Difference between revisions of "Biblical Parallels Index – Shemot 20/0"
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− | <li>Tanakh Lab</li> | + | <li>Tanakh Lab – Use the <a href="https://mg.alhatorah.org/TanakhLab?c1=Shemot:20:1-20:13&c2=Devarim:5:6-5:17&f=bc">Tanakh Lab</a> to compare the two versions.</li> |
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− | <li>See <a href="Decalogue Differences Between Shemot and Devarim" data-aht="page">Decalogue Differences Between Shemot and Devarim</a> for several approaches to the differences as discussed by commentators throughout the ages. </li> | + | <li>See <a href="Decalogue Differences Between Shemot and Devarim" data-aht="page">Decalogue Differences Between Shemot and Devarim</a> for several approaches to the differences as discussed by commentators throughout the ages.Several medieval commentators assert that the discrepancies are insignificant and simply a natural outcome of Moshe's paraphrasing of Hashem's words, in which only the general meaning need be preserved. In contrast, many modern exegetes suggest that the Devarim rendition of the commandments constituted an intentional updating of the original Shemot version, as it was addressed to a different audience and set of circumstances. Midrashic sources posit a third approach, that the two Decalogues were both given simultaneously in the first year, and that both have legal relevance for all generations.</li> |
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Version as of 06:44, 14 December 2023
Biblical Parallels Index – Shemot 20
Decalogue Differences
The Decalogue appears in both the Torah's original account of the Revelation at Sinai in Shemot 20 and in Moshe's later retelling of the event in Devarim 5. The two versions contain many differences, including additions, omissions, and substitutions.
Tools
- Tanakh Lab – Use the Tanakh Lab to compare the two versions.
Articles
- See Decalogue Differences Between Shemot and Devarim for several approaches to the differences as discussed by commentators throughout the ages.Several medieval commentators assert that the discrepancies are insignificant and simply a natural outcome of Moshe's paraphrasing of Hashem's words, in which only the general meaning need be preserved. In contrast, many modern exegetes suggest that the Devarim rendition of the commandments constituted an intentional updating of the original Shemot version, as it was addressed to a different audience and set of circumstances. Midrashic sources posit a third approach, that the two Decalogues were both given simultaneously in the first year, and that both have legal relevance for all generations.
Revelation
Attributes of God
Tools
- Makbilot Bamikra demonstrates that Hashem’s qualities of justice and mercy appear in several other places in the Torah. Interestingly, the emphasis in Shemot 20 is on Hashem’s quality of strict judgment, whereas in Shemot 34 His quality of mercy is described.
Articles
- See The First Tablets and the Second Tablets: The Differences Between Mishpatim and Ki Tisa, by R. Yoel Bin-Nun, for analysis of the meaning of this contrast between the passages in Shemot 20 and Shemot 34.