Difference between revisions of "Bizarre Prophetic Commands/2"
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<mekorot><multilink><a href="RidYeshayahu20-2" data-aht="source">Rid</a><a href="RidYeshayahu20-2" data-aht="source">Yeshayahu 20:2</a><a href="RidYechezkel4-12-13" data-aht="source">Yechezkel 4:12-13</a><a href="RidHoshea1-2" data-aht="source">Hoshea 1:2</a><a href="R. Yeshayah of Trani (Rid)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yeshayah of Trani</a></multilink><fn>Rid brings both the possibility that the verses should be read literally and that they might have been relayed only in a prophetic vision.</fn></mekorot> | <mekorot><multilink><a href="RidYeshayahu20-2" data-aht="source">Rid</a><a href="RidYeshayahu20-2" data-aht="source">Yeshayahu 20:2</a><a href="RidYechezkel4-12-13" data-aht="source">Yechezkel 4:12-13</a><a href="RidHoshea1-2" data-aht="source">Hoshea 1:2</a><a href="R. Yeshayah of Trani (Rid)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yeshayah of Trani</a></multilink><fn>Rid brings both the possibility that the verses should be read literally and that they might have been relayed only in a prophetic vision.</fn></mekorot> | ||
<point><b>Prophetic trials</b> – Rid maintains that prophets are initiated into prophecy with the understanding that their lives will be filled with trials and tribulations.  The fact that a command might entail suffering pain, sorrow, or humiliation is part of the prophetic package. Thus, the idea that Yeshayahu could have been told to walk literally naked, Yirmeyahu could not marry, or that Yechezkel could be expected to lie on his side and eat meager rations of food kneaded in dung,<fn>Rid is somewhat unique in understanding that Yechezkel was not commanded to merely cook the bread using coals of dung, but that he actually kneaded it on top of them.  See also the Hoil Moshe who goes a step further to suggest that Yechezkel was meant to mix these into the bread itself, to symbolize the severity of the famine and the measures which would be taken when no other food was available.</fn> should not trouble the reader.</point> | <point><b>Prophetic trials</b> – Rid maintains that prophets are initiated into prophecy with the understanding that their lives will be filled with trials and tribulations.  The fact that a command might entail suffering pain, sorrow, or humiliation is part of the prophetic package. Thus, the idea that Yeshayahu could have been told to walk literally naked, Yirmeyahu could not marry, or that Yechezkel could be expected to lie on his side and eat meager rations of food kneaded in dung,<fn>Rid is somewhat unique in understanding that Yechezkel was not commanded to merely cook the bread using coals of dung, but that he actually kneaded it on top of them.  See also the Hoil Moshe who goes a step further to suggest that Yechezkel was meant to mix these into the bread itself, to symbolize the severity of the famine and the measures which would be taken when no other food was available.</fn> should not trouble the reader.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Commanding a transgression?</b> The Rid is not bothered by the possibility that a prophet might be commanded to transgress a Biblical commandment. Hashem can permit whatever He wants ("הפה שאסר הוא הפה שהתיר"), and since He is the one doing the commanding, the prophet must listen.<fn>This issue takes center stage in discussions of the Binding of Isaac, where commentators question how Hashem could command Avraham to do an action which is later prohibited in the Torah. See <a href="Purpose of Akeidat Yitzchak" data-aht="page">Purpose of Akeidat Yitzchak</a> for elaboration.</fn>  Thus, Hoshea's sleeping with a prostitute or Yechezkel's shaving his sideburns would not be problematic.</point> | + | <point><b>Commanding a transgression?</b> The Rid is not bothered by the possibility that a prophet might be commanded to transgress a Biblical commandment. Hashem can both prohibit or permit whatever He wants ("הפה שאסר הוא הפה שהתיר"), and since He is the one doing the commanding, the prophet must listen.<fn>This issue takes center stage in discussions of the Binding of Isaac, where commentators question how Hashem could command Avraham to do an action which is later prohibited in the Torah. See <a href="Purpose of Akeidat Yitzchak" data-aht="page">Purpose of Akeidat Yitzchak</a> for elaboration.</fn>  Thus, Hoshea's sleeping with a prostitute or Yechezkel's shaving his sideburns would not be problematic.</point> |
<point><b>Maintaining prophetic standards and reputation</b> – Rid does not address how a prophet's engaging in bizarre behavior would impact his reputation and how it might affect how his future prophecies were heard.  It is possible that people were used to their prophets performing symbolic actions and recognized them as such.  And, even if at first they found the prophet's behavior odd, once the actions were explained, they accepted it as part of the prophet's job.</point> | <point><b>Maintaining prophetic standards and reputation</b> – Rid does not address how a prophet's engaging in bizarre behavior would impact his reputation and how it might affect how his future prophecies were heard.  It is possible that people were used to their prophets performing symbolic actions and recognized them as such.  And, even if at first they found the prophet's behavior odd, once the actions were explained, they accepted it as part of the prophet's job.</point> | ||
<point><b>Purpose of such actions</b><ul> | <point><b>Purpose of such actions</b><ul> | ||
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</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>Burdensome actions: Traveling to Perat</b> – Shadal raises the possibility that that there was a place called "Perat" close to Jerusalem where the people could congregate and view the prophet's symbolic deed. Yirmeyahu was not expected to travel all the way to the Euphrates, especially considering that if he had, no one would have viewed the act regardless.</point> | <point><b>Burdensome actions: Traveling to Perat</b> – Shadal raises the possibility that that there was a place called "Perat" close to Jerusalem where the people could congregate and view the prophet's symbolic deed. Yirmeyahu was not expected to travel all the way to the Euphrates, especially considering that if he had, no one would have viewed the act regardless.</point> | ||
+ | <point><b>Yirmeyahu's not marrying</b> – Shadal does not attempt to reinterpret these actions, assuming that they were fulfilled as commanded. Yirmeyahu did not marry, have children, attend a funeral or wedding for years, all to be a visual analogy for the people. Shadal (following Abarbanel) assumes that the people would have taken notice of both his absence from festive gatherings and his bachelorhood (an unmarried public figure was probably a rarity in the time of Tanakh).  As such, his actions prompted questions and served their prophetic function.</point> | ||
<point><b>"אוֹת וּמוֹפֵת"</b> – Shadal, following Abarbanel, suggests that these words prove that Yeshayahu was meant to be actively walk around naked, and that this did not occur in a vision.</point> | <point><b>"אוֹת וּמוֹפֵת"</b> – Shadal, following Abarbanel, suggests that these words prove that Yeshayahu was meant to be actively walk around naked, and that this did not occur in a vision.</point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> |
Version as of 00:01, 9 October 2018
Bizarre Prophetic Commands
Exegetical Approaches
Prophetic Vision
The various bizarre actions demanded of prophets took place only in prophetic visions. They were meant to serve as analogies, and not intended to be active public displays.
- The prophet – It is possible that Hashem wished for the prophet himself to internalize Hashem's messages, for only then would he be able to effectively relay them to the people, in whatever manner he wished. [This assumes that the prophet need not have relayed the vision he saw, but only the message which emerged from it.] Alternatively, certain messages were not even intended to be relayed further and held import only for the prophet.
- The nation – The messages were relayed as analogies to the nation, but without the accompanying visuals. Though verbal parables would seem to have much less impact on an audience than symbolic actions, the honor of the prophet precludes the latter.9 Moreover, in cases where the audience is a foreign nation, it is possible that verbal analogies were preferred, since any symbolic action would have reached them only via hearsay regardless.
- Future generations –
Symbolic Action
Hashem's commands were actively fulfilled, despite the embarrassment or pain they might have caused the prophet. This position subdivides regarding whether or not the commands should be reinterpreted so as to mitigate the difficulties that a literal understanding would pose for the prophet.
Literal Fulfillment
Hashem's commands are understood literally, without an attempt to soften the directives.
- This approach might suggest that one of the best ways to get a message across to an apathetic audience is to shock them into attention. This would support reading the verses as literally a possible since the more unexpected the prophet's behavior, the more of an impact it would have had on the listeners.
- In the case of Yechezkel, it is also possible that Hashem's directive that he be mute and not rebuke the people (Yechezkel 3) might have necessitated substituting verbal chastisement with symbolic actions.
Non-literal Fulfillment
Many of Hashem's commands are reinterpreted, easing their fulfillment and making them accord more with the standards of behavior expected of a prophet.
- "עָרוֹם וְיָחֵף" – Shadal claims that Yeshayahu removed his sackcloth, which resulted in his bare skin showing, but not that he walked around totally naked.16 He points out that if the latter were true, there would be no point in the verse sharing that he walked barefoot for that would be redundant.
- "שָׁלֹשׁ שָׁנִים" – According to Malbim Yeshayahu derobed only for one day or a short while in the privacy of his home.17 The phrase "שָׁלֹשׁ שָׁנִים" refers not to the duration of Yeshayahu's symbolic act but the length of time until the prophecy against Egypt would be fulfilled.18
- "שְׁכַב עַל צִדְּךָ" – Shadal assumes that Yechezkel did not lie on his side straight for 390 days, Rather, during that period of time, whenever he went to sleep at night, Yechezkel would lie on his side facing the brick engraving of the besieged Yerushalayim. Though Hashem says, "וְהִנֵּה נָתַתִּי עָלֶיךָ עֲבוֹתִים וְלֹא תֵהָפֵךְ מִצִּדְּךָ אֶל צִדֶּךָ", this just means, "it will be as if I have tied you".19
- "וְהִיא בְּגֶלְלֵי צֵאַת הָאָדָם תְּעֻגֶנָה" – According to Shadal,20 Hashem did not command Yechezkel to actively mix dung into his bread, but to cook it on top of coals made of dried human excrement.
- This position might claim, like Malbim, that sometimes Hashem gives one time commands (הוראת שעה) which do not accord with Torah law so as to achieve a larger goal. As an example, Malbim points to Eliyahu's sacrificing on a private altar when such altars were prohibited.21
- Alternatively, this approach might posit that none of Hashem's commands entailed transgressing any prohibition, for a prostitute is only prohibited to a priest and Yechezkel need not have been commanded to shave the areas of his hair which are not allowed to be cut.
Case Dependent
Any bizarre command which the narrator states was fulfilled by the prophet must be interpreted as having been fulfilled literally and not in a dream. Those commands whose fulfillment is not explicit might have been given only in a prophetic vision.
- Where the text explicitly states that something occurred in a vision, such as Yechezkel being taken "בְּמַרְאוֹת אֱלֹהִים" to Yerushalayim (8:3), the prophecy and all actions mentioned therein can be assumed to be have taken place only in a prophetic dream.
- Where the text explicitly states that a prophetic command was fulfilled, such as Yeshayahu's walking naked and Hoshea's taking a prostitute in marriage,22 one must assume that the action happened literally.
- In cases where the text is silent, neither mentioning a vision nor an active deed, such as the commands that Yechezkel shave his hair, lie on his side, or eat bread baked in dung, one can take either option.