Deuteronomy 1:1 - 3:22 A number of years ago I was preparing to read Torah. I noticed a number of different section in this parashah had a different cadence and theme than the rest. At the time, I was trying to learn Yemini cantillation. So, I chanted Dt. 2:10-13, 20-23 in a different trope. Nobody noticed, but I have thought about it since then. (See also Gen 6:1-4 14:5, 15:20, 36:20, Josh 3:13, 13:13) In the book of Numbers, we read quotes from the book of Wars of YHWH. In Joshua and other books, we read of the book of Yashar. In the book of Kings, we read of the Chronicles of the Kings. So, it is not uncommon for the Bible to quote other books. Sometimes the poems, such as Exodus 15 or Numbers 21:27-30 are quoted without reference. I believe these two sections in Dt. 2 were copied from another source. I will not write, now, about textual criticism, however. I will write about the function these sections serve in explaining Israel's conquering its northern border. Emim, Refaim, Zamzumim words of fear, more on this later. |
I got engaged last Friday and a friend said that a bride and groom have extra merit when saying blessings, so I wrote this, shatuf befi.
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Mattot 30:2 - 32:42 Mase'ei 33:1 - 36:13 5766 Chapter 31 begins with God commanding Moses's last act, to correct (NQM M) what the Midianites did, and to separate out fighters in order to reprove (NQM B) Midian for their sin. These two uses of NQM in parallel teach the intent of the bloodshed that follows, to return the Israelites to God by punishing the Midianites. (note: parallel)
While the story as written is unlikely to be historical, it nonetheless shows a middle stage in the relationship between Israel and the wide-ranging kingdoms of Midian. When Moses was young, he lived among them and married a Midianite priest's daughter. Her father maintained strong ties to Moses (Exodus 19). In this story all Midianite men and female non-virgins are killed (while the virgins may be married). By the time of Ezra and Nehemia, any intermarriage with the surrounding nations was prohibited. (Deuteronomy lays out different conditions for taking women in war). That being said, if the sin in this story is related to Bilaam and Baal Peor (an idol), then why the later complete prohibition of marriage with other nations under Ezra and Nehemia. In the story of Dinah and Schechem (Gen 34:21), for example, intermarriage is seen as a exemplary of a peaceful relationship, just as Beit Hillel and Beit Shammai later intermarried (Eruvin 13b?) in Deut 7:3 3 You shall not intermarry with them: do not give your daughters to their sons or take their daughters for your sons. 4 For they will turn your children away from Me to worship other gods, and the Lord's anger will blaze forth against you and He will promptly wipe you out. 5 Instead, this is what you shall do to them: you shall tear down their altars, smash their pillars, cut down their sacred posts, and consign their images to the fire. Only the Moabites and Moabites are completely forbidden to intermarry, for a historical sin Yevamot 76b (except Ruth and Orpah 4:13). The Bible seems to have a mixed message on intermarriage. Joseph married the daughter of an Egyptian priest (Gen 41:45), so presumably, idol worship wasn't a forbidden trait in wives then. Going back to the parashah, what had the Midanites done to deserve a virtual genocide? If the crime was sexual licentiousness on the part of Midianite women and Israelite men, why are the Midianite men killed? Is the tradition correct that Bilaam asked the Midianite women to engage in cultic sex with the Israelite men at Baal Peor (San. 106a; Yer. ib. x. 28d; Num. R. l.c.) ? Shouldn't the punishment then be to anyone involved in the act, not just the non-virgins? Isn't collective punishment, especially collective near genocide something to be frowned upon? How could God command this as Moses's last act? It is strange, by comparison, that everyone who worshipped the Golden Calf was killed, but not all Israelite men who cohabited with Midianite women were killed. Looking at the quasi-historicity of the text, it appears that later events, perhaps in the time of Judges (21:10-12) recast the story to tell the contemporary audience of the importance of monotheism, of worshipping YHWH--- not as even later texts would consider it as a matter of intermarriage. To summarize, the writers of the early Bible (Torah,
Neviim), saw deviance from strict monotheistic worship as a captial offense. Anything that diluted the Godly purity of the Israelite people would be punished. Foreign worship (РАЕЦД ФЬД, РКЕ"М) not only led away from God, it made you a bad person. Since Israel became a nation, the writers of the Bible were concerned with not just a loss of belief in God, but a loss of the moral system that such a belief necessitates (Hosea 6:6 For I desire mercy, and not sacrifice, and the knowledge of God rather than burnt-offerings.) Viewed in that light, where the Torah sees foreign worship as immoral for Israelites (Deut 4:19), we begin to understand the severity of the crime. In today's terms, though breaking with the Jewish people should not be considered a capital offense, we can perhaps
use the metaphor that moral behavior is Jewish behavior (note, this emphasize has shifted to legalism in some communities). It is therefore our job to revive those dead to Jewish values (i.e. moralism) through an understanding of the moral demands of being Jewish. Above all, we must do so diplomatically, and not as our forefathers did. Dvar PeorSee Balak, women whoring with men, Pinhas ended it. Parallel CommandBemidbar 25:17-18 TzRR ИФ ЖхЬ֖ЕиЬ ЮфЗнДгНлдЦюИхПд֑ИМ ЕюДдКлдИЗф֖М ЮЕиЗхмМс ИГ Клд֣И ЖимЬюЬд֥ИМ ДеМ֙ ЛхКф֔М АлюПдКюЛеИДф֛М ЮбЫяфЬнПдКлюЛ֥Ел ЛхКф֖М РгЛнЦлюАгЬнТлюР֑ЕиЬ ЕюРгЛнЦлюАг֞Ь КлхФюАлд֨И АгЗнПюЫрд֤ИЮ НдЦюИхО֙ ЮбГиЗх֔М ДгНлкКлх֥Д АюИЕиМнДгНлгБлеТх֖Д РгЛнЦлюАгЬнТлюРмЕиЬс Unlikely To Be HistoricalSome debate as to the historicity of the story p.178 based on utter destruction, numbers, booty, no injuries Marry Midianites31:15 Moses said to them, "You have spared every female! 16 Yet they are the very ones who, at the bidding of Balaam, induced the Israelites to trespass against the Lord in the matter of Peor, so that the Lord's community was struck by the plague. 17 Now, therefore, slay every male among the children, and slay also every woman who has known a man carnally; 18 but spare every young woman who has not had carnal relations with a man. Moses Married a MidianiteMoses Exodus 2:21, Bemidbar 12:1 Ezra Nehemia on IntermarriageForbidden Ezra Nehemia 10:2-3,44, Nehemiah 10:31 Deut on Taking Women in WarOkay Devarim 21:10-14 Deut 21:10 When you take the field against your enemies, and the Lord your God delivers them into your power and you take some of them captive, 11 and you see among the captives a beautiful woman and you desire her and would take her to wife, 12 you shall bring her into your house, and she shall trim her hair, pare her nails, 13 and discard her captive's garb. She shall spend a month's time in your house lamenting her father and mother; after that you may come to her and possess her, and she shall be your wife. 14 Then, should you no longer want her, you must release her outright. You must not sell her for money: since you had your will of her, you must not enslave her. |