Esnoga Bet Emunah 4544
Highline Dr. SE Olympia,
WA 98501 United
States of America © 2013 E-Mail: gkilli@aol.com |
|
Esnoga Bet El 102
Broken Arrow Dr. Paris
TN 38242 United
States of America © 2013 E-Mail: waltoakley@charter.net |
Triennial Cycle (Triennial Torah Cycle) /
Septennial Cycle (Septennial Torah Cycle)
Three and
1/2 year Lectionary Readings |
Fourth Year of the Reading
Cycle |
Nisan 15, 5773 – Mar. 25/27, 2013 |
Fourth Year of the Shmita
Cycle |
Happy & Kosher
Pesach 5773
Candle Lighting and Habdalah Times:
Conroe &
Austin, TX, U.S. Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 7:27 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 8:21 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 8:22 P.M |
Brisbane,
Australia Eve of First Day of Passover Mon.
Apr. 25 – Candles at 5:37 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues.
Apr. 26 – Candles at 6:28 PM Wed.
Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 6:27 P.M |
Chattanooga, & Cleveland, TN, U.S. Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 7:38 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 8:35 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 8:36 P.M |
Jakarta,
Indonesia Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 5:44 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 6:32 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 6:32 P.M |
Manila & Cebu, Philippines Eve of First Day of Passover Mon.
Apr. 25 – Candles at 5:49 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues.
Apr. 26 – Candles at 6:39 PM Wed.
Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 6:39 P.M |
Miami,
FL, U.S. Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 7:16 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 8:09 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 8:09 P.M |
Olympia,
WA, U.S. Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 7:12 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 8:17 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 8:19 P.M |
Murray,
KY, & Paris, TN. U.S. Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 6:52 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 7:50 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 7:51 P.M |
San Antonio, Texas Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 7:30 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 8:24 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 8:24 P.M |
Sheboygan & Manitowoc, WI, US Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 6:51 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 7:53 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 7:54 P.M |
Singapore,
Singapore Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 6:56 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 7:45 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 7:45 P.M |
St.
Louis, MO, U.S. Eve of First Day of Passover Mon. Apr. 25 – Candles at 6:59 PM Eve of Second Day of Passover Tues. Apr. 26 – Candles at 7:57 PM Wed. Apr. 27 – Hol. Ends at 7:58 P.M |
For other places see: http://chabad.org/calendar/candlelighting.asp
Roll of Honor:
This
Torah commentary comes to you courtesy of:
His Eminence Rabbi Dr. 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 Honor Paqid Adon Ezra ben Abraham and beloved wife HH Giberet
Karmela bat Sarah,
His Excellency Dr. Adon Yeshayahu ben Yosef and beloved wife HE Giberet
Tricia Foster
His Excellency Adon Eliyahu ben Abraham and beloved wife HE Giberet
Vardit bat Sarah
Her Excellency Giberet Laurie Taylor
His Eminence Rabbi Dr. Adon Eliyahu ben Abraham and beloved wife HH
Giberet Dr. Elisheba bat Sarah
Her Excellency Prof. Dr. Conny Williams & beloved family
Her Excellency Giberet Gloria Sutton & beloved family
His Excellency Adon Albert Carlsson and beloved wife Giberet Lorraine
Carlsson
His Excellency Adon John Hope & beloved family
For their regular and sacrificial giving, providing
the best oil for the lamps, we pray that G-d’s richest blessings be upon their
lives and those of their loved ones, together with all Yisrael and her Torah
Scholars, amen ve amen!
If you want to subscribe to our list and ensure that
you never lose any of our commentaries, or would like your friends also to
receive this commentary, please do send me an E-Mail to benhaggai@GMail.com with
your E-Mail or the E-Mail addresses of your friends. Toda Rabba!
For
further study on Passover and the Seven Days of Unleavened Bread 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
&
“First Day of Pesach”
(Monday Evening March 25, 2013)
Family Passover
(Tuesday Morning March 26, 2013)
Morning Service
Torah
Reading: Shemot (Exodus) 12:21-51
Reader
1: Shemot 12:21-24
Reader
2: Shemot 12:25-28
Reader
3: Shemot 12:29-36
Reader
4: Shemot 12:37-42
Reader
5: Shemot 12:43-51
Maftir:
B’Midbar (Numbers) 28:16-25
Ashlamatah:
Joshua 5:2 – 6:1 + 27
Nazarean
Codicil: N.C.: 1 Corinthians 1:1 – 2:16
&
Revelation 2:1-7
Blessing Before Torah Study
Blessed are You, Ha-Shem our G-d, King of the universe, Who
has sanctified us through Your commandments, and commanded us to actively study
Torah. Amen!
Please Ha-Shem, our G-d, sweeten the words of Your Torah in
our mouths and in the mouths of all Your people Israel. May we and our
offspring, and our offspring's offspring, and all the offspring of Your people,
the House of Israel, may we all, together, know Your Name and study Your Torah
for the sake of fulfilling Your desire. Blessed are You, Ha-Shem, Who teaches
Torah to His people Israel. Amen!
Blessed are You, Ha-Shem our G-d, King of the universe, Who
chose us from all the nations, and gave us the Torah. Blessed are You, Ha-Shem,
Giver of the Torah. Amen!
Ha-Shem spoke to Moses, explaining a Commandment.
"Speak to Aaron and his sons, and teach them the following Commandment:
This is how you should bless the Children of Israel. Say to the Children of
Israel:
May Ha-Shem bless you and keep watch over you; - Amen!
May Ha-Shem make His Presence enlighten you, and may He be
kind to you; - Amen!
May Ha-Shem bestow favor on you, and grant you peace. –
Amen!
This way, the priests will link My Name with the Israelites,
and I will bless them."
These are the Laws for which the Torah did not mandate
specific amounts: How much growing produce must be left in the corner of the
field for the poor; how much of the first fruits must be offered at the Holy
Temple; how much one must bring as an offering when one visits the Holy Temple
three times a year; how much one must do when doing acts of kindness; and there
is no maximum amount of Torah that a person must study.
These are the Laws whose benefits a person can often enjoy
even in this world, even though the primary reward is in the Next World: They
are: Honoring one's father and mother; doing acts of kindness; early attendance
at the place of Torah study -- morning and night; showing hospitality to
guests; visiting the sick; providing for the financial needs of a bride;
escorting the dead; being very engrossed in prayer; bringing peace between two
people, and between husband and wife; but the study of Torah is as great as all
of them together. Amen!
Rashi
& Targum Pseudo Jonathan
for: Shemot
(Exodus) 12:21-51
Rashi |
Targum
Pseudo Jonathan |
21. Moses summoned all the elders
of Israel and said to them, "Draw forth or buy for yourselves sheep for
your families and slaughter the Passover sacrifice. |
21. And Mosheh called all the elders of Israel, and said to them,
Withdraw your hands from the idols of the Mizraee, and take to you from the
offspring of the flock, according to your houses, and kill the paschal lamb. |
22. And you shall take a bunch of
hyssop and immerse [it] in the blood that is in the basin, and you shall
extend to the lintel and to the two doorposts the blood that is in the basin,
and you shall not go out, any man from the entrance of his house until
morning. |
22. And you will take a bunch of hyssop, and dip it in the blood that
is in the earthen vessel, and upon the upper bar without and upon the two
posts you will sprinkle of the blood which is in the earthen vessel, and not
a man of you must come forth from the door of his hour till the morning. |
23. The Lord will pass to smite the
Egyptians, and He will see the blood on the lintel and on the two doorposts,
and the Lord will pass over the entrance, and He will not permit the
destroyer to enter your houses to smite [you]. |
23. For the Glory of the LORD will be manifested in striking the
Mizraee, and He will see the blood upon the lintel and upon the two posts,
and the Word of the LORD will spread His protection over the door, and the
destroying angel will not be permitted to enter your houses to smite. |
24. And you shall keep this matter as a statute for you and for your children
forever. |
24. And you
will observe this thing for a statute to you and to your sons for a memorial
for ever. |
25. And it shall come to pass when
you enter the land that the Lord will give you, as He spoke, that you shall
observe this service. |
25. And it will be when you are come into the land that the LORD will
give to you, as He has spoken, that from the time of your coming you will
observe this service. |
26. And it will come to pass if
your children say to you, ÔWhat is this service to you?' |
26. And it will be that when at that time your children will say to
you, What is this your service? |
27. you shall say, ÔIt is a
Passover sacrifice to the Lord, for He passed over the houses of the children
of Israel in Egypt when He smote the Egyptians, and He saved our houses.'
" And the people kneeled and prostrated themselves. |
27. You will say, It is the sacrifice of mercy before the LORD,
who had mercy in His Word upon the houses of the sons of Israel in Mizraim,
when He destroyed the Mizraee, and spared our houses. And when the house of
Israel heard this word from the mouth of Mosheh, they bowed and worshipped. |
28. So the children of Israel went
and did; as the Lord commanded Moses and Aaron, so they did. |
28. And the sons of Israel went and did as the LORD commanded Mosheh
and Aharon, so did they hasten and do. |
29. It came to pass at midnight,
and the Lord smote every firstborn in the land of Egypt, from the firstborn
of Pharaoh who sits on his throne to the firstborn of the captive who is in
the dungeon, and every firstborn animal. |
29. And it was in the dividing, of the night of the fifteenth, that
the Word of the LORD slew all the firstborn in the land of Mizraim, from the
firstborn son of Pharoh, who would have sat upon the throne of his kingdom,
unto the firstborn sons of the kings who were captives in the dungeon as
hostages under Pharoh's hand; and who, for having rejoiced at the servitude
of Israel, were punished as (the Mizraee): and all the firstborn of the
cattle that did the work of the Mizraee died also. |
30. And Pharaoh arose at night, he
and all his servants and all the Egyptians, and there was a great outcry in
Egypt, for there was no house in which no one was dead. |
30. And Pharoh rose up in that night, and all the rest of his
servants, and all the rest of the Mizraee; and there was a great cry, because
there was no house of the Mizraee where the firstborn was not dead. |
31. So he called for Moses and
Aaron at night, and he said, "Get up and get out from among my people,
both you, as well as the children of Israel, and go, worship the Lord as you
have spoken. |
31. And the border of the land of Mizraim extended four hundred
pharsee; but the land of Goshen, where Mosheh and the sons of Israel were,
was in the midst of the land of Mizraim; and the royal palace of Pharoh was
at the entrance of the land of Mizraim. But when he cried to Mosheh and to
Aharon in the night of the Pascha, his voice was heard unto the land of
Goshen; Pharoh crying with a voice of woe, and saying thus: Arise, Go forth
from among my people, both you and the sons of Israel; and go, worship before
the LORD, as you have said; |
32. Take also your flocks and also
your cattle, as you have spoken, and go, but you shall also bless me." |
32. your sheep also take, and whatever of mine you have spoken about,
and go; and nothing ask I of you except that you pray for me that I may not
die. |
33. So the Egyptians took hold of
the people to hasten to send them out of the land, for they said, "We
are all dead." |
33. When Mosheh and Aharon, and the sons of Israel, heard the voice of
Pharoh's weeping, they were not mindful, until he came himself, and all his
servants, and all the Mizraee, and urged all the people of the house of
Israel, that they might hasten to send them forth from the land; For, said
they, if they prolong here one hour more, behold, we are all dead. JERUSALEM: For, said the Mizraee, if Israel delay one hour (longer),
behold, all Mizraim dies. |
34. The people picked up their
dough when it was not yet leavened, their leftovers bound in their garments
on their shoulders. |
34. And the people carried their dough upon their heads, being
unleavened, and what remained to them of the paschal cakes and bitter things
they carried, bound up with their raiment, upon their shoulders. |
35. And the children of Israel did
according to Moses' order, and they borrowed from the Egyptians silver
objects, golden objects, and garments. |
35. And the sons of Israel did according to the word of Mosheh, and
asked of the Mizraee vessels of silver and vessels of gold. |
36. The Lord gave the people favor
in the eyes of the Egyptians, and they lent them, and they emptied out Egypt. |
36. And the LORD gave the people favor and compassion before the
Mizraee, and they brought forth to them, and they emptied the Mizraee of
their riches. |
37. The children of Israel
journeyed from Rameses to Succoth, about six hundred thousand on foot, the
men, besides the young children. |
37. And the sons of Israel moved forth from Pilusin towards Succoth, a
hundred and thirty thousand, protected there by seven clouds of glory on
their four sides: one above them, that neither hail nor rain might fall upon
them, nor that they should be burned by the heat of the sun; one beneath
them, that they might not be hurt by thorns, serpents, or scorpions; and one
went before them, to make the valleys even, and the mountains low, and to
prepare them a place of habitation. And they were about six hundred thousand
men, journeying on foot, none riding on horses except the children five to
every man; |
38. And also, a great mixed
multitude went up with them, and flocks and cattle, very much livestock. |
38. and a multitude of strangers, two hundred and forty myriads, went
up with them, and sheep, and oxen, and cattle, very many. JERUSALEM: A mixed multitude. |
39. They baked the dough that they
had taken out of Egypt as unleavened cakes, for it had not leavened, for they
were driven out of Egypt, and they could not tarry, and also, they had not
made provisions for themselves. |
39. And they divided the dough which they brought out of Mizraim,
which they had carried on their heads, and it was baked for them by the heat
of the sun, (into) unleavened cakes, because it had not fermented; for the
Mizraee had thrust them out, neither could they delay; and it was sufficient
for them to eat until the fifteenth of the month Iyar; because they had not
prepared provision for the way. |
40. And the habitation of the
children of Israel, that they dwelled in Egypt, was four hundred and thirty
years. |
40. And the days of the dwelling of the sons of Israel in Mizraim were
thirty weeks of years, (thirty times seven years,) which is the sum of two
hundred and ten years. But the number of four hundred and thirty years (had
passed away since) the LORD spoke to Abraham, in the hour that He spoke with
him on the fifteenth of Nisan, between the divided parts, until the day that
they went out of Mizraim. |
41. It came to pass at the end of
four hundred and thirty years, and it came to pass in that very day, that all
the legions of the Lord went out of the land of Egypt. |
41. And it was at the end of thirty years from the making of this
covenant, that Yizhak was born; and thence until they went out of Mizraim
four hundred (years), on the selfsame day it was that all the hosts of the
LORD went forth made free from the land of Mizraim. |
42. It is a night of anticipation for the Lord, to take
them out of the land of Egypt; this night is the Lord's, guarding all the
children of Israel throughout their generations. |
42. Four nights are there written in the Book of Memorials before the
LORD of the world. Night the first,--when He was revealed in creating the
world; the second,--when He was revealed to Abraham; the third,--when He was
revealed in Mizraim, His hand killing all the firstborn of Mizraim, and His
right hand saving the firstborn of Israel; the fourth,--when He will yet be
revealed to liberate the people of the house of Israel from among the Gentiles.
And all these are called Nights to be observed; for so explained Mosheh, and
said thereof, It is
to be observed on account of the liberation which is from the LORD, to lead
forth the people of the sons of Israel from the land of Mizraim. This is that
Night of preservation from the destroying angel for all the sons of Israel
who were in Mizraim, and of redemption of their generations from their
captivity. |
43. The Lord said to Moses and Aaron, "This is the statute of the
Passover sacrifice: No estranged one may partake of it. |
43. _ _ JERUSALEM: This is a night to be observed and celebrated for the
liberation from before the LORD in bringing forth the sons of Israel, made
free from the land of Mizraim. Four nights are there written in the Book of
Memorial. Night first; when the Word of the LORD was revealed upon the world
as it was created; when the world was without form and void, and darkness was
spread upon the face of the deep, and the Word of the LORD illuminated and
made it light; and he called it the first night. Night second; when the Word
of the LORD was revealed unto Abraham between the divided parts; when Abraham
was a son of a hundred years, and Sarah was a daughter of ninety years, and
that which the Scripture sad was confirmed,--Abraham a hundred years, can he
beget? and Sarah, ninety year old, can she bear? Was not our father Yizhak a
son of thirty and seven years, at the time he was offered upon the altar? The
heavens were (then) bowed down and brought low, and Yizhak saw their
realities, and his eyes were blinded at the sight, and he called it the
second night. The third night; when the Word of the LORD was revealed upon
the Mizraee, at the dividing of the night; His right hand slew the firstborn
of the Mizraee, His right hand spared the firstborn of Israel; to fulfill
what the Scripture has said, Israel is My firstborn son. And He called
it the third night. Night the fourth; when the end of the age will be
accomplished, that it might be dissolved, the bands of wickedness destroyed
and the iron yoke broken. Mosheh came forth from the midst of the desert; but
the King Messiah (comes) from the midst of Roma). The Cloud preceded that,
and the Cloud will go before this one; and the Word of the LORD will lead
between both, and they will proceed together. This is the night of the Pascha
before the LORD, to be observed and celebrated by the sons of Israel in all
their generations. |
44. And every man's slave, purchased for his money you shall circumcise him;
then he will be permitted to partake of it. |
44. _ _ JERUSALEM: A
sojourning man and a hireling born of the Gentiles will not eat of it. |
45. A sojourner or a hired hand may not partake of it. |
45. A
sojourner or a hired stranger will not eat thereof. |
46. It must be eaten in one house;
you shall not take any of the meat out of the house to the outside, neither
shall you break any of its bones. |
46. In his own company he will eat. You will not carry any of the flesh
out of the house from [your] company, nor send a gift to his neighbor; and a
bone of him will not be broken for the sake of eating that which is within
it. |
47. The entire community of Israel shall make it. |
47. All the
congregation of Israel will mix together, this one with that, one family with
another, that they may perform it. |
48. And should a proselyte reside with you, he shall make a Passover
sacrifice to the Lord. All his males shall be circumcised, and then he may
approach to make it, and he will be like the native of the land, but no
uncircumcised male may partake of it. |
48. And if a
proselyte sojourn with you, and would perform the pascha before the LORD, let
every male belonging to him be circumcised, and so be made fit to perform it;
and he will be as the native of the land: but no uncircumcised one of the
sons of Israel will eat thereof. |
49. There shall be one law for the native and for the stranger who resides in
your midst." |
49. One Law
will there be as to appointments for the native and for the proselyte who sojourns
among you. |
50. All the children of Israel did;
as the Lord had commanded Moses and Aaron, so they did. |
50. And all the sons of Israel did as the LORD had commanded Mosheh
and Aharon, so did they. |
51. It came to pass on that very
day, that the Lord took the children of Israel out of the land of Egypt with
their legions. |
51. And it was on that same day that the LORD brought forth the sons
of Israel from the land of Mizraim, with their hosts. |
|
|
Rashi
& Targum Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar
(Num.) 28:16-25
Rashi |
Targum
Pseudo Jonathan |
16. In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month, [you shall offer
up] a Passover offering to the Lord. |
16. And in the month of Nisan, on the fourteenth day of the month, is
the sacrifice of the Pascha before the LORD. |
17. On the fifteenth day of this
month, a festival [begins]; you shall eat unleavened bread for seven days. |
17. On the fifteenth day of this month is a festival; seven days will
unleavened be eaten. |
18. On the first day is a holy convocation;
you shall not perform any mundane work. |
18. On the first day of the festival a holy convocation; no servile
work will you do; |
19. You shall offer up a fire
offering, a burnt offering to the Lord: two young bulls, one ram, and seven
lambs in the first year they shall be unblemished for you. |
19. but offer an oblation of a burnt sacrifice before the LORD, two
young bullocks, one ram, and seven lambs of the year, unblemished, will you
have. |
20. Their meal offerings [shall be]
fine flour mixed with oil; three tenths for each bull and two tenths for the
ram you shall offer up. |
20. And their minchas of wheat flour, mingled with olive oil, three
tenths for each bullock, two tenths for the ram, |
21. And you shall offer up one
tenth for each lamb, for all seven lambs. |
21. and for a single lamb a tenth, so for the seven; |
22. And one young male goat for a
sin offering to atone for you. |
22. and one kid of the goats, to make an atonement for you: |
23. You shall offer these up
besides the morning burnt offering which is offered as a continual burnt
offering. |
23. beside the burnt sacrifice of the morning, the perpetual burnt
sacrifice, you will make these offerings. |
24. Like these, you shall offer up
daily for seven days, food of the fire offering, a spirit of satisfaction to
the Lord; you shall offer up this in addition to the continual burnt offering
and its libation. |
24. According to these oblations of the first day you will do daily
through the seven days of the festival. It is the bread of the oblation which
is received with favor before the LORD; it will be made beside the perpetual
burnt offering, with its libation. |
25. The seventh day shall be a holy
convocation for you; you shall not perform any mundane work. |
25. And on the seventh day you shall have a holy convocation; no
servile work shall you do. |
|
|
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’s
Commentary for: Shemot
(Exodus) 12:21-51
21 Draw forth
Whoever has sheep shall draw from his own.
or buy Whoever has none shall
buy from the market.-[from Mechilta]
for your families-A
lamb for a parental house.-[from Mechilta 3]
22 hyssop-Heb. אֵזוֹב . A species of herb that has thin stalks.
a bunch of hyssop Three
stalks are called a bunch.- [Sukkah 13a]
that is in the basin-Heb. בַּסַּף , in the vessel, like “silver pitchers (סִפּוֹת) ” (II Kings 12:14). [from Mechilta]
the blood that is in the basin-Why does the text repeat this? So that you should
not say that [Scripture means] one immersion for [all] the three sprinklings.
Therefore, it says again: “that is in the basin,” [to indicate] that every
sprinkling shall be from the blood that is in the basin-for each touching an
immersion [is necessary].-[from Mechilta]
and you shall not go out, etc.-This tells [us] that once the destroyer is given
permission to destroy, he does not discriminate between righteous and wicked. And night is the time that
destroyers are given permission, as it is said: “in which every
beast of the forest moves about” (Ps. 104:20).-[from Mechilta]
23 will pass over Heb. וּפָסַח , and He will have pity. This may also be
rendered: and He will skip over. See Rashi on verses 11 and 13.
and He will not permit the destroyer Heb. וְלֹא
יִתֵּן , lit., and will not give. [I.e.,] He will not grant him the
ability to enter, as in “but God did not permit him (נְתָנוֹ) to harm me” (Gen. 31:7).
25 And it shall come to pass when you enter- Scripture makes this commandment contingent upon
their entry into the land, but in the desert, they were obligated only to bring
one Passover sacrifice, the one they performed in the second year, [which they
did] by divine mandate.- [from Mechilta]
as He spoke-Now
where did He speak? “And I will bring you to the land, etc.” (Exod. 6:8).-[from
Mechilta]
27 And the people kneeled and prostrated themselves-[in thanksgiving] for the tidings of the
redemption, the entry into the land [of Israel], and the tidings of the
children that they would have.-[from Mechilta]
28 So the children of Israel went and did-Now did they already do [it]? Wasn’t this said to
them on Rosh Chodesh? But since they accepted upon themselves [to do it],
Scripture credits them for it as if they had [already] done [it].- [from
Mechilta]
went and did-Scripture counts also the going, to give reward for the
going and reward for the deed.- [from Mechilta]
as the Lord commanded Moses and Aaron-[This comes] to tell Israel’s praise, that they did
not omit anything of all the commandments of Moses and Aaron. And what is the
meaning of “so they did”? Moses and Aaron also did so.-[from Mechilta]
29 and the Lord-Heb. וַה'
. Wherever it says,
“and the Lord,” it means “He and His tribunal” (Exod. Rabbah 12:4),
for the “vav” is an expression of addition, like “so-and-so and (“vav”) so-and-
so.”
smote every firstborn-Even [a firstborn] of another nation who was in
Egypt.-[from Mechilta]
from the firstborn of Pharaoh-Pharaoh, too, was a firstborn, but he remained
[alive] of the firstborn. Concerning him, He [God] says: “But, for this
[reason] I have allowed you to stand, in order to show you My strength” (Exod.
9:16) at the Red Sea.-[from Mechilta]
to the firstborn of the captive-Because they rejoiced at Israel’s misfortune
(Tanchuma 7), and furthermore, so that they would not say, “Our deity brought
about this retribution” (Mechilta). The firstborn of the slave woman was
included, because [Scripture] counts from the most esteemed to the lowest, and
the firstborn of the slave woman is more esteemed than the firstborn of the
captive. See commentary on Exodus 11:5.
30 And Pharaoh arose-from his bed.
at night-Unlike the custom of
kings, [who rise] three hours after daybreak.-[from Mechilta]
he-[arose] first, and
afterwards his servants. This teaches us that he went around to his servants’
houses and woke them up.-[from Mechilta]
for there was no house in which no one was dead-If there was a firstborn, he was
dead. If there was no firstborn, the oldest household member was called the
firstborn, as it is said: “I, too, shall make him [David] a firstborn” (Ps. 89:28) (Tanchuma Buber 19). [Rashi explains
there: I shall make him great.] Another explanation: Some Egyptian women were
unfaithful to their husbands and bore children from bachelors. Thus they would
have many firstborn; sometimes one woman would have five, each one the
firstborn of his father (Mechilta 13:33).
31 So he called for Moses and Aaron at night-[This] tells [us] that Pharaoh went around to the
entrances [i.e., to the doors of the houses] of the city, and cried out, “Where
is Moses staying? Where is Aaron staying?”-[from Mechilta]
both you-the men.
as well as the children of Israel-The young children.
and go, worship the Lord as you have spoken-Everything is as you said, not as I said. “Neither
will I let Israel out” (Exod. 5:2) is nullified. “Who and who are going?”
(Exod. 10:8) is nullified. “But your flocks and your cattle shall be left”
(Exod. 10:24) is nullified. [Instead,] take also your flocks and also your
cattle. What is [the meaning of] “as you have spoken”? You too shall give into
our hands sacrifices and burnt offerings (Exod. 10:25).-[from Mechilta]
32 Take… as you have spoken… but you shall also
bless me-[I.e.,] pray for me
that I shall not die, for I am a firstborn.-[from Onkelos]
33 We are all dead-They said, “This is not in accordance with Moses’
decree, for he said, ‘And every firstborn in the land of Egypt will die’ (Exod.
11:5), but here, the ordinary people too are dead, five or ten in one
house.”-[from Mechilta] See Rashi on verse 30.
34 when it was not yet leavened-The Egyptians did not permit them to tarry long
enough for it to leaven.
their leftovers-Heb. מִשְׁאֲרֽתָם . The remaining matzah and bitter
herbs.-[from Mechilta and Jonathan]
on their shoulders-Although they took many animals with them, they
[carried the remaining matzoth and bitter herbs on their shoulders because]
they loved the mitzvoth.-[from Mechilta]
35 according to Moses’ order-that he said to them in Egypt: “and let them
borrow, each man from his friend” (Exod. 11:2).-[from Mechilta]
and garments-These
meant more to them than the silver and the gold, and [thus] whatever is mentioned later in
the verse is more esteemed.-[from Mechilta]
36 and they lent them-Even what they [the Israelites] did not request,
they [the Egyptians] gave them. You say, “[Lend me] one.” [They responded,]
“Take two and go!”-[from Mechilta]
and they emptied out-Heb. וַיְנַצְלוּ . Onkelos renders: וְרוֹקִינוּ , and they emptied out.
37 from Rameses to Succoth-They were 120 “mil” [apart]. Yet they arrived
there instantly, as it is said: “and I carried you on eagles’ wings.”-[from
Mechilta]
the men-from 20 years old and older.-[from Song Rabbah 3:6]
38 a great mixed multitude-A mixture of nations of proselytes.-[from Zohar,
vol. 2, p. 45b]
39 and also, they had not made provisions for
themselves for the trip. [This verse] tells [of]
Israel’s praise, [namely] that
they did not say, “How will we go out into the desert without provisions?”
Instead they believed and left. This is what is what is stated explicitly in
the Prophets: “I remember to you the loving kindness of your youth, the love of
your nuptials, your following Me in the desert, in a land not sown” (Jer. 2:2).
Now what was the [Israelites’] reward? It is explained afterward: “Israel is
holy to the Lord, etc.” (Jer. 2:3).-[from Mechilta]
40 that they dwelled in Egypt-after the other dwellings in which they dwelled as
foreigners in a land that was not theirs.-[from Mechilta]
was four hundred and thirty years-Altogether, from the time that Isaac was born,
until now, were 400 years. From the time that Abraham had seed [i.e., had a child,
the prophecy] “that your seed will be strangers” (Gen. 15:13) was fulfilled;
and there were another 30 years from the decree “between the parts” (Gen 15:10)
until Isaac was born. It is impossible, however, to say that [they spent 400
years] in Egypt alone, because Kehath [the grandfather of Moses] was [one] of
those who came with Jacob. Go and figure all his years, all the years of his
son Amram, and Moses’ 80 years; you will not find them [to be] that many, and
perforce, Kehath lived many of his years before he descended to Egypt, and many
of Amram’s years are included in the years of Kehath, and many of Moses’ years
are included in Amram’s years. Hence, you will not find 400 years counting from
their arrival in Egypt. You are compelled, perforce, to say that the other
dwellings [which the Patriarchs settled] were also called being “sojournings”
and even in Hebron, as it is said: “where Abraham and Isaac sojourned (גָּרוּ) ” (Gen. 35:27), and [Scripture] states also “the land of their
sojournings in which they sojourned” (Exod. 6:4). Therefore, you must say that
[the prophecy] “your seed will be strangers” [commences] when he [Abraham] had
offspring. And only when you count 400 years from the time that Isaac was born,
you will find 210 years from their entry into Egypt. This is one of the things
that [the Sages] changed for King Ptolemy.-[from Mechilta, Meg. 9a]
41 It came to pass at the end of four hundred and
thirty years, and it came to pass in
that very day [This] tells [us] that as soon as the end [of this period]
arrived, the Omnipresent did not keep them [even] as long as the blink of an
eye. On the fifteenth of Nissan, the angels came to Abraham to bring him
tidings. On the
fifteenth of Nissan Isaac was born; on the fifteenth of Nissan the decree of
“between the parts” was decreed.-[from Mechilta]
42 It is a night of anticipation-for which the Holy One, blessed be He, was waiting
and anticipating, [in order] to fulfill His promise to take them out of the
land of Egypt.
this night is the Lord’s-This is the night concerning which He said to
Abraham, “On this night I will redeem your children.”-[from Mechilta]
guarding all the children of Israel throughout
their generations-from that time onward,
it [the Israelites] are guarded from harmful spirits, like the matter that is
stated: “and He will not permit the destroyer, etc.” (above verse 23).-[from
Mechilta]
43 This is the statute of the Passover sacrifice-On the fourteenth of Nissan, this section was told
to them.-[from Exod. Rabbah 19:5]
No estranged one-Whose
deeds have become estranged from his Father in heaven. Both a gentile and an
Israelite apostate are meant.-[from Mechilta]
44 you shall circumcise him; then he will be
permitted to partake of it-[I.e., he means] his
master. [This] tells [us] that the [failure to perform the] circumcision of
one’s slaves prevents one from partaking of the Passover sacrifice. [These are]
the words of Rabbi Joshua. Rabbi Eliezer says: The [failure to perform the]
circumcision of one’s slaves does not prevent one from partaking of the
Passover sacrifice. If so, what is the meaning of “then he will be permitted to
partake of it”? [“He” in this phrase is referring to] the slave.-[from
Mechilta]
45 A sojourner-This
is a resident alien.-[from Mechilta] [I.e., a gentile who has accepted upon
himself not to practice idolatry but eats carcasses.]
or a hired hand-This
is a gentile. Now why is this [verse] stated? Aren’t they uncircumcised? And it
is stated: “but no uncircumcised man may partake of it” (verse 48). But this
refers to a circumcised Arab or a circumcised Gibeonite, who is a sojourner or
a hired hand.-[from Mechilta]
46 It must be eaten in one house-In one group, that those counted upon it may not
become two groups and divide it. You say [that it means] in two groups, or
[perhaps] it means nothing other than in one house as is its apparent meaning,
and to teach that if they started eating in the yard and it rained, that they
may not enter the house. Therefore, Scripture states: “on the houses in which
they will eat it” (above verse 7). From here [we deduce] that the one who eats
[the Passover sacrifice] may eat [it] in two places.-[from Mechilta]
you shall not take any of the meat out of the house-[I.e.,] out of the group.-[from Mechilta]
neither shall you break any of its bones-If it [the bone] is edible, e.g., if there is an
olive-sized amount of meat on it, it bears the prohibition of breaking a bone;
if there is neither an olive-sized amount of meat on it nor marrow [in it], it
does not bear the prohibition against breaking a bone.-[from Pes. 84b]
47 The entire community of Israel shall make it-Why was this stated? Because it says concerning the
Passover sacrifice of Egypt: “a lamb for each parental home” (above verse 3),
we might think that the same applies to the Passover sacrifice of later
generations. Therefore, Scripture states: “The entire community of Israel shall
make it.”-[from Mechilta]
48 he shall make a Passover sacrifice We might think that everyone who converts must make
a Passover sacrifice immediately. Therefore, Scripture states: “and he will be
like the native of the land,” [indicating that] just as the native [makes the
sacrifice] on the fourteenth [of Nissan], so must a proselyte [make it] on the
fourteenth [of Nissan].-[from Mechilta]
but no uncircumcised male may partake of it-This includes one whose brothers died because of
circumcision, [one] who is not considered an apostate in regards to
circumcision, and [his disqualification] is not derived from “No estranged one
may partake of it” (verse 43).-[from Mechilta]
49 There shall be one law-[This verse comes] to liken a proselyte to a
native also regarding other commandments in the Torah.-[from Mechilta]
Rashi’s
Commentary for: B’Midbar
(Num.) 28:16-25
18 You shall refrain from all manner
of mundane work Even essential work, such as the prevention of loss, which
is permitted on the intermediate days of the festival, is forbidden on the
festival itself.-[Torath Kohanim Emor
187, see Rashi on Lev. 23:8]
19 bulls Corresponding to Abraham,
about whom it says, “And to the cattle did Abraham run,” [to feed the three
angels who visited him] (Gen. 18:7).
ram Symbolizing the ram [sacrificed instead] of Isaac
(see Gen. 22:13).
lambs Corresponding to Jacob, of whom it says, “Jacob
separated the lambs” (Gen. 30: 40). I saw this in the commentary of R. Moshe
Hadarshan [the preacher]. -[Mid. Aggadah,
Midrash Tadshey ch. 10]
24 Like these, you shall offer up
daily They should not be decreased progressively, as is the case of the
bulls of the [Sukkoth] festival.-[Sifrei
Pinchas 48]
Ashlamatah:
Joshua 5:2 – 6:1 + 27
Rashi |
Targum |
2. At that time the Lord said to Joshua, Make for yourself sharp knives, and
circumcise again the children of Israel the second time. |
2. At that time the LORD said to Joshua: "Make for yourself sharp
scalpels, and circumcise the sons of Israel again a second time." |
3. And Joshua made for himself
sharp knives, and circumcised the children of Israel at the hill of the
foreskins. |
3. And Joshua made for himself sharp
scalpels and circumcised the sons of Israel at the hill, and he called it the
hill of foreskins. |
4. And this is the reason why
Joshua did circumcise: All the people that came out of Egypt, that were
males, all the men of war, had died in the desert by the way after they came
out of Egypt. |
4. And this is the reason that Joshua
circumcised: All the people who went forth from Egypt, the males, all the men
waging battle died in the wilderness on the
way when they went forth from Egypt. |
5. For all the people that came
out were circumcised, but all the people that were born in the wilderness by
the way as they came forth out of Egypt, they had not circumcised. |
5. For all the people who went forth were circumcised; and all the
people who were born in the wilderness on the
way when they went forth from Egypt, they did not circumcise. |
6. For the children of Israel
walked forty years in the wilderness, until all the people, the men of war,
that came out of Egypt, were consumed, those who did not listen to the voice
of the Lord, to whom the Lord had sworn that He would not show them the land,
which the Lord had sworn to their forefathers that He would give us, a land
that flows with milk and honey. |
6. For forty years the sons of Israel
walked in the wilderness until all the people, the men waging battle who went
forth from Egypt, perished, for they did not accept
the Memra of the LORD for the LORD swore to them that he would not let them
see the land that the LORD swore to their fathers to
give to us, a land producing milk and honey. |
7. And their children, whom he
raised up in their stead, them Joshua circumcised, for they had not
circumcised them by the way. |
7. And their sons who stood in their place, them Joshua circumcised,
because they were uncircumcised, because they
did not circumcise them on the way. |
8. And it was, when all the people
were finished being circumcised, that they remained in their places in the
camp, until they recovered. |
8. And when all the people were finished being circumcised, they remained in their place in the camp until they
were healed. |
9. And the Lord said to Joshua,
This day have I rolled away the reproach of Egypt from you. And he called the
name of the place Gilgal to this day. |
9. And the LORD said to Joshua: "This day I have made pass away
the reproaches' of the Egyptians from
you." And he called the name of that place Gilgal until this day. |
10. And the children of Israel
encamped in Gilgal, and they made the Passover sacrifice on the fourteenth day
of the month at evening in the plains of Jericho. |
10. And the sons of Israel camped in
Gilgal and kept the Passover on the fourteenth day of the month, at evening,
in the plains of Jericho. |
11. And they ate of the grain of
the land on the morrow of the Passover, unleavened cakes and parched grain on
this very day. |
11. And they ate from the produce of
the land after the Passover - the unleavened bread and the parched grain, the
first fruits - this day. |
12. And the manna ceased on the
morrow when they ate of the grain of the land; neither had the children of
Israel manna anymore; and they ate of the produce of the land of Canaan that
year. |
12. And the manna ceased on the day
that was after the one on which they ate from the produce of the land. And
there was no more manna for the sons of Israel.
And they ate from the harvest of the land of Canaan in that year. |
13. And it was when Joshua was in
Jericho, that he lifted up his eyes and saw, and, behold, a man was standing
opposite him with his sword drawn in his hand; and Joshua went to him, and
said to him, Are you for us, or for our adversaries? |
13. And when Joshua was in Jericho, he lifted up his eyes and saw. And behold a man was standing opposite him, and
his sword was drawn in his hand. And Joshua came unto him and said to him: "Are you coming
to our aid or to our enemies?" |
14. And he said, No, but I am the
the captain of the host of the Lord; I have now come. And Joshua fell on his
face to the earth and prostrated himself, and said to him, What does my lord
say to his servant? |
14. And he said: "No, for I, an angel sent from before the LORD
have come now." And Joshua fell upon his
face, upon the earth, and bowed down and said to him: "What is my master
speaking with his servant?" |
15. And the captain of the Lord's
host said to Joshua, Remove your shoe from your foot; for the place upon
which you stand is holy. And Joshua did so. |
15. And the angel who was sent from
before the LORD said to Joshua: "Loosen your shoes from upon your feet,
for the place upon which you are standing is holy." And Joshua did so. |
|
|
1. And Jericho had shut its gates and was barred because of the children of
Israel; none went out and none came in. |
1. And Jericho was closed up and forttfied from before the sons of
Israel; no one of them was going forth and entering. |
27. So the Lord was with Joshua; and his fame was
throughout the entire land. |
27. And the Memra of the LORD was at the aid of Joshua. and his
reputation was great in all the land. |
|
|
Note:
As you read the following Midrash, please
remember that they are composed in the Drash style, and therefore their content
is metaphorical – i.e., a parable that is teaching something about the
government/governance of Heaven. It is up to you to read each paragraph and
discern what the parable is and what it teaches about the kingdom of G-d here
on earth. After that, look at the whole Pisqa and see how the parts join to
form a whole new parable which you need to identify and interpret. Remember we
are at the Parable/metaphorical level, and we should not interpret these
statements literally – it says what it means, otherwise we miss the whole point
that the author/s had in mind as well as their objectives.
Midrash PESIQTA deRAB KAHANA
Pisqa Seven
And it came to pass at
midnight [that the Lord smote all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, from
the firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on his throne to the firstborn of the
handmaiden behind the millstones, and all the firstborn of the cattle. And
Pharaoh rose up in the night, he and all his servants and all the Egyptians,
and there was a great cry in Egypt, for there was not a house where one was not
dead. And he summoned Moses and Aaron by night and said, "Rise up, go
forth from among my people, both you and the people of Israel, and go, serve
the LORD as you have said. Take your flocks and your herds, as you have said,
and be gone; and bless me also!] (Ex. 12:29-32).
VII:I
R. Tanhum of Jaffa in the name
of R. Nunayya of Caesarea opened discourse by citing the following verse: "But
when I thought how to understand this, it seemed to me a wearisome task (Ps,
73:16). Said David, 'No one can reckon the exact moment of midnight except
for the Holy One, blessed be He, but, as for me, But when I thought how
to understand this, it seemed to me a wearisome task. For no creature can
reckon the exact moment except for Him, for it is said: And it came to pass
at midnight {that the LORD smote all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, from
the firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on his throne to the firstborn of the
handmaiden behind the millstones, and all the firstborn of the cattle. And
Pharaoh rose up in the night, he and all his servants and all the Egyptians,
and there was a great cry in Egypt, for there was not a house where one was not
dead. And he summoned Moses and Aaron by night and said, "Rise up, go
forth from among my people, both you and the people of Israel, and go, serve
the Lord as you have said. Take your flocks and your herds, as you have said,
and be gone; and bless me also!]” (Ex. 12:29-32).
VII:II
R. Aha opened discourse by
citing this verse: I am the LORD, the LORD is My name; I will not give My
glory to another god, nor My praise to any idol
(Is. 42:8). I am the LORD, the LORD is my name:
said R. Aha, "Said the Holy One, blessed be He, 'I am the LORD, the
LORD is My name. That
is the name that was given to Me by the first Man. That
is My name, concerning which I made a stipulation with Myself. That is the name
concerning which I stipulated between the angels and Myself.
... I will not give My glory to
another god, nor My praise to any idol (Is. 42:8): R. Menahema
said in the name of R. Abin, "This refers to the shades."
R. Nehemiah in the name of R.
Mina said, "No creature except for the Holy One, blessed be He, can
distinguish between the drop of sperm that produces
a firstborn and one that does not But as
for me, But when I thought how to understand this, it seemed to me a
wearisome task. For no creature can reckon the
exact moment except for Him, for it is said: And it came to pass at midnight
[that the LORD smote all the firstborn in
the land of Egypt."
VII:III
I make My servants' prophecies
come true and give effect to My messengers' designs. I say of Jerusalem,
"She will be inhabited once more," and of
the cities of Judah, "They will be rebuilt, all their ruins I will
restore" (Is. 44:26): R. Berekhiah in the name of R. Levi: "If someone can make
My servants' prophecies come true and give effect to
my messengers' designs, do we not know that He will say of Jerusalem, She
will be inhabited once more, and of the cities of
Judah, They will be rebuilt, all their ruins I will restore? But
the point is this: an angel appeared to Jacob, our father, and said to him,
What is your name? And he said, Jacob. And he
said, Your name will not longer be Jacob, but Israel (Gen. 32:28-29). Then the Holy One, blessed be He, appeared to our father,
Jacob, so as to confirm the decree of that angel: And
God said to him, Your name is Jacob (Gen. 35:9, 10).As to Jerusalem, since
all of the prophets prophesied that Jerusalem would be rebuilt, how much the
more so [will God confirm what his prophets
have said]!"
Another interpretation of the
verse: “I make My servants' prophecies come true and give effect to My
messengers' designs. I say of Jerusalem, "She
will be inhabited once more," and of the cities of Judah, "They will
be rebuilt, all their ruins I will restore.””
(Is. 44:26): I make My
servants' prophecies come true refers to Moses: Not so is My servant
Moses (Num. 12:7). And give effect to My messengers' designs refers
to Moses: He sent an angel and brought us out of Egypt (Num.
20:16). Said the Holy One, blessed be He, to Moses,
Go, say to Israel, I will pass through the land of Egypt on that night (Ex. 12:12). Moses went and told Israel: Thus
said the LORD, At midnight I will go forth through Egypt (Ex. 11:4). [Noting that Moses had specified the exact time,]
said the Holy One, blessed be He, “I have already made a promise
to Moses, saying to him, Not so is My servant, Moses. In My entire household
he is faithful (Num. 12:7). Will My servant,
Moses, tum out to be a bluffer?” But what has Moses said? At midnight I will
go forth through Egypt. So I will do it at
midnight: and it came to pass at midnight [that the LORD smote all the
firstborn in the land of Egypt, from the firstborn
of Pharaoh who sat on his throne to the firstborn of the captive who was in the
dungeon, and all the firstborn of the cattle.}"
VII:IV
At
midnight I rise to give You thanks for the justice of Your decrees. I keep
company with all who fear You, with all who
follow Your precepts. The earth is full of Your never-failing love; O LORD,
teach me Your statutes (Ps. 119:62-64): R.
Phineas in the name of R. Eleazar bar Menahem: "What would David do? He
would take a psaltery and a harp and put them at his pillow and get up at
midnight and play on them. And the Sages of Israel would hear the sound and say, 'Now if King
David is occupied with Torah-study, how much the
more so should we!' It came about that all of Israel would occupy themselves in
the study of Torah."
Said R.
Levi, "There was a window by the bed of David, open to the north, and the
harp was suspended at it, and as the north went
blew at midnight, it would rush through the harp, and the harp would give forth
sound on its own, in line with this verse: When
the instrument played (2 Kgs. 3:5). What it
says is not, 'when David played ... ,' but, When the instrument played. This indicates that the harp would give forth sound on
its own. And the Sages
of Israel would hear the sound and say, 'Now if King David is occupied with
Torah-study, how much the more so should we!' It came about that all of Israel would occupy themselves
in the study of Torah."
[… and it
came to pass at midnight that the LORD smote all the firstborn in the land of
Egypt, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on
his throne to the firstborn of the captive who was in the dungeon, and all the
firstborn of the cattle:] That is in line with
what David said: [My heart is steadfast, O God, my heart is steadfast. I
will sing and raise a psalm;] awake, my glory,
awake, lute and harp, I will awake at dawn of day (Ps. 57:7-8). I will
awake my glory before the glory of my creator, my glory is nothing before the
glory of my creator. I will awake at dawn of day: I will awake the dawn,
and the dawn will not wake me up. But
his impulse to do evil roused him and said to him, "David, ordinarily dawn
wakes up kings, but you say, I will awake at
dawn of day! Kings usually sleep to the third hour, but you say, At
midnight I rise to give you thanks for the
justice of Your decrees.”
What is
the meaning of the justice of Your decrees? [Thanks
are due for] the decree of judgment that You carried out against the wicked
Pharaoh, and the justice that You did with our
elder, Sarah. That is in line with this verse: And the LORD afflicted
Pharaoh with great plagues (Gen. 12: 17).
Another
interpretation of the justice of Your decrees: [David
said,] "[Thanks are due for] the decree of judgment that You carried out
against the nations of the world [Ammon
and Moab], and the justice that You did with our ancestor and our ancestress
[reference here is to Boaz and Ruth]. For if he
[Boaz] had [Braude and Kapstein, p. 143:] slipped into her as she lay at his
feet, whence would I have had my origin? Instead
You set a blessing into his heart, so he said, Blessed are You of the LORD, my
daughter (Ruth 3:10).
Another
interpretation of the justice of Your decrees: [Thanks
are due for] the decree of judgment that You carried out against the Egyptians
in Egypt. And for the righteousness/generosity that You carried out with our
forefathers in Egypt. For they had to
their credit only two religious duties on account of which they should be
redeemed, the blood of the Passover-offering and
the blood of circumcision. That is in line with this verse: And I passed
over you and I saw you wallowing in your bloods, and I said to you, In your bloods, live (Ezek 16:6). In your
bloods: the blood of the Passover-offering and the blood of circumcision.
VII:V
Said R.
Simeon b. Yohai, "Moses did not know how to calculate split seconds, let
alone minutes or hours, of the night. But the
Holy One, blessed be He, knows how to calculate split seconds, let alone
minutes and hours, can stay within the rule even
by a hair's breadth." [Mandelbaum, p. 125, n. to 1. 13:] Therefore it is
written, ... and it came to pass at midnight [that the LORD smote all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, from the
firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on his throne to the firstborn of
the captive who was in the dungeon, and all the firstborn of the cattle.}
Who
divided the night? R. Benjamin bar Japheth in the name of R. Yohanan: "The
night divided itself up on its own." Rabbis
say, "Its creator divided it."
Here you
read: And it came to pass at midnight (Ex. 12:29) and elsewhere: And
He divided the night for them (Gen. 14:15). Said R. Tanhuma, "[God
said,] 'Your father went forth with me at midnight, so I will go forth with his
children at midnight.'” Rabbis say, "Said
the Holy One, blessed be He, 'Your father went forth with me last night to
midnight, so I will go forth with his children
from midnight to the morning.'"
Said R.
Yohanan, "The angelic prince who protects the Egyptians will fall only by
day. What verse of Scripture so indicates? Daylight will fail in Tahpanhes,
when I break the yoke of Egypt there; [then
her boasted might will be subdued; a cloud will cover her, and her daughters
will go into captivity. Thus I will execute
judgment on Egypt, and they will know that I am the LORD] (Ezek.
30:18-19)." And Scripture further states, On
that day there will be five cities in the land of Egypt speaking the language [of Canaan and swearing allegiance to the LORD
of Hosts, and one of them will be called the City of the Sun] (Is. 19:18)." What
are these five cities? R. Hilkiah in the name of R. Simon says, "No,
which is Alexandria, Noph, which is Memphis, Tehaphnehes,
which is Hophnias, the city of the sherds, which is [Braude and
Kapstein, p. 145:] Ostracena, and the city of the sun, which is Heliopolis.
Said
Rabban Yohanan b. Zakkai, "We have found that both night and day are
called day, for it is written, And there was evening, and there was morning,
one day (Gen. 1:5)." R. Joshua bar Nehemiah derived the same proposition
from this verse: "Also the night
will not be too dark for you, and the night will glow like the day, darkness
like light (Ps. 139:12). "[God
says,] 'That is darkness which is light for Me, and night so far as mortals are
concerned. '" That yields the conclusion
that on that very day the firstborn of the Egyptians died. How
did it work out? They were smitten with a death-dealing blow in the evening,
then writhed all night, and in the morning died. What verse of Scripture
indicates it? "We have all died" is not what it says, but rather, We
are all dying, that is to say, breathing our last. That
is in line with this verse: On the day on which I smote every firstborn
(Num. 3:13), and, further, On the day on which I sanctified to me every
firstborn (Num. 8:17). On this basis you must conclude that on the day on
which the firstborn of the Egyptians died, I sanctified to Me every firstborn
[of Israel].
VII:VI
... the
Lord smote all the firstborn in the land of Egypt (Ex.
12:29): When the verse refers to a firstborn, it
adds, all the firstborn, encompassing the firstborn of a man and the
firstborn of a woman, the firstborn of a male and the firstborn
of a female. How so? If a man had sexual
relations with ten women and then they produced ten sons, it would tum out that
all of them were firstborn of women. If ten men had sexual relations with one
woman and she produced ten sons, all of them would turn out to be the firstborn
of males. But take note of a case in which there was a household in which was
no firstborn either for a male or for a female? How then can I apply to that
house the verse: for there was not a
house where one was not dead? Said R. Abba bar Aha, ''Then the
one in charge of the household would die. That is in line with this verse: Shimri
the one in charge, for though he was not firstborn, nonetheless
his father put him in charge (1 Chr. 26:10)."
It was
taught on Tannaite authority in the name of R. Nathan, "On the day on
which a firstborn of one of them died, he would make an icon of him in the
house. On that day [on which the firstborn was
killed,] it too was smashed up, shattered, and scattered. It
was as hard for the parent as if on that very day he had buried the firstborn
himself. Said R. Yudan, "Since the Egyptians would bury their dead in
their houses, the dogs would come in through the burial niches [better: sewer
pipes] and pull out the bones of the firstborn
among the dead and play with them. It
was as hard for the parent as if on that very day he had buried the firstborn
himself."
VII:VII
.. from
the firstborn of Pharaoh [who sat on his throne even to the firstborn of the
maidservant who is behind the mill, and all the firstborn of the cattle] (Ex.
12:29): On the basis of that statement [read as from
the firstborn, Pharaoh] it follows that Pharaoh himself was a firstborn.
All of
the firstborn came to their fathers, saying to them, “Since Moses has said, And
every firstborn will die (Ex. 11:5), all the things that he has said
against this people have come upon them. But now
go and let these Hebrews go from among you, and if you do not do so, lo, this
people is going to die." They said,
"Each one of us has ten sons. Let one of them die, and let what these
Hebrews say not come to pass." They said, "The sole remedy for the
matter is [or us to go to Pharaoh, for he is a firstborn. He may have mercy on
his own life and let these Hebrews go away from
among us." They went to Pharaoh, saying to
him, "Since Moses has said, And every firstborn will die (Ex.
11:5), all the things that he has said against this people have come upon them. But now go and let these Hebrews go
from among you, and if you do not do so, lo, this people is going to die."
He
said, "Go and beat the humps of these people. I have said, 'It is my life
or the lives of these Hebrews!' And you say this!" The firstborn went and
killed sixty myriads of their fathers. That is in line with this verse: To
the one who smote Egypt through their firstborn (Ps. 136: 1 0). What is written is not, "To the one who smote the
Egyptians in Egypt," but, To the one who smote the Egyptians through
their firstborn. [for] the firstborn killed
their fathers, in the number of sixty myriads.
R. Abun
in the name of R. Judah b. Pazzi said, "Batyah, the daughter of Pharaoh,
was a firstborn. On account of what merit was she saved? It was through the prayer of Moses. For
it is written: She perceives that her merchandise is profitable. Her lamp
does not go out at night (Prov. 31: 18). The
reference to night calls to mind the verse: It is a watch night for the LORD
(Ex. 12:42)."
VII:VIII
[..from
the firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on his throne] even to the firstborn of the
maidservant who is behind the mill, [and all the firstborn of the cattle] (Ex. 11:5): R. Huna
and R. Aha in the name of R. Eleazar son of R. Yose the Galileans, "Even
the handmaiden who were latched to the millstones would say, 'We take pleasure in our subjugation, so long as the Israelites
also are subjugated." Said R. Judah b. Pazzi, "There is a traditional
narrative that this was with reference to Seah, daughter of Asher, for when she
came down to Egypt, they had latched her to the
millstones."
VII:IX
... and
all the firstborn of the cattle: If man had sinned,
what sin had beasts done? It was because the Egyptians bow down to the ram. It was so that the Egyptian would not have occasion to
say, "Our god [the ram] has brought this punishment on us. Our god is
strong, for it has stood up for itself. Our god
is strong, because the punishment did not touch it."
VII:X
R. Huna
and R. Joshua bar Abin, son-in-law of R. Levi, in the name of R. Levi:
"The Merciful God does not touch lives first of all [but exacts vengeance
on property]. From whom do you learn that fact?
From Job: A messenger came to Job and said, The oxen were plowing and the
asses feeding beside them (Job 1:14). What is the meaning of, and the
asses feeding beside them? Said R. Hama,
"A model of the order of the world to come was made for him, in line with
this verse: Behold, the days are coming, says the LORD, when the one who ploughs will overtake the one who reaps
(Amos 9:13). [Mendelbaum: That is, corn will ripen within moments after the
seed is planted, so that browing animals will
follow in the tracks of the plowing animals.]"
Said R.
Abba bar Kahana, "[With reference to the verse, The Sabeans made a raid
and took the oxen and the asses away, yes, they smote the servants with the edge of the sword (Job 1: 15),] they went out
of Kefar Kerinos and went through the whole of Ublin, and when they came to
Migdal Sebayya, they died." Said R. Hama, “[In the verse, And I alone have
escaped (Job 1: 15),] the word alone bears the sense of solely,
that is, he alone escaped [only with his life], but
was himself broken and beaten." Said R. Yudan, "And I alone have
escaped to tell you (Job 1:15) means that 'the sole purpose for which I
escaped was to tell you,' at which point he died. That
is in line with this verse: While he was still speaking, there came another
and said, The fire of God fell from heaven and burned up the sheep and the servants and consumed them; and I alone have
escaped to tell you. While he was speaking there came another and said,
The Chaldaeans formed three companies and made a
raid upon the camels and took them and slew the servants with the edge of the
sword and I alone have escaped to tell you. (Job 1:14-17).When
Job heard this news, he forthwith began to collect a troop to make war against
them [but then he changed his mind, as will now be explained]. That is in line with this verse: Because I stood in
great fear of the multitude, and the contempt of families terrified me, so that
I kept silence and did not go out of doors
(Job 31:34)."
Said Job
[in gathering his troops], "This nation is the most contemptible of all
nations: Behold the land of the Chaldaeans - the people that was a
no-people (Is. 23:13). Would that it
had never come into existence. Does that people think that it can frighten me?”
But when people told him, "The fire of God fell from heaven, he
said, "If it is from Heaven, what can I do." Forthwith:
... so that I kept silence and did not go out of doors. And then: And he took a potsherd with which to
scrape himself and sat among the ashes (Job 2:8).
[The same
proposition derives from the case] also of Mahlon and Chilion. First their
horses, camels, and asses died, and then he died, as
it is said: And Elimelech, Naomi's husband, died (Ruth 1:3), then the
two sons: Mahlon and Chilion died, both of them (Ruth 1:5). [Delete: And
then she died.]
So too is
the rule applying to skin-ailments which affect man. First
of all, it begins on his house, and, if the man repents, the affected stone has
only to be removed: They will dismantle the stones (Lev. 14:40). If the man does not repent, then the whole house has to be
dismantled: And he will dismantle the house (Lev.
14:45). And then it affects his clothing. If he
repents, the clothing has to be ripped: And he will tear the affected patch
out of the garment or the hide or from the warp or from the woof (Lev. 13:56). If he does not repent, then the
clothing has to be burned: And he will burn the clothing (Lev. 13:52).
Then it affects his body. If he repents, it goes away,
and he departs, and if not, it comes back on him: And he will sit solitary,
his dwelling will be outside of the camp (Lev. 13:46) [Tosefta. Neg. 6:4]
.
So too is
the rule as to the events in Egypt: First the measure of justice affected their
property: He smote their vines and their fig trees (Ps. 105:33). Then: He gave over their cattle to the
hail and their flocks to fiery bolts of lightning (Ps, 78:48). Then at the end: He smote all the firstborn of
Egypt (Ps, 78:51).
VII:XI
R. Levi
bar Zechariah in the name of R. Berekhiah: "It was with the arts of royal
siege-warfare that God came against them. First of all, [a besieging army]
shuts up their water supply, then he brings against them thunders of war, then
he shoots arrows, then he brings troops, then he
storms them, then he pours burning oil, then he throws great stones against
them, then he brings against them scaling troops, then he captures them, then he takes out their greatest figure and
kills him. [So too is the order of God's siege
of Egypt:] first he shut up their water supply: He turned their rivers into
blood (Ps, 78:44). Then he brought against
them thunders of war: This refers to the frogs.” (Said R. Yose bar Hanina,
"The croaking was worse for them than the frogs themselves."
"Then he shot arrows: This refers to the lice. Then he brought troops:
This refers to the swarms of wild beasts. Then he starved them out: A very
heavy murrain (Ex. 9:3). Then he poured
burning oil: This refers to the boils. Then he threw great stones against them:
This refers to the hail. Then he brought against them scaling troops: This
refers to the locusts. Then he captured them: this refers to the darkness. Then
he took out their greatest figure and killed him: This refers to the killing of
the firstborn."
R. Levi,
son-in-law of R. Zechariah, in the name of R. Berekhiah said, "As at the
news concerning Egypt, so they shall be startled at the fall of the adversary
(Is. 23:5)." Said R. Eliezer, "Whenever the name of Tyre is
written in Scripture, if it is written out [with all of the letters], then it
refers to the province of Tyre. Where it is
written without all of its letters (and so appears identical to the word for
enemy). the reference of Scripture is to Rome. [So the sense of the verse is that Rome will receive its appropriate reward.]"
[Resuming
the discussion begun at VII:XI with the information just now given:] R. Levi in
the name of R. Hama bar Hanina: "He who exacted vengeance from the former [oppressor] will exact vengeance from the
latter. Just as, in Egypt, it was with blood, so with Edom it will be the same:
I will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth, blood, and fire, and
pillars of smoke (Job 3:3). Just as, in Egypt, it was with frogs, so with Edom it
will be the same: The sound of an uproar from
the city, an uproar because of the palace, an uproar of the Lord who renders
recompense to his enemies (Is. 66:6). Just
as, in Egypt, it was with lice, so with Edom it will be the same: The streams of Bosrah will be turned into pitch, and
the dust thereof into brimstone, and the land thereof shall become burning
pitch (Is. 34:9). Smite the dust of the earth
that it may become lice (Ex. 8:12). Just
as, in Egypt, it was with swarms of wild beasts, so with Edom it will be the
same: The pelican and the bittern will possess it (Is. 34:11). Just as,
in Egypt, it was with pestilence, so with Edom it will be the same: I will
plead against Gog with pestilence and with blood (Ez. 38:22). Just as, in Egypt, it was with boils, so with Edom it
will be the same: This will be the plague
wherewith the Lord will smite all the peoples that have warred against
Jerusalem: their flesh will consume away while they stand upon their feet (Zech. 14:12). Just
as, in Egypt, it was with great stones, so with Edom it will be the same: I
will cause to rain upon Gog ... an overflowing shower and great hailstones (Ez. 38:22). Just
as, in Egypt, it was with locusts, so with Edorn it will be the same: And you, son of man, thus says the LORD God: Speak
to birds of every sort ... the flesh of the mighty will you eat ... blood will
you drink ... you will eat fat until you are
full and drink blood until you are drunk (Ez. 39:17-19). Just
as, in Egypt, it was with darkness, so with Edom it will be the same: He
will stretch over Edom the line of chaos and the plummet of emptiness (Is. 34:11). Just as,
in Egypt, he took out their greatest figure and killed him, so with Edom it
will be the same: A great slaughter in the land of Edom, among them to come down will be the wild oxen (Is. 34:6-7). Said R. Meir, "[The letters of the word for wild
(reemim) may be read as Rome, thus,] 'Among them to come down
shall be Rome."
VII:XII
For
behold darkness will cover the earth, and thick darkness the peoples; but the
LORD will arise upon you, and His glory will be seen upon you. [And nations will come to your light, and kings to the brightness
of your rising] (Is. 60:2-3):
R. Levi
bar Zechariah in the name of R. Berekhiah: "Darkness and thick darkness
affected Egypt for three days. What verse of Scripture indicates it? And there was darkness, thick darkness (Ex. 10:22). But emptiness and void have never yet affected this
world. But where [and when] will they come to
pass? They will envelope the great city of Rome: He will stretch over it the
line of chaos and the plummet of emptiness (Is. 34:11)." Rabbis say, "As to the nations of the world, who
never accepted the Torah which was given in darkness, concerning them Scripture
says, For behold darkness will cover the
earth, and thick darkness the peoples .... But as to Israel, which accepted
it in darkness, concerning them Scripture says, ... but the LORD will arise
upon you, and His glory will be seen upon you."
Nazarean
Codicil:
I
Corinthians 1:1 – 2:16
&
Revelation 2:1-7
Revelation 2:1-7
Hakham’s Rendition
1And to the angel of the congregation in
Ephesus, write, 'So says he who holds the seven stars in his hand, he who walks
among the Menorot (seven branched candlesticks) of gold.
2 I know your works and your labor and
your endurance and that you are not able to bear evil [ones]. And you have
tested those who say about themselves that they are to be Sh’liachim (apostles)
and are not and you have found them [to be] liars.
3 And you have endurance and you bear a burden because of my name (or,
authority) and you have not become weary.
4 But I have
[something] against you, because you have left your first love.[1]
5 Remember from where you came and do the former works, but if not, I
will come to you and I will remove your Menora (candelabra – i.e. the seven
ministers of the congregation), unless you repent.
6 But this you have, that you hate the works of the Nicolaitans (i.e.
Oppressors of the Laity), that I also hate.'
7 He who has ears should hear what the Spirit says to the congregations.
And to him who overcomes, I will allow [him] to eat of the tree of life which
is in the midst of PaRDeS (paradise) of Ha-Shem."
Blessing After Torah Study
Barúch Atáh Adonai, Elohénu Meléch HaOlám,
Ashér Natán Lánu Torát Emét, V'Chayéi Olám Natá B'Tochénu.
Barúch Atáh Adonái, Notén HaToráh. Amen!
Blessed is Ha-Shem our God, King of the universe,
Who has given us a teaching of truth, implanting within us
eternal life.
Blessed is Ha-Shem, Giver of the Torah. Amen!
“Now unto Him who is able to preserve you faultless, and
spotless, and to establish you without a blemish,
before His majesty, with joy, [namely,] the only one God,
our Deliverer, by means of Yeshua the Messiah our Master, be praise, and
dominion, and honor, and majesty, both now and in all ages. Amen!”
“Second Day of Pesach”
(Tuesday Evening March 26, 2013)
Public Passover
Evening: Counting of the Omer Day 1
Then read the following:
Day of the
Omer |
Ministry |
Date |
Ephesians |
Attributes |
1 |
Masoret |
Nisan 16 |
1:1 |
G’dolah / Chessed, (Greatness/Mercy) – Royal Blue Virtue: Ahavah
(love) Ministry: Masoret [Catechist/Embody Mesorah] |
Eph. 1:1 Hakham
Shaul (Paul), a Sh’liach (apostle/emissary) of Yeshua HaMashiach by the will of God,
to the Tsadiqim (Greek: a-gios) who are at Ephesus and who are faithfully
obedient[2]
in Yeshua HaMashiach:
(Wednesday Morning March 27, 2013)
Morning Service
Torah
Reading: Vayikra (Leviticus) 22:26-23:44
Reader
1: Vayikra 22:26 – 23:3
Reader
2: Vayikra 23:4-14
Reader
3: Vayikra 23:15-22
Reader
4: Vayikra 23:23-32
Reader
5: Vayikra 22:33-44
Maftir:
B’Midbar (Number)s 28:16-25
Ashlamatah:
II Kings 23:1-9; 21-25
Nazarean
Codicil: 1 Corinthians 3:1 – 5:13 & Revelation 2:1-7[3]
Blessing Before Torah Study
Blessed are You, Ha-Shem our G-d, King of the universe, Who
has sanctified us through Your commandments, and commanded us to actively study
Torah. Amen!
Please Ha-Shem, our G-d, sweeten the words of Your Torah in
our mouths and in the mouths of all Your people Israel. May we and our
offspring, and our offspring's offspring, and all the offspring of Your people,
the House of Israel, may we all, together, know Your Name and study Your Torah
for the sake of fulfilling Your desire. Blessed are You, Ha-Shem, Who teaches
Torah to His people Israel. Amen!
Blessed are You, Ha-Shem our G-d, King of the universe, Who
chose us from all the nations, and gave us the Torah. Blessed are You, Ha-Shem,
Giver of the Torah. Amen!
Ha-Shem spoke to Moses, explaining a Commandment.
"Speak to Aaron and his sons, and teach them the following Commandment:
This is how you should bless the Children of Israel. Say to the Children of Israel:
May Ha-Shem bless you and keep watch over you; - Amen!
May Ha-Shem make His Presence enlighten you, and may He be
kind to you; - Amen!
May Ha-Shem bestow favor on you, and grant you peace. –
Amen!
This way, the priests will link My Name with the Israelites,
and I will bless them."
These are the Laws for which the Torah did not mandate
specific amounts: How much growing produce must be left in the corner of the
field for the poor; how much of the first fruits must be offered at the Holy
Temple; how much one must bring as an offering when one visits the Holy Temple
three times a year; how much one must do when doing acts of kindness; and there
is no maximum amount of Torah that a person must study.
These are the Laws whose benefits a person can often enjoy
even in this world, even though the primary reward is in the Next World: They
are: Honoring one's father and mother; doing acts of kindness; early attendance
at the place of Torah study -- morning and night; showing hospitality to
guests; visiting the sick; providing for the financial needs of a bride;
escorting the dead; being very engrossed in prayer; bringing peace between two
people, and between husband and wife; but the study of Torah is as great as all
of them together. Amen!
Rashi
& Targum Pseudo Jonathan
for: Vayikra
(Leviticus) 22:26-23:44
Rashi |
Targum
Pseudo Jonathan |
26. And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying: |
26. And the LORD spoke with Mosheh, saying |
27. When an ox or a sheep or a goat is born, it shall remain under its
mother for seven days, and from the eighth day onwards, it shall be accepted
as a sacrifice for a fire offering to the Lord. |
27. (to the effect that): What time you call to our mind the order of
our oblations, as they will be offered year by year, being our expiatory
offering for our sins, when on account of our sins (such sacrifices are
required), and we have none to bring from our flocks of sheep, then will a
bullock be chosen before him, in memorial of the righteousness/generosity of
the elder who came from the cast, the sincere one who brought the calf, fat
and tender, to Your Name. A sheep is to be chosen, secondly, in memory of the
righteousness/generosity of him who was bound as a lamb on the altar, and who
stretched forth his neck for Your Name's sake, while the heavens stooped down
and condescended, and Yitshaq beheld their foundations, and his eyes were
blinded by the high things; on which account he was reckoned to be worthy
that a lamb should be provided for him as a burnt offering. A kid of the
goats is to be chosen likewise, in memorial of the righteousness/ generosity
of that perfect one who made the savory meat of the kid, and brought it to
his father, and was made worthy to receive the order of the blessing: wherefore
Mosheh the prophet explains, saying: Sons of Israel, my people, When a
bullock, or a lamb, or a kid is brought forth according, to the manner of the
world, it will be seven days after its dam, that there may be evidence that
it is not imperfect; and on the eighth day and thenceforth, it is acceptable
to be offered an oblation to the Name of the LORD. |
28. An ox or sheep you shall not slaughter it and its offspring in one
day._ |
28. Sons of Israel, my people, as our Father in heaven is merciful, so
shall you be merciful on earth: neither cow, nor ewe, shall you sacrifice
along with her young on the same day. |
29. And when you slaughter a thanksgiving offering to the Lord, you shall slaughter it so that it should be acceptable
for you. |
29. And when you offer a sacrifice of thanksgiving to the Name of the
LORD, you will offer so as to be accepted. |
30. It shall be eaten on that day; do not leave it over until morning.
I am the Lord. |
30. It will be eaten on that day, none will remain till the morning: I
am the LORD. |
31. You shall keep My commandments and perform them. I am the Lord. |
31. And you will observe My commandments to do them I am the LORD who
gives a good reward, to them who keep My commandments and My Laws. |
32. You shall not desecrate My Holy Name. I shall be sanctified amidst
the children of Israel. I am the Lord Who sanctifies you, |
32. Nor will you profane My Holy Name, that I may be hallowed among
the children of Israel. I am the LORD who sanctifies you, |
33. Who took you out of the land of Egypt, to be a God to you. I am
the Lord. |
33. having brought you forth redeemed from the land of Mizraim, that I
may be to you Elohim: I am the LORD. |
|
|
1. And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, |
1. And the LORD spoke with Mosheh, saying: |
2. Speak to the children of Israel and say to them: The Lord's appointed [holy days] that you
shall designate as holy occasions. These are My appointed [holy
days]: |
2. Speak with the sons of Israel, and say to them, The orders of the time of the Festivals of the LORD,
which you will proclaim as holy convocations, these are the orders of the time of My festivals. |
3. [For] six days, work may be performed, but on the seventh day, it
is a complete rest day, a holy occasion; you shall not perform any work. It
is a Sabbath to the Lord in all your dwelling places. |
3. Six days will you do work, and the seventh day (will be) a Sabbath
and a rest, a holy convocation. No manner of work may you do; it is a Sabbath
to the LORD in every place of your habitations. |
4. These are the Lord's appointed [holy days], holy occasions, which
you shall designate in their appointed time: |
4. These are the times of the Festivals of the LORD, holy convocations
which you will proclaim in their times: |
5. In the first month, on the fourteenth of the month, in the
afternoon, [you shall sacrifice] the Passover offering to the Lord. |
5. In the month of Nisan, on the fourteenth day of the month, between
the suns (will be) the time for the sacrifice of the Pesach to the Name of
the LORD. |
6. And on the fifteenth day of that month is the Festival of
Unleavened Cakes to the Lord; you shall eat unleavened cakes for a seven day
period. |
6. And on the fifteenth day of this month the feast of unleavened
bread to the Name of the LORD. Seven days you will eat unleavened bread. |
7. On the first day, there shall be a holy occasion for you; you shall
not perform any work of labor. |
7. On the first day of the feast a holy convocation will be to you;
you will do no work of labor, |
8. And you shall bring a fire offering to the Lord for a seven day
period. On the seventh day, there shall be a holy occasion; you shall not
perform any work of labor. |
8. but offer the oblation to the Name of the LORD seven days; in the
seventh day of the feast will be a holy convocation; you will do no work of
labor. |
9. And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, |
9. And the LORD spoke with Mosheh, saying: |
10. Speak to the children of Israel and say to them: When you come to
the Land which I am giving you, and you reap its harvest, you shall bring to
the kohen an omer of the beginning of your reaping. |
10. Speak with the sons of Israel, and say to them: When you have
entered into the land which I give you, and you reap the harvest, you will
bring the sheaf of the first fruits of your harvest unto the priest; |
11. And he shall wave the omer before the Lord so that it will be
acceptable for you; the kohen shall wave it on the day after the rest day. |
11. and he will uplift the sheaf before the LORD to be accepted for
you. After the first festal day of Pesach (or, the day after the feast-day of
Pesach) |
12. And on the day of your waving the omer, you shall offer up an
unblemished lamb in its [first] year as a burnt offering to the Lord; |
12. on the day on which you elevate the sheaf, you will make (the
sacrifice of a lamb of the year, unblemished a burnt offering unto the Name
of the LORD: |
13. Its meal offering [shall be] two tenths [of an ephah] of fine
flour mixed with oil, a fire offering to the Lord as a spirit of
satisfaction. And its libation [shall be] a quarter of a hin of wine. |
13. and its mincha, two tenths of flour, mingled with olive oil, for
an oblation to the Name of the LORD, to be received with acceptance; and its
libation, wine of grapes, the fourth of a hin. |
14. You shall not eat bread or [flour made from] parched grain or
fresh grain, until this very day, until you bring your God's sacrifice. [This
is] an eternal statute throughout your generations in all your dwelling
places. |
14. But neither bread nor parched corn (of the ripe harvest) nor new
ears may you eat until this day, until the time of your bringing the oblation
of your God: an everlasting statute unto your generations in all your
dwellings. |
15. And you shall count for yourselves, from the morrow of the rest
day from the day you bring the omer as a wave offering seven weeks; they
shall be complete. |
15. And number to you after the first feast day of Pesach, from the
day when you brought the sheaf for the elevation, seven weeks; complete they
will be. |
16. You shall count until the day after the seventh week, [namely,]
the fiftieth day, [on which] you shall bring a new meal offering to the Lord. |
16. Until the day after the seventh week you will number fifty days,
and will offer a mincha of the new bread unto the Name of the LORD. |
17. From your dwelling places, you shall bring bread, set aside, two
[loaves] [made from] two tenths [of an ephah]; they shall be of fine flour,
[and] they shall be baked leavened, the first offering to the Lord. |
17. From the place of your dwellings you are to bring the bread for
the elevation; two cakes of two-tenths of flour, which must be baked with
leaven, as first fruits unto the Name of the LORD. |
18. And associated with the bread, you shall bring seven unblemished
lambs in their [first] year, one young bull, and two rams these shall be a
burn offering to the Lord, [along with] their meal offering and libations a
fire offering [with] a spirit of satisfaction to the Lord. |
18. And with that bread you are to offer seven lambs of the year,
unblemished, and a young bullock without mixture (of color), the one for a
sin offering, and two lambs of the year for a sanctified oblation. |
19. And you shall offer up one he goat as a sin offering, and two
lambs in their [first] year as a peace offering._ |
19. And you will make (a sacrifice) of a young goat without mixture,
the one for a sin offering and two lambs of the year for a sanctified
oblation. |
20. And the kohen shall wave them in conjunction with the first
offering bread as a waving before the Lord, along with the two lambs. They
shall be holy to the Lord, [and] belong to the kohen. |
20. And the priest will uplift them with the bread of the first fruits,
an elevation before the LORD, with the two lambs; they will be holy to the
Name of the LORD, and will be for the priest. |
21. And you shall designate on this very day a holy occasion it shall
be for you; you shall not perform any work of labor. [This
is] an eternal statute in all your dwelling places throughout your
generations. |
21. And you will proclaim with life and strength that self-same day,
that at the time of that day there will be to you a holy convocation: you will do no work of labor: it is an everlasting
statute in all your dwelling for your generations. |
22. When you reap the harvest of your Land, you shall not completely
remove the corner of your field during your harvesting, and you shall not
gather up the gleanings of your harvest. [Rather,] you shall leave these for
the poor person and for the stranger. I am the Lord, your God. |
22. And when you reap the harvest of the ground, you will not finish
one corner that is in thy field at your reaping nor will you gather the
gleanings of your harvest, but leave them for the poor and the strangers: I
am the LORD your God. |
23. And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, |
23. And the LORD spoke with Mosheh, saying: |
24. Speak to the children of Israel, saying: In the seventh month, on
the first of the month, it shall be a Sabbath for you, a remembrance of
[Israel through] the shofar blast a holy occasion. |
24. Speak with the children of Israel, saying: In Tishri, which is the
seven month, will be to you a festival of seven days, a memorial of trumpets,
a holy convocation. |
25. You shall not perform any work of labor, and you shall offer up a
fire offering to the Lord. |
25. No work of labor may you do, but offer an oblation before the LORD
unto the Name of the LORD. |
26. And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying: |
26. And the LORD spoke with Mosheh saying: |
27. But on the tenth of this seventh month, it is a day of atonement,
it shall be a holy occasion for you; you shall afflict yourselves, and you
shall offer up a fire offering to the Lord. |
27. But on the tenth day of this seventh month is the Day of Atonement;
a holy convocation will it be to you, and you will humble your souls,
(abstaining) from food, and from drink, and from the use of the bath, and
from anointing, and the use of the bed, and from sandals; and you will offer
an oblation before the LORD, |
28. You shall not perform any work on that very day, for it is a day
of atonement, for you to gain atonement before the Lord, your God. |
28. and do no work on this same day; for it is the Day of Atonement,
to make atonement for you before the LORD your God. |
29. For any person who will not be afflicted on that very day, shall
be cut off from its people. |
29. For every man who eats in the fast, and will not fast that same
day, will be cut off by death from among his people. |
30. And any person who performs any work on that very day I will
destroy that person from amidst its people. |
30. And every man who does any work on that same day, that man will I
destroy with death from among his people. |
31. You shall not perform any work. [This is] an
eternal statute throughout your generations in all your dwelling
places. |
31. No work of labor may you do ____ an everlasting
statute for your generations, in all your dwellings. |
32. It is a complete day of rest for you, and you shall afflict
yourselves. On the ninth of the month in the evening, from evening to
evening, you shall observe your rest day. |
32. It is a Sabbath and time of leisure for you to humble your souls.
And you will begin to fast at the ninth day of the month at even time; from
that evening, until the next evening, will you fast your fast, and repose in
your quietude, that you may employ the time of your festivals with joy. |
33. And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, |
33. And the LORD spoke with Mosheh, saying: |
34. Speak to the children of Israel, saying: On the fifteenth day of
this seventh month, is the Festival of Succoth, a seven day period to the
Lord. |
34. Speak with the sons of Israel: In the fifteenth day of this
seventh month will be the Feast of Tabernacles, seven days unto the Name of
the LORD. |
35. On the first day, it is a holy occasion; you shall not
perform any work of labor. |
35. On the first day of the feast is a holy convocation; no work of labor may you do. |
36. [For] a seven day period, you shall bring a fire offering to the
Lord. On the eighth day, it shall be a holy occasion for you, and you shall
bring a fire offering to the Lord. It is a [day of] detention. You shall not perform any work of labor. |
36. Seven days you will offer an oblation to the Name of the LORD, you
will gather together to pray before the LORD for rain; no work of
labor may you do. |
37. These are God's appointed [holy days] that you shall designate
them as holy occasions, [on which] to offer up a fire offering to the Lord
burnt offering and meal offering, sacrifice and libations, the requirement of
each day on its day; |
37. These are the times of the order of the LORD's festivals which you
are to convoke for holy convocations, to offer an oblation to the name of the
LORD, a burnt sacrifice and a mincha, sanctified offerings and libations, the
rite of a day in its day; |
38. apart from the Lord's Sabbaths, and apart from your gifts, and
apart from all your vows, and apart from all your donations that you give to
the Lord. |
38. beside the days of the LORD's Sabbaths, beside your gifts, and
beside your vows, and beside your free-will offering which you bring before the
LORD. |
39. But on the fifteenth day of the seventh month, when you gather in
the produce of the land, you shall celebrate the festival of the Lord for a
seven day period; the first day shall be a rest day, and the eighth day shall
be a rest day |
39. But on the fifteenth of the seventh month, at the time when you
collect the produce of the ground, you will solemnize a festival of the LORD
seven days. On the first day, rest; and on the eighth day, rest. |
40. And you shall take for yourselves on the first day, the fruit of
the hadar tree, date palm fronds, a branch of a braided tree, and willows of
the brook, and you shall rejoice before the Lord your God for a seven day
period. |
40. And of your own will you take on the first day of the feast, the
fruits of praiseworthy trees, citrons, and lulabin, and myrtles, and willows
that grow by the brooks; and you will rejoice before the LORD your God seven
days. |
41. And you shall celebrate it as a festival to the Lord for seven
days in the year. [It is] an eternal statute
throughout your generations [that] you celebrate it in the seventh
month. |
41. And you will solemnize it before the LORD seven days in the year, by an everlasting statute in your generations
will you observe it in the seventh month. |
42. For a seven day period you shall live in booths. Every resident
among the Israelites shall live in booths, |
42. In tabernacles of two sides according to their rule, and the third
a handbreadth (higher), that its shaded part may be greater than that into
which comes the sunshine; to be made for a bower (or shade) for the feast,
from different kinds (of materials) which spring from the earth and are
uprooted: in measure seven palms, but the height within ten palms. In it you
will sit seven days; the males in Israel, and children who need not their
mothers, will sit in the tabernacles, blessing their Creator whenever they
enter thereunto. |
43. in order that your [ensuing] generations should know that I had
the children of Israel live in booths when I took them out of the land of
Egypt. I am the Lord, your God. |
43. That your generations may know how, under the shadow of the cloud
of glory, I made the sons of Israel to dwell at the time that I brought them
out redeemed from the land of Mizraim. |
44. And Moses told the children of Israel [these laws] of the Lord's appointed [holy days]. |
44. And Mosheh declared the time of the orders of
the LORD's festivals, and taught them to the sons of Israel. |
|
|
Rashi
& Targum Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar
(Num.) 28:16-25
Rashi |
Targum
Pseudo Jonathan |
16. In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month, [you shall offer
up] a Passover offering to the Lord. |
16. And in the month of Nisan, on the fourteenth day of the month, is
the sacrifice of the Pascha before the LORD. |
17. On the fifteenth day of this
month, a festival [begins]; you shall eat unleavened bread for seven days. |
17. On the fifteenth day of this month is a festival; seven days will
unleavened be eaten. |
18. On the first day is a holy
convocation; you shall not perform any mundane work. |
18. On the first day of the festival a holy convocation; no servile
work will you do; |
19. You shall offer up a fire
offering, a burnt offering to the Lord: two young bulls, one ram, and seven
lambs in the first year they shall be unblemished for you. |
19. but offer an oblation of a burnt sacrifice before the LORD, two
young bullocks, one ram, and seven lambs of the year, unblemished, will you
have. |
20. Their meal offerings [shall be]
fine flour mixed with oil; three tenths for each bull and two tenths for the
ram you shall offer up. |
20. And their minchas of wheat flour, mingled with olive oil, three
tenths for each bullock, two tenths for the ram, |
21. And you shall offer up one
tenth for each lamb, for all seven lambs. |
21. and for a single lamb a tenth, so for the seven; |
22. And one young male goat for a
sin offering to atone for you. |
22. and one kid of the goats, to make an atonement for you: |
23. You shall offer these up
besides the morning burnt offering which is offered as a continual burnt
offering. |
23. beside the burnt sacrifice of the morning, the perpetual burnt
sacrifice, you will make these offerings. |
24. Like these, you shall offer up
daily for seven days, food of the fire offering, a spirit of satisfaction to
the Lord; you shall offer up this in addition to the continual burnt offering
and its libation. |
24. According to these oblations of the first day you will do daily
through the seven days of the festival. It is the bread of the oblation which
is received with favor before the LORD; it will be made beside the perpetual
burnt offering, with its libation. |
25. The seventh day shall be a holy
convocation for you; you shall not perform any mundane work. |
25. And on the seventh day you shall have a holy convocation; no
servile work shall you do. |
|
|
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’s
Commentary for: Vayikra
(Leviticus) 22:26-23:44
27 When [an ox or
a sheep or a goat] is born [The expression “is born” comes] to exclude
[from sacrifice an animal] delivered by Caesarean section. -[Chul. 38b]
28 it and its
offspring [This prohibition] applies to the female [i.e., the mother]
animal, namely, that it is prohibited to slaughter a mother animal and its male
or female offspring [on the same day]. The prohibition does not apply, however,
to males [i.e., to the father animals], and it is permissible to slaughter the
father animal along with its male or female offspring [on the same day].-[Chul. 78b]
[you shall not slaughter] it and its offspring Also
included [in this prohibition is slaughtering] its offspring and [then] it.-[Chul. 82a]
29 you shall
slaughter it so that it should be acceptable for you From the very
beginning of your slaughtering, take care that it should be “acceptable for
you.” And what makes it acceptable?"
It shall be eaten on that day [Now,
although it has already been stated that thanksgiving-offerings must be eaten
on the day of sacrificing (Lev. 7:15), the Torah repeats this here] exclusively
to warn us that the slaughtering must be performed on this condition. Do not
slaughter it with the intention of eating it on the next day, for if you have
this invalidating intention in mind, the sacrifice will not be “acceptable for
you” (Torath Kohanim 22:135) [Indeed,
it will be rejected (פִּגּוּל ; see Rashi
Lev. 7:18)]. Another explanation of לִרְצֽנְכֶם is: “knowingly.” From here, [we learn that] if
someone slaughtered an animal in an incidental manner [i.e., according to Rashi, without intending to slaughter,
just to pick up the knife or to throw it. According to Tosafoth, if he did not intend to slaughter, but only to sever the
organs, or if he thought that it was an ordinary animal, and did not realize
that it was to be slaughtered as a holy sacrifice], then [even though the
animal is fit to be eaten as ordinary non- consecrated meat, nevertheless,]
regarding being slaughtered as a holy sacrifice, it is deemed unfit.-[Chul. 13a] Now, although Scripture has
already stated [that a sacrifice is “not acceptable” if, while slaughtering,
one intended to eat it after its permissible time] in the case of sacrifices
that may be eaten for two days (see Lev. 7:18), it specifies it again regarding
those sacrifices that must be eaten on the same day (see Rashi Lev. 7:15), namely, that they [too] must be slaughtered with
the intention of eating them within their permissible time.
30 It shall be
eaten on that day [As explained above (see preceding Rashi)], Scripture
states this here only to warn us that the slaughtering must be performed with
this intention. For if it meant to fix the time limit for eating it, this has
already been stated, “And the flesh of his thanksgiving peace-offering [shall
be eaten on the day that it is offered...]” (Lev. 7:15). -[Torath Kohanim 7:113]
I am the Lord Know Who decreed this matter, and do not perceive it
as unimportant.
31 You shall keep
[My commandments] This refers to learning [God’s commandments and “keeping”
them organized and memorized in one’s heart]
and perform them meaning [putting them into]
action.-[Mizrachi ; Torath Kohanim 22:136]
32 You shall not
desecrate [My Holy Name] By transgressing My commandments intentionally.
Now, is it not already implied by the verse “ You shall not desecrate [My Holy
Name,” that if you do not transgress, God’s Name will be sanctified? So] what
do we learn by Scripture adding “I shall be sanctified [amidst the children of
Israel]?” [It teaches us:] Surrender your life [and do not transgress God’s
commandments], and [thus] sanctify My Name. Now, one might think [that this
commandment applies even] in private [i.e., if he is not in the presence of ten
or more Jews]. Scripture, therefore, says here “[I shall be sanctified] amidst
the children of Israel” [i.e., one is obliged to sacrifice one’s life to avoid
transgressing God’s commandments only in the presence of ten or more Jews]. And
when one sacrifices oneself, one shall do so with the willingness to die,
anyone who [submits to] sacrifices himself while assuming [that God will surely
perform] a miracle [for him and save his life], for this person, God does not
perform a miracle, for so we find in [the case of] Hananiah, Mishael and
Azariah, that [when the evil Nebuchadnezzar threatened to throw them into a
fiery furnace], they did not submit themselves on the condition [that God would
perform] a miracle, as Scripture says, "[Behold, there is our God Whom we
worship; He can save us from the burning, fiery furnace and from your hands, O
king!] But if not, let it be known to you, O king [that we will not worship
your god, neither will we prostrate ourselves to the golden image that you have
set up]!" (Dan. 3:1718). [We see here that whatever the outcome,] whether
[God would] rescue [them] or not—[they declared, regardless] “Let it be known
to you, O king [that we will not prostrate ourselves...]!”-[Torath Kohanim 22:137]
33 Who took you
out [of the land of Egypt] on this very condition [i.e., to be willing to
sacrifice your lives in sanctification of My Holy Name.-[Torath Kohanim 22:138] [And do not think that since it is an
obligation, you will not receive reward for sacrificing yourselves, for]
I am the Lord faithful to give reward [to those who fulfill My
Torah.-[Torath Kohanim 22:138]
Chapter 23
2 Speak to the
children of Israel...The Lord’s appointed [holy days] Designate the [times]
of the festivals so that [all of] Israel will become accustomed to them,
[meaning] that they should proclaim leap years for [the Jews in] the Diaspora
who had uprooted themselves from their place to ascend to [Jerusalem for] the
festivals, but who had not yet arrived in Jerusalem. [The leap year would
enable them to arrive in time. Consequently, in ensuing years, they would not
lose hope of arriving on time and would be encouraged to make the
pilgrimage.]-[Torath Kohanim 23:139; Levush Ha’orah. See also Mizrachi, Nachalath Ya’akov, Sefer
Hazikkaron, Yosef Hallel, Chavel]
3 [For] six
days... Why does the Sabbath [designated by God,] appear here amidst the
festivals [designated by the Sanhedrin]? To teach you that whoever desecrates
the festivals is considered [to have transgressed as severely] as if he had
desecrated the Sabbath, and that whoever who fulfills the festivals is
considered as if he has fulfilled the Sabbath, [and his reward is as great].-[Be’er Basadeh ; Torath Kohanim 23:144]
4 These are the
Lord’s appointed [holy days, holy occasions, that you shall designate] In
the earlier verse (verse 2), Scripture is referring to the proclamation of a
leap year, while here, Scripture is referring to sanctifying the new month
[i.e., “designating” which day is the first of the month, based on testimony of
the sighting of the new moon. Both of these “designations,” therefore, have
bearing on the establishment of the festivals.] -[Torath Kohanim 23:146]
5 in the
afternoon Heb. הָעַרְבָּיִם
בֵּין, lit. between the two evenings. From six [halachic] hours
[after dawn,] and onwards [until evening (עֶרֶב), i.e., nightfall.]
the Passover offering to the Lord Heb. פֶּסַח, the offering up of a sacrifice named “Pesach.” [The term
“Pesach” here refers to the Pesach offering brought on the fourteenth of
Nissan, not to the Passover Festival, which begins on the fifteenth.-[Be’er Heitev on Rashi]
8 And you shall
bring a fire offering [to the Lord for a seven-day period] These are the
additional offerings [of Passover] delineated in parshath Pinchas (Num. 28:1625). Why are they mentioned here? To
inform you that the additional offerings do not impede one another, [if some
are omitted, as the Torah states:]
And you shall bring a fire offering to the Lord in any
case. If there are no bulls, bring rams, and if there are neither bulls nor
rams, bring lambs [as prescribed in Num. 28:19].-[Torath Kohanim 23:152]
for a seven-day period Heb. שִׁבְעַת
יָמִים, lit., a “seven” of days. Wherever the שִׁבְעַת appears, it denotes a noun, and [thus, the
expression here שִׁבְעַת
יָמִים means “a week of days”; septaine
in Old French [which is the noun, as opposed to sept, meaning the number seven. See Mizrachi on Rashi Exod.
10:22]. Likewise, every [construct expression like], שְׁמוֹנַת, שֵׁשֶׁת, חֲמֵשֶׁת, שְׁלֽשֶׁת [literally means, respectively, “an eight of,”
"a six of," “a five of,” "a three of," [meaning a unit
consisting of one of these numbers]. -[See Gur
Aryeh and Levush Haorah on Rashi Exod. 10:22 for the reason this type of
expression is used here instead of simply שִׁבְעָה
יָמִים, “seven days.”]
work of labor Even types of work (מְלָאכוֹת) that are considered by you as labor (עֲבוֹדָה) and necessities, where a monetary loss may be
incurred if one would refrain from them, for example, something that will be
lost [if the activity is postponed]. I understood this from Torath Kohanim, where it is taught (23:
187): “One might think that even during the intermediate days of the Festival,
work of labor is prohibited...” [and the text concludes by teaching us that
during those days, מְלֶאכֶת
עֲבוֹדָה is permitted, and we know that the type of work that is
permitted on the intermediate days is such work whose postponement would cause
a loss (דָּבָר
הָאָבֵד). Hence, we see that מְלֶאכֶת
עֲבוֹדָה and דָָּבָר
הָאָבֵד are synonymous, and that is what the Torah meant to prohibit on
the festival holy days—namely, the first and seventh days of Passover, when
even that type of work is prohibited].
10 [you shall
bring...an omer] of the beginning of your reaping the first of the harvest
[from the fields. Thus, one is permitted to proceed with the general harvest
only after this omer has been
reaped.]-[Sifthei Chachamim ; Men. 71a]
omer a tenth of an ephah
(see Exod. 16:36). That was its [the measure’s] name, like “And they measured
it with an omer ” (Exod. 16:18).
11 And he shall
wave Every [mention of] תְּנוּפָה, “waving,” [in Scripture], denotes moving back and
forth, up and down. [It is moved] back and forth to prevent evil winds; [it is
moved] up and down to prevent evil dews [i.e., the dew should be a blessing for
the crop, not a curse].-[Men.
61a-62a]
so that it will be acceptable for you If you
offer it up according to these instructions, it will be acceptable for you.
on the day after the rest day - מִמָּחֳרַת
הַשַּׁבָּת. On the day after the first holy day of Passover, [since a holy
festival day is also שַׁבָָּת, rest day,
in Scripture]. For if you say [that it means] the “Sabbath of Creation” [i.e., the
actual Sabbath, the seventh day of the week], you would not know which one. -[Men. 66a]
12 you shall
offer up [an unblemished lamb in its [first] year] It comes as obligatory
for the omer [not as part the
additional offerings of Passover.
13 Its meal
offering The meal offering [which accompanies every sacrifice], along with
its libations. [See Num. 15:116.] [This is not an independent meal offering.]
two tenths [of an ephah] It was
double [the usual meal offering for a lamb, which is one tenth.] (See Num.
15:4.)
and its libation [shall be] a quarter of a hin of wine Although
its meal offering is double, its libations are not double, [but the usual
libation prescribed for a lamb (Num. 15:5). -[Men. 89b]
14 or [flour made
from] parched grain [This refers to] flour made from tender, plump grain
that is parched in an oven (see Lev. 2:14).
plump grain [These are the] plump, parched kernels, grenaillis
[in Old French].-[See Rashi, Sifthei Chachamim on Lev. 2:14]
in all your dwelling places The
Sages of Israel differ concerning this. Some learned from here that [the
prohibition of eating] the new crop [before the omer] applies [even] outside the Land [of Israel], while others say
that this phrase comes only to teach [us] that they were commanded regarding
the new crop only after possession and settlement, after they had conquered and
apportioned [the land.-[Kid. 37a]
15 from the
morrow of the rest day On the day after the [first] holy day [of
Passover].-[See Rashi on verse 11; Men. 65b]
[seven weeks;] they shall be complete [This
verse] teaches us that one must begin counting [each of these days] from the
evening, because otherwise, they would not be “complete.”-[Men. 66a]
16 the day after
the seventh week - הַשַּׁבָּת
הַשְּׁבִיעִת, as the Targum
[Onkelos] renders: שְׁבוּעֲתָא
שְׁבִיעָתָא, “the seventh week.”
You shall count until the day after the seventh week But not
inclusive, making forty-nine days.
the fiftieth day, [on which] you will bring a meal
offering to the Lord from the new [wheat crop] [lit.,
“(You shall count) fifty days and bring a meal offering to the Lord from the
new (wheat crop).” But we count only forty-nine days. Therefore, the meaning
is:] On the fiftieth day, you shall bring this [meal offering of the new wheat
crop]. But I say that this is a Midrashic explanation of the verse [since it
requires the forced attachment of the words חֲמִשִּׁים
יוֹם to the
continuation of the verse regarding the meal offering, whereas the cantillation
signs attach them to the preceding words regarding the counting]. But its
simple meaning is: “until [but not inclusive of]...the day after [the
completion of] the seventh week, which is the fiftieth day, shall you count.”
Accordingly, this is a transposed verse.
a new meal-offering This is the first meal
offering brought from the new [crop]. Now, if you ask, “But was not the meal
offering of the omer already offered
up (see verse 10 above)?” [the answer to this is that] that is not like other
meal offerings—for it comes from barley [and hence, this meal offering is new
since it is the first meal offering from the wheat crop].
17 From your
dwelling places but not from outside the Land.-[Men. 83b]
bread set aside Heb. לֶחֶם
תְּנוּפָה, bread of separation, set aside for the sake of the Most High, and
this is the new meal offering, mentioned above [in the preceding verse].
the first offering The first of all the meal
offerings [brought from the new crop]; even a “jealousy meal offering” [for
suspected infidelity, see Num. 5:1131], which comes from barley [see verse 15
there], may not be offered up from the new crop before the two loaves [have
been brought].-[Men. 84b]
18 And associated
with the bread Heb. עַל־הַלֶּחֶם,lit. on the bread, i.e., “because of the bread,”
i.e., as an obligation for the bread, [but not as a separate obligation for
that day. I.e., if they did not bring the bread offering, they do not bring
this associated burnt offering.-[Mizrachi
; Torath Kohanim 23: 171]
[along with] their meal offering and libations i.e.,
according to the prescription of meal offerings and libations specified for
each [type of] animal in the passage that delineates [libations (see Num.
15:116), as follows: three tenths [of an ephah
of flour] for each bull, two tenths for a ram and one tenth for a lamb—this is
the meal offering [for sacrifices]. And the libations are as follows: Half a hin [of wine] for a bull, a third of a hin for a ram, and a quarter of a hin for a lamb.
19 And you shall
offer up one he-goat One might think that the seven lambs (preceding verse)
and the he-goat mentioned here are the same seven lambs and the he-goat
enumerated in the Book of Numbers (28:19, 22). However, when you reach [the
enumeration there of] the bulls and rams, [the numbers of each animal] they are
not the same [as those listed here]. You must now conclude that these are
separate and those are separate—these are brought in conjunction with the
bread, while those as additional offerings [for the Festival].- [Torath Kohanim 23:171]
20 And the kohen
shall wave them...as a waving This teaches us that they require waving
while still alive. Now, one might think that they all [require waving].
Scripture, therefore, says, “along with the two lambs.” -[see Men. 62a]
They shall be holy Since a peace offering of
an individual has itself a minor degree of holiness, Scripture had to say
concerning communal peace offering that they are holy of holies.
22 When you reap
[But Scripture has already stated this, “When you...reap its harvest...” (verse
10 above).] Scripture repeats it once again, [so that one who disobeys]
transgresses two negative commands. Rabbi Avdimi the son of Rabbi Joseph says:
Why does Scripture place this [passage] in the very middle of [the laws
regarding] the Festivals—with Passover and Atzereth
(Shavuoth) on one side and Rosh
Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and the Festival [of Succoth]
on the other? To teach you that whoever gives לֶקֶט, gleanings,
שִׁכְחָה, forgotten
sheaves, and פֵּאָה, the corners, to the
poor in the appropriate manner, is deemed as if he had built the Holy Temple
and offered up his sacrifices within it.-[Torath
Kohanim 23:175]
you shall leave Leave it before them and
let them gather it up. And you shall not help one of them [since this will
deprive the others].-[Torath Kohanim
19: 22]
I am the Lord, your God Who is
faithful to give reward [to those who fulfill My Torah].
24 a remembrance of
[Israel through] the shofar blast [On this Rosh Hashanah day,] a
remembrance [before God of the Jewish people is evoked through the sounds of
the shofar. And in order to enhance this remembrance, our Rabbis instituted the
recitation] of Scriptural verses dealing with remembrance and Scriptural verses
dealing with the blowing of the shofar (R.H.
32a), through which the remembrance of the binding of Isaac is recalled for
them, [whereby Isaac was willing to be sacrificed as a burnt-offering according
to God’s words (see Gen. 22:119), and] in whose stead a ram was offered up
[whereby the shofar alludes to that ram’s horns, by which it was caught in a
tree, thus making its appearance as Isaac’s replacement (see Gen. 22:13)].-[Sifthei Chachamim, Gur Aryeh ; R.H. 16a]
25 And you shall
offer up a fire offering The additional offerings stated in the Book of
Num. (29:16).
27 But Heb. אַךְ. Wherever the word אַךְ, “but,” or רַק, “only,” appear in the Torah, they denote an
exclusion. [Thus,] Yom Kippur atones for those who repent, “but” it does not
atone for those who do not repent.-[Shev.
13a]
30 I will destroy
- כָּרֵת ("excision" or “cutting off”) is stated [as a
punishment] in many places [in Scripture] and I do not know what that means,
when God says [explicitly] “I will destroy,” [coinciding with וְנִכְרְתָהin the
preceding verse,] this teaches us כָּרֵת means only “destruction” [i.e., premature death,
and not that the body is to be cut up or that the person is to be exiled].-[See
Be’er Basadeh on this verse and on
22:3 above; Torath Kohanim 23:180]
31 You shall not
perform any work [But has this not already been stated in verses 28 and 30
above? Yes, nevertheless this prohibition is repeated several times here, so
that one who disobeys] transgresses many negative commandments, or to warn
against work at night [that it is forbidden just] as [performing] work during
the day [of the tenth of Tishri]. -[Yoma
81a; see Mizrachi and Divrei David]
35 a holy
occasion [This expression mentioned in connection with Yom Kippur, means
that you are to] sanctify it [the day] through [wearing] clean garments and
through prayer, while [this expression mentioned in connection] with the other
holy days, [means] sanctify it with food and drink, through [wearing] clean
clothes and through [their own special] prayers.-[See Torath Kohanim 23:186] [Note that this Rashi belongs on verse 27. Therefore, it is obvious that it is
referring to Yom Kippur, and the words, הַכִּפּוּרים
בְּיוֹם are completely unnecessary. Since the copyists believed it to
be on verse 35, which deals with Succoth, they found it necessary to insert
those words. See Divrei David.]
36 It is a [day
of] detention [i.e., God says to Israel,] “I have detained you [to remain]
with Me.” This is analogous to a king who invited his sons to feast with him
for a certain number of days, and when the time came for them to leave, he
said: “My sons! Please, stay with me just one more day, [for] it is difficult
for me to part with you!” [Similarly, after the seven days of Succoth, God
“detains” Israel for one extra holy day.]
[you shall not perform] any work of labor [I.e.,]
even such work that is considered labor for you, that, if not done, would cause
a monetary loss [is prohibited].
you shall not perform One
might think that even during the intermediate days of the Festival, work of
labor is [also] prohibited. Scripture, therefore says here, “ It [is a day of detention,” [i.e., only
on this eighth day is work prohibited, and not on the preceding weekdays of the
Festival, when such work, which, if postponed, would cause a monetary loss, is
permitted].-[Torath Kohanim 23:187]
37 burnt offering
and meal offering the libations meal offering that is offered up with the
burnt offering (see Num. 15:116). -[Men.
44b]
the requirement of each day on its day [I.e.,]
according to the prescribed laws set out in the Book of Num. (chapter 29).
the requirement of each day on its day But if
its day passes, [and the prescribed sacrifice for that day had not been
offered,] this sacrifice is canceled [i.e., it can no longer be brought on a
later day].-[Torath Kohanim 23:189]
39 But on the
fifteenth day... when you gather in the produce of the land, you shall
celebrate the festival of the Lord for a seven-day period [by bringing] a
peace offering as the [special] “Festival offering (חֲגִיגָה).” Now, one might think that this [Festival
offering] overrides the Sabbath. Scripture, therefore, says here, “But (אַךְ) ” [denoting an exclusion (see Rashi on verse 27 above; Torath
Kohanim 23:191), namely that this sacrifice may not be brought on the
Sabbath], since it can be made up on any of the seven [days of the Festival].
when you gather in the produce of the land [This
teaches us] that this seventh month must occur at the time of ingathering,
[namely, in the fall]. From here, [we learn] that they were commanded to
proclaim leap years [i.e., to add an extra, thirteenth month to the lunar
year], for if there were no leap years, [the lunar years would eventually no
longer coincide with the solar years, and] sometimes [the seventh month] would
occur in midsummer or midwinter [not in the time of ingathering]. -[Torath Kohanim 23:192]
you shall celebrate [by bringing] the Festival
peace offering (see the first Rashi on this verse),
for a seven-day period If one
did not bring it on one [day of the Festival], he may still bring it on
another. Now, one might think that we are obliged to bring it all seven days.
Scripture, therefore, says, “celebrate it
” (verse 41 below) [employing the singular form,] thus denoting only one day
and no more. But why does Scripture say "seven"? [To give seven days]
for making it up [if one did not bring it on the first day]. -[Chag.9a]
40 the fruit of
the hadar tree [Scripture could have simply said, “ hadar fruit.” Since it adds the word “tree,” next to “fruit,” it
teaches us that it is] a tree whose wood has the same taste as its fruit.-[Sukkah 35a] [Note that, according to Ramban, the fruit known in Aramaic as
“ethrog,” is known in Hebrew as “ hadar.”
hadar [Refers to a fruit] “that resides (הַדָּר) ” on its tree from one year to the next, which is
the ethrog.-[Sukkah 35a]
date-palm fronds Heb. כַּפּֽת
תְּמָרִים. [The word כַּפּֽת is written here with] a missing “vav” (ו) [thus implying the singular rather than the plural]. This
teaches us that only one [date-palm frond is to be taken].-[Sukkah 32a]
a branch of a braided tree [A tree]
whose branches עֲנָפָיו are braided like cords עֲבוֹתוֹת and like ropes. And Scripture is referring here
specifically to the הֲדַס (myrtle) tree, which is made in a braided-like form.-[Sukkah 32b]
42 resident
Heb. הָאֶזְרָח, [lit., “the resident.” The definite article here]
signifies a resident [of the people of Israel, namely, a native Jew. Therefore,
the next seemingly superfluous expression, namely,]
among the Israelites Comes to include converts
[in this commandment].-[Sukkah 28b]
43 I had the
children of Israel live in booths [These were] the clouds of glory [with
which God enveloped the Jewish people in the desert, forming a protective
shelter for them against wild beasts and enemies.] [See Num. 10:34 and Rashi on that verse.]-[Sukkah 11b]
Ashlamatah:
II Kings 23:1-9; 21-25
Rashi |
Targum |
1. And the king summoned, and they assembled before him all the elders of
Judah and Jerusalem. |
1. And the king sent, and all the elders of Judah and Jerusalem gathered
unto him. |
2. And the king went up to the house of the Lord, and all the people
of Judah and all the inhabitants of Jerusalem were with him, and the priests
and the prophets, and all the people from small to great, and he read within
their hearing all the words of the scroll of the covenant that was found in
the house of the Lord. |
2. And the king went up to the house of the sanctuary of the
LORD, and all the men of Judah and all the inhabitants of Jerusalem with him,
and the priests and the scribes and all the people, from small and
unto great. And he read before them all the words of the book of the
covenant that was found in the house of the sanctuary of the LORD. |
3. And the king stood on his place, and enacted the covenant before
the Lord, to follow the Lord and to observe His commandments and His
testimonies and His statutes with all their heart and soul, to fulfill the
words of this covenant, which are written in this scroll. And all the people
were steadfast in their acceptance of the covenant. |
3. And the king stood upon the balcony and he cut the covenant
before the LORD to walk after the service of the LORD and to keep His
commands and His testimonies and His statutes with all heart and with all
soul, to fulfill the words of this covenant that were written upon this book.
And all the people took upon themselves the covenant. |
4. And the king commanded Hilkiah the high priest and the priests of
the second rank and the guards of the threshold, to take out of the Temple of
the Lord all the utensils that were made for the Baal and for the asherah,
and for the entire host of the heaven, and he burnt them outside Jerusalem in
the plains of Kidron, and he carried their ashes to Bethel. |
4. And the king commanded Hilkiah the high priest and the prefect of
the priests and the cashiers to bring forth from the temple of the LORD
all the vessels that were made for Baal and for Asherah and for all the hosts
of the heavens; and he burned them outside Jerusalem in the valley of
the Kidron, and he brought their dust to Bethel. |
5. And he abolished the pagan priests whom the kings of Judah had
appointed and who had burnt incense on the high places in the cities of Judah
and the environs of Jerusalem, and those who burnt incense to the Baal, to
the sun, to the moon, and to the constellations, and to all the host of
heaven. |
5. And he made (stop) the idol priests to whom the kings of the
house of Judah gave and they offered sweet spices upon the high
places in the cities of the house of Judah and in the surroundings of
Jerusalem, and those who offered sweet spices to Baal, to the sun and to the
moon and to the constellations and to all the hosts of the heavens. |
6. And he took the asherah out of the house of the Lord to the outside
of Jerusalem, to the Kidron Valley, and he burnt it in the Kidron Valley and
he pulverized it into dust; and he threw its dust on the graves of the
members of the people. |
6. And he brought forth the Asherah from the house of the sanctuary
of the LORD outside Jerusalem to the valley of the Kidron, and he burned
it in the valley of the Kidron, and he crushed it to dust and cast its dust
to the graves of the idols. |
7. And he demolished the houses devoted to pagan worship that were in
the house of the Lord, where the women weave enclosures for the asherah. |
7. And he broke down the houses of the sacred property of the idols
that were in the house of the sanctuary of the LORD where the women were
weaving curtains's for the Asherah. |
8. And he brought all the priests from the cities of Judah, and he
defiled the high places where the priests had burnt incense, from Geba as far
as Beersheba, and he demolished the high places near the gates, the one that
was at the entrance of the gate of Joshua the mayor of the city, which is on
a person's left in the gate of the city. |
8. And he made all the idol priests come from the cities of the
house of Judah, and he profaned the high places where the idol priests
offered sweet spices from Geba unto Beer-sheba; and he broke down the
high places of the gates that were before the gate of Joshua the chief
of the city, which were at the left of a man in his comings in the
gate of the city. |
9. However, the priests of the high places would not go up to the
Lord's altar in Jerusalem, but they would eat unleavened cakes among their
brethren. |
9. But the idol priests of the high places were not coming up to
sacrifice upon the altar of the LORD in Jerusalem; but they ate
unleavened bread in the midst of their brothers. |
21. And the king commanded all the people, saying, "Perform a
Passover sacrifice to the Lord your God, as it is written in this scroll of
the covenant." |
21. And the king commanded all the people, saying: "Make the
Passover before" the LORD your God just as it is written upon the
book of the covenant." |
22. For such a Passover sacrifice had not been performed since the
time of the judges who judged Israel, and all the days of the kings of Israel
and the kings of Judah. |
22. For it was not done like this Passover from the days of the
leaders who judged Israel and all the days of the kings of Israel and the
kings of the house of Judah. |
23. Except in the eighteenth year of King Josiah, this Passover
sacrifice was performed to the Lord, in Jerusalem. |
23. Only in the eighteenth year for King Josiah this Passover was made
before the LORD in Jerusalem. |
24. And also the necromancers and those who divine by the Jidoa bone
and the teraphim and the idols and all the abominations that were seen in the
land of Judah and in Jerusalem, Josiah abolished, in order to fulfill the
words of the Torah which were written in the scroll that Hilkiah the priest
had found in the house of the Lord. |
24. And also the spiritualists and the necromancers and the graven
images and the idols and all the abominations that were seen in the land
of the house of Judah and in Jerusalem, Josiah removed in order to
fulfill the words of the Law that were written upon the book that Hilkiah the
priest found in the house of the sanctuary of the LORD. |
25. Now, before him there was no king like him, who returned to
the Lord with all his heart and with all his soul and with all his
possessions, according to the entire Torah of Moses, and after him
no one arose. |
25. And there was no king like him before him who turned to the
service of the LORD with all his heart and with all his soul and with all
his goods according to all the Law of Moses. And after him no one
like him arose. |
|
|
Note:
As you read the
following Midrash, please remember that they are composed in the Drash style,
and therefore their content is metaphorical – i.e., a parable that is teaching
something about the government/governance of Heaven. It is up to you to read
each paragraph and discern what the parable is and what it teaches about the
kingdom of G-d here on earth. After that, look at the whole Pisqa and see how
the parts join to form a whole new parable which you need to identify and
interpret. Remember we are at the Parable/metaphorical level, and we should not
interpret these statements literally – it says what it means, otherwise we miss
the whole point that the author/s had in mind as well as their objectives.
Midrash PESIQTA deRAB KAHANA
Pisqa
Nine
When
a bull or sheep or goat [is born, it will remain seven days with its mother,
and from the eighth day on, it will be acceptable as an offering by
fire to the Lord] (Lev.
22:27).
IX:I
[Concerning
the verse: When a bull or sheep or goat is born, it will remain seven days with
its mother; and from the eighth day on it will be acceptable as an offering by fire to the Lord
(Lev. 22:27)]: Your righteousness/generosity is like the mountains of God,
Your judgments are like the great deep; [man and beast You save, O LORD] (Ps. 36:6). R. Ishmael and R. Aqiba: R. Ishmael says, "With the righteous/generous,
who carry out the Torah, which was given from the mountains of God the
Holy One, blessed be He, does righteousness/generosity
like the mountains of God. Your righteousness/generosity is like the
mountains of God. But with the
wicked, who do not carry out the Torah, which was given 'from the mountains
of God,' the Holy One, blessed be He, seeks a strict accounting, unto the great deep. Your judgments are like the
great deep. R. Aqiba says,
"All the same are these and those: the Holy One, blessed be He, seeks a
strict accounting with [all of] them in accord with strict justice. He seeks a
strict accounting with the righteous/generous, collecting from them the few bad
deeds that they do in this world, in order to pay them an abundant reward in the world to come. And He affords prosperity to the wicked and
gives them a full reward for the minor religious duties that they successfully
accomplished in this world, in order to
exact a full penalty from them in the world to come."
Rabbi [Judah the Patriarch] [Leviticus Rabbah: Meir] says,
"The righteous/generous are comparable to their abode [like the mountains
of God] and the wicked are comparable to
their dwelling [like the great deep]. The
righteous/ generous are comparable to their abode: I will feed them in a
good pasture, and upon the high mountains of Israel will be their fold (Ez.
34:14). The wicked are
comparable to their abode: Thus said the LORD in the day when he went down
to the netherworld, I caused the deep to mourn and cover itself for him
(Ez. 31:15)."
R.
Judah b. Rabbi said, "'I caused to mourn (H'BLTY)' is written, 'I brought
down (HWBLTY).' By way of parable: they do not make a cover for a bowl of
silver, gold, copper, iron, tin, or lead [Num. 31:22] but only [for one] of
clay, for it is a material of the same sort [as
the bowl]. So said the Holy One, blessed be He, 'Gehenna is dark, and the
wicked are dark, and the deep is dark. Let the dark come and cover the dark,' [as
it is said], For {the wicked} comes in vanity and departs in darkness and
his name is covered with darkness (Qoh 6:4)."
R.
Jonathan in the name of R. Josiah would rearrange the elements of this verse:
"Your righteousness/generosity over Your judgments {prevails} like the
mountains of God over the great deep.” Just as these mountains conquer the great deep, so that it may
not rise up and flood the entire world, so the deeds of the righteous/generous
overcome punishment, keeping it from spreading over the world. Another interpretation of the
verse, our righteousness/generosity over your judgments {prevails} like the
mountains of God over the great deep: Just as these mountains have no
end, so the reward of the righteous/generous in the world to come will know no
end. "Your judgments are like the great deep (Ps, 36:6): Just
as there is no searching out the great deep, so there is no searching out the
punishment that is coming upon the wicked in the age to come.
Another
interpretation: Your righteousness/generosity is like the mountains of God Just as the mountains are [readily] visible,
so the deeds of the righteous/ generous are [readily] visible. That is in line
with the following verse of Scripture: May they fear You in the sun (Ps,
72:5). Your judgments are like the great deep: Just as the
deep is hidden [from view]. so the deeds of the wicked are hidden [from view]. That
is in line with the following verse of Scripture: Whose deeds are in the
dark (Is. 29: 15).
Another
interpretation: Your righteousness/generosity is like the mountains of God:
Just as these mountains are sown and bring forth fruit. so the
deeds of the righteous/generous bring forth fruit. That is in line with the
following verse of Scripture: Tell the righteous/generous that it will be
well with them, for they will eat the fruit of their deeds (Is. 3:10). Your
judgments are like the great deep: Just as the great deep is not sown and
does not bring forth fruit. so the deeds of the wicked do not bear fruit. That
is in line with the following verse of Scripture: Woe to the wicked. It will
be ill with him, for what his hands have done will be done to him (Is.
3:11).
.
Another
interpretation: Your righteousness/generosity is like the mountains of God:
[Said] R. Judah b. R. Simon. "The act of righteousness/generosity which You
did with Noah in the ark is like the mountains of God. That
is in line with the following verse of Scripture: And the ark rested ... on
the mountains of Ararat (Gen. 8:4). [“Your
judgments are like the great deep:] The judgments which You meted out to
his generation you exacted from them even to the great deep. That is in line
with the following verse of Scripture: And on that day the springs of the
great deep broke open (Gen. 7:11). And
not only so, but, when You remembered him, it was not him alone that you
remembered, but him and everyone that was with him in the ark. That is in line
with the following verse of Scripture: And God remembered Noah and all the
living creatures (Gen. 8: 1)." [Leviticus
Rabbah adds:] Another interpretation of Your righteousness/generosity is
like the mountains of God: R. Joshua b. Levi went to Rome. There he saw marble pillars covered
with tapestries, so that in the hot weather they should not crack from
expansion and in the cold weather they should not crack from contraction. When
he went out, he met a poor man with a mat of reeds underneath him and a mat of
reeds on top of him. Concerning the marble pillars he recited the following verse of
Scripture: Your righteousness/generosity is like the mountains of God. He said, "Where you give, you give
lavishly." Concerning the poor man he recited this verse: Your
judgments are like the great deep. "Where
you smite, You pay close attention to every little detail."
Alexander
of Macedonia went to the king of Kasia, beyond the mountains of darkness. He
came to a certain town, called Cartagena, and it was populated entirely
by women. They came out before him and said to him, "If you make war on us
and conquer us, word will spread about you that you destroyed a town of women.
But if we do battle with you and conquer you, word will spread about you
that you made war on women and they beat you. And you'll never again be able to
hold up your head among kings." [Leviticus
Rabbah adds: At that moment he turned away and left.] After he went away, he
wrote on the door of the gate of the city, saying, "I, Alexander the Macedonian,
a king, was a fool until I came to the town called Cartagena, and I learned
wisdom from women." He came to another
town, called Africa. They came out and greeted him with apples made out of
gold, golden pomegranates, and golden bread. He
said, "Is this gold what you eat in your country?" They said to him,
"And is it not this way in your country, that you have come here?" He
said to them, "It is not your wealth that I have come to see, but it is
your justice that I have come to see." While they were standing there, two
men came before the king for justice. [Leviticus
Rabbah adds: This one kept himself far from thievery, and so did that.] One of
them said, "I bought a rubbish heap from this man. I dug it open and
found a jewel in it. I said to him, Take your jewel. I bought a rubbish heap. A
jewel I didn't buy." The other said, "When I sold the rubbish heap to
that man, I sold him the rubbish heap and everything that is in it." The
king called one of them and said to him, "Do you have a male child?" He
said to him, "Yes." The king called the other and said to him, "Do you have a
daughter?" He said to him, "Yes." Then the king said to them,
"Let this one marry that one, and let the two of them enjoy the
jewel." Alexander of Macedonia began to express surprise. He
said to him, "Why are you surprised? Did I not give a good judgment?"
He said to him, "Yes, you did." He said to him, "If this case
had come to court in your country, how would you have judged it?" He
said to him, "We should have cut off the head of this party and cut off
the head of that party, and the jewel would have passed into the possession of
the crown." He said to him,
"Does rain fall on you?" He said to him, "Yes." "And
does the sun rise for you?" He said to him, "Yes." He said to
him, "Are there small cattle in your country?" He said to him,
"Yes." “Woe to you! It is on account of the merit of the small cattle
that you are saved." That is in line with the following verse of
Scripture: Man and beast you save, O LORD (Ps. 36:7). Man on account of
the merit of the beast do you save, O LORD."
So
did the Israelites say before the Holy One, blessed be He: "LORD of the
world, we are mere men. Save us like a beast, for we are drawn after You like beasts."
[That is in line with the following verse of Scripture:] Draw
me, we will run after You, like a beast, we are drawn to You. (Song of
Songs 1:4). And whither [are we drawn after You]? A member of the
household of Rabbi said, "To the Garden of Eden." For
it is written, They feast on the abundance of Your house, and You give them drink
from the river of Your delights (Ps. 36:9). Said R. Eleazar b. R. Menahem, '''Your
delight' is not written here, but rather, Your delights. On the basis of
that fact we may conclude that every righteous/generous
person has an Eden unto himself."
Said
R. Isaac, "Judgment is stated with regard to man, and judgment is stated
with regard to beast. The judgment stated with regard to a man: And on the
eighth day, he will be circumcised (Lev. 12:3). And the judgment stated
with regard to the beast: [When a bull or sheep or goat is born, it will
remain seven days (with its mother);] and from the eighth day on, it will be acceptable [as an offering by fire to
the LORD] (Lev. 22:26).
IX:II
R.
Tanhuma commenced discourse by citing this verse: Who has given me anything
beforehand, that I should repay him? Whatever is under the whole heaven is Mine
(Job 41:3 [Heb. 41:11]). R. Tanhuma interpreted the verse to speak of a bachelor who was
living in a town and who [though he had no children and owed nothing] gave
wages for scribes and Mishnah teachers: "Said the Holy One, blessed be
He, 'It is my responsibility to pay him back for his goodness and to give him a
male child.' [Leviticus Rabbah:] "That is in line with the following verse
of Scripture: He who is kind to the poor lends to the LORD], and He
will repay him for his deed (Prov.
19:17)."
Said
R. Jeremiah b. Eleazar, "An echo is going to proclaim on the tops of the
mountains, saying, 'Whoever has worked with God' will come and collect his reward.'
That is in line with the following verse of Scripture: In time it will be
said to Jacob and to Israel, What has God worked (Num. 23:23). Whoever
has worked with God now let him come and collect his reward. And the Holy
Spirit says, 'Who has given Me anything beforehand? I will repay him'
(Job. 41:3). Who praised Me before I gave him a soul, who was circumcised in My
name before I gave him a male child, who made a parapet for Me before I gave him
a roof, who made a Mezuzah for Me before I gave him a house, who made a Sukkah
for Me before I gave him a place [for it], who made a Lulab for Me
before I gave him money, who made show fringes for Me before I gave him a
cloak, who separated Peah for Me before I gave him a field, who separated
heave offering for Me and tithe before I gave him a harvest, who separated dough
offering for Me before I gave him dough, who separated an offering
for Me before I gave him a beast! "When a
bull or a sheep or a goat [is born] (Lev. 22:7)."
IX:III
R.
Jacob b. R. Zabedi in the name of R. Abbahu opened [discourse by citing the
following verse:] "And it will never again be the reliance of the house
of Israel, [recalling their iniquity, when they
turn to them for aid. Then they will know that I am the LORD God]”
(Ez. 29:16). It is written, Above him stood the seraphim: each had six
wings, [with two he covered his face, and with two he covered his feet,] and
with two he flew' (Is. 6:2). [With two he flew] - singing praises. With
two he covered his face - so as not to gaze upon the Presence of God. And with two he
covered his feet - so as not to let them be seen by the face of the
Presence of God. For it is written, And the soles of their feet were like the
sole of a calf’s foot (Ez. 1:7). And it is
written, They made for themselves a molten calf (Ex. 32:8). [Leviticus
Rabbah adds:] So [in covering their feet, they avoided calling to mind the
molten calf,] in accord with the verse, And it will never again be the
reliance of the house of Israel, recalling their iniquity
(Ez. 29:16)."
There
we have learned in the Mishnah (M. R.H. 3:2): All [horns] are suitable
except for that of a cow. Why except for that of the cow? Because it is the horn of a calf. [Leviticus
Rabbah adds:] And it is written, They made for themselves a molten calf (Ex.
32:8). So [in not using the horn of a cow, they avoid calling to mind the
molten calf, in accord with the verse], And it will never again be the
reliance of the house of Israel, recalling their iniquity (Ez, 29:16).
There
we have also learned: And you will kill the woman and the beast [that lay
with her] (Lev. 20:16). If a human being has sinned, what sin did the beast
commit? But since through that beast a disaster has come upon a human
being, the Torah has said that it should be stoned. Another
consideration: That a beast should not walk through the market and people
should say, "That is the beast on account of which So-and-so was stoned
to death." This is in line with the verse of Scripture: And it will
never again be the reliance of the house of Israel, recalling their iniquity
(Ez. 29: 17).
It
has been taught: On what account does a wife accused of infidelity not drink
from a cup used by another woman [the water that brings a curse]? So that
people should not say, "Out of this cup another woman drank the water
and died." This is in line with the verse of Scripture: And it will never
again be the reliance of the house of Israel, recalling their iniquity (Ez.
29: 17).
And
so too here: When a bull or a sheep or a goat is born (Lev. 22:27). Now
is it born as a bull and not as a calf? But because it is said, They made for
themselves a molten calf, therefore the Scripture refers to it as a bull and not
as a calf: When a bull, a sheep, a goat is born.
IX:IV
That
which is already has been, that which is to be already has been. [God seeks
that which is pursued] (Qoh. 3:15). R. Judah and R. Nehemiah: R. Judah says, "If someone should
say to you that had the first Adam not sinned and eaten from that tree, he
would have lived and endured even to this very
day, tell him, It already has been. Elijah, of blessed memory, who did not sin,
does not live forever. "That which is to be already has been:” If someone
should tell to you, it is possible that the Holy One, blessed be He, in the
future is going to resurrect the dead, say to him, It already has been. He has already
resurrected the dead through Elijah, Elisha, and Ezekiel in the valley of
Dura." And R. Nehemiah says, "If someone should say to you that it is
possible that to begin with the world was entirely made up of water in water,
say to him, It already has been, for the ocean is full of diverse water. "That
which is to be already has been:” If someone should say to you, the Holy
One, blessed be He, is going to dry the sea up, say to him, It already has been.
Has he not already done so through Moses: And the children of Israel walked
on dry land through the sea (Ex. 14:29)."
R.
Aha in the name of R. Simeon b. Halapta: "Whatever the Holy One, blessed be He, is destined to do
in the age to come in some small measure already has he done through the righteous/generous in this world. The
Holy One, blessed be He, has said that He is going to resurrect the dead: he
has already resurrected the dead through Elijah, Elisha, and Ezekiel. The Holy
One, blessed be He, has said that He is going to bring [people] through water
on to dry land: [Leviticus Rabbah:] When you pass through water, I am
with you (Is. 43:2). He has already brought Israel through [water] with
Moses: And the children of Israel walked on dry land through the sea
(Ex. 14:29). [Leviticus Rabbah:] "And through rivers they will not
overwhelm you (Is. 43:2). This He has already accomplished through Joshua:
On dry land the Israelites crossed the Jordan (Josh. 4:2). [Leviticus
Rabbah:] "When you walk through fire you will not be burned (Is.
43:2). This he has already accomplished through Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah.
[Leviticus Rabbah:] "And the flame will not consume you
(Is. 43:2). This he has already accomplished: [The fire had not had any
power over the bodies of those men] no smell of fire had come upon them
(Dan. 3:27). [Leviticus Rabbah:] "The Holy One, blessed be He, has said
that He will sweeten bitter water, he has already accomplished through Moses: The
LORD showed him a tree, and he threw it into the water, and the water became
sweet (Ex. 15:25). [Leviticus Rabbah:] "The Holy One, blessed be He, has said
that God will sweeten what is bitter through something bitter, He has already
accomplished that through Elisha: Then he went to the spring of water and threw salt into
it and said, Thus says the LORD, I have made this water wholesome (2 Kgs.
2:21). [Leviticus Rabbah:] "The Holy One, blessed be He, has said
that He blesses what is little [and makes it much], He already has accomplished
that through Elijah and Elisha: For thus says the LORD, the God of Israel, 'The jar of
meal shall not be spent, and the cruse of oil shall not fail, [until the day
that the Lord sends rain upon the
earth] (1 Kgs. 17:14). [Not in Leviticus Rabbah:] The Holy One, blessed be He, has said
that He will open the eyes of the blind (Is. 35:5). Has he not already done so:
And God opened the eyes of the youth (2 Kgs. 6: 17)? The
Holy One, blessed be He, has said that He will visit barren women, but He has
already accomplished it [Leviticus Rabbah adds: through Sarah, Rebecca, Rachel,
and Hannah]: And the Lord visited Sarah (Gen. 21:1). [Leviticus
Rabbah adds:] "The wolf and the lamb will pasture together (Is.
65:25), He has already accomplished it through Hezekiah: The wolf will dwell
with the lamb (Is. 11:6). The Holy One, blessed be He, has said, "And kings will be your
tutor (Is. 49:23. Has he not has already accomplished it through Daniel: Then
the king Nebuchadnezzer fell upon his face and worshipped Daniel”
(Dan. 2:46).
God
seeks what has been driven away (Qoh. 3:15): R..
Huna in the name of R. Joseph said, "The Holy One, blessed be He, is
destined to avenge the blood of the pursued through punishing the pursuer. [You
find that] when a righteous/generous man pursues a righteous/generous man, God
seeks what has been driven away. When a wicked man pursues a wicked man, God
seeks what has been driven away. All the more so
when a wicked man pursues a righteous/generous man, God seeks what has been
driven away. [The same principle applies] even when you come around to a case in
which a righteous/generous man pursues a wicked man, God seeks what has been
driven away."
[Leviticus
Rabbah adds:] R. Yose b. R. Yudan in the name of R. Yose b. R. Nehorai says,
"It is always the case that the Holy One, blessed be He, demands an
accounting for the blood of those who have been pursued from the hand of the
pursuer. You may know that this is the case, for Lo, Abel was pursued by Cain,
God seeks what has been driven away [and God sought an accounting for the pursued]:
And the LORD looked [favourably] upon Abel and his meal offering (Gen.
4:4). Noah was pursued by his generation, God seeks what has been driven
away: Noah found favor in the eyes of God (Gen. 6:8). [Leviticus
Rabbah adds: You and all your household will come into the ark'
(Gen. 7:1). And it says, For this is like the days of Noah to me, as I swore
[that the waters of Noah should no
more go over the earth] (Is. 54:9).] Abraham was pursued by Nimrod, God seeks what has been driven
away:You are the LORD, the God who chose Abram and brought him out of Ur
(Neh. 9:7). Isaac was pursued by the Philistines [Leviticus Rabbah: Ishmael], God
seeks what has been driven away. And they said, We have certainly seen
that the LORD is with you (Gen. 26:28) [Leviticus Rabbah: For
through Isaac will seed be called for you (Gen. 21:12)]. Jacob
was pursued by Esau, God seeks what has been driven away. For the
LORD has chosen Jacob, Israel for his prized possession (Ps. 135:4). Joseph
was pursued by his brothers, God seeks what has been driven away. The
LORD was with Joseph, and he was a successful man (Gen. 39:2). Moses
was pursued by Pharaoh, but Moses, the man God had chosen, threw himself
into the breach to tum back his wrath lest it destroy them (Ps. 106:23). [Leviticus
Rabbah adds:] "David was pursued by Saul, God seeks what has been
driven away. And he chose David, his servant (Ps. 78:70). Israel
is pursued by the nations, God seeks what has been driven away. And
you has the LORD chosen to be a people to Him (Deut. 14:2). R.
Judah bar Simon in the name of R. Yose bar Nehorai, "And the rule applies
also to the matter of offerings. A bull is pursued by a lion, a sheep is
pursued by a wolf, a goat is pursued by a leopard. Therefore
the Holy One, blessed be He, has said, 'Do not make offerings before Me from
those animals that pursue, but from those that are pursued: When
a bull, a sheep, or a goat is born (Lev. 22:27).
IX:V
O My
people, what have I done to you, in what have I wearied you? Testify
against me (Mic. 6:3). Said R. Aha, "Testify against me and receive a reward,
but Do not bear false witness (Ex. 20: 13) and face a settlement of
accounts [Leviticus Rabbah adds:] in the age to
come."
Said
R. Samuel b. R. Nahman, "On three occasions the Holy One, blessed be He,
came to engage in argument with Israel, and the nations of the world rejoiced, saying,
'Can these ever [dare] engage in an argument with their creator? Now He will
wipe them out of the world.' One was when he said to them, Come, and let us
reason together, says the LORD (Is. 1:18). When the Holy One, blessed be
He, saw that the nations of the world were rejoicing, he turned the matter to [Israel's]
advantage: If your sins are as scarlet, they shall be white as snow (Is.
1:18). Then the nations of the world were astonished, and said, 'This is
repentance, and this is rebuke? He has planned only to amuse Himself with His
children.' [A second time was] when He said to them, Hear, you mountains,
the controversy of the LORD (Mic. 6:2), so the nations of the world
rejoiced, saying, 'How can these ever [dare] engage in an argument with their creator? Now
he will wipe them out of the world.' When the Holy
One, blessed be He, saw that the nations of the world were rejoicing, He turned
the matter to [Israel's] advantage: O my people, what have I
done to you? In what have I wearied you? Testify against me (Mic.
6:3). Remember what Balak king of Moab devised (Mic, 6:5). [Leviticus
Rabbah adds:] Then the nations of the world were astonished, saying, "This
is repentance, and this is rebuke, one following the other? He has planned
only to amuse Himself with His children.' [A
third time was] when He said to them, The LORD has an indictment against
Judah, and will punish Jacob according to his ways (Hos. 12:2), the nations
of the world rejoiced, saying, 'How can these ever [dare] engage in
an argument with their creator? Now he will wipe them out of the world.' When
the Holy One, blessed be He, saw that the nations of the world were rejoicing,
He turned the matter to [Israel's] advantage. That is in line with the following
verse of Scripture: In the womb he [Jacob = Israel] took his brother [Esau =
other nations] by the heel [and in his manhood he strove with God. He
strove with the angel and prevailed, he wept and sought his favor] (Hos.
12:3-4)."
[Leviticus
Rabbah adds: Said R. Yudan b. R. Simeon,] "The matter may be compared to a
widow who was complaining to a judge about her son. When she saw
that the judge was in session and handing out sentences of capital punishment
[Leviticus Rabbah adds:] punishment by fire, pitch, and lashes, she said, 'If I
report the bad conduct of my son to that judge, he will kill him
now.' She waited until he was finished. When he had finished, he said to her,
'Madam, this son of yours, how has he behaved badly toward you?' She
said to him, 'My lord, when he was in my womb, he kicked me.' He
said to her, 'Now has he done anything wrong to you?' She
said to him, 'No.' He said to her, '[Leviticus Rabbah adds: Go your way], there
is nothing wrong in the matter [that you report]. [Leviticus
Rabbah adds:] "So, when the Holy One, blessed be He, saw that the nations
of the world were rejoicing, he turned the matter to [Israel's] advantage:
[Leviticus Rabbah adds:] "In the womb he took his brother
by the heel (Mic. 12:3) Then the nations of the world were astonished, saying, 'This is
repentance and this is rebuke, one following the other? He has planned only to
amuse Himself with His children."
Said
R. Berekhiah [Leviticus Rabbah: Isaac], "The matter may be compared to the
case of a king who sent his proclamation to a city. What did the inhabitants of
the city do? They stood up and bared their heads and read the proclamation in
awe, trembling, fear, and trepidation. So the Holy One, blessed be He, said to
Israel, The proclamation of the Shema is My proclamation [that I sent you]. I
did not impose on you by telling you to read
[the Shema] either standing on your feet or having bared your heads, but only
[at your convenience: merely] When you sit in your house and when
you walk by the way (Deut. 6:7).''' [Leviticus Rabbah supplies the following: And
how have I wearied you? (Mic, 6:3). Said R. Berekhiah, "The matter may
be compared to the case of a king, who sent three messengers to a certain city,
and the inhabitants of the city stood up before them and paid them service]
in awe, trembling, fear, and trepidation. So the Holy One, blessed be He, said
to Israel, 'I sent you three messengers, Moses, Aaron, and Miriam. Now
did they eat any of your food? Did they drink any of your drink? Did they
impose upon you in any way? Is it not through their merit that you are maintained?
The mana was through the merit of Moses, the well through the merit of Miriam,
and the clouds of glory through the merit of Aaron.''']
Another
teaching concerning the verse, And how have I wearied you: Said
R. Judah b. R. Simon, "Said the Holy One, blessed be He, 'I handed over
ten clean beasts to you [as suitable food for you and for me], three in your domain
[under your control, as domesticated beasts], and seven not in your domain.
The three in your domain: the ox, sheep, and the goat (Deut.
14:4). The seven not in your domain: the hart, gazelle, roebuck, wild
goat, ibex, antelope, and mountain sheep (Deut. 14:5). I did
not trouble you, and I did not tell you to go up into the mountains and to tire
yourselves in the fields to [hunt and so to] bring me an offering of those
beasts that are not within your domain. I
asked only for those that are in your domain, the ones that grow at your crib: Ox,
sheep or goat that is born (Lev. 22:27).'"
IX:VI
R.
Levi opened [discourse by citing the following verse of Scripture:] "Behold
you are nothing, and your work is nought; [an abomination is he who chooses you]
(Is. 41:24). Nothing - from nil, from a foul secretion.
Nought (M'P') - from the hundred (M'H) outcries (P'YWT) that a woman cries
out when she is sitting on the birth stool, ninety-nine are for death, and one
for life."
An
abomination is he who chooses you
Even though the infant emerges from his mother's belly filthy and
soiled, covered with secretions and blood, everybody caresses and kisses him. And
even more so if it is a male.
Another
interpretation: Behold, you are nothing: Said
R. Berekhiah, The word 'behold' (HN) is Greek, 'hina,' meaning one.
Said the Holy One, blessed be He, 'I have only one nation among the nations of
the world.' Nothing: This refers to those about which it is written, The
nations are nothing before Him (Is. 40:17)." And
your work is nought (Is. 41:24): Said R. Levi,
"All the good and comforting works that the Holy One, blessed be He, is
going to do for Israel are only on account of a single exclamation (P'YYH)
which you made before Me at Sinai, when you said, Everything that the
LORD has said we will do and we will hear (Ex. 24:7)."
An abomination is he who chooses you (Is. 41:24): That abomination concerning which it is
written, They made for themselves a molten calf (Ex. 32:4), is the same
abomination [that] they will bring to Me as
an offering: Bull or sheep or goat (Lev. 22:27).
IX:VII
By
their wickedness they make the king glad. and the princes by their adultery
(Hos. 7:3). Now why was the bull recognized to be designated as the first of all
of the offerings [bull. sheep. goat (Lev. 22:27)]? Said
R. Levi, "The matter may be compared to the case of a highborn lady who
got a bad name on account of [alleged adultery with] one of the lords of the
state. The king looked into the matter and found nothing. What did the king do?
He made a banquet and sat the [accused] man at the head of the guests. Why so?
To show that the king had looked into the matter and found nothing. So the
nations of the world taunt Israel and say to them, 'You made the golden calf!'
The Holy One, blessed be He, looked into the matter and found nothing. Accordingly,
the bull was made the first among all the offerings: Bull. sheep. goat
(Lev. 22:27)."
IX:VIII
R.
Huna, R. Idi in the name of R. Samuel b. R. Nahman: "The [true] Israelites
were saved from that act. For if the Israelites had themselves made the calf,
they ought to have said, These are our gods, O Israel.' It was the
proselytes who came up with Israel from Egypt [who made the calf]: And also
a mixed multitude came up with them (Ex. 12:38). They are the ones who made the calf. They taunted them, saying to
them, These are your gods, O Israel (Ex. 32:8)."
2.
A. Said R. Judah b. R. Simon, "It is written, An ox knows its owner,
and an ass its master's crib, [but Israel does not know] (Is. 1:3). Did
they really not know? Rather, they trampled under heel [God's commandments].
[They did not pay adequate attention and sinned by inadvertence (Margulies).]"
Along these same lines: For My people is foolish. Me they have
not known (Jer. 4:22). Did they not know? Rather, they trampled under heel.
Along these same lines: And she did not know that it was I who
gave her the grain, [wine, and oil] (Hos. 2:8). Did she not know? Rather,
she trampled under heel."
IX:IX
[A
bull, a sheep, or a goat (Lev. 22:27):] A
bull on account of the merit of Abraham, as it is said: [And Abraham ran to
the herd and took a calf] (Gen. 18:7). A
sheep on account of the merit of Isaac, as it is written, And he looked, and
behold, a ram caught by its horns (Gen. 22:13). A
goat on account of the merit of Jacob, as it is written in his regard, Now
go to the flock and get me two good kid goats (Gen. 27:9).
What
is the meaning of "good"? R. Berekhiah in
the name of R. Helbo: "Good for you, good for your children. Good for you,
for on their account you will receive blessings. Good for your children, for on
their account you will have atonement on the Day of Atonement: For on this
day atonement will be made for you (Lev. 16:30),
[including the atonement of the sacrifice of the goat (Lev. 16:9)]."
IX:X
It
will remain seven days with its mother (Lev.
22:27). [Leviticus Rabbah adds:] Why for seven days? R.
Joshua of Sikhnin in the name of R. Levi said, "The matter may be compared
to the case of a king who came into a town and made decrees, saying, 'None
of the residents who are here will see me before they first see my lady.'
Said the Holy One, blessed be He, 'You will not make an offering
before Me until a Sabbath will have passed over [the animal that is to be
offered]. For seven days cannot pass without a Sabbath, and [for the same reason]
the rite of circumcision [takes place on the eighth day] so that it cannot take
place without the advent of a Sabbath. And
from the eighth day on it shall be acceptable [as an offering by fire to the
LORD] (Lev. 22:27)."
Said
R. Isaac, "A rule is written with regard to a man, and the same rule is
written with regard to a beast: The rule with
regard to a man: And on the eighth day the flesh of his foreskin will be
circumcised (Lev. 12:3). The same rule with regard to a beast: And from the eighth day on,
it shall be acceptable (Lev. 22:27)." [Leviticus Rabbah adds: [When
a bull or sheep or goat is born.] it will remain seven days with its mother; [from the eighth
day on it will be acceptable as an offering by fire to the LORD] (Lev.
22:27). Why for seven days? So that the beast may be inspected, for if the
dam should have gored it, or if some disqualifying blemish should tum up on it,
lo, it will be invalid and not be suitable for an offering. For we have
learned (M. Nid. 5:1): That which goes forth from the side [delivered by
Caesarean section] - they do not sit out the days of uncleanness and the days
of cleanness [Lev. 12: Iff.] on its account, and they are not liable on its
account for an offering. R. Simeon says, "Lo, this is like one that Is
born [naturally] [so that the rules of Lev. 12:Uf. do apply]."
IX:XI
And
whether the mother is a cow or a ewe, [you will not kill] both her and her
young [in one day] (Lev. 22:28). R. Berekhiah in the name of R. Levi: "It is written, A
righteous/generous man has regard for the life of his beast, [but the mercy of
the wicked is cruel] (Prov. 12:10). A
righteous/generous man has regard for the life of his beast refers
to the Holy One, blessed be He, in whose Torah it is written, You will not
take the mother with the young (Deut, 22:6). But the mercy of the wicked is cruel refers to
Sennacherib, the wicked one, concerning whom it is written, The mother was
dashed into pieces with her children
(Hos, 10:14)."
Another
interpretation: A righteous/generous man has regard for the life of his
beast refers to the Holy One, blessed be He, in whose Torah it is written, And
whether the mother is a cow or a ewe, you will not kill both her and her young
in one day (Lev. 22:28). But the mercy of the wicked is cruel refers to the
wicked Haman, concerning whom it is written, To destroy, to slay, to
obliterate all Jews young and old children and
women, on a single day (Est. 3:13).
Said
R. Levi, "Woe for the wicked, who make conspiracies against Israel, each
one saying, 'My plan is better than your plan.' Esau
said, 'Cain was a fool, since he killed his brother while his father was yet
alive. Did he not know that his father would continue to be fruitful and multiply?
That is not how I am going to do things.' Rather: The
days of mourning for my father are approaching; [only upon his death] will I
kill my brother Jacob (Gen. 27:41). Pharaoh said, 'Esau was a fool. For he said, The days of
mourning for my father are approaching. But did he not know that his
brother would continue to be fruitful and multiply in the lifetime of his father? That is
not how I am going to do things. But while they are still little, under their
mother's belly, I will strangle them.' That is in line with the following verse of
Scripture: Every son that is born you will cast into the river (Ex. 1
:22). Haman said, 'Pharaoh was a fool, for he said, Every son that is
born and let the daughter live. Did he not realize that the daughters would
marry husbands and be fruitful and multiply with them? That is not how I am going
to do things. Rather: To destroy, to slay, to obliterate all Jews (Est.
3: 13)." Said R. Levi, "So, too, Gog, in time to come, is going to say
the same, 'The ancients were fools, for they made conspiracies against Israel
and did they not know that they have a patron in Heaven? That is not how I am
going to do things. First I will seek a confrontation with their patron, and
afterward I will seek a confrontation with them.' That is in line with the
following verse of Scripture: The kings of the earth set themselves, and
the rulers take counsel together,
against the LORD and against his anointed (Mesiah)
(Ps. 2:2). Said to him the Holy One, blessed be He, 'Wicked man! Do you seek a
confrontation with Me? By your life, I will make war with you.' That is in line
with the following verse of Scripture: The LORD will go forth as
a mighty man, like a fighter, he whips up his rage, He yells, He roars aloud (Is.
42: 13). And the LORD will go forth and fight against those nations
(Zech. 14:3). Leviticus Rabbah adds:] And what is written there? The LORD
will be king over all the earth (Zech, 14:9)."
IX:XII
And
when you sacrifice a thanksgiving sacrifice to the LORD sacrifice it so that it
may be acceptable in your favour (Lev. 22:29): R.
Phineas and R. Levi and R. Yohanan in the name of R. Menahern of Gallia: "In time to come all offerings
will come to an end, but the thanksgiving-offering
will never come to an end.
All forms of prayer will
come to an end, but the thanksgiving-prayer will never come to an end. That
is in line with that which is written, The voice of joy and the voice of
gladness, the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride, the voice of them
that say, Give thanks to the God of Hosts, for the LORD is good, his kindness
is everlasting (Jer. 33:11). This refers to the thanksgiving-prayer. Who
bring a thanksgiving-offering to the house of the Lord
(Jer. 33: 11). This refers to the thanksgiving-offering. And
so did David say, Your vows are incumbent upon me, 0 God I will render
[thanksgivings to You] (Ps. 56:13). 'I will render thanksgiving [in the singular]
to You' is not written here, but rather, I will render thanksgivings
[plural] to You (Ps. 56:13). The reference [of
the plural usage] then is to both the thanksgiving-prayer and the
thanksgiving-offering."
Nazarean
Codicil:
I
Corinthians 3:1 –
5:13
&
Revelation 2:1-7
Revelation 2:1-7
Hakham’s Rendition
1And to the angel of the congregation in
Ephesus, write, 'So says he who holds the seven stars in his hand, he who walks
among the Menorot (seven branched candlesticks) of gold.
2 I know your works and your labor and
your endurance and that you are not able to bear evil [ones]. And you have
tested those who say about themselves that they are to be Sh’liachim (apostles)
and are not and you have found them [to be] liars.
3 And you have endurance and you bear a burden because of my name (or,
authority) and you have not become weary.
4 But I have
[something] against you, because you have left your first love.[4]
5 Remember from where you came and do the former works, but if not, I
will come to you and I will remove your Menora (candelabra – i.e. the seven
ministers of the congregation), unless you repent.
6 But this you have, that you hate the works of the Nicolaitans (i.e.
Oppressors of the Laity), that I also hate.'
7 He who has ears should hear what the Spirit says to the congregations.
And to him who overcomes, I will allow [him] to eat of the tree of life which
is in the midst of PaRDeS (paradise) of Ha-Shem."
Blessing After Torah Study
Barúch Atáh Adonai, Elohénu Meléch HaOlám,
Ashér Natán Lánu Torát Emét, V'Chayéi Olám Natá B'Tochénu.
Barúch Atáh Adonái, Notén HaToráh. Amen!
Blessed is Ha-Shem our God, King of the universe,
Who has given us a teaching of truth, implanting within us
eternal life.
Blessed is Ha-Shem, Giver of the Torah. Amen!
“Now unto Him who is able to preserve you faultless, and
spotless, and to establish you without a blemish,
before His majesty, with joy, [namely,] the only one God,
our Deliverer, by means of Yeshua the Messiah our Master, be praise, and
dominion, and honor, and majesty, both now and in all ages. Amen!”
“First Intermediate Day of Pesach”
(Wednesday Evening March 27, 2013)
Evening: Counting of the Omer Day 2
Then read the following:
Day of the Omer |
Ministry |
Date |
Ephesians |
Attributes |
2 |
Masoret/Chazan |
Nisan
17 |
1:2 |
Chessed
(Mercy) With
Din (Justice) |
Ephesians
1:2 Chessed to you and shalom from God[5]
the Father and the master Yeshua HaMashiach.
(Thursday Morning March 28, 2013)
Morning Service
Torah Reading: Shemot
(Exodus) 13:1-16
Reader 1: Shemot
13:1-4
Reader 2: Shemot
13:5-10
Reader 3: Shemot
13:11-16
Maftir: B’Midbar
(Numbers) 28:18-25
Ashlamatah: Shir
HaShirim (Song of Songs) 1:1 – 2:17
Nazarean Codicil: 1
Corinthians 6:1 – 7:40 & Revelation 2:1-7
Blessing Before Torah Study
Blessed are You, Ha-Shem our G-d, King of the universe, Who
has sanctified us through Your commandments, and commanded us to actively study
Torah. Amen!
Please Ha-Shem, our G-d, sweeten the words of Your Torah in
our mouths and in the mouths of all Your people Israel. May we and our
offspring, and our offspring's offspring, and all the offspring of Your people,
the House of Israel, may we all, together, know Your Name and study Your Torah
for the sake of fulfilling Your desire. Blessed are You, Ha-Shem, Who teaches
Torah to His people Israel. Amen!
Blessed are You, Ha-Shem our G-d, King of the universe, Who
chose us from all the nations, and gave us the Torah. Blessed are You, Ha-Shem,
Giver of the Torah. Amen!
Ha-Shem spoke to Moses, explaining a Commandment.
"Speak to Aaron and his sons, and teach them the following Commandment:
This is how you should bless the Children of Israel. Say to the Children of
Israel:
May Ha-Shem bless you and keep watch over you; - Amen!
May Ha-Shem make His Presence enlighten you, and may He be
kind to you; - Amen!
May Ha-Shem bestow favor on you, and grant you peace. –
Amen!
This way, the priests will link My Name with the Israelites,
and I will bless them."
These are the Laws for which the Torah did not mandate
specific amounts: How much growing produce must be left in the corner of the
field for the poor; how much of the first fruits must be offered at the Holy
Temple; how much one must bring as an offering when one visits the Holy Temple
three times a year; how much one must do when doing acts of kindness; and there
is no maximum amount of Torah that a person must study.
These are the Laws whose benefits a person can often enjoy
even in this world, even though the primary reward is in the Next World: They
are: Honoring one's father and mother; doing acts of kindness; early attendance
at the place of Torah study -- morning and night; showing hospitality to
guests; visiting the sick; providing for the financial needs of a bride;
escorting the dead; being very engrossed in prayer; bringing peace between two
people, and between husband and wife; but the study of Torah is as great as all
of them together. Amen!
I Corinthians 6:1 – 7:40
& Revelation 2:1-7
Revelation 2:1-7
Hakham’s Rendition
1And to
the angel of the congregation in Ephesus, write, 'So says he who holds the
seven stars in his hand, he who walks among the Menorot (seven branched
candlesticks) of gold.
2 I know your
works and your labor and your endurance and that you are not able to bear evil
[ones]. And you have tested those who say about themselves that they are to
be Sh’liachim (apostles) and are not and you have found them [to be] liars.
3 And you
have endurance and you bear a burden because of my name (or, authority) and you
have not become weary.
4 But I have [something] against
you, because you have left your first love.[6]
5
Remember from where you came and do the former works, but if not, I will come
to you and I will remove your Menora (candelabra – i.e. the seven ministers of
the congregation), unless you repent.
6 But
this you have, that you hate the works of the Nicolaitans (i.e. Oppressors of
the Laity), that I also hate.'
7 He who
has ears should hear what the Spirit says to the congregations. And to him who
overcomes, I will allow [him] to eat of the tree of life which is in the midst
of PaRDeS (paradise) of Ha-Shem."
Blessing After Torah Study
Barúch Atáh Adonai, Elohénu Meléch HaOlám,
Ashér Natán Lánu Torát Emét, V'Chayéi Olám Natá B'Tochénu.
Barúch Atáh Adonái, Notén HaToráh. Amen!
Blessed is Ha-Shem our God, King of the universe,
Who has given us a teaching of truth, implanting within us
eternal life.
Blessed is Ha-Shem, Giver of the Torah. Amen!
“Now unto Him who is able to preserve you faultless, and
spotless, and to establish you without a blemish,
before His majesty, with joy, [namely,] the only one God,
our Deliverer, by means of Yeshua the Messiah our Master, be praise, and
dominion, and honor, and majesty, both now and in all ages. Amen!”
“Second Intermediate Day of Pesach”
(Thursday Evening March 28, 2013)
Evening: Counting of the Omer Day 3
Then read the following:
Day of the Omer |
Ministry |
Date |
Ephesians |
Attributes |
3 |
Masoret/Darshan |
Nisan
18 |
1:3-6 |
Chessed coupled
with prophecy |
Ephesians
1:3-6 Let the God and Father of our
master Yeshua HaMashiach be Blessed[7], having
blessed[8]
us in Messiah with every spiritual[9]
blessing[10] in
the heavens,[11] even
as He (God) has elected[12] (separated)[13] us[14]
(the Jewish people) to be in union with him[15]
Messiah before the foundation of the
world[16]
to be Tsadiqim (Greek: agios) and blameless in His God's presence in love. He God
appointed us as His chief/principle[17]
adoption[18]
as His own (children) through Yeshua
HaMashiach according to His
desire and good will to
the praise of the honour of His chessed (loving-kindness), in which He has made us accepted as the one beloved.
(Friday Morning March 29, 2013)
Morning Service
Torah Reading: Shemot
(Exodus) 22:24 – 23:19
Reader 1: Shemot 22:24-26
Reader 2: Shemot 22:27 – 23:5
Reader 3: Shemot 23:6-19
Maftir: B’Midbar (Numbers)
28:18-25
Ashlamatah: Shir
HaShirim (Song of Songs) 3:1 – 4:16
Nazarean
Codicil: 1 Corinthians 8:1 – 10:15 & Revelation 2:1-7
Blessing
Before Torah Study
Blessed are You,
Ha-Shem our G-d, King of the universe, Who has sanctified us through Your
commandments, and commanded us to actively study Torah. Amen!
Please Ha-Shem, our
G-d, sweeten the words of Your Torah in our mouths and in the mouths of all
Your people Israel. May we and our offspring, and our offspring's offspring,
and all the offspring of Your people, the House of Israel, may we all,
together, know Your Name and study Your Torah for the sake of fulfilling Your
desire. Blessed are You, Ha-Shem, Who teaches Torah to His people Israel. Amen!
Blessed are You,
Ha-Shem our G-d, King of the universe, Who chose us from all the nations, and
gave us the Torah. Blessed are You, Ha-Shem, Giver of the Torah. Amen!
Ha-Shem spoke to
Moses, explaining a Commandment. "Speak to Aaron and his sons, and teach
them the following Commandment: This is how you should bless the Children of
Israel. Say to the Children of Israel:
May Ha-Shem bless you
and keep watch over you; - Amen!
May Ha-Shem make His
Presence enlighten you, and may He be kind to you; - Amen!
May Ha-Shem bestow
favor on you, and grant you peace. – Amen!
This way, the priests
will link My Name with the Israelites, and I will bless them."
These
are the Laws for which the Torah did not mandate specific amounts: How much
growing produce must be left in the corner of the field for the poor; how much
of the first fruits must be offered at the Holy Temple; how much one must bring
as an offering when one visits the Holy Temple three times a year; how much one
must do when doing acts of kindness; and there is no maximum amount of Torah
that a person must study.
These
are the Laws whose benefits a person can often enjoy even in this world, even
though the primary reward is in the Next World: They are: Honoring one's father
and mother; doing acts of kindness; early attendance at the place of Torah
study -- morning and night; showing hospitality to guests; visiting the sick;
providing for the financial needs of a bride; escorting the dead; being very
engrossed in prayer; bringing peace between two people, and between husband and
wife; but the study of Torah is as great as all of them together. Amen!
Nazarean Codicil:
I Corinthians 8:1 – 10:15
& Revelation 2:1-7
Revelation 2:1-7
Hakham’s Rendition
1And to
the angel of the congregation in Ephesus, write, 'So says he who holds the
seven stars in his hand, he who walks among the Menorot (seven branched
candlesticks) of gold.
2 I know your
works and your labor and your endurance and that you are not able to bear evil
[ones]. And you have tested those who say about themselves that they are to
be Sh’liachim (apostles) and are not and you have found them [to be] liars.
3 And you
have endurance and you bear a burden because of my name (or, authority) and you
have not become weary.
4 But I have [something] against
you, because you have left your first love.[19]
5
Remember from where you came and do the former works, but if not, I will come
to you and I will remove your Menora (candelabra – i.e. the seven ministers of
the congregation), unless you repent.
6 But
this you have, that you hate the works of the Nicolaitans (i.e. Oppressors of
the Laity), that I also hate.'
7 He who
has ears should hear what the Spirit says to the congregations. And to him who
overcomes, I will allow [him] to eat of the tree of life which is in the midst
of PaRDeS (paradise) of Ha-Shem."
Blessing After Torah Study
Barúch Atáh Adonai, Elohénu Meléch HaOlám,
Ashér Natán Lánu Torát Emét, V'Chayéi Olám Natá B'Tochénu.
Barúch Atáh Adonái, Notén HaToráh. Amen!
Blessed is Ha-Shem our God, King of the universe,
Who has given us a teaching of truth, implanting within us
eternal life.
Blessed is Ha-Shem, Giver of the Torah. Amen!
“Now unto Him who is able to preserve you faultless, and
spotless, and to establish you without a blemish,
before His majesty, with joy, [namely,] the only one God,
our Deliverer, by means of Yeshua the Messiah our Master, be praise, and
dominion, and honor, and majesty, both now and in all ages. Amen!”
We wish you and yours
a wonderful Yom Tov, filled with nachas and inspiration. May the radiance and
meaning of Pesach gladden your heart and uplift your soul. And may we all
celebrate Pesach together in Jerusalem next year!
Chag Kasher VeSameach!
Hakham Dr. Yosef ben Haggai
Rabbi Dr. Hillel ben David
Rabbi Dr. ELiyahu ben Abraham
[1] See above Rashi’s commentary on Shemot (Exodus) 12:39 for an explanation on the nature of this “first love.” See also the statement of Israel in Shemot (Exodus) 24:7 “Everything that the LORD has said we will do and we will hear.” That is, “we will obey and then hear the reason for the commandment.” This is full EMUNAH! See also Luke 7:6-9.
[2]
Wuest, K. S. (1997, c1984). Wuest's word studies from the Greek New
Testament: For the English reader (Eph 1:1). Grand Rapids: Eerdmans.
[3] See above Rashi’s commentary on Shemot (Exodus) 12:39 for an explanation on the nature of this “first love.” See also the statement of Israel in Shemot (Exodus) 24:7 “Everything that the LORD has said we will do and we will hear.” That is, “we will obey and then hear the reason for the commandment.” This is full EMUNAH! See also Luke 7:6-9.
[4] See
above Rashi’s commentary on Shemot (Exodus) 12:39 for an explanation on the
nature of this “first love.” See also the statement of Israel in Shemot
(Exodus) 24:7 “Everything that the LORD has said we will do and we will hear.”
That is, “we will obey and then hear the reason for the commandment.” This is
full EMUNAH! See also Luke 7:6-9.
[5] Any definition of G-d is spiritual idolatry
[6] See
above Rashi’s commentary on Shemot (Exodus) 12:39 for an explanation on the
nature of this “first love.” See also the statement of Israel in Shemot
(Exodus) 24:7 “Everything that the LORD has said we will do and we will hear.”
That is, “we will obey and then hear the reason for the commandment.” This is
full EMUNAH! See also Luke 7:6-9.
[7] Lit.
good words εὐλογέω
Therefore, we see that the appropriate blessings should be said. General
“barakhot” (blessings) follow the format of “Blessed are you O Lord God…)
[8] The "blessing" mentioned here is in past tense.
[9] πνευματικός
Lit.
Spirituals. Here we must note that the language is identical to 1Co. 12:1,
where the text of the Authorized Version reads "spiritual" gifts.
Gifts is added. "Gifts" is NOT implied. Therefore we
see in πνευματικός
the
essence of the soul Heb. נפֶשׁ a soul, living being, life, self, person, desire, passion,
appetite, emotion. Str. H5315, TWOT 659b
[10] εὐλογίᾳ
πνευματικῇ - good
spiritual words. However, these words are the words spoken from the upper triad
of the bench of three. Hokhmah – Binah & Da’at. ChaBaD. To put this more
succinctly these “words” are the judgments of the Hakhamim. We also see these
words applying to the Mesorah – Oral Torah. In these “breathings”, we have good
spiritual (breathed) words.
[11] ἐπουράνιος compound επι and ουράνιος point of origin
being "from the heavens" the spiritual environs of the ethereal
world. (see v4 below) Therefore, “from the heavens” means that the decisions
(halakhic judgments which from the Bench of there are the judgments which are
“binding on earth” because they have been made in the spiritual world.
[12] ἐκλέγω Greek ἐκλέγω is
compound. εκ meaning out of λέγω logos or
Word, Aramaic Memra. This translation can be read "out of words"
meaning that there were NO words spoken in our creation, or that this is a
reference to being created and given a mission while we were in an ethereal
state spirit. Regardless the ethereal world of God is without words.
Herein we see God speaking to us the plan/mission of our lives without
words.
בְּרֵאשִׁית Gen. 1:1 can be translated בְּ רֵאשִׁ In the head, i.e. God's head. These events took place in
the timeless expanse of the "heavens" i.e spirit - ethereal world
before there were words and letters. In this environment words are not spoken.
ALL communication is "KNOWING" not hearing, but SEEING - which is not
seeing with the eye of the body but the eye of the soul – spiritual being.
[13] cf.
Eze. 20:38 LXX. Kittel, G. (Ed.). (1964). Theological Dictionary of the New
Testament (Vol. 4 ). (i. Geoffrey W. Bro, Trans.) Grand Rapids , Michigan:
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. p. 145
[14] We
need to now alert the reader to pay special attention to Hakham Shaul’s (Paul)
“us” and “you.” Hakham Shaul’s use of we, us and you are key to determining who
he is addressing.
[15] see 1:11 below
[16] We
interpret this to mean at or before Har Sinai. The foundation of the world was
G-d’s giving of the Torah. However, the Greek word καταβολή – katabole also means, “to conceive.”
Therefore, we can see that G-d conceived the Jewish people before all others
and before there was an earth. Thus it can also be interpreted to mean that G-d
conceived the Jewish people before Har Sinai, which is a very reasonable and an
allegorical thought. The notion of καταβολή – katabole
is also related to the thought of injecting or depositing semen into the
womb.
[17] cf.
TDNT 6:685 3. Metaphorical. Here our Ephesians text is Remes/Allegorical
bordering So’od. Therefore, we see that the Jewish people are the
Chief/principle adoption above all others. προορίζω can mean
beforehand. προορίζω can
have the connotation of “to foreordain,”
“to predestine.” Since God is eternal and has ordained everything before time, προορίζειν is a
stronger form of ὁρίζειν. προγινώσκειν is
the same. See B’resheet 42:22 where Reuven equates the soul of Yosef with his
blood.
[18] υἱοθεσία = υἱο son θεα derived from Theos
God
[19] See
above Rashi’s commentary on Shemot (Exodus) 12:39 for an explanation on the
nature of this “first love.” See also the statement of Israel in Shemot
(Exodus) 24:7 “Everything that the LORD has said we will do and we will hear.”
That is, “we will obey and then hear the reason for the commandment.” This is
full EMUNAH! See also Luke 7:6-9.