Difference between revisions of "Biblical Parallels Index – Shemot 34/0"

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<li>In Ki Tisa: Chet HaEgel and the 13 Midot of Rachamim, R. Menachem Leibtag points out that the characteristics of Hashem’s judgment, described in Shemot 20:4-6, are transformed into qualities of mercy in Shemot 34:6-7.&#160; This represents the process by which Hashem creates a new beginning for the Jewish people, reinstating the covenant after the sin of the golden calf.</li>
 
<li>In Ki Tisa: Chet HaEgel and the 13 Midot of Rachamim, R. Menachem Leibtag points out that the characteristics of Hashem’s judgment, described in Shemot 20:4-6, are transformed into qualities of mercy in Shemot 34:6-7.&#160; This represents the process by which Hashem creates a new beginning for the Jewish people, reinstating the covenant after the sin of the golden calf.</li>
 
<li>Listen to: <a href="https://etzion.org.il/en/tanakh/torah/sefer-shemot/parashat-ki-tisa/second-luchot-and-thirteen-midot">The Second Luchot and the 13 Midot</a>, by R. Yair Kahn, for a comparison and contrast of the first tablets (32:15-16) and the second tablets (34:1), analysis of the thirteen divine attributes of mercy that accompanied the giving of the second tablets (34:6-7) in contrast to the commandments that accompanied the giving of the first tablets (20:2-13), and exploration of the meaning of the thirteen attributes in our liturgy.</li>
 
<li>Listen to: <a href="https://etzion.org.il/en/tanakh/torah/sefer-shemot/parashat-ki-tisa/second-luchot-and-thirteen-midot">The Second Luchot and the 13 Midot</a>, by R. Yair Kahn, for a comparison and contrast of the first tablets (32:15-16) and the second tablets (34:1), analysis of the thirteen divine attributes of mercy that accompanied the giving of the second tablets (34:6-7) in contrast to the commandments that accompanied the giving of the first tablets (20:2-13), and exploration of the meaning of the thirteen attributes in our liturgy.</li>
<li>See The First Tablets and the Second Tablets: The Differences Between Mishpatim and Ki Tisa, by R. Yoel Bin-Nun.&#160; R. Bin-Nun compares the two sets of tablets to the relationship between Oral and Written Torah.&#160; He also compares and contrasts several other parallels between these two parashot.</li>
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<li>See <a href="https://www.hatanakh.com/sites/herzog/files/herzog/Ki%20Tisa-%20Rav%20Yoel%20Bin-Nun.pdf">The First Tablets and the Second Tablets: The Differences Between Mishpatim and Ki Tisa</a>, by R. Yoel Bin-Nun.&#160; R. Bin-Nun compares the two sets of tablets to the relationship between Oral and Written Torah.&#160; He also compares and contrasts several other parallels between these two parashot.</li>
<li>See The Ideal and the Real, by R. Zvi Grumet, for analysis of various narratives in Tanakh in which the Torah presents two narratives of an event, the first representing Hashem’s perfect vision and the second reflecting man’s flawed reality.&#160; R. Grumet situates the story of the first and second tablets within this framework.</li>
+
<li>See <a href="https://traditiononline.org/the-ideal-and-the-real/">The Ideal and the Rea</a>l, by R. Zvi Grumet, for analysis of various narratives in Tanakh in which the Torah presents two narratives of an event, the first representing Hashem’s perfect vision and the second reflecting man’s flawed reality.&#160; R. Grumet situates the story of the first and second tablets within this framework.</li>
 
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Version as of 05:25, 25 December 2023

Biblical Parallels Index – Shemot 34

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

Divine Attributes of Mercy and Justice

A list of Divine attributes, commonly referred to as "thirteen divine attributes" appears in Shemot 34:6-7.  Though often thought of as attributes of mercy, they in fact reflect both mercy and judgment. Various versions of this list of attributes appear throughout Tanakh. Sometimes these lists are partial, focusing more on mercy or more on justice, leading commentators to question the reasons for the different formulations.

Tools

  • See Makbilot BaMikra for links to the many place where lists of Divine attributes appear in Tanakh, including Shemot 20, 34, Bemidbar 14, Devarim 7, Yirmeyahu 32, Yonah 4, Nachum 1 and more.
  • Use the Tanakh Lab to compare any of the above to each other.  For example, see how the attributes on the Tablets compare to those said to Moshe after the sin of the golden calf here.

Primary Sources

  • See Ramban on Bemidbar 14:17-20, who seeks to understand why Moshe includes only some of the attributes in his prayer after the sin of the spies.

Articles

  • See Can There Be Compassion Without Justice?, by R. Jonathan Sacks, for discussion of the relationship between mercy and judgment in the 13 Attributes. He points to studies that demonstrate that societies need justice alongside mercy, for without belief in a punitive God (or in secular societies,in a sytem of justice) there is both more crime and less human forgiveness.
  • In The 13 Midot of Rachamim,1 R. Menachem Leibtag notes how the characteristics of Hashem’s judgment, described in Shemot 20:4-6, are transformed into qualities of mercy in Shemot 34:6-7, in the wake of the sin of the calf.  The wilderness period is marked by God's instantaneous punishment of the sinful, stemming from His direct presence in the nation's midst. After the sin, Hashem recognized that this was potentially disastrous and therefore decided to remove His presence. Moshe, uncomfortable with the solution, suggested a compromise, that Hashem mix justice with mercy and allow for non-immediate retribution, and, hence, repentance and pardon. The thirteen attributes attest to this new type of providence, one in which Hashem is no longer a "vengeful God" but a "God of mercy",  no longer "filled with anger" but "long to anger", and no longer "עשה חסד" but "נוצר חסד" etc.2
  • Makbilot Bamikra points out the various verses in Tanakh that refer to whether children are punished for their parents’ sins.  See Are Children Punished for Parents’ Sins?, which analyzes the many Biblical passages that take different approaches to this issue and gives an overview of commentators’ interpretations and resolutions of the seeming contradictions. 

Avraham and Moshe

Perhaps surprisingly, a comparison of Hashem's revelation to Avraham in Bereshit 18 reveals much in common with Hashem's revelation to Moshe after the sin of the calf in Shemot 33-34.

Tools

  • To see the linguistic parallels between the stories, compare them in the Tanakh Lab.

Articles

  • See The Revelations to Avraham and Moshe, by R. Tamir Granot, for analysis of the many parallels between Hashem’s revelation to Avraham in Bereshit 18 and to Moshe in Shemot 33-34, both taking place at "the entrance to the tent". The stories highlight how these  leaders were chosen by God, who "knows" them intimately; they in turn, each know/are taught the "ways of God". The parallels emphasize the willingness of both leaders to plead with Hashem on behalf of a sinful people, perhaps the reason for their choice. Finally, both stories represent a new beginning for the Jewish people: Avraham becomes their genealogical father, while Moshe becomes their metaphysical father when he saves them from annihilation.

Moshe and Eliyahu

Many sources have noted parallels between the figures of Moshe and Eliyahu.  Each  witnesses the nation affirm their belief in God only to have them revert to idolatry soon after, and each significantly receives personal divine revelation at Chorev.

Tools

  • Tanakh Lab – A comparison of the various revelations to Moshe at Sinai (in Shemot 3, 24, and 33-34) with Melakhim I 19, which describes Hashem's revelation to Eliyahu, reveals that, despite significant similarity in content, there is not much linguistic overlap between the stories. One notable exception is the phrase "אַרְבָּעִים יוֹם וְאַרְבָּעִים לַיְלָה".

Primary Sources

Articles

The First and Second Covenants

Articles

  • After making a covenant with the Jewish people after revelation in Shemot 24:8, Hashem renews that covenant in 34:27 after the sin of the golden calf.  Listen to Ramban on Ki Tisa: The Covenant Before the Chet HaEgel and the Second Covenant Following the Egel, by R. Azarya Berzon, for analysis of Ramban’s interpretation of the key differences between the two covenants
  • In Ki Tisa: Chet HaEgel and the 13 Midot of Rachamim, R. Menachem Leibtag points out that the characteristics of Hashem’s judgment, described in Shemot 20:4-6, are transformed into qualities of mercy in Shemot 34:6-7.  This represents the process by which Hashem creates a new beginning for the Jewish people, reinstating the covenant after the sin of the golden calf.
  • Listen to: The Second Luchot and the 13 Midot, by R. Yair Kahn, for a comparison and contrast of the first tablets (32:15-16) and the second tablets (34:1), analysis of the thirteen divine attributes of mercy that accompanied the giving of the second tablets (34:6-7) in contrast to the commandments that accompanied the giving of the first tablets (20:2-13), and exploration of the meaning of the thirteen attributes in our liturgy.
  • See The First Tablets and the Second Tablets: The Differences Between Mishpatim and Ki Tisa, by R. Yoel Bin-Nun.  R. Bin-Nun compares the two sets of tablets to the relationship between Oral and Written Torah.  He also compares and contrasts several other parallels between these two parashot.
  • See The Ideal and the Real, by R. Zvi Grumet, for analysis of various narratives in Tanakh in which the Torah presents two narratives of an event, the first representing Hashem’s perfect vision and the second reflecting man’s flawed reality.  R. Grumet situates the story of the first and second tablets within this framework.