Difference between revisions of "Chronology – Shemot 18/2"
Line 116: | Line 116: | ||
<p>Yitro arrived and also gave his advice (18:1-23) before the people came to Mount Sinai,<span class="unbold"> but Moshe appointed the judges and Yitro departed (18:24-27) only in the second year when they left Mount Sinai</span>.</p> | <p>Yitro arrived and also gave his advice (18:1-23) before the people came to Mount Sinai,<span class="unbold"> but Moshe appointed the judges and Yitro departed (18:24-27) only in the second year when they left Mount Sinai</span>.</p> | ||
<mekorot><multilink><a href="Akeidat43-1" data-aht="source">Akeidat Yitzchak</a><a href="Akeidat43-1" data-aht="source">Shemot #43</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Arama (Akeidat Yitzchak)" data-aht="parshan">About Akeidat Yitzchak</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Abarbanel18-1" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="Abarbanel18-1" data-aht="source">Shemot 18</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About Abarbanel</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Malbim18-24" data-aht="source">Malbim</a><a href="Malbim18-24" data-aht="source">Shemot 18:24</a><a href="R. Meir Leibush Weiser (Malbim)" data-aht="parshan">About Malbim</a></multilink>, opinion cited in <multilink><a href="HoilDevarim1-9" data-aht="source">Hoil Moshe</a><a href="HoilDevarim1-9" data-aht="source">Devarim 1:9</a><a href="R. Moshe Yitzchak Ashkenazi (Hoil Moshe)" data-aht="parshan">About Hoil Moshe</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RDZHoffmann18Intro" data-aht="source">R. D"Z Hoffmann</a><a href="RDZHoffmann18Intro" data-aht="source">Introduction to Shemot 18</a><a href="R. David Zvi Hoffmann" data-aht="parshan">About R. D"Z Hoffmann</a></multilink>.</mekorot> | <mekorot><multilink><a href="Akeidat43-1" data-aht="source">Akeidat Yitzchak</a><a href="Akeidat43-1" data-aht="source">Shemot #43</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Arama (Akeidat Yitzchak)" data-aht="parshan">About Akeidat Yitzchak</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Abarbanel18-1" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="Abarbanel18-1" data-aht="source">Shemot 18</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About Abarbanel</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Malbim18-24" data-aht="source">Malbim</a><a href="Malbim18-24" data-aht="source">Shemot 18:24</a><a href="R. Meir Leibush Weiser (Malbim)" data-aht="parshan">About Malbim</a></multilink>, opinion cited in <multilink><a href="HoilDevarim1-9" data-aht="source">Hoil Moshe</a><a href="HoilDevarim1-9" data-aht="source">Devarim 1:9</a><a href="R. Moshe Yitzchak Ashkenazi (Hoil Moshe)" data-aht="parshan">About Hoil Moshe</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RDZHoffmann18Intro" data-aht="source">R. D"Z Hoffmann</a><a href="RDZHoffmann18Intro" data-aht="source">Introduction to Shemot 18</a><a href="R. David Zvi Hoffmann" data-aht="parshan">About R. D"Z Hoffmann</a></multilink>.</mekorot> | ||
− | <point><a href="Did Moshe Need Yitro's Advice/ | + | <point><a href="Did Moshe Need Yitro's Advice/2en#ReceiveLaws" data-aht="page">Why did Moshe need Yitro's advice</a> – Akeidat Yitzchak and Abarbanel attempt to address the question of why Moshe on his own had not already implemented Yitro's plan. By assigning the advice and its eventual implementation to two different time periods, they are able to explain that the timing was not yet ripe for Yitro's plan.<fn>See also the discussion of Abarbanel's postion in <a href="Moshe's Duties and Yitro's Advice/2#TwoofFiveRoles" data-aht="page">Moshe's Duties and Yitro's Advice</a>.</fn> This allows them to posit that Moshe was always planning to appoint judges, but that it was first necessary for the people to receive the laws.<fn>While the approaches of Akeidat Yitzchak and Abarbanel concur in the need to split Shemot 18 into two different time periods, they differ fundamentally in their perspective on Yitro and the value of his advice – see <a href="Did Moshe Need Yitro's Advice/2#MosheandYitroBothCorrect" data-aht="page">here</a>.</fn></point> |
<point><b>"At God's mountain"</b>(18:5) – According to Abarbanel, even though some of the people were still at Rephidim until Chapter 19, Moshe and part of the nation<fn>Abarbanel needs to say that part of the nation was also at Mount Sinai with Moshe because otherwise Yitro could not have observed Moshe judging them in the continuation of the chapter. However, according to Rashi and Tosafot who split the chapter in half and say that Moshe's judging of the people was only much later (see above), only Moshe (and not the people) would need to be at Mount Sinai in the first half of the chapter.</fn> were at Mount Sinai already from Chapter 17 onwards.<fn>Interestingly, it is Ibn Ezra in both of his commentaries to 17:9 who explains similarly (despite his position that Yitro came only in the second year), while Ramban Shemot 17:5 argues against this possibility (even though it would have greatly simplified his interpretation of 18:5 – see Ramban above). Ibn Ezra in his Short Commentary adds that the record of the people's arrival at Sinai only in 19:1-2 does not pose a problem (cf. Ramban) because the nation could have stretched from Rephidim to Mount Sinai. This theory could also explain how Amalek was able to attack the "stragglers" of the camp.</fn> Abarbanel also notes that Hashem had instructed Moshe to draw water from the rock at Horev in 17:6, and that Sinai was the "hill" (17:9) where Moshe sat during the battle with Amalek (like Ibn Ezra there). Thus, we can readily understand why in 18:5 Yitro came to "where he (Moshe) was encamped, at God's mountain." Abarbanel adds that we should not be surprised that the Torah calls Mount Sinai "God's mountain" even before the Decalogue (see also Shemot 3:1), because the Torah uses the names by which places were later known ("על שם סופו"). This suggestion appears already in Sifre Devarim 22 (cf. Targum Onkelos Shemot 3:1, 18:5). Alternatively, R. D"Z Hoffmann 18:5 cites an opinion that "God's mountain" refers not to Mount Sinai, but rather to the mountain upon which Hashem appeared and provided water in Shemot 17:6.<fn>The difficulty with this approach is that the term "God's mountain" clearly refers to Mount Sinai in Shemot 3:1 (see 3:12) and 24:13, and the same is true for "mountain of Hashem" in Bemidbar 10:33.</fn></point> | <point><b>"At God's mountain"</b>(18:5) – According to Abarbanel, even though some of the people were still at Rephidim until Chapter 19, Moshe and part of the nation<fn>Abarbanel needs to say that part of the nation was also at Mount Sinai with Moshe because otherwise Yitro could not have observed Moshe judging them in the continuation of the chapter. However, according to Rashi and Tosafot who split the chapter in half and say that Moshe's judging of the people was only much later (see above), only Moshe (and not the people) would need to be at Mount Sinai in the first half of the chapter.</fn> were at Mount Sinai already from Chapter 17 onwards.<fn>Interestingly, it is Ibn Ezra in both of his commentaries to 17:9 who explains similarly (despite his position that Yitro came only in the second year), while Ramban Shemot 17:5 argues against this possibility (even though it would have greatly simplified his interpretation of 18:5 – see Ramban above). Ibn Ezra in his Short Commentary adds that the record of the people's arrival at Sinai only in 19:1-2 does not pose a problem (cf. Ramban) because the nation could have stretched from Rephidim to Mount Sinai. This theory could also explain how Amalek was able to attack the "stragglers" of the camp.</fn> Abarbanel also notes that Hashem had instructed Moshe to draw water from the rock at Horev in 17:6, and that Sinai was the "hill" (17:9) where Moshe sat during the battle with Amalek (like Ibn Ezra there). Thus, we can readily understand why in 18:5 Yitro came to "where he (Moshe) was encamped, at God's mountain." Abarbanel adds that we should not be surprised that the Torah calls Mount Sinai "God's mountain" even before the Decalogue (see also Shemot 3:1), because the Torah uses the names by which places were later known ("על שם סופו"). This suggestion appears already in Sifre Devarim 22 (cf. Targum Onkelos Shemot 3:1, 18:5). Alternatively, R. D"Z Hoffmann 18:5 cites an opinion that "God's mountain" refers not to Mount Sinai, but rather to the mountain upon which Hashem appeared and provided water in Shemot 17:6.<fn>The difficulty with this approach is that the term "God's mountain" clearly refers to Mount Sinai in Shemot 3:1 (see 3:12) and 24:13, and the same is true for "mountain of Hashem" in Bemidbar 10:33.</fn></point> | ||
<point>"<a href="Yitro's Sacrifices and Eating Bread Before God" data-aht="page">Before God</a>" – Akeidat Yitzchak and Abarbanel explain these words as in front of the altar which Moshe had built. Abarbanel identifies this altar as the one Moshe built at the culmination of the battle with Amalek in 17:15.</point> | <point>"<a href="Yitro's Sacrifices and Eating Bread Before God" data-aht="page">Before God</a>" – Akeidat Yitzchak and Abarbanel explain these words as in front of the altar which Moshe had built. Abarbanel identifies this altar as the one Moshe built at the culmination of the battle with Amalek in 17:15.</point> |
Version as of 05:31, 23 July 2021
Chronology – Shemot 18
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
When did the various events of Chapter 18 occur? Did they take place before the events of the chapters which follow? Or did they happen only after the Decalogue or the building of the Tabernacle? There are three basic categories of possibilities which subdivide further. Many Midrashim assume that the entire chapter is in chronological order and that Yitro both arrived and left before the revelation at Sinai. In contrast, R. Saadia and Ibn Ezra argue that the whole story is out of order. Finally a whole host of other exegetes split the chapter and suggest various permutations for which parts of the story happened before the Decalogue and which occurred only later.Completely Chronological
All of Chapter 18 occurred before the Decalogue, and the entire chapter is in its chronological place. There are two variations of this position:
In the 2nd Month
Yitro visited at the end of the second month (of the first year) while the nation was still camped at Rephidim, and all of the events recorded in Chapter 18 occurred before the nation arrived at Mount Sinai in Chapter 19.
- The first passage records a dispute over when Yitro came. According to the Oxford and Munich manuscripts of the Mekhilta Yitro Amalek 1 it would seem that R. Yehoshua claims that Yitro embarked on his journey only after hearing about the revelation at Sinai, while R. Elazar HaModai argues that he heard about the splitting of the sea. However, from various other textual witnesses8 it appears that these two manuscripts are missing a section (possibly the result of a homeoteleuton) and R. Yehoshua asserts that Yitro came after hearing of the victory over Amalek,9 while it is R. Elazar HaModai who maintains that he came after hearing about the revelation at Sinai.10
- The second passage in Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Yitro Amalek 2 discusses their opinions regarding the meaning of the intensive (piel) form of "vayshalach" in 18:27 (which might imply that Moshe purposefully sent Yitro away rather than merely letting him depart). Here, R. Yehoshua enigmatically explains that Moshe sent Yitro away "with the glory of the world" ("בכבודו של עולם"). This leads some to explain based on the variant "from the glory of the world" ("מכבודו של עולם") found in Yalkut Shimoni Yitro 271, that R. Yehoshua, like the Pesikta, contends that Yitro was sent away so that he would not be present for the revelation. Accordingly, R. Yehoshua would maintain that all of Chapter 18 occurred before the Decalogue.11
In the 3rd Month
Yitro came in the beginning of the third month (of the first year) immediately after the nation's arrival at Mount Sinai, but before the preparations for the giving of the Decalogue in the rest of Chapter 19.
All Achronological
All of Chapter 18 occurred after the Decalogue, and the entire chapter is NOT in its chronological place ("אין מוקדם ומאוחר בתורה"). This position also subdivides into two:
Before the building of the Tabernacle
All of Chapter 18 happened after the Decalogue, but before the completion of the Tabernacle.
- One possibility is that Yitro arrived only after Moshe descended with the second set of tablets. See the position cited by Chizkuni 18:27 that Yitro arrived on Yom HaKippurim of the first year, and cf. Rashi and Tosafot below who, despite maintaining that Yitro arrived earlier, posit that Yitro observed Moshe judging the people on the day after Yom HaKippurim.
- Alternatively, Yitro might have come during the second set of forty days after the Decalogue, if one assumes that Moshe spent those days in his personal tent and not on the mountain [see here for the various positions on this issue]. This variation creates the intriguing possibility that "the tent" in 18:6 refers to the same tent of Moshe described in Shemot 33:7-11 (cf. Hoil Moshe Shemot 18:7), and that the people coming to "inquire of God" in 18:15 are the same people "seeking out Hashem" in 33:7.
After the building of the Tabernacle
All of Chapter 18 took place only in the second year after the Tabernacle was already built.
Chronological Compromise
Chapter 18 combines six events which happened during different time periods, and part of Chapter 18 is in its chronological place while part is not. There is a full spectrum of variations of this compromise position:22
Only Yitro's departure was after the revelation at Sinai
Almost the entire chapter (18:1-26) transpired before the nation arrived at Mount Sinai, and only the last verse (18:27) regarding Yitro's departure is achronological and happened later.
Yitro's advice was implemented after the revelation at Sinai
Yitro arrived and also gave his advice (18:1-23) before the people came to Mount Sinai, but Moshe appointed the judges and Yitro departed (18:24-27) only in the second year when they left Mount Sinai.
Yitro gave his advice only after the revelation at Sinai
Yitro arrived and offered sacrifices (18:1-12) before the Decalogue, but he gave his advice (18:13-27) only afterwards.
Yitro offered sacrifices only after the revelation at Sinai
Yitro arrived (18:1-11) before the revelation at Sinai, but he brought sacrifices and gave his advice (18:12-27) only afterwards.
Yitro arrived only after the revelation at Sinai
Yitro heard the news of the Exodus (18:1) before the revelation at Mount Sinai, but he arrived at the camp only afterwards.