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7104 Inlay St. SE, Lacey, WA 98513
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© 2009
E-Mail: gkilli@aol.com
Triennial
Cycle (Triennial Torah Cycle) / Septennial Cycle (Septennial Torah Cycle)
Three and 1/2 year
Lectionary Readings |
First Year
of the Reading Cycle |
Shebat 27, 5769 – February
20/21, 2009 |
First Year
of the Shmita Cycle |
“Shabbat
Shekalim” & “Shabbat Mevar’chin HaChodesh Adar”
“Sabbath
of the Shekels” & “Sabbath of the Proclamation of the New Month of Adar”
For
further study see: http://www.betemunah.org/chodesh.html
& http://www.inner.org/times/adar/adar.htm
Candle Lighting and Havdalah Times:
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 6:08 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 7:04 PM |
San Antonio, Texas, U.S. Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 6:09 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 7:03 PM |
Baton Rouge & Alexandria, Louisiana, U.S. Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:38 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:33 PM |
Sheboygan
& Manitowoc, Wisconsin US Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:09 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:11 PM |
Bowling Green & Murray, Kentucky, U.S. Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:12 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:10 PM |
Brisbane, Australia Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 6:11 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 7:04 PM |
Miami,
Florida, US Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:59 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:52 PM |
Jakarta,
Indonesia Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:57 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:46 PM |
New London, Connecticut USA Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:02 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:02 PM |
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 7:10 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 7:59 PM |
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:58 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:56 PM |
Manila
& Cebu, Philippines Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:44 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:34 PM |
Olympia, Washington, U.S. Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:25 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:30 PM |
Port Elizabeth, South Africa Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 6:53 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 7:48 PM |
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania USA Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 5:24 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 6:23 PM |
Singapore, Singapore Friday Feb. 20, 2009 – Candles at 7:03 PM Saturday Feb. 21, 2009 – Havdalah 7:52 PM |
For
other places see: http://chabad.org/calendar/candlelighting.asp
Roll of Honor:
This Torah commentary comes to you courtesy of:
His
Honor Rosh Paqid Adon Hillel ben David and
beloved wife HH Giberet Batsheva bat Sarah,
His
Honor Paqid Adon Mikha ben Hillel
His
Honor Paqid Adon David ben Abraham,
Her
Excellency Giberet Sarai bat Sarah and
beloved family,
His
Excellency Adon Barth Lindemann and
beloved family,
His
Excellency Adon John Batchelor and
beloved wife,
His
Excellency Adon Ezra ben Abraham and
beloved wife HE Giberet Karmela bat Sarah,
Her Excellency Giberet Sandra Grenier
His Excellency Adon Stephen Legge and
beloved wife HE Giberet Angela Legge
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!
Also a great thank you and great blessings be upon
all who send comments to the list about the contents and commentary of the
weekly Torah Seder and allied topics.
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Shabbat |
Torah
Reading: |
Weekday Torah
Reading: |
מַחֲצִית
הַשֶּׁקֶל |
|
|
“MaChatsit
HaSheqel” |
Reader 1 – Sh’mot
30:1-5 |
Reader 1 – B’resheet
25:19-21 |
“Half
a Shekel” |
Reader 2 – Sh’mot
30:6-10 |
Reader 2 – B’resheet
25:22-24 |
“Medio Shequel” |
Reader 3 – Sh’mot
30:11-16 |
Reader 3 – B’resheet 25:25-27 |
Sh’mot (Exodus) 30:1-38 B’midbar (Num 28:9-15) |
Reader 4 – Sh’mot
30:17-21 |
|
Ashlamatah: II
Kings 12:1-17 |
Reader 5 – Sh’mot
30:22-25 |
|
Special: I Samuel
20:18, 42 |
Reader 6 – Sh’mot
30:26-33 |
Reader 1 – B’resheet
25:19-21 |
Psalms 104:1-35 |
Reader 7 – Sh’mot
30:34-38 |
Reader 2 – B’resheet
25:22-24 |
N.C.: Matthew 17:24-27 |
Maftir: B’midbar
28:9-15 |
Reader 3 – B’resheet
25:25-27 |
Mishle (Proverbs) Proverbs
7:1-27 |
II Kings
12:1-17 |
|
|
I Samuel 20:18, 42 |
|
Rashi & Targum
Pseudo Jonathan
for: Sh’mot (Ex.)
30:1-38
RASHI |
TARGUM
PSEUDO JONATHAN |
1 ¶ Verse 1: You will make
an altar to burn incense. Make it out of Acacia wood. |
1 And you will make an altar
on which to burn incense of perfumes: of sitta wood will you make it. |
2 It will be one amoh
long and one amoh wide, it will be a square, and two amohs high. Its
horn-like elevations will be of one piece with it. |
2 A cubit its length, and a
cubit its breadth; foursquare will it be: and two cubits its height: and its
upright horns will be of it. |
3 You will overlay it with
pure gold, on its top, its walls all around, and its horn-like elevations,
and make a gold crown-like rim all around it. |
3 And you will overlay it
with pure gold, its top, and its wall round about, and its horns; and make
for it a border of gold round about. |
4 Make two gold rings for it
under its crown-like rim, on two of its corners. Make them on its two
opposite sides. They will house the poles with which it is carried. |
4 And two golden rings make
you for it beneath its border at the two corners, you will make upon its two
sides, to be the place for the staves by which it may be carried. |
5 Make the poles out of
acacia wood and overlay them with gold. |
5 And you will make the
staves of sitta wood, and cover them with gold. |
6 Place it in front of the
parochet that is by the Ark of the Testimony, in front of the covering that
is on the Testimony where I will meet with you there. |
6 And you will place it
before the veil which is over the ark of the testimony, before the mercy seat
that is upon the testimony, where I will appoint My Word to be with you. |
7 Aharon will burn upon it
incense of spices. Every morning when he cleans the lamps, he will burn it. |
7 And Aharon will burn sweet
incense upon it from morning to morning: when he orders the lamps, be will
burn it. |
8 And when Aharon lights the
lamps in the afternoon, he will burn it. It is a continual incense-offering
before Adonai for you generations. |
8 And when Aharon kindles
the lamps between the evenings, he will burn sweet incense perpetually before
the Lord in your generations. |
9 Do not bring upon it
strange [unauthorized] incense; neither burnt-offerings nor meal-offerings.
You will not pour a libation-offering upon it. |
9 You will not offer thereon
the sweet incense of strange peoples, nor offer upon it burnt offerings, or
minchas, nor pour libations. |
10 Aharon will make
atonement on its horn-like elevations once each year. With the blood of the
sin-offering of atonement, he will make atonement on it once each year for
your generations. It is Holy of Holies to Adonai. |
10 And Aharon will expiate
upon its horns once in the year with the blood of the sin offering for an
expiation: once in the year will he make atonement upon it on the day of
atonement in your generations: it will be most holy before the Lord. |
|
|
11 ¶ Adonai spoke to Moshe,
saying, |
11 And the Lord spoke unto
Mosheh, saying, |
12 "When you take the
count of the B'ne Yisrael to determine their numbers, each man will give an atonement
pledge for his soul to Adonai, when you count them. Thus there will be no
plague among them when you count them. |
12 When you take the sum of
the sons of Israel according to their number, they will give every man the
ransom of their souls before the Lord when you number them; that there may
not be among them the calamity of death when you dost number them.
[JERUSALEM. When you take the head of the number of the sums of the sons of
Israel.] |
13 Everyone passing by to be
counted must give this--- half a shekel based on the shekel of the Holy
[Sanctuary,] where a shekel is twenty gerah. Half of such a shekel must be
given as a terumah-offering to Adonai. |
13 This valuation was shown
to Mosheh in the mountain as with a denarius of fire, and thus spoke He to
him: So will every one who passes to the numbering give a half shekel of the
coin of the sanctuary: (a half shekel is twenty manin:) the half shekel is to
be the separation before the Lord. |
14 Everyone passing by to be
counted, from [age] twenty years and older, must give a terumah-offering to
Adonai. |
14 Every one who passes to
the numbering, from a son of twenty years and upwards, will give the
separation before the Lord. |
15 The rich will not give
more, and the poor will not give less than half a shekel, when giving this
terumah-offering to Adonai to atone for your souls. |
15 He who is rich will not
add to, and he who is poor will diminish from, the half shekel in giving the
separation before the Lord, to atone for your souls. |
16 Take this atonement money
from the B'ne Yisrael and donate it for the work of the Tent of Meeting. It
will be a remembrance for the B'ne Yisrael before Adonai to atone for your
souls." |
16 And you will take the
silver of the ransom from the sons of Israel, and apply it to the work of the
tabernacle of ordinance; that it may be for the sons of Israel for a good
memorial before the Lord, as a ransom for your souls. |
|
|
17 ¶ Adonai spoke to Moshe,
saying: |
17 And the Lord spoke to
Mosheh, saying, |
18 "Make a copper wash
basin and its copper base for washing; and place it between the Tent of
Meeting and the Altar, and put water in it. |
18 And you will make a laver
of brass, and its foundation of brass, for purification; and will set it
between the tabernacle of ordinance and the altar, and put water therein. |
19 Aharon and his sons will
wash from it their hands and their feet. |
19 And they will take from
it for a cleansing ablution. And Aharon and his sons will sanctify their
hands and their feet with its water; |
20 Before entering the Tent
of Meeting they must wash with water and they will not die, or whenever they
approach the Altar for Divine service, or to burn a fire-offering to Adonai. |
20 at the time of their
entering into the tabernacle of ordinance they will sanctify with water, |
21 They must wash their
hands and their feet and they will not die. This is a perpetual statute for
them, for him [Aharon] and his descendants for all their generations." |
21 that they die not by the
fiery flame: and it will be to them an everlasting statute, to him and to his
sons in their generations. |
|
|
22 ¶ Adonai spoke to Moshe
saying. |
22 And the Lord spoke to
Mosheh, saying, |
23 "You will take the
finest spices, five hundred [shekels] of pure myrrh, half portions of
fragrant cinnamon, [consisting of] two hundred and fifty shekels each, and
two hundred and fifty [shekels] of calamus spices. |
23 And you also take to you
the first aromatics, choice myrrh, in weight five hundred minas, and sweet
cinnamon of half the weight, two hundred and fifty minas, and sweet calamus
in weight two hundred and fifty minas |
24 [Also take] five hundred
[shekels] of cassia based on the shekel value of the Holy [Sanctuary], and a
hin of olive oil. |
24 and cassia in weight five
hundred minas of shekels, in the shekel of the sanctuary, and olive oil a
vase full, in weight twelve logs, a log for each tribe of the twelve tribes.
[JERUSALEM. And you take to you the chief goodly spices, choice myrrh, in
weight five hundred minas of shekels.] |
25 Make it into sacred anointing
oil, a blend made by a [perfume] blender. It will be a sacred anointing oil. |
25 And you will make of it a
holy anointing oil, perfumed with perfume, the work of the perfumer, of
compounded perfumes: a holy anointing oil will it be. |
26 Anoint with it the Tent
of Meeting, and the Ark of the Testimony, |
26 And with it anoint you
the tabernacle of ordinance, and the ark of the testimony, |
27 And the Table and all its
vessels, and the Menorah and its vessels, and the Incense Altar, |
27 and the table and all its
vessels, and the candelabrum and its vessels, and the altar of sweet incense,
|
28 And the Burnt-offering
Altar and all its vessels, and the wash basin and its base. |
28 and the altar of burnt
offering and all its vessels, and the laver and its foundation, |
29 Sanctify them and they
will become holy of holies. Anything that touches them will become holy. |
29 and consecrate them, and
they will be most holy. Every one of the priests who approaches to them will
be sanctified; but of the rest of the tribes, (whoever touches them) will be
consumed by the fiery flame from before the Lord. |
30 You will also anoint
Aharon and his sons, and sanctify them to serve Me as kohanim." |
30 But Aharon and his sons
anoint you, and consecrate them to minister before Me. |
31 Speak to the B'ne
Yisrael, saying: "This will be sacred anointing oil to Me for all your
generations. |
31 And speak you to the sons
of Israel, saying, This will be a holy anointing oil before Me unto your
generations. |
32 It must not be poured on
the flesh of any man, and its formula must not be duplicated. It is sacred.
It must be sacred to you. |
32 Upon the flesh of man it
may not be poured, and the like of it you will not make to resemble it; unto
you it will be most sacred. |
33 If a person compounds a
similar formula, or if he places from it upon an unauthorized person, he will
be cut off [spiritually] from his people. |
33 The man who compounds the
like of it, or putts it upon the unconsecrated who are not of the sons of
Aharon, will be destroyed from his people. |
|
|
34 ¶ Adonai said to Moshe,
Take for yourself spices, stacte, onycha and galbanum, spices and pure
frankincense. They will be of equal weight. |
34 And the Lord said to
Mosheh, Take to you spices, balsam, and onycha, and galbanum, choice spices,
and pure frankincense, weight for weight will it be. [JERUSALEM. Balsam,
spikenard‑myrrh, and galbanum.] |
35 Make it into incense, a
blend blended by a blender, thoroughly blended, pure and holy. |
35 And confect therewith a
fragrant incense, the work of the compounder, a pure and sacred mixture.
[JERUSALEM. Commixed.] |
36 Pulverize some of it very
finely and place it before the [Ark of] Testimony in the Tent of Meeting,
where I will meet with you. It will be holy of holies to you. |
36 And beat, and make it
small, and of it some will you put before the testimony in the tabernacle of
ordinance, where I will appoint My Word to be with you. Most sacred will it
be to you. |
37 The incense you are
making, its formula must not be duplicated for you[r use]. It will be sacred
to you for Adonai. |
37 And of the sweet incense
you will make, the like will not be made among you; it will be sacred to you
before the Lord: |
38 A person who duplicates
this formula to enjoy its fragrance, will be cut off [spiritually] from his
people." |
38 the man who makes the
like of it to smell thereto will be destroyed from his people. |
|
|
Rashi & Targum
Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar (Num.)
28:9-15
RASHI |
TARGUM PSEUDO JONATHAN |
9. On the Shabbat day [the
offering will be] two yearling lambs without blemish, and two tenths [of an
ephah] of fine flour as a meal-offering, mixed with [olive] oil, and its
libation. |
9. but on the day of Shabbat
two lambs of the year without blemish, and two‑tenths of flour mixed with
olive oil for the mincha and its libation. |
10.
This is the burnt-offering on its Shabbat, in addition to the constant
(daily) burnt-offering and its libation. |
10.
On the Sabbath you will make a Sabbath burnt sacrifice in addition to the
perpetual burnt sacrifice and its libation. |
11.
At the beginning of your months you will bring a burnt-offering to Adonai,
two young bulls, one ram, seven yearling lambs, [all] without blemish. |
11.
And at the beginning of your months you will offer a burnt sacrifice before
the LORD; two young bullocks, without mixture, one ram, lambs of the year
seven, unblemished; |
12.
And three tenths [of an ephah] of fine flour as a meal-offering mixed with
the [olive] oil for each bull, two tenths [of an ephah] of fine flour as a
meal-offering, mixed with the [olive] oil for the one ram, |
12.
and three tenths of flour mingled with oil for the mincha for one bullock;
two tenths of flour with olive oil for the mincha of the one ram; |
13.
And one tenth [of an ephah] of fine flour as a meal-offering mixed with the
[olive] oil for each lamb. A burnt-offering of pleasing aroma, a
fire-offering to Adonai. |
13.
and one tenth of flour with olive oil for the mincha for each lamb of the
burnt offering, an oblation to be received with favour before the LORD. |
14.
Their libations [will be], one half of a hin for (a) bull, one third of a hin
for the ram, and one fourth of a hin for (the) lamb, of wine. This is the
burnt-offering of each [Rosh] Chodesh, at its renewal throughout the months
of the year. |
14.
And for their libation to be offered with them, the half of a hin for a
bullock, the third of a hin for the ram, and the fourth of a hin for a lamb,
of the wine of grapes. This burnt sacrifice will be offered at the beginning
of every month in the time of the removal of the beginning of every month in
the year; |
15.
And [You will also bring] one he-goat for a sin offering to Adonai, in
addition to the constant (daily) burnt-offering it will be done, and its
libation. |
15.
and one kid of the goats, for a sin offering before the LORD at the
disappearing (failure) of the moon, with the perpetual burnt sacrifice will you
perform with its libation. |
.
|
16.
|
Midrash
Tanhuma Yelammedenu
Sh’mot
(Exodus) 30:1-38
1. When you take the sum of the children of Israel
(Exodus 30:12). May our masters teach us: How many times each year did
the Israelites bring their offerings to the Temple? Thus did our masters teach
us: They brought them three times a year; on the first day of the months of
Nisan, Iyar, and Elul. On the first day of the months of Nisan and Iyar the
offerings for the Temple treasury would be collected and the priests would
approach the altar to seek forgiveness for the sins of Israel with the shekels
they had contributed. But why did they do so three times a year? In order that
all the Israelites might be involved, throughout the year, in giving their
contributions. Why did they begin to accumulate their contributions on the
first day of Adar (actually the Sanhedrin would make the announcement on the
first day of Adar), yough they did not bring it in until the first day of
Nisan? It was done that way so that the offering would not become an unbearable
hardship for the Israelites. Hence they (the priests) would remind the
Israelites on the first day of the month of Adar (to prepare their offerings).
Solomon exclaimed: The way of the sluggard is as though
hedged by thorns; but the path of the upright is even (Proverbs 15:19).
Scripture is referring in this verse to the wicked Esau. Just as the thorns
from a bush that cling to a man’s garment will cling to another part of the
garment when he tries to brush them off, so the government of Esau (Rome),
while still collecting a crop tax from Israel, would impose a head tax. And
even before the head tax was fully collected, it would impose a levy for the
care of its soldiers. The Holy One, blessed be He, did not do that: For the
path of the upright is even, made level before Israel.
They announced (the obligations) on the first day of
Adar, and then it was collected (by the priests) on the first day of Nisan. How
much did they collect? A half-shekel (the head-tax for the Temple). And how
much was it? It was equal to half a sela. They were collected only to make it
possible to atone for the sins of Israel. They would purchase the daily burnt
offerings with the contribution. Because the Holy One, blessed be He, foresaw
that in every census Israel would take in the future, some of them would be
missing (as a punishment for the census – since there is a prohibition against
taking a census of Jews; see Yoma 22b and II Samuel 24), He ordained the shekel
offering as a remedy so that it might atone for them and no plague would befall
them.
2. When you take the sum of the children of Israel
(Exodus 30:12). Scripture states elsewhere in allusion to this verse: Your
navel is like a round goblet, your belly is like a heap of wheat set about with
lilies, wherein no mingled wine is wanting (Song 7:3). Your navel refers
to the Sanhedrin. But why did they call the Sanhedrin a navel? Just as the navel
is located in the centre of a man’s body, so the Sanhedrin met in a chamber of
hewn stone in the centre of the Temple. Furthermore, just as the child, whose
mouth is closed whilst within its mother’s womb, is sustained through the
navel, so the Israelites were sustained only by virtue of the Sanhedrin. Hence
they likened it to a navel. The word round indicates that just as the
navel is round, so the Sanhedrin sat in a semicircular room.
The meeting place of a Sanhedrin was called a sahar
(“goblet”) because it resembled a sohar (“store”). For just as you are
able to find whatever you need in a store, so the Sanhedrin decided what was
pure and impure, fit and unfit, permitted and forbidden.
Wherein no mingled wine was wanting. If one of
the members of the Sanhedrin found it necessary to leave the meeting to satisfy
his physical needs, he would first look about to see if twenty-three members
were in attendance (the judicial court, also called a small court, consisted of
twenty-three members; all had to be present at a trial). If there were, he
would leave, but if not he would not depart. Your belly is like a heap of
wheat alludes to the book of Leviticus, which contains the means for
attaining atonement for guilt and sinful acts. It holds (a heap of) sin offerings
and a heap of guilt offerings. He placed in the middle of the Torah, with all
its offerings (two books of the Torah precede Leviticus and two follow it),
with all its offerings. In that way it resembles a heap of wheat.
R. Simeon the son of Lakish said: Why is it (Israel)
compared to wheat? Just as wheat piles up when poured into a measure, so the
elders, the students, the wise, and the pious increase in number when a census
is taken.
Your belly is like a heap of wheat. R. Idi said:
Is not a heap of cedar cones more beautiful than a heap of wheat? Why does this
verse says a heap of wheat? They replied: The world cannot exist on
cedar cones if it lacks wheat. Hence it says: Your belly is like a heap of
wheat.
Set about with lilies. Does a man ever fence in his
fields with lilies? Does he not normally fence his fields with thorns and
thistles, with pits and thorn-bushes? What then is the meaning of Set about
with lilies? This refers to numerous commandments that are as sensitive as
lilies. For example, a man is extremely anxious to enter his bridal chamber,
for no day is dearer to him than that day. It is the day in which he rejoices
with his bride. What does he do? He spends a considerable amount of money to
set up the bridal chamber and he comes to have intercourse with her. But if she
says to him: “I have seen something like a red lily (i.e. like the blood of her
menstruation), he draws away from her. He turns his face to one side and she to
the other. What compelled him to turn from her? Was it a snake biting him, a
scorpion stinging him, or a thorn between them? No, only the words of the
Torah, since it is said: And you shall not approach a woman to uncover her
nakedness, as long as she is impure by her uncleanness (Leviticus 18:19).
Hence it is written: Set about like lilies.
They shall give (Exodus 30:12). Observe that
Israel was so beloved that even their sins brought them considerable benefit.
If their sins could do that, how much more so would their meritorious deeds.
You find that when Jacob sent Joseph to his brethren, they watched him approach
and said to one another: Behold this dreamer comes. Come now, therefore, and
let us slay him (Genesis 37:19-20). They hurled him into the pit and said:
Let us eat and drink, and then we will kill him. After eating and drinking,
they were about to say grace when Judah said to them: We are planning to take a
life, yet now we would bless G-d. If we should do this, we would be blaspheming
against G-d and not blessing Him. Because of this, Scripture says: And the
covetous vaunts himself, though he condemn the Lord (Psalm 10:3). Come,
and let us sell him to the Ishmaelites and let not our hand be upon him (Genesis
37:27). (And they all agreed.)
And they sat down to eat bread (ibid.,
v.25). R. Judah the son of Shalum said: This is a notable instance of many
sitting down together in unity, with a single thought in mind; to sell Joseph.
Yet he fed the world for seven years, through two famines. If despite their sin
he could feed the world and cause it to endure, how much more beneficial would
have been the result if they had acted meritoriously. Similarly, observe what
happened to the tribes in the chapter Shekalim, when they were permitted to
atone for the incident of the golden calf. If the heinous sin they committed
could lead to the performance of a worthy act, how much more so if they had
acted meritoriously.
3. When you take the sum of the children of Israel
(Exodus 30:12). R. Tanhuma the son of Abba began the discussion with the
verse Sweet is the sleep of a labouring man, whether he eat little or much;
but the satiety of the rich will not suffer him to sleep (Ecclesiastes
5:11). They said to Solomon after he spoke these words: Surely you must be
jesting, inasmuch as it is written concerning you: For he was wiser than all
men (1 Kings 5:11). And now you say: Sweet is the sleep of a labouring
man, whether he eats little or much. Is it not a fact that anyone who is
hungry because he ate only a little cannot sleep, while one that eats much
sleeps well? He replied: I am speaking here only of righteous/generous men and
those who labour in the study of the Law. For example, a man who lives only
thirty years may have devoted himself from his tenth year to the day of his
death to the study of the Law and the commandments, while another man who lives
eighty years, may have devoted himself to the study of the Law and the
commandments from his tenth year to the day of his death. You might say: Woe to
the first one, who laboured only twenty years in the study of the Law, whilst
the other devoted himself to the study of the Law for seventy years. Surely the
Holy One, blessed be He, will give him a greater reward than He will give to
him who laboured in the Law only twenty years. Hence I said: Whether
he eats little or much. For the one who had devoted twenty years to the
study of the Torah might well say to the Holy One, blessed be He: “If You had
not removed me from this world in the prime of my life, I would have had
additional years to devote to the study of the Law and the commandments.”
Therefore I repeat: Whether he eats little or much, the reward of one is
equal to the reward of the other.
Then they said to him: You declared also that The
satiety of the rich will not suffer him to sleep. What can this mean?
Certainly it permits him to sleep. In fact, a man sated with food falls asleep
more quickly than others. Solomon replied: I was speaking about those who
possess the riches of the Torah and not material possessions. For example, a
man who is distinguished and wealthy in the knowledge of the Torah will teach
many students and disseminate his knowledge among the masses, and he is
satisfied in his knowledge of Torah. And when he dies, the disciples he raised
do not permit him to be forgotten. They sit and labour in the Torah, the
Talmud, the Law, and the Aggadah, quoting the Law in his name and recalling him
to mind constantly. They do not permit him to sleep undisturbed in his grave.
R. Simeon the son of Lakish, R. Akiba, and R. Simeon the
son of Yohai said: His disciples do not permit him to sleep undisturbed in his
grave, as it is said: Moving gently the lips of those that are asleep (Song
7:10). Hence, The satiety of the rich will not suffer him to sleep. Similarly,
Moses taught the Torah to the Israelites, trained them in the observance of the
Law, arranged the order of the chapters of the Torah, and assigned the
chapters to be read each Sabbath, on Rosh Chodesh, and on the holy days. And
they call him to mind as they read each Torah portion.
With reference to the portion Shekalim, Moses had said to
the Holy One, blessed be He: Master of the universe, when I die I shall not be
remembered. The Holy One, blessed be He, replied: Be sure that just as you
stand here now, giving them the portion containing Shekalim, thereby lifting
their heads upright (i.e., to be forgiven), every year when they read it before
Me, it will be as though you were standing in that place and lifting their
heads upright. How do we know this? From what they shall read concerning this
matter in the verse And the Lord spoke to Moses saying: When you are lifting
up the head of Israel (Exodus 30:11). “Lift up the head” is not said, but
rather when you are lifting up (the future tense of the word “lifting”
is used: “they will be forgiven.”)
4. When you take the sum of the children of Israel
(Exodus 30:12). Scripture states elsewhere: Many there are that say of
my soul: “There is no salvation for him in God,” Selah. But You, O Lord, are a
shield about me, my glory, and the lifter of my head (Psalm 3:3-4). R.
Samuel the son of Ammi and the rabbis discussed this verse. R. Samuel the son
of Ammi contended that this verse refers to Doeg and Ahithophel, who were
masters of the Torah. That say of my soul suggests that they would say
to David: Can a man who captures a lamb and then kills the shepherd causing
Israel to fall before the sword gain salvation, since it is written: There
is no salvation for him in God, Selah?
Then David cried out: But You, O Lord, as if to
say, O You who are Master of the world, Your law agrees with them, for You
said: The adulterer and the adulteress will surely be put to death (Leviticus
20:10). But are a shield to me refers to the merits of my ancestors. My
glory indicates that You have restored me to kingship; and Lifter of my
head implies that though I was guilty of murder, You permitted me to lift
up the head, that is, to be forgiven through Nathan the Prophet, for he said: The
Lord also has put away your sin; you shall not die (II Samuel 12:13).
However, the Rabbis held that this verse refers to the
nations of the world. The idolaters are many (rabim), as it is written: The
uproar of many peoples (Isaiah 17:12). They said to Israel: You are a
nation that heard at Sinai: I am the Lord Your God, you shall have no other
gods before Me (Exodus 20:3), yet at the end of forty days you said of a
calf: This is your god O Israel (ibid., 32:4). How can they enjoy
salvation, since it says: There is no salvation for him in God (Psalm
3:3)? But You, O Lord, are a shield about me suggests that Israel cried
out: Master of the universe, do You agree with them, since You have said: He
that sacrifices unto the gods will be utterly destroyed (Exodus 22:19)? A
shield about me alludes to the merits of the fathers; my glory implies
that You will cause Your Shekhinah to dwell in our midst when You said: Build
Me a sanctuary that I may tabernacle among them (ibid., 25:8), and lifter
of the head indicates that instead of sentencing us to destruction, You
permitted us to lift up the head, that is, to be forgiven because of Moses, as
it is said: You lift up the head.
R. Jacob the son of Yohai, in the name of R. Jonathan,
explained the text: And man bows down, and man lowers himself (Isaiah
2:9). And man bows down alludes to the Israelites, as it is said: And
you My sheep, the sheep of My pasture, are men (Exodus 34:31), while man
lowers himself refers to Moses, as it is said: Now the man Moses was
very meek (Numbers 12:3). Moses cried out: Master of the universe, I know
that Israel lowered itself before a calf, but I too lowered myself; will You
not forgive them? He replied: You will forgive them. Hence: When you take
the sum (forgive them) [“take the sum” (lit. “lift up the head”) is a
Hebrew idiom meaning “forgive.”]
5. When you take the sum of the children of Israel
(Exodus 30:12). R. Jonah began to discuss the verse For God is judge;
He puts down one, and lifts up another (Psalm 75:8). A Roman matron asked
R. Yose the son of Halfta: “In how many days did the Holy One, blessed be He,
create the world?” “In six days,” he replied, “as it is said: For in six
days the Lord made the heaven and the earth (Exodus 20:11).” “What has He
been doing since that time?” she queried. “He has been uniting couples and
making one man wealthy and another poor,” he responded. Whereupon she retorted:
“I too am able to do this. I have many slaves and maid servants, and I can
couple them all this very night. What He has been doing since the time of
creation, I can do easily in one hour.” “It may appear a simple matter to you,”
he replied, “but to Him it is as difficult as splitting the Red Sea, for it is
written: God makes the solitary to dwell in a house (Psalm 68:7).
He left her and went on his way. What did she do? She
took a thousand male slaves and a thousand female slaves and had them stand
face to face in two rows. This male slave, she commanded, will take this one as
his wife, and this shall take the other, and she continued to do this until she
had coupled them all on that one night. When they returned in the morning, one
had lost an eye, another had suffered a head wound, and a third one’s leg was
broken. One shouted: “I do not want him as my husband,” while another
exclaimed: “I do not want her as my wife.” Thereupon she summoned R. Yose. When
he came to her she said: “I agree that your God is a God of truth, and that His
Law is the truth, and that everything you have said is indeed so.” He said to
her: “The Holy One, blessed be He, sits and joins them together even against
their will. He binds a chain about the neck of one and brings him from one end
of the earth to the other to couple him with his mate, as it is said: God
makes the solitary to dwell in a house; He brings out the prisoners into
prosperity (Psalm 68:7).”
What does bakosharot (“prosperity”) imply? The one
who is not pleased (with his mate) weeps, the one who is pleased sings. Hence
the word bakosharot (from beki, “weeping,” and shirot,
“songs”) is used in the text. He causes one to ascend the ladder and another to
descend. Thus it is said: For God is judge; He puts down this one, and lifts
up this one (Psalm 76:8).
R. Jonah of Bozrah and the rabbis disagreed concerning
the meaning of this verse. The rabbis maintain that it refers to Aaron. Because
of the word this (in the preceding verse) he was humbled, as it is said:
And I cast it into the fire, and there came out this calf (Exodus
32:24), and because of the word this he was exalted, as it is said: This
is the offering of Aaron and his sons (Leviticus 6:13). R. Jonah, however,
was of the opinion that this verse refers to Israel: With the word this
they debased themselves, and with the word this they exalted themselves.
With the word this they debased themselves in saying: As for this man
Moses (Exodus 32:1), and with the word this they exalted themselves,
as it is said: This they will give (ibid., 30:13). Scripture states
elsewhere: Righteousness exalts a nation; but sin is a reproach to any
people (Proverbs 14:34). R. Joshua said: Righteousness exalts a nation;
but sin is a reproach to any people is indicated by the fact that when
Israel sinned, the nations of the world turned against them and enslaved them.
R. Nahuniah the son of Hakanah maintained that Righteousness
exalts a nation alludes to Israel, while sin is a reproach to any people
is applicable to the idolatrous nations that sinned against Israel. From
whom do you learn this? You learn it from Mesha, king of Moab, for it is said: Now
Mesha king of Moab was a sheep-master (II Kings 3:4). What is meant by a noked
(“sheep-master”)? He was a shepherd, for it is said: And he rendered unto
the king of Israel the wool of a hundred thousand lambs and a hundred thousand
rams (ibid.). What is meant by the wool of rams? R. Abba the son of
Kahana said: Sheep. What did he do? He assembled all his astrologers and said
to them: “I have a problem, tell me what to do. Should I wage war together with
all the nations against Israel and exile them, or should I wage war alone
against Israel so that the victory may be mine alone?” They replied: “Israel
had a patriarch called Abraham who was given a child when he was one hundred
years old, and he offered him as a sacrifice.” He asked them: “Was the
sacrifice completed?” “No,” they answered. He replied: “He offered a sacrifice
that was not completed and yet He performed miracles for them, how many more
miracles would He have performed if the sacrifice had been completed. Now,
since I have a firstborn son who will rule in my stead, I shall offer him as a
sacrifice, and perhaps a miracle will be performed in my behalf.” Hence it is
written: Then he took his eldest son that should have reigned in his stead,
and offered him for a burnt offering upon the wall, and there came a great
wrath upon Israel (II Kings 3:27-28).
Homah (“wall”) is written here, since he prostrated himself
towards the hamah (“sun”) (in performing the sacrifice). Forthwith
there came a great wrath upon Israel. The Holy One, blessed be He, said to
Israel: The idolaters do not acknowledge My glory, and so they rebel against
Me, but you, who acknowledge My glory, rebel against Me as well.
R. Mani stated: Were it not for the merit of Obadiah’s
wife, Israel would have been exterminated at that time: Now there cried a
certain woman of the wives of the sons of the prophets unto Elisha (II
Kings 4:1).
R. Huna said: Whatever justice and kindness the idolaters
perform is as dangerous to Israel as the poison of a serpent. From whom does
one learn this? From Berodach, who would eat every day at the third hour of the
day and would sleep until the ninth hour. Once, during the time of Hezekiah, he
was allowed to sleep through the sun’s return on its track (According to II
Kings 20 the sun was made to go backwards for Hezekiah). When he awakened and
discovered that it was morning, he wanted to slay all his servants. He asked
them: “Why did you permit me to sleep through a whole day and night?” They
replied: “The God of Hezekiah is the greatest of all the gods in the world.” Then
Berodach-baladan, the son of Baladan, King of Babylon, sent a letter and a
present to Hezekiah (II Kings 20:12). He wrote: “Peace to Hezekiah the
king, peace to Jerusalem, and peace to the great God.” As the scribes were
about to depart, he became uneasy. He said to himself: “Did I not do wrong in
mentioning the peace of Hezekiah and of the city before addressing the great
God?” He arose from his throne, took three steps to recall the scribes, and
wrote another letter to replace it. This time he said: “Peace to the great God,
peace to Jerusalem, and peace to Hezekiah.”
The Holy One, blessed be He, then said to him: Because
you arose and took three steps for the sake of My honour, I will cause three
kings to descend from you who will rule from one end of the earth to the other.
They were Nebuchadnezzar, Evil-Merodach, and Belshazzar. However, when these
came to power they blasphemed, and so the Holy One, blessed be He, destroyed
them and caused others to arise in their place. The rabbis said: Righteousness
exalts a nation refers to the free-will gifts that Israel brought to the
Temple. Therefore He granted them forgiveness through Moses. And He said: When
you take the sum.
… …
7. When you take the sum of the children of Israel
(Exodus 30:12). R. Yose the son of Hanina said: This verse indicated to
him that in the future he would bring the first of the tribes to the Shekhinah.
But which one was the first tribe? It is Reuben, as it is said: Let Reuben
live and not die (Deuteronomy 33:6). This is what is meant by You lift
up the head (rosh) of the children of Israel; i.e. he lifted up the first (rishon)
of the tribes.
… …
9. When you take the sum of the children of Israel
(Exodus 30:12). The Holy One, blessed be He, said to Moses: Take the
sum of the children of Israel. He replied: My master, it is written: And
your seed shall be as the dust of the earth (Genesis 28:14), and it is
written elsewhere: And make your seed as the sand of the sea (ibid.,
32:13), yet you tell me now to do this. He answered: If you want to know their
number, you need only add together the first letter of the names of each of the
tribes and this will give you their number. The resh in the word Reuben
stands for two hundred thousand; the shin in Simeon stands for three
hundred thousand, the yods in the names Judah, Issachar, and Joseph
total thirty thousand, the nun in Naphtali accounts for fifty thousand,
the zayin in Zebulun’s name is seven thousand, the dalet in Dan
is four thousand, the gimel in Gad is three thousand, and the alef
in Asheris one thousand – totalling five hundred and ninety-seven thousand in
all. The three thousand not accounted for were slain at the time of the episode
of the golden calf, as it is said: And the sons of Levi did according to the
words of Moses; and there fell of the people on that day about three thousand
men (Exodus 33:28). Hence the Holy One, blessed be He, said to Moses: You
are taking the count to learn how many are missing. R. Menahem said in the name
of R. Bebai: This may be compared to a king who had many sheep. When wolves
attacked and destroyed some of them, the king told his shepherd: “Count the
sheep and find out how many are missing.” Likewise, the Holy One, blessed be
He, said to Moses: Go, count the Israelites, and find out how many are missing.
A census of Israel was taken on ten different occasions.
The first occurred when they descended to Egypt, as it is said: Your fathers
went down into Egypt with three score and ten persons (Deuteronomy 10:29).
Again, when they came out of Egypt, as is said: And the children of Israel
journeyed from Rameses to Succoth, about six hundred thousand men (Exodus
12:37). Once in the Book of Numbers (it was taken) with reference to the
standards (Numbers 2:21); once with regard to the spies (Numbers 13); in the
days of Joshua when the land was divided (Joshua 18:10); twice in the time of
Saul, as it is said: And he numbered them with lambs in Telaim (I Samuel
14:4) and He numbered them with pebbles in Bezek (ibid., 11:8). What is
indicated by the word Telaim? When they were prosperous, he counted them
by means of their lambs (telayim), but when they were poor in deeds, he
counted them with stones. What is bezek? It is a stone. He took a stone
for each one of them and then totalled the stones. A census was taken in the
days of David, as is said: Joab gave up the sum, the number of the people to
the king (II Samuel 24:9); and again at the time of Ezra: The whole
congregation together was forty and two thousand, three hundred and three score
(Ezra 2:14). In the time-to-come (a census will be taken), as is said: The
flock shall again pass into the hands of Him that counts them (Jeremiah
33:13), and in this instance: When you take the sum.
R. Menahem said in the name of R. Bebai, in the name of
R. Hiyya the son of Abba in the name of R. Eliezer the son of Johanan: It is
stated: And the number of the children of Israel shall be as the sand of the
sea (Hosea 2:1). Why were the children of Israel compared to the sand of
the sea? To inform us that just as a hole dug in the sand of the sea at evening
time fills up again by morning, so the thousands lacking at the time of David
would be replaced by the time of his son Solomon, as it is said: Judah and
Israel were many, as the sand which is by the sea in multitude (I Kings
4:20).
R. Eliezer in the name of R. Yose the son of Zimra:
Whenever the Israelites were counted because it was essential to do so, none
were lacking, but whenever they were counted when there was no need to do so,
some were missing. When were they counted to meet a need? When Moses took the
census. When were they counted unnecessarily? At the time of David. Then
they shall give every man a ransom for his soul unto the Lord (Exodus
30:12). This occurred at the time of Moses: That there be no plague among
them (ibid), but there was no plague at the time of David.
This they shall give. R. Menahem said: The Holy
One, blessed be He, removed from beneath His throne of glory a coin of fire
(the size of a half-shekel coin) and showed it to Moses. Then He said to him: This
they shall give. That is to say, everyone who passes by as the census is
taken shall give something similar to them.
10. This they will give, everyone that passes among them
that are numbered, half a shekel (Exodus 30:15). Because they had sinned at
the sixth hour [word-play reading the word boshet (“shame, disgrace”) as
bo shish (“the sixth hour”); thus, “The sixth hour came, they erected
the golden calf.”], which is the middle of the day, they shall give half a
shekel, which is six grammmata. R. Johanan declared: Because they had violated
the Ten Commandments each one had to give ten gerah, which totals half a
shekel. R. Simeon the son of Levi said: Because they sold Rachel’s first born
for twenty pieces of silver and each one took a coin for himself, each one had
to give one coin.
R. Judah the son of Simon stated: Moses heard three
things from the lips of the Mighty One that confused and startled him. When the
Holy One, blessed be He, said to him: Let them make Me a sanctuary, that I
may dwell among them (Exodus 25:8), he replied: Master of the universe, the
heavens and the heavens of the heavens cannot contain You. He responded: Moses,
it is not as you think. Erect twenty boards on the northern side and twenty
boards on the southern side and eight on the eastern side and eight on the
western side, and I will compress My Shekhinah and dwell within them; as it is
written: And there I will meet with You, and I will speak with you (ibid.,
v.22).
Similarly when He said: Command the children of Israel,
and say unto them: My food which is presented unto Me for offerings (Numbers
28:2), Moses called out: Master of the universe, if I should assemble all the
animals and all the beasts in the world, they would not be sufficient for one
offering, and all the trees of the world would be insufficient for a single
fire, for it is said: And Lebanon is not sufficient fuel, nor the beasts
thereof sufficient for bunt offerings (Isaiah 40:16). He replied: Moses, it
is not as you think. You need offer unto Me but one lamb in the morning and not
two, for they are not meant to be food and drink for Me. If I had food and
drink when you were with Me on the mountain for forty days, would I not have
eaten, and if I had food would you not have eaten? Only for a sweet savour,
shall you observe to offer unto Me (Numbers 28:2).
And when He said: When will they give every man a
ransom for his soul (Exodus 30:12), he wondered and said: Who is able to
give a ransom for his soul, since it is said: No man can by any means redeem
his brother, nor give to God a ransom for him, for too costly is the redemption
of their soul (Psalm 48:8-9)? He replied: Moses it is not as you imagine. This
they shall give indicates that they shall give something like this. R. Huna
said in the name of Rab: The Almighty, whom we cannot find out, is excellent
in power (Job 37:23) implies that the Holy One, blessed be He, did not
impose impossible burdens upon Israel. When Moses realized that, he declared: Happy
is the people that is in such a case (Psalm 144:15) and Happy is he
whose help is the God of Jacob (ibid. 146:5).
Ketubim: Targum Tehillim (Psalms) 104:1-35
JUDAICA PRESS TRANSLATION |
TARGUM |
1. My soul, bless the LORD. My God, You are very great,
You are attired with majesty and beauty. |
1.
Bless, O my soul, the name of the LORD. O LORD my God, You are greatly
exalted; You have put on praise and splendour. |
2.
[You] enwrap Yourself with light like a garment;
[You] extend the heavens like a curtain. |
2.
Who wraps Himself in light like a sheet, Who stretches out the heavens like a
curtain. |
3.
Who roofs His upper chambers with water; Who
makes clouds His chariot, which goes on the wings of the wind. |
3.
Who covers His chambers with water like a building with beams; Who placed His
chariot, as it were, upon swift clouds; Who goes on the wings of an eagle. |
4.
He makes winds His messengers, burning fire His
ministers. |
4.
Who made His messengers as swift as wind; His servants, as strong as burning
fire. |
5.
He founded the earth on its foundations that it
not falter to eternity. |
5.
Who lays the foundation of the earth upon its base, so that it will not shake
for ages upon ages. |
6.
You covered the deep as [with] a garment; the
waters stand on the mountains. |
6.
You have covered over the abyss as with a garment; and the waters split on
the mountains, and endure. |
7.
From Your rebuke they fled; from the sound of
Your thunder they hastened away. |
7.
At Your rebuke, they will flee, flowing down; at the sound of Your shout,
they will be frightened, pouring themselves out. |
8.
They ascended mountains, they descended into
valleys to this place, which You had founded for them. |
8.
They will go up from the abyss to the mountains, and descend to the valleys,
to this place that You founded for them. |
9.
You set a boundary that they should not cross,
that they should not return to cover the earth. |
9.
You have placed a boundary for the waves of the sea that they will not cross,
lest they return to cover the earth. |
10.
He sends the springs into the streams; they go
between the mountains. |
10.
Who releases springs into rivers; they flow between the mountains. |
11.
They water every beast of the field; the wild
donkeys quench their thirst. |
11.
They water all the wild animals; the asses will break their thirst. |
12.
Beside them the fowl of the heavens dwell; from
between the branches they let out their voices. |
12.
The birds of heaven will settle on them; they will give out a sound of
singing from among the branches. |
13.
He waters the mountains from His upper chambers;
from the fruit of Your works the earth is sated. |
13.
Who waters the mountains from His upper treasury; the earth will be satisfied
with the fruit of Your deeds. |
14.
He causes grass to sprout for the animals and
vegetation for the work of man, to bring forth bread from the earth. |
14.
Who makes grass grow for beasts, and herbs for the cultivation of the son of
man, that bread may come forth from the earth; |
15.
And wine, which cheers man's heart, to make the
face shine from oil, and bread, which sustains man's heart. |
15.
And wine that gladdens the heart of the son of man, to make the face shine by
oil; and bread will support the heart of the son of man. |
16.
The LORD's trees are sated, the cedars of
Lebanon, which He planted. |
16.
The trees that the LORD created are satisfied, the cedars of Lebanon that He
planted: |
17.
Where birds nest; as for the stork-the high
junipers are its home. |
17.
Where the birds make nests; the stork’s dwelling is in the cypresses. |
18.
The lofty mountains for the ibexes; the rocks a
shelter for the hyraxes. |
18.
The high mountains are for the wild goats; the rocks are security for the
conies. |
19.
He made the moon for the appointed seasons; the
sun knows its setting. |
19.
He made the moon to calculate times by; the sun knows the time of his
setting. |
20.
You make darkness and it is night, in which every
beast of the forest moves about. |
20.
You will make darkness and it will be night; in it all the beasts of the
forest creep about. |
21.
The young lions roar for prey and to beg their
food from God. |
21.
The offspring of lions roar to find food, and to seek their sustenance from
God. |
22.
When the sun rises they gather in and couch in
their dens. |
22.
The sun will shine, they gather together; and they lay down in their dwelling
place. |
23.
Man goes out to his work, to his labor until
evening. |
23.
A son of man will go forth to his work and to his cultivation, until the
sunset of evening. |
24.
How great are Your works, O LORD! You have
made them all with wisdom; the earth is full of Your possessions! |
24.
How many are Your works, O LORD! You have made all of them in wisdom;
the earth is full of Your possessions. |
25.
This sea-great and wide; there are creeping
things and innumerable beasts, both small and large. |
25.
This sea is great and broad in extent; creeping things are there without
number, both tiny creatures and large. |
26.
There the ships go; You formed this leviathan
with which to sport. |
26.
There the ships go about, [and] this Leviathan You created for the sport of
the righteous/ generous at the supper of His dwelling place. |
27.
They all look to You with hope, to give their
food in its time. |
27.
All of them rely on You to give their food in its time. |
28.
You give them that they may gather; You open Your
hand that they may be sated with goodness. |
28.
You will give it to them, and they gather it; You will open Your hand, and
they are satisfied with goodness. |
29.
You hide Your countenance and they are
frightened; You gather in their spirit and they perish and return to their
dust. |
29.
You will remove Your presence, they are dazed; You will gather their spirit
and they expire, and return to their dust. |
30.
You will send forth Your spirit and they will be
created, and You will renew the surface of the ground. |
30.
You will send out Your spirit of holiness and they are created; and You will
make new the surface of the earth. |
31.
The Glory of the LORD will be forever; the LORD
will rejoice with His works. |
31.
May the Glory of the LORD be eternal; the LORD will rejoice in His works. |
32.
He Who looks at the earth and it quakes; He
touches the mountains and they emit smoke. |
32.
Who looks at the earth, and it shakes; He draws near to the mountains, and
they emit smoke. |
33.
I will sing to the LORD while I am alive; I will
sing praises to my God as long as I exist. |
33.
I will sing praise in the presence of the LORD during my life; I will make
music to my God while I exist. |
34.
May my speech be pleasing to Him; I will rejoice
with the LORD. |
34.
May my talk be pleasing in His presence; I will rejoice in the Word of the
LORD. |
35.
Sinners will be destroyed from the earth and the
wicked/Lawless will be no more; my soul, bless the LORD. Hallelujah. |
35.
The sinners will be destroyed from the earth, and wicked/Lawless exist no
longer. Bless, O my soul, the name of the LORD. Hallelujah! |
|
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Ketubim Mishle (Proverbs) 7:1-27
7:1
My son, keep my words, store up my commands with you.
7:2
Obey my commands, and live; guard my teaching like the pupil of your eye.
7:3
Bind them on your fingers; write them on the tablet of your heart.
7:4
Say to wisdom, "You are my sister"; call understanding your
kinswoman;
7:5
so that they can keep you from unknown women, from loose women with their
seductive talk.
7:6
For I was at the window of my house, glancing out through the lattice,
7:7
when I saw among the young men there, among those who don't think for
themselves, a young fellow devoid of all sense.
7:8
He crosses the street near her corner and continues on toward her house.
7:9
Dusk turns into evening, and finally night, dark and black.
7:10
Then a woman approaches him, dressed as a prostitute, wily of heart.
7:11
She's the coarse, impulsive type, whose feet don't stay at home;
7:12
rather, she stalks the streets and squares, lurking at every streetcorner.
7:13
She grabs him, gives him a kiss, and, brazen-faced, she says to him,
7:14
"I had to offer peace sacrifices, and I fulfilled my vows today.
7:15
This is why I came out to meet you, to look for you; now I've found you.
7:16
I've spread quilts on my couch made of coloured Egyptian linen.
7:17
I've perfumed my bed with myrrh, aloes and cinnamon.
7:18
Come on, let's make love till morning; we'll enjoy making love.
7:19
My husband isn't at home, he's gone on a long trip;
7:20
he took a bag of money with him and won't be back till the new moon."
7:21
With all her sweet talk she convinces him, enticing him with her seductive
words.
7:22
At once he follows her like an ox on its way to be slaughtered; like a fool to
be punished in the stocks;
7:23
or like a bird rushing into a trap, not knowing its life is at stake till an
arrow pierces its liver.
7:24
So now, children, listen to me; pay attention to what I am saying.
7:25
Don't let your heart turn to her ways; don't stray onto her paths.
7:26
For many are those she has struck down dead, numerous those she has killed.
7:27
Her house is the way to Sh'ol; it leads down to the halls of death.
Ashlamatah:
II Kings 12:1-17
1 Jehoash was seven years old
when he began to reign. {P}
2 In the seventh year of Jehu
began Jehoash to reign; and he reigned forty years in Jerusalem; and his
mother's name was Zibiah of Beer-sheba.
3 And Jehoash did that which
was right in the eyes of the LORD all his days wherein Jehoiada the priest
instructed him.
4 Howbeit the high places were
not taken away; the people still sacrificed and offered in the high places.
5 And Jehoash said to the
priests: ‘All the money of the hallowed things that is brought into the house
of the LORD, in current money, the money of the persons for whom each man is rated,
all the money that comes into any man's heart to bring into the house of the
LORD,
6 let the priests take it to
them, every man from him that bestows it upon him; and they will repair the
breaches of the house, wheresoever any breach will be found.’ {P}
7 But it was so, that in the
three and twentieth year of king Jehoash the priests had not repaired the
breaches of the house.
8 Then king Jehoash called for
Jehoiada the priest, and for the other priests, and said unto them: ‘Why do you
not repair the breaches of the house? Now therefore take no longer money from
them that bestow it upon you, but deliver it for the breaches of the house.’
9 And the priests consented
that they should take no longer money from the people, neither repair the
breaches of the house.
10 And Jehoiada the priest
took a chest, and bored a hole in the lid of it, and set it beside the altar,
on the right side as one comes into the house of the LORD; and the priests that
kept the threshold put therein all the money that was brought into the house of
the LORD.
11 And it was so, when they
saw that there was much money in the chest, that the king's scribe and the high
priest came up, and they put up in bags and counted the money that was found in
the house of the LORD.
12 And they gave the money
that was weighed out into the hands of them that did the work, that had the
oversight of the house of the LORD; and they paid it out to the carpenters and
the builders, that wrought upon the house of the LORD,
13 and to the masons and the
hewers of stone, and for buying timber and hewn stone to repair the breaches of
the house of the LORD, and for all that was laid out for the house to repair
it.
14 But there were not made for
the house of the LORD cups of silver, snuffers, basins, trumpets, any vessels
of gold, or vessels of silver, of the money that was brought into the house of
the LORD;
15 for they gave that to them
that did the work, and repaired therewith the house of the LORD.
16 Moreover they reckoned not
with the men, into whose hand they delivered the money to give to them that did
the work; for they dealt faithfully.
17 The forfeit money, and the
sin money, was not brought into the house of the LORD; it was the priests. {P}
Ashlamatah:
I Samuel 20:18, 42
18. And Jonathan said to him,
Tomorrow is the new moon, and you will be expected, for your seat will be
empty.
42. And Jonathan said to
David, Go in peace, because we have sworn, the two of us, in the name of
Ha-Shem, saying, Ha-Shem will be between you and me, and between my seed and
your seed forever. And he rose up and went. And Jonathan went into the city.
Midrash
of Matityahu (Matthew) 17:24-27
24.
¶ When they arrived into K’far Nakhum, the collectors of
the half shekel [the temple tax] went up to Shimon HaTsefet bar Yonah and said,
Does not your Rabbi pay the half shekel?
Comments:
For
the Midrash specialist, Hakham Matityahu (Matthew) the occasion for the
collection of the Holy Half Shekel
brings the perfect time to explain the metaphorical meaning of this solemn
Torah requirement. According to our Sages, the meaning of the Half Shekel is to
teach us that personal Judaism is a lie, since Judaism is by essence communal,
and therefore the Shekel is not complete until two Jews agree together to
observe the Mitzvoth (commandments) and create a Jewish community.
The
Master adds here a further and most profound insight. For our Master a Jew has
the unescapable vocation t become a Torah teacher. And therefore, he either
earns a lot of money to pay yearly the half Shekel or he finds Torah Disciples
from amongst the Gentiles who will pay the half Shekel for him. The waters here
are a picture of the Gentiles and the fish is a symbol of a Gentile who has a
calling to become a Torah Disciple.
There
is in this narrative an expectation that the Gentiles who comes to learn Torah
will have in his mouth what is required to economically support his Torah
teacher. If this is not the case, then it is obvious that the Gentile who is
learning Torah is by his non-payment not partaking of the “sap” of the good
olive tree. The Gentiles owe an immense debt to the Jewish people, firstly
because it is through the Jewish people that the salvation of the Gentiles is
achieved, second, it is through the Jewish people that the Gentiles can know
the revealed will of G-d as is in the Bible. Thirdly, even to this very day,
without Jewish Hermeneutics and Jewish Codes of Law, and Jewish Masters to
teach it , it is impossible to fully perceive and understand the depth and
great hidden riches of the writings of the Nazarean Codicil. For these three
chief reasons, the Gentiles who come to adhere to the Master of Nazareth (the
King of the JEWS) owe it to the Master to support Jewish Torah Scholars.
Therefore,
in the grands picture of the Governance (Kingdom) of G-d, the commandment of
the Half Shekel teaches us that Jews are to teach the Torah to the Gentiles,
and conversely the Gentiles who are taught in the Torah are to support the
Torah Scholar teaching to them as a outward sign of an inner work: - i.e. that
he/she has been grafted into the Jewish Olive Tree and brought near to the
Commonwealth of Israel. May this be so, amen ve amen!
Questions
for Reflection:
1.
What
is the metaphorical meaning of Proverbs 7:19-21?
2.
How
does the half Shekel atone for the sins of Israel? (Please explain)
3.
How does teaching Torah to the Gentiles and their
Talmudization atones for the incident of the golden calf?
4.
How can we logically deduce how many Israelites came out
of Egypt?
5.
Who invented the Septennial Lectionary of Torah Readings?
6.
From a Nazarean perspective what is the full meaning of
the half Shekel?
7.
How many gerah’s are in a Shekel? And therefore, what
does the half Shekel point to?
Shalom Shabbat!
Hakham Dr. Yosef ben
Haggai
Next Shabbat: Adar 04, 5769
(February 27/28, 2009):
Shabbat |
Torah
Reading: |
Weekday
Torah Reading: |
תּוֹלְדֹת
יִצְחָק |
|
|
“Tol’dot Yitschaq” |
Reader 1 – B’Resheet 25:19-22 |
Reader 1 – B’Resheet 26:12-14 |
“[the] generations of Isaac” |
Reader 2 – B’Resheet 25:23-26 |
Reader 2 – B’Resheet 26:15-17 |
“las generaciones de Isaac” |
Reader 3 – B’Resheet 25:27-30 |
Reader 3 – B’Resheet 26:18-20 |
B’resheet (Gen.) 25:19 – 26:11 |
Reader 4 – B’Resheet 25:31-34 |
|
Ashlamatah: Isaiah 65:23 –
66:2 + 9-13 |
Reader 5 – B’Resheet 26:1-5 |
|
|
Reader 6 – B’Resheet 26:6-8 |
Reader 1 – B’Resheet 26:12-14 |
Psalms 19 |
Reader 7 – B’Resheet 26:9-11 |
Reader 2 – B’Resheet 26:15-17 |
N.C.: Jude 1-2 |
Maftir: B’Resheet 26:9-11 |
Reader 3 – B’Resheet 26:18-20 |
Mishle (Proverbs) 6:6-11 |
Isaiah 65:23 – 66:2 + 9-13 |
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