Difference between revisions of "Appointing Moshe's Assistants/2"
(Original Author: Yonatan Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
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<point><b>Differences between Shemot 18 and Devarim 1</b> – This position has difficulty explaining why in Shemot 18 the initiative is Yitro's and there is no hint of Moshe complaining,<fn>4Q22PalaeoExodus<span style="vertical-align:super;font-size:.6em;">m</span> and the Samaritan Pentateuch "solve" part of this problem by harmonizing the texts of Shemot 18 and Devarim 1, and inserting the verses from Devarim 1 into Shemot 18. See <a href="Textual Variants – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Textual Variants</a> for a <a href="Textual Variants – Shemot 18/Table2" data-aht="page">comparison table</a> and analysis. The Samaritan Pentateuch did not harmonize these two chapters with Bemidbar 11, presumably because it thought that Bemidbar 11 was a separate event.</fn> while in Devarim 1 the initiative comes from Moshe and Yitro is not even mentioned.<fn>Ramban Devarim 1:18 struggles to suggest that Moshe may have omitted Yitro's name because of Yitro's modesty, or to avoid reminding his audience that he (Moshe) had married a Midianite woman (presumably a sensitive topic in the aftermath of the worship of Baal Peor). Alternatively, see R. Eliezer Ashkenazi in Ma'asei Hashem, Ma'aseh Torah 5, who argues that in Devarim 1 Moshe is concerned only with the implementation, and not the genesis of the idea, and therefore doesn't mention Yitro. He points out that in similar fashion, Moshe doesn't always mention that an instruction came from Hashem. Regarding the omission of "officers" in Shemot 18, see Ramban Shemot 18:20.</fn></point> | <point><b>Differences between Shemot 18 and Devarim 1</b> – This position has difficulty explaining why in Shemot 18 the initiative is Yitro's and there is no hint of Moshe complaining,<fn>4Q22PalaeoExodus<span style="vertical-align:super;font-size:.6em;">m</span> and the Samaritan Pentateuch "solve" part of this problem by harmonizing the texts of Shemot 18 and Devarim 1, and inserting the verses from Devarim 1 into Shemot 18. See <a href="Textual Variants – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Textual Variants</a> for a <a href="Textual Variants – Shemot 18/Table2" data-aht="page">comparison table</a> and analysis. The Samaritan Pentateuch did not harmonize these two chapters with Bemidbar 11, presumably because it thought that Bemidbar 11 was a separate event.</fn> while in Devarim 1 the initiative comes from Moshe and Yitro is not even mentioned.<fn>Ramban Devarim 1:18 struggles to suggest that Moshe may have omitted Yitro's name because of Yitro's modesty, or to avoid reminding his audience that he (Moshe) had married a Midianite woman (presumably a sensitive topic in the aftermath of the worship of Baal Peor). Alternatively, see R. Eliezer Ashkenazi in Ma'asei Hashem, Ma'aseh Torah 5, who argues that in Devarim 1 Moshe is concerned only with the implementation, and not the genesis of the idea, and therefore doesn't mention Yitro. He points out that in similar fashion, Moshe doesn't always mention that an instruction came from Hashem. Regarding the omission of "officers" in Shemot 18, see Ramban Shemot 18:20.</fn></point> | ||
<point><a href="Chronology – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Chronological setting of Shemot 18</a> – According to most of those who adopt this position, all of the events of Shemot 18 transpired in the first year of the desert before the Decalogue and are told in their chronological place.</point> | <point><a href="Chronology – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Chronological setting of Shemot 18</a> – According to most of those who adopt this position, all of the events of Shemot 18 transpired in the first year of the desert before the Decalogue and are told in their chronological place.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Context of Devarim 1</b> – | + | <point><b>Context of Devarim 1</b> – As Devarim 1 speaks of the events of the second year, it is unclear why it would digress to discuss an appointment of judges which took place in the first year.<fn>Ramban Devarim 1:9 explains that the phrase "at that time" ("בעת ההיא") in Devarim 1:9 does not imply that the judicial appointments occurred at the same time as the rest of the events of that chapter, but rather indicates a flashback to the previous year (see also Ibn Kaspi Shemot 18:1, and see <a href="Literary:Chronology#BaetHahi" data-aht="page">"at that time"</a> for an analysis of the phrase in Tanakh). He adds that Moshe mentions this story here to demonstrate that if not for the sin of the spies the nation was all prepared to enter the land of Israel and that they even had a judicial system in place. See <a href="MaaseiHashem5" data-aht="source">Ma'asei Hashem 5</a>, for an alternative explanation.</fn></point> |
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
<opinion name="Devarim 1=Bemidbar 11">Devarim 1 = Bemidbar 11 (and not Shemot 18) | <opinion name="Devarim 1=Bemidbar 11">Devarim 1 = Bemidbar 11 (and not Shemot 18) |
Version as of 09:55, 8 February 2016
Appointing Moshe's Assistants in
Shemot 18, Bemidbar 11, and Devarim 1
Exegetical Approaches
In analyzing the relationship between the three accounts, the primary question is whether Shemot 18 and Bemidbar 11 speak of events which occurred at totally different times, or of simultaneous and perhaps even the same events. The secondary question is which of the two stories (or both) is retold in Devarim 1.
Shemot 18 and Bemidbar 11 tell of different events, and Devarim 1 recaps only one of them. Shemot 18 describes the creation of a judicial system to assist Moshe with his case load in the first year in the desert, while Bemidbar 11 speaks of the subsequent appointment of seventy elders in the second year to share and ease Moshe's administrative burden. This approach subdivides regarding which of these two distinct stories is being retold by Moshe in Devarim 1.
Devarim 1 = Shemot 18 (and not Bemidbar 11)
Both Shemot 18 and Devarim 1 recount events of the first year, while Bemidbar 11 speaks of the events of the second year.
Devarim 1 = Bemidbar 11 (and not Shemot 18)
Both Bemidbar 11 and Devarim 1 recount events of the second year, while only Shemot 18 speaks of the events of the first year.
Same or Simultaneous Events
Shemot 18 + Bemidbar 11 = Devarim 1. All or part of Shemot 18 occurred in the second year at the same time as Bemidbar 11, and Devarim 1 combines the accounts of these two chapters into one story. For each variation of this approach, one must examine whether the events described in Shemot and Bemidbar are identical or merely simultaneous.
All in 2nd Year
Both Yitro's advice and its implementation (all of Shemot 18) occurred in the second year, and Devarim 1 merges the entire Yitro story with the story of Moshe's own complaints (Bemidbar 11).
Part in 1st Year
Only the implementation of Yitro's advice (Shemot 18:24-26) took place in the second year, and Devarim 1 synthesizes the story of Moshe being unable to deal with the burden of the nation found only in Bemidbar 11 with the accounts of the appointments of assistants recorded in both Shemot and Bemidbar.
- Judges could be appointed only after the laws were received – Akeidat Yitzchak, Abarbanel Shemot 18, Malbim.19 Abarbanel posits that Yitro had assumed incorrectly that the judges could issue verdicts based on their intuition alone, even without a law code.20 According to him, Moshe's implementation differed significantly from Yitro's proposal – see Implementation, and this is why Yitro's name is not even mentioned in Devarim 1.21
- Leaders were necessary only in preparation for entrance to the land of Israel when an organized army would be required and the nation would settle throughout the country – Abarbanel Devarim 1.
- Assistants were necessary only when the nation resumed their travels because that is when complaints spiked – Hoil Moshe,22 R. Medan.