Difference between revisions of "Censuses in the Wilderness/2"
(Original Author: Neima Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
(Original Author: Neima Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
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</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
− | <opinion name="">Spanning | + | <opinion name="">Spanning Both the First and Second Years |
<p>The censuses described in Shemot 30 and Bemidbar 1 were both part of a single extended process which began when the Tabernacle was being constructed and continued through the second month of the second year.</p> | <p>The censuses described in Shemot 30 and Bemidbar 1 were both part of a single extended process which began when the Tabernacle was being constructed and continued through the second month of the second year.</p> | ||
<mekorot> | <mekorot> | ||
<multilink><aht source="CassutoShemot38-25">U. Cassuto</aht><aht source="CassutoShemot38-25">Shemot 38:25</aht><aht parshan="Umberto Cassuto">About U. Cassuto</aht></multilink> | <multilink><aht source="CassutoShemot38-25">U. Cassuto</aht><aht source="CassutoShemot38-25">Shemot 38:25</aht><aht parshan="Umberto Cassuto">About U. Cassuto</aht></multilink> | ||
</mekorot> | </mekorot> | ||
− | <point><b>Two in one</b> - Cassuto proposes that the census had two parts. At the time of the construction of the Tabernacle, the people gave their half-shekels, names and other information but it was only in the following | + | <point><b>Two in one</b> - Cassuto proposes that the census had two parts. At the time of the construction of the Tabernacle, the people gave their half-shekels, names and other information, but it was only in the second month of the following year that the data was analyzed and all of the necessary calculations were made.</point> |
− | <point><b>Purpose of census</b> – Cassuto does not address the specific goal of the census. Since he posits that there was only one, the issue is not as problematic and one could suggest that it was either related to the establishment of the Tabernacle when it began, or to the upcoming travels and conquest which were to take place right after it finished.</point> | + | <point><b>Purpose of census</b> – Cassuto does not address the specific goal of the census. Since he posits that there was only one, the issue is not as problematic and one could suggest that it was either related to the establishment of the Tabernacle when it began, or to the upcoming travels and conquest which were to take place right after it was finished.</point> |
− | <point><b>Parallels</b> – Cassuto points to documentation of other censuses in the Ancient Near East and to David's census described in <aht source="ShemuelII24-4">Shemuel II 24:8</aht> as evidence that such counts were a drawn out process that could take months.<fn>Cf. Malbim who agrees that censuses were not a one day process, but still speaks of 2 separate counts. He suggests that | + | <point><b>Parallels</b> – Cassuto points to documentation of other censuses in the Ancient Near East and to David's census described in <aht source="ShemuelII24-4">Shemuel II 24:8</aht> as evidence that such counts were a long drawn out process that could take many months.<fn>Cf. Malbim who agrees that censuses were not a one day process, but still speaks of 2 separate counts. He suggests that the one described in Bemidbar 1 began on the first of the month but was not completed until 20 days later when they left Sinai.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>Identical tallies </b> – Since the "two" counts were really one and the same, the final | + | <point><b>Identical tallies </b> – Since the "two" counts were really one and the same, it is not astonishing that the final totals were identical.</point> |
− | <point><b>Above the age of twenty / "כָּל יֹצֵא צָבָא"</b> – Cassuto agrees that the count included only those of age to go to war, but points out that in other Ancient Near Eastern cultures, too, censuses generally included | + | <point><b>Above the age of twenty / "כָּל יֹצֵא צָבָא"</b> – Cassuto agrees that the count included only those of age to go to war, but points out that in other Ancient Near Eastern cultures, too, censuses generally included only those who were of military fighting age. The reference to war, then, does not necessarily connote that the purpose of the census was related to the imminent conquest.</point> |
− | <point><b>When was the census of Shemot 30?</b> According to Cassuto the chapters are written in chronological order and the beginning of the census took place before the sin of the Golden Calf.</point> | + | <point><b>When was the census of Shemot 30?</b> According to Cassuto, the chapters are written in chronological order, and the beginning of the census took place before the sin of the Golden Calf.</point> |
− | <point><b>Were the Levites included in the original census?</b> As there is but one census, the Levites were not included, as | + | <point><b>Were the Levites included in the original census?</b> As there is but one census, the Levites were not included, as becomes clear from the description in Bemidbar.</point> |
<point><b>Half-shekels?</b> The census began with a half-shekel count (as described in Shemot 30) and concluded with a more detailed analysis of families and individuals (as found in Bemidbar 1).</point> | <point><b>Half-shekels?</b> The census began with a half-shekel count (as described in Shemot 30) and concluded with a more detailed analysis of families and individuals (as found in Bemidbar 1).</point> | ||
<point><b>"כְּשֵׁשׁ מֵאוֹת אֶלֶף רַגְלִי"</b> – Cassuto views this number as an estimate and not the result of an actual census.</point> | <point><b>"כְּשֵׁשׁ מֵאוֹת אֶלֶף רַגְלִי"</b> – Cassuto views this number as an estimate and not the result of an actual census.</point> | ||
+ | <!-- | ||
<point><b>Census of Bemidbar 26 in the fortieth year</b> – </point> | <point><b>Census of Bemidbar 26 in the fortieth year</b> – </point> | ||
+ | --> | ||
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<point><b>Crux of the position</b> – </point> | <point><b>Crux of the position</b> – </point> |
Version as of 02:44, 23 May 2014
Censuses in the Wilderness
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
(in progress...)
Multiple Censuses
There were two or more distinct censuses during the first two years of the Israelites' sojourn through the wilderness.
- For the purpose of both the census in the first year of the wilderness and the one in the second year, people's ages were calculated not by their biological age, but rather by how old they were on the first day of the new year,8 which for this purpose (only) was counted from Tishrei.9 As such, no one turned twenty in the period between the census of Shemot 30 (which, according to Rashi, took place in Tishrei after Yom HaKippurim – see above) and that of Bemidbar 1-4 (which took place seven months later in Iyyar).
- The Levites were not included in either census – see above.
- There were no deaths during the period between the censuses.10
One Full and One Partial Census
The census in Shemot 30 was a general census which merely provided the total number of Israelites, while the census of Bemidbar 1 was a far more comprehensive one, which collected data about individuals, their families, and tribal affiliations.
- Intentional – The Netziv suggests that after the first census, the total of 603,550 was set as the necessary number for the army, and for God's presence to dwell amongst the nation. Thus, during the second census, the people were not counted to see how many they were, but to ensure that they met the proper quota.17
- Coincidence – The other commentators suggest that the identical numbers were a coincidence, but they differ in their understandings of the details of how this worked:
- Deaths match those coming of age – Ramban (first explanation) proposes that by happenstance the number of men who turned twenty equaled the number of men who had died.18
- Levites included or omitted – Ramban (second proposal) and Abarbanel explain that the coincidence was possible because the Levites were included in the first census, but not the second. This would allow for approximately 22,000 people to turn twenty in the intervening months.19
- Levites replace firstborns – According to Shadal, the Levites were included in the first census, but the firstborns were not.20 As these two groups were close in number, the omission of the Levites from the second count did not have any significant affect on the census21 and by complete chance it turned out that with the small discrepancy between Levites and firstborns, the number of deaths equaled the number of men turning twenty.
Only One Census
There was only a single census during the first two years in the wilderness. This approach subdivides as to when this census transpired:
In the Second Year
Shemot 30 did not constitute a command to immediately count the nation, and there was only a single census which took place in the second year and is described in Bemidbar 1.
- Prevention of plague – Chizkuni asserts that the shekel donations were a necessary contribution to prevent plagues in future censuses, but their initial collection in Shemot 30 did not constitute a census in its own right.
- Contribution to Mishkan – According to R. Yosef Bekhor Shor and the GR"A, the command to give half-shekels was wholly unconnected to the census and solely for the building of and service of the Mishkan. R. Yosef Bekhor Shor suggests that the shekalim were not even counted; the number of half-shekels totaled in Shemot 38 is the Torah's omniscient parenthetical statement regarding the future total which had not yet occurred.
Spanning Both the First and Second Years
The censuses described in Shemot 30 and Bemidbar 1 were both part of a single extended process which began when the Tabernacle was being constructed and continued through the second month of the second year.