land of Edom. ... The cow shall be
burnt in his sight: The fourth beast...was handed over to be burned with
fire (Dan. 7:11). ... skin, flesh and blood, together with the offal:
[Edom, together with] its dukes, its hyparchs, and its generals. Your
wealth, your staple wares, your imports, your sailors and your helmsmen, your
caulkers, your merchants, and your warriors, all your ship’s company, all who
were with you were flung into the sea on the day of your disaster; at the cries
of your helmsmen the troubled waters tossed (Ez. 27:27-28): Said R. Samuel
bar R. Isaac, All your ship’s company encompasses even those who had
been of my company and had gone and joined your company — even they were flung
into the sea on the day of your disaster.
IV:X
Another
matter: ...a heifer: this refers to Israel: For like a stubborn
heifer Israel was stubborn (Hos. 4:16). ...red: this refers to
Israel: were redder than rubies (Lam. 4:7). ... without defect:
this refers to Israel: My dove, my perfect one, is unique (Song 6:9).
... in which there is no blemish: this refers to Israel: You were all
fair, my love, and there was no blemish in you (Song 4:7). ... and upon
which a yoke has never come: this refers to Israel in the generation of
Jeremiah, which did not accept the yoke of the Holy One, blessed be He. You
shall give it to Eleazar the priest: this refers to Jeremiah, one of the
priests of Anatoth (Jer. 1:1). and it shall be taken outside the camp:
Nebuchadnezzar ... carried the people away to Babylonia (Ezra 5:12). ...
and slaughtered to the east of it: And the sons of Zedekiah he
slaughtered before him (2 Kgs. 25:7). The cow shall be burnt in his
sight: He burned the house of the Lord and the house of the king (2
Kgs. 25:9). ... skin, flesh and blood, together with the offal: And
all of the houses of Jerusalem, and the entire great house, he burned with fire
(2 Kgs. 25:9). Why is it called the great house? This is the study-house
of Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai, in which the greatness of the Holy One, blessed
be He, was expounded. ... shall take [some of the blood on his finger and
sprinkle it seven times toward the front of the Tent of the Presence]: this
refers to Nebuchadnezzar, the evil man. cedar-wood, marjoram, and scarlet
thread [and throw them into the heart of the fire in which the cow is burning]
(Num. 19:3-6): this refers to Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah. and throw them
into the heart of the fire in which the cow is burning: The flame of
fire slew those men (Dan. 3:22). (Then a man who is clean] shall collect
(the ashes of the cow] (Num. 19:9): this refers to the Holy One, blessed be
He: He will lift up a standard to the nations and collect the scattered ones
of Israel (Is. 11:12). (Then] a man who is clean shall collect (the
ashes of the cow and deposit them outside the camp in a clean place] (Num.
19:9): this refers to the Holy One, blessed be He, for it is written, The
Lord is a man of war (Ex. 15:3). (Then a man] who is clean (shall
collect (the ashes of the cow and deposit them outside the camp in a clean
place] (Num. 19:9): this refers to the Holy One, blessed be He, as it is
written, You who have eyes too pure to look at evil (Hab. 1:13). ... the ashes of the cow: this refers
to Israel’s exiles. ... and deposit them outside the camp in a clean place:
this refers to Jerusalem, which is clean. They shall be reserved for use by
the community of Israel in the water of ritual purification; for the cow is a
sin-offering (Num. 19:9): this is because, in this age, decisions of
uncleanness and rites of purification rest upon the instructions of the priest,
but in the age to come, the Holy One, blessed be He, is destined to effect
Israel’s purification, as it is written, I shall sprinkle on you water that
purifies (Ez. 36:25).
Ketubim: Targum Tehillim (Psalms) 110
Rashi |
TARGUM |
1. Of David a psalm. The Word of the Lord to my master;
"Wait for My right hand, until I make your enemies a footstool at your
feet." |
1. Composed by David, a psalm. The LORD said in his
decree to make me lord of all Israel, but he said to me, “Wait still for Saul
of the tribe of Benjamin to die, for one reign must not encroach on another;
and afterwards I will make your enemies a prop for your feet.” Another Targum: The LORD spoke by his decree to give
me the dominion in exchange for sitting in study of Torah. “Wait at my right
hand until I make your enemies a prop for your feet.” Another Targum: The
LORD said in his decree to appoint me ruler over Israel, but the LORD said to
me, “Wait for Saul of the tribe of Benjamin to pass away from the world; and
afterwards you will inherit the kingship, and I will make your enemies a prop
for your feet.” |
2.
The staff of your might the Lord will send from
Zion; rule in the midst of your enemies. |
2. The LORD will send from Zion the rod of your
strength, and you will rule in the midst of your enemies. |
3.
Your people will volunteer on the day of your
host, because of the beauty of holiness when you fell from the womb; for you,
your youth is like dew. |
3. Your people are those of the house of
Israel who devote themselves to the Torah; you will be helped in the day of
your making battle with them; in the glories of holiness the mercies of God
will hasten to you like the descent of dew; your offspring dwell securely. |
4.
The Lord swore and will not repent; you are a
priest forever because of the speech of Malchizedek. |
4. The LORD has sworn and will not turn aside, that
you are appointed leader in the age to come, because of the merit that you
were a righteous/ generous king. |
5.
The Lord, on your right hand, has crushed kings
on the day of His wrath |
5. The presence of the LORD is at your right hand; He
struck down kings on the day of His anger. |
6.
He will execute justice upon the nations [into] a
heap of corpses; He crushed the head on a great land. |
6. He was appointed judge over the Gentiles; the
earth is full of the bodies of the slain wicked/lawless; he smote the heads
of kings on the earth, very many. |
7.
From the stream on the way he would drink;
therefore, he raised his head. |
7. He will receive instruction from the mouth of the
prophet on the way; because of this, he will lift up his head. |
|
|
Rashi’s Commentary to Psalm 110
1 The word of the
Lord to my master Our Rabbis interpreted it as referring to Abraham our
father, and I will explain it according to their words (Mid. Ps. 110:1): The
word of the Lord to Abraham, whom the world called “my master,” as it is
written (Gen. 23:6): “Hearken to us, my master.”
“Wait for My right hand” Wait for My salvation and hope for the Lord. [The root] ישיבה means only waiting, as Scripture
states (Deut. 1:46): “And you stayed (וַתֵּשְׁבוּ) in Kadesh for many days.”
for My right hand For the salvation of My right hand.
until I make your enemies Amraphel and his allies.
2 The staff of
[This is] an expression of support, as (above 105:16): “every staff of bread.”
The staff of your might the Lord
will send from Zion When you return from the war and
your men are weary and in pursuit, the Lord will send you Malchizedek, king of
Salem, to bring out bread and wine (Gen. 14:14).
rule in the war.
in the midst of your enemies safely.
3 Your people will
volunteer on the day of your host When you gather an army to pursue them,
your people and your friends will volunteer to go out with you, as we find
(Gen. 14: 14): “and he armed his trained men, those born in his house,” and no
more; and Aner, Eshkol, and Mamre volunteered by themselves to go out to his
aid.
because of the beauty of holiness
when you fell from the womb And this will be to you in the
merit of the beauty of holiness that was in you from your mother’s womb, for he
recognized his Creator at the age of three.
when you fell from the womb Heb. מִשְׁחָר, when you fell from the womb,
like (Beizah 35b): “We may let fruit down through a skylight on a festival.”
for you, your youth is like dew For you will be considered your youth, the ways of
uprightness with which you conducted yourself in your youth will be for you as
pleasantness, like this dew, which is pleasant and comforting.
4 The Lord swore
and will not repent Since Abraham was afraid lest he be punished for the
troops that he had killed, it was said to him (Gen. 15:1): “Fear not, Abraham,
etc.”
and will not repent over the good that He spoke about you.
you are a priest forever because
of the speech of Malchizedek From you will emerge the
priesthood and the kingship that your children will inherit from Shem your
progenitor, the priesthood and the kingship, which were given to him. דִּבְרָתִי, מַלְכִּי-צֶדֶק. The “yud” is superfluous,
like (Lam. 1:1): “the city that was once so populous (רַבָּתִי).” Because of the speech of
Malchizedek, because of the command of Malchizedek. You are a priest, Heb. כֹהֵן. The word כֹהֵן bears the connotation of
priesthood and rulership, as (II Sam. 8:18): “and David’s sons were chief
officers.”
5 The Lord Who
was on your right hand in battle.
has crushed kings on the day of
His wrath The four kings. He...
6 will execute
justice upon the nations [into] a heap of corpses This is the tidings of the
‘covenant between the parts,’ [in] which was stated to him concerning Egypt
(Gen. 15:14): “But also that nation whom they will serve do I judge.”
a heap of corpses Heb. מָלֵא, a heap of corpses. מָלֵא is an expression of
gathering, as (Jer. 12:6): “have called a gang (מָלֵא) after you”; (Isa. 31:4),
“although a band (מְלֹא) of shepherds gather against him.”
Now where did He execute justice, making them a heap of corpses? (Exod. 14:30),
“the Egyptians dead on the seashore.”
He crushed the head on a great
land This resembles the prophecy of Habakkuk (3:12):
“You have crushed the head of the house of the wicked.” [This refers to] the
head of Pharaoh, who was the head and the prince of a land greater and more
esteemed than all the lands, as is said (above 102:20): “a ruler of peoples
[sent] and loosed his bonds,” for all the nations were under the rule of Egypt.
7 From the stream
on the way he would drink, etc. From the Nile River, on the way of its
course, his land would drink, and it was not in need of rain water. Therefore,
he would raise his head and boast (Ezek. 29:3): “My river is my own, and I made
myself.”
In another manner, this psalm can be explained regarding
David.
[1] The word of the Lord about my
master Concerning my master, Saul, when I was pursued by
him.
about my master Heb. לַאדֹנִי, about my master, as (Exod.
14: 3): “Then Pharaoh will say concerning the children of (לִבְנֵי) Israel”; (Gen. 26:7), “The
people of the place asked him about his wife (לְאִשְׁתּוֹ).”
“Wait for My right hand” Stay and wait for My salvation.
[2] The staff of your might the Lord will send from Zion The
exceptional good deeds in your hand. Another explanation: You will yet reign in
Zion, and there a staff of might will be sent to you, and then you will rule in
the midst of your enemies.
[3] Your people
will volunteer on the day of your host The people of Israel will volunteer
to your aid on the day that you form an army, as it is delineated in (I)
Chronicles (12:21); that they were joining him from every tribe: “When he went
to Ziklag, there deserted to him of Manasseh, etc.”; (ibid. verse 8): “And from
the Gadites there separated themselves to David, etc.”
because of the beauty of holiness
when you fell from the womb Because of the beauty of
holiness that was in you from your youth.
your youth is like dew A good youth and
a good period of maturity that you had will be to you like dew, which is
pleasant and sweet, and will produce fruit for you to make you prosper.
[4] The Lord has
sworn, etc. that the kingdom will be yours forever.
You are a priest forever And which of the priesthoods? A priesthood that is above
the priesthood of Malchizedek, and that is the kingdom, which is above the high
priesthood in thirty steps.
above the charge of Malchizedek above the priesthood (Some mss. read: above the charge)
of Malchizedek, who was a priest to the Most High God. Now if you challenge
that he too was a king, [we answer that] the kingdom over the nations was not
an esteemed kingdom when compared to Israel.
[5] The Lord
will always be on your right hand to save you, Who...
crushed kings on the day of His
wrath Those who fought with Abraham and with Joshua and
with Barak.
[6] He will
execute justice upon the nations [into] a heap of corpses And further, in
the days of Hezekiah your son, He will execute justice upon the armies of
Sennacherib [making them] a heap of dead corpses, and He will crush
Sennacherib, who is the head of Nineveh and Assyria, which is a great land,
who...
[7] From the
stream on the way he was drinking, for he boasted that his armies drank
from the waters of the Jordan, as it is said (Isa. 37:25): “I dug and drank
water, and I dry up, etc.”
therefore, he raised his head He praised himself and boasted of his greatness.
Ashlamatah: Ezekiel 36:16-36
16
Moreover the word of the LORD came unto me, saying:
17
'Son of man, when the house of Israel dwelt in their own land, they defiled it
by their way and by their doings; their way before Me was as the uncleanness of
a woman in her impurity.
18
Wherefore I poured out My fury upon them for the blood which they had shed upon
the land, and because they had defiled it with their idols;
19 and
I scattered them among the nations, and they were dispersed through the
countries; according to their way and according to their doings I judged them.
20 And
when they came unto the nations, whither they came, they profaned My holy name;
in that men said of them: These are the people of the LORD, and are gone forth
out of His land.
21 But
I had pity for My holy name, which the house of Israel had profaned among the
nations, whither they came. {P}
22
Therefore say unto the house of Israel: Thus says the Lord GOD: I do not
this for your sake, O house of Israel, but for My holy name, which you have
profaned among the nations, whither you came.
23 And
I will sanctify My great name, which has been profaned among the nations, which
you have profaned in the midst of them; and the nations will know that I am the
LORD, says the Lord GOD, when I will be sanctified in you before their eyes.
24 For
I will take you from among the nations, and gather you out of all the
countries, and will bring you into your own land.
25 And
I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and you will be clean; from all your
uncleanness, and from all your idols, will I cleanse you.
26 A
new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you; and I
will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart
of flesh.
27 And
I will put My spirit within you, and cause you to walk in My statutes, and you
will keep Mine ordinances, and do them.
28 And
you will dwell in the land that I gave to your fathers; and you will be My
people, and I will be your God.
29 And
I will save you from all your uncleanness; and I will call for the corn, and
will increase it, and lay no famine upon you.
30 And
I will multiply the fruit of the tree, and the increase of the field, that you
may receive no more the reproach of famine among the nations.
31
Then will you remember your evil ways, and your doings that were not good; and
you will loathe yourselves in your own sight for your iniquities/lawlessness
and for your abominations.
32 Not
for your sake do I this, says the Lord GOD, be it known unto you; be ashamed
and confounded for your ways, O house of Israel. {S}
33
Thus says the Lord GOD: In the day that I cleanse you from all your
iniquities/lawlessness, I will cause the cities to be inhabited, and the waste
places will be built.
34 And
the land that was desolate will be tilled, whereas it was a desolation in the
sight of all that passed by.
35 And
they will say: This land that was desolate is become like the garden of
Eden; and the waste and desolate and ruined cities are fortified and inhabited.
36
Then the nations that are left round about you will know that I the LORD have
built the ruined places, and planted that which was desolate; I the LORD have
spoken it, and I will do it. {S}
Nazarean Codicil:
Bereans (Hebrews) 8:1 – 9:14[1]
1.
¶ Most important of the things being spoken of [is that] such we have a high
(Psalm 110:4) priest who (Psalm 110:1) sat down at [the] right hand
of the throne of Majesty in the heavens,
2.
Of the holy [things] a minister and of the true (Numbers 24:6-7) “tent
(Tabernacle) which the LORD set up” – not man.
3.
¶ For every High Priest is for the purpose of offering gifts and sacrifices
constituted; whence [it is] necessary to have something also [for] this one
which he may offer.
4.
If, indeed, for he had been on earth, not even would he be a priest, there
being [already] the priests who offer according to the Law the gifts,
5.
Who [the] representation and shadow serve of the heavenly [things], according
as was divinely instructed [to] Moses [who was advised when] being about to
construct the tent (Tabernacle) (Exodus 25:40): “See,” he said, “[that]
you make all [things] according to the pattern which was shown to you on the
mountain.”
6.
But now a more excellent ministry (liturgy) he has acquired so also of a better
he is covenant mediator, which upon better promises has been established.
7.
¶ For if the first had been faultless, not for a second would place be sought.
8.
For finding fault, to them He says (Jer. 31:31-34): “Look! Days are coming,”
says the LORD, “and I will ratify with the house of Israel and with the house
of Judah a refreshed covenant,
9.
Not according to the covenant which I made with their fathers on [the] day when
I took them by their hand to lead them out of [the] land of Egypt, because they
did not continue in my covenant, and I disregarded them,” says [the] LORD.
10.
“Because, this [is] the covenant which I will covenant with the house of Israel
after those days,” says [the] LORD. “[I will be] giving My Laws into their
minds, also upon their hearts I will inscribe them; and I will be to them for
God, and they will be to Me for people.
11.
And not at all will they teach, each his fellow citizen and each one his
brother, saying, “Know the LORD,” because they will all know Me, from [the]
little [ones] of them to [the] great [ones] of them,
12.
Because merciful I will be to their unrighteousness, and their sins, and their
lawlessness in no wise will I remember anymore.”
13.
In the saying refreshed, he has made old the first but that which grows old and
aged [is] near disappearing
1. ¶ Had indeed,
therefore also the first tent (Tabernacle) [divine] statutes for worship,
[and] also a cosmic [well organized] sanctuary,
2. For the first tent
(Tabernacle), was prepared in which [were] both the candelabra, and the table,
and the setting of the loaves; which is called Holy (Exodus 26:33-35)
3. Beyond the second
curtain [is] a tent (Tabernacle) that is called “Holy of holies,”
4. Having a golden
censer, and the ark of the covenant completely covered with gold, in which [there
was] a gold jar containing manna, and the rod of Aaron that budded, and the
tablets of the covenant,
5. And above it [are
the] cherubim of glory, overshadowing the mercy-seat, concerning which [things],
it is not now [the time] to speak in detail.
6. ¶ Now these things
having been thus prepared, into the first tent (Tabernacle), the priests entered
at all times while performing the services,
7. But into the second
[tent], once in the year alone the Chief Priest not apart from blood, which he
offers in behalf of his own [sins] and the unintentional sins of the people,
8. This signifying the Spirit
of Holiness [that] the way of the holy [precincts], is not yet visible as long
as the first tent still has standing.
9. This [tent] is
an allegory[2]
for the present time, according to which both gifts and sacrifices are
offered, [which are] not [alone/by themselves] able to perfect (or: make
whole/complete) the worshipper according to [his] conscience.
10. Only being concerned
with foods, and drinks and different washings – proper [observances] of the
flesh until the time of restoration (i.e. the Jubilee).
11. ¶ But Messiah having
become a Chief Priest of the good things that have happened, through the greater
and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands [that is, not of this creation]
12. And not through
blood of goats [for the people] and bulls [for the priests], but through his
own blood entered once and for all into the holy [precincts], having obtained age-long
redemption;
13. for if the blood of
bulls [for the priests], and goats [for the people], and ashes of a heifer,
sprinkling those who are defiled, sanctifies [them] for the cleansing of the
flesh,
14. How much the more
will the blood (or “life”) of the Messiah [who through the spirit of the age offered
himself blameless to God], will cleanse our conscience from works of death for
the purpose of serving the living God?
Questions for Meditation &
Dialogue
1.
What does the mystery of the Red
Heifer consists of? (Please explain)
2.
Why are all those who are engaged
in the work of preparing the ashes of the red heifer from beginning to end
impart uncleanness to clothing?
3.
Why are the laws concerning the
ashes of the red heifer called in Hebrew a “Choq” (statute) of the Torah and
not a “Mitzvah” of the Torah?
4.
Does a corpse of itself impart
ritual uncleanness and the waters of the ashes of the red heifer of themselves
impart ritual cleanness? (Please explain your answer)
5.
What in Bereans (Hebrews) 8:13 is
becoming “old” and “near disappearing,” the Law or the Levitical Priesthood?
(Please explain your answer)
6.
Before some great sin took place,
the first born son was the priest of the family, but after this great sin was
committed G-d replaced the firstborns for the Levitical Priests. What grave sin
was this? (Please explain)
7.
In a work of “restoration,” this
would mean that the Levitical Priesthood would be rescinded and the firstborns
would again take their place since the creation of Adam. Do you agree or
disagree? Please explain.
8.
What is the “first” and “second”
tent (Tabernacle) in Bereans (Hebrews) 9:6-10 allegories of? Please explain
your answer.
9.
In your opinion what operative
Hermeneutic principle (not Hermeneutic Law) does R. Moshe
HaDarshan uses for his peshat
interpretation of our Torah text?
(m.k.m.)
Please explain the rationale for your answer.
10.
What was Moses’ sin/s that
merited G-d’s punishment of not entering the Promised Land?
11.
How is the Torah Seder related
to:
(a) Psalm
One Hundred and Ten for this week?
(b) The Ashlamatah of Ezekiel 36:16-38 for this
week?
(c) Bereans (Hebrews) 8:1 - 9:14?
Next Shabbat:
Shabbat HaChodesh
Proclamation of
the New Moon of the month of Nissan
& the Temple
New Year
(Adar 27, 5770):
Shabbat |
Torah Reading: |
Weekday Torah Reading: |
הַחֹדֶשׁ |
|
|
“HaChodesh” |
Reader 1 – Shemot 11:1-3 |
Reader 1 –
Sh’mot 26:31-33 |
“The New Moon” |
Reader 2 – Shemot 11:4-10 |
Reader 2 –
Sh’mot 26:34-36 |
“El
novilunio” |
Reader 3 – Shemot 12:1-5 |
Reader 3 –
Sh’mot 26:35-37 |
Shemot (Exodus) 11:1 – 12:28 B’Midbar (Num.) 28:9-15 |
Reader 4 – Shemot 12:6-10 |
|
Ashlamatah: Ezekiel 45:18 - 46:15 |
Reader 5 – Shemot 12:11-13 |
|
Ashlamatah: I Samuel
20:18,42 |
Reader 6 – Shemot 12:14-17 |
Reader 1 –
Sh’mot 26:31-33 |
Proverbs 7:1-27 |
Reader 7 – Shemot 12:18-20 |
Reader 2 –
Sh’mot 26:34-36 |
|
Maftir – Shemot
12:18-20 & B’Midbar 28:9-15 |
Reader 3 –
Sh’mot 26:35-37 |
N.C.: Col. 2:16-23; 1 Cor. 5:6-8 |
Ezekiel
45:18 - 46:15 &
I Samuel 20:18,42 |
|
Coming Festival: Passover – March
30, 2010
For
further study see: http://www.betemunah.org/chametz.html; http://www.betemunah.org/passover.html; http://www.betemunah.org/chronology.html; http://www.betemunah.org/redemption.html; http://www.betemunah.org/haggada.html & http://www.betemunah.org/pcustoms.html
Shabbat
Shalom!
Hakham
Dr. Yosef ben Haggai
Paqid
Adon Mikha ben Hillel
[1] This translation is taken from: George Wesley Buchanan, The Book of Hebrews: Its Challenge from Zion,
[2] Every time the Greek
term παραβολή (Parabolí) appears in
the Remes genre of literature it should not be translated as “parable” or
“symbol” but rather as “allegory,” for “parable” or “metaphor” (Hebrew:
“Mashal”) belongs to the Drash genre of literature and has its unique rules of
hermeneutics, and “symbol” belongs to the Sod genre of literature and which is
also governed by precise rules of interpretation. Thus, παραβολή (Parabolí) in the
Peshat should be translated as “simile”; in the Remes as “allegory”;
in the Drash as “parable”; and in the Sod as “symbol.”