Difference between revisions of "Chronology of Bemidbar 1 – 10/2"
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<p>The early chapters of Sefer Bemidbar speak of events that occurred only later, because they are not part of the book's core.  Rather, they serve as either an introduction to Sefer Bemidbar or as appendix to the Books of Shemot and Vayikra.</p> | <p>The early chapters of Sefer Bemidbar speak of events that occurred only later, because they are not part of the book's core.  Rather, they serve as either an introduction to Sefer Bemidbar or as appendix to the Books of Shemot and Vayikra.</p> | ||
<mekorot><multilink><a href="RambanBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Ramban</a><a href="RambanBemidbar3-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 3:1</a><a href="RambanBemidbar3-14" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 3:14</a><a href="RambanBemidbar5-2-6" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 5:2:6</a><a href="RambanBemidbar7-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 7:1</a><a href="RambanBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 9:1</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Nachman (Ramban, Nachmanides)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Moshe b. Nachman</a></multilink>,</mekorot> | <mekorot><multilink><a href="RambanBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Ramban</a><a href="RambanBemidbar3-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 3:1</a><a href="RambanBemidbar3-14" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 3:14</a><a href="RambanBemidbar5-2-6" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 5:2:6</a><a href="RambanBemidbar7-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 7:1</a><a href="RambanBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 9:1</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Nachman (Ramban, Nachmanides)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Moshe b. Nachman</a></multilink>,</mekorot> | ||
+ | <point><b>Bemidbar 1-6</b> – This position assumes that the opening date of Chapter 1 refers to the events of all 6 chapters and that both the census and accompanying laws occurred in the second month.</point> | ||
+ | <point><b>Bemidbar 7 and 9</b> – These chapters are achronological and the events that they describe occurred as dated, in the first month.</point> | ||
<point><b>Why isn't the book written chronologically?</b><ul> | <point><b>Why isn't the book written chronologically?</b><ul> | ||
<li><b>Appendix</b> – According to Ramban, Bemidbar 9 really opens the book, while the first eight chapters only come to finish topics (להשלים את הענין) discussed in  the Books of Shemot and Vayikra.<fn>These all relate in some way to the Mishkan.</fn> As such, there is no attempt to arrange them chronologically and some of the events discussed there happened after events spoken of only later in Bemidbar.</li> | <li><b>Appendix</b> – According to Ramban, Bemidbar 9 really opens the book, while the first eight chapters only come to finish topics (להשלים את הענין) discussed in  the Books of Shemot and Vayikra.<fn>These all relate in some way to the Mishkan.</fn> As such, there is no attempt to arrange them chronologically and some of the events discussed there happened after events spoken of only later in Bemidbar.</li> | ||
− | <li><b>Introduction</b> – Alternatively, the core of Bemidbar really begins with Chapter 7, "the day that Moshe finished erecting the Tabernacle" and proceeds chronologically from there. However, the census set up of the camp in the second month | + | <li><b>Introduction</b> – Alternatively, the core of Bemidbar really begins with Chapter 7, "the day that Moshe finished erecting the Tabernacle" and proceeds chronologically from there. However, the census and set up of the camp in the second month are recorded earlier (in Chapters 1-4) because they comprise a necessary introduction to the book.<fn>A discussion of the set up of the camp is a natural prelude for a book dealing with the nation's wanderings.</fn> Chapters 5-6 might be viewed as a legal appendix to this unit,<fn>As such it would not be necessary to find a connection between them and the preceding narrative.</fn> as in other places where a narrative section ends with a legal passage.</li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>Internal order of achronological chapters</b><ul> | <point><b>Internal order of achronological chapters</b><ul> | ||
− | <li>According to Ramban, within the appendix, thematic order takes precedence over chronology.  The book opens with the censuses and set up of the camp around the Mishkan (perhaps because the book focuses on the nation's travels), and then discusses laws which relate to this.<fn>Chapter five opens with laws related to the impure who must leave the camp.  Then, since the census involved family lineage, laws of the Sotah and potential illegitimate children follow. The Nazirite stands in contrast both to the impure and Sotah and is thus discussed next.</fn> Only after all the legal material is covered does the Torah return to narrative | + | <li>According to Ramban, within the appendix, thematic order takes precedence over chronology.  The book opens with the censuses and set up of the camp around the Mishkan (perhaps because the book focuses on the nation's travels), and then discusses laws which relate to this.<fn>Chapter five opens with laws related to the impure who must leave the camp.  Then, since the census involved family lineage, laws of the Sotah and potential illegitimate children follow. The Nazirite stands in contrast both to the impure and Sotah and is thus discussed next.</fn> Only after all the legal material is covered does the Torah return to narrative to speak of the prince's offerings and the Levite's purification.</li> |
<li>According to the alternative opinion, it is only one set of chapters that is out of order, those dealing with the censuses and camp, and within these there is no achronology. </li> | <li>According to the alternative opinion, it is only one set of chapters that is out of order, those dealing with the censuses and camp, and within these there is no achronology. </li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
− | <point><b>Gifts to the Levites</b> – Since this position posits that the dedication of the altar took place in the first month, but that the Levite's census and replacement of the firstborns took place in the second, it must explain how the princes knew to give the Levites wagons if they had not yet been assigned their tasks.  It could suggest one of two possibilities:<br/> | + | <point><b>Gifts to the Levites</b> – Since this position posits that the dedication of the altar (chapter 7) took place in the first month, but that the Levite's census and replacement of the firstborns (Chapter 3) took place in the second, it must explain how the princes knew to give the Levites wagons if they had not yet been assigned their tasks.  It could suggest one of two possibilities:<br/> |
<ul> | <ul> | ||
− | <li>The Levites were chosen beforehand, but they were only officially counted in the second month, as this was right before the nation's travels, when they were to begin their jobs as porters.</li> | + | <li>The Levites were actually chosen beforehand, but they were only officially counted in the second month, as this was right before the nation's travels, when they were to begin their jobs as porters. See <a href="Selection of the Priests and Levites" data-aht="page">Selection of the Priests and Levites</a> for a full discussion of when they might have first been chosen.</li> |
− | <li>Alternatively, Bemidbar 7:5-7 is out of place.  Though the princes' gifts and sacrifices were brought in the first month, the wagons and cattle were only given to the Levites after their appointment in the second month.  The verses are only recorded here to finish the story of the princes' offerings.</li> | + | <li>Alternatively, Bemidbar 7:5-7 is out of place.  Though the princes' gifts and sacrifices were brought to the Mishkan in the first month, the wagons and cattle were only given to the Levites after their appointment in the second month.<fn>This might be Ramban's own opinion; see his comments to Bemidbar 8:5.</fn>  The verses are only recorded here to finish the story of the princes' offerings.</li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
− | <point><b>"הֵם הָעֹמְדִים עַל הַפְּקֻדִים"</b> – According to this position this description is a parenthetical statement of the narrator, meant for the reader who already knows that the princes officiated in the counting.</point> | + | <point><b>"הֵם הָעֹמְדִים עַל הַפְּקֻדִים"</b> – According to this position this description is a parenthetical statement of the narrator, meant for the reader who already knows that the princes officiated in the counting even though they had not yet done so at the time of the story.</point> |
− | <point><b> | + | <point><b>Dedication of the Altar and the Consecration of the Mishkan</b> – according to this position</point> |
− | <point><b> | + | <point><b>Purification of the Levites</b><ul> |
− | <li>According to | + | <li>According to the position that the core of Sefer Bemidbar begins in Chapter 7 and proceeds chronologically, the purification of the Levites took place in the first month.  This assumes that not only were the Levites chosen before the census<fn>See above point.</fn> but that they were purified as well. Presumably this was done so that they would be prepared for their tasks as soon as they needed to travel.</li> |
− | <li> | + | <li>Ramban is ambiguous, but seems to imply in contrast, that the purification took place in the second month, soon after the Levites' official census and appointments.<fn>Since all of Chapters 1-8 are an appendix according to Ramban, they are not trying to preserve any chornological order so it is not problematic that they begin in the second month, return to the first, only to revert back to the second.  Nonetheless, it would seem to be more logical to discuss the purification right after the Levite's appointments and only then to move into the laws of Chapters 5-6.</fn></li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>Chronology in Torah</b> – Ramban normally posits that the Torah is written according to chronological order. Here, he claims otherwise due to the explicit sdates</point> | <point><b>Chronology in Torah</b> – Ramban normally posits that the Torah is written according to chronological order. Here, he claims otherwise due to the explicit sdates</point> | ||
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<mekorot><multilink><a href="RashiBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Rashi</a><a href="RashiBemidbar7-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 7:1</a><a href="RashiBemidbar7-2" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 7:2</a><a href="RashiBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 9:1</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Shelomo Yitzchaki</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="SefornoBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Seforno</a><a href="SefornoBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 9:1</a><a href="R. Ovadyah Seforno" data-aht="parshan">About R. Ovadyah Seforno</a></multilink>,</mekorot> | <mekorot><multilink><a href="RashiBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Rashi</a><a href="RashiBemidbar7-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 7:1</a><a href="RashiBemidbar7-2" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 7:2</a><a href="RashiBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 9:1</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Shelomo Yitzchaki</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="SefornoBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Seforno</a><a href="SefornoBemidbar9-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 9:1</a><a href="R. Ovadyah Seforno" data-aht="parshan">About R. Ovadyah Seforno</a></multilink>,</mekorot> | ||
<point><b>Bemidbar 1-4</b> – This position assumes that the events of these chapters occurred in the second month, as the simple reading of the verses would imply.</point> | <point><b>Bemidbar 1-4</b> – This position assumes that the events of these chapters occurred in the second month, as the simple reading of the verses would imply.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Chapters 7 and 9</b> – These chapters | + | <point><b>Bemidbar 5-6</b> – Seforno suggests that the laws of these chapters deal with keeping the camp holy and thus were given in the second month together with the laws regarding the set up of the camp.<fn>They discuss the sending away of the impure and purifying the camp from the potentially illegitimate child of a sotah. Cf. Ramban's similar explanation of the placement of these laws above.</fn></point> |
+ | <point><b>Chapters 7 and 9</b> – These chapters are achronological and occurred as dated, in the first month.</point> | ||
<point><b>Purpose of achronology</b><ul> | <point><b>Purpose of achronology</b><ul> | ||
− | <li><b>Avoid denigration</b> – Rashi | + | <li><b>Avoid denigration</b> – Rashi only addresses the achronological placement of Chapter 9. He suggests that Hashem did not want to open the book with the story of the nation's observance of the Pesach in the first month since it was shameful that this was the only Pesach they observed throughout their 40 years in the wilderness.  This, however, is difficult since the book could have begun with Chapter 7 (the description of the princes' sacrifices in the first month) which would have both maintained chronological order and also opened the book with a positive action.  Moreover, it is hard to say that speaking of the Pesach is denigrating, as in the first year the nation had not done anything wrong.</li> |
<li><b>Give praise</b> – Seforno suggests that though the description of the nation's travels in Chapter 10 really flows straight from Chapters 1-6,<fn>The book opens in the first of the second month, while Chapter 10 continues with the twentieth of the month.</fn> Chapters 7-9 are inserted in the middle as an introduction to Chapter 10 to explain why the nation merited to enter the land immediately without war.<fn>Seforno points out that were it not for the spies the nation was supposed to enter the land immediately and inherit it without need of military conquest.  This i consistent with his general approach that actions of the people, such as the Sin of the Spies or Golden Calf, cause changes from Hashem's original plan.</fn> The events described in these chapters (the dedication of the altar, purification of the Levites, Pesach sacrifice, and willingness to follow Hashem in the Wilderness) were all praiseworthy deeds which merited them entry into the land..</li> | <li><b>Give praise</b> – Seforno suggests that though the description of the nation's travels in Chapter 10 really flows straight from Chapters 1-6,<fn>The book opens in the first of the second month, while Chapter 10 continues with the twentieth of the month.</fn> Chapters 7-9 are inserted in the middle as an introduction to Chapter 10 to explain why the nation merited to enter the land immediately without war.<fn>Seforno points out that were it not for the spies the nation was supposed to enter the land immediately and inherit it without need of military conquest.  This i consistent with his general approach that actions of the people, such as the Sin of the Spies or Golden Calf, cause changes from Hashem's original plan.</fn> The events described in these chapters (the dedication of the altar, purification of the Levites, Pesach sacrifice, and willingness to follow Hashem in the Wilderness) were all praiseworthy deeds which merited them entry into the land..</li> | ||
+ | </ul></point> | ||
+ | <point><b>Purification of the Levites</b><ul> | ||
+ | <li>Seforno claims that this occurred in the first month.<fn>Rashi does not address the issue.</fn>  This preserves the internal chronology within the larger unit of Chapters 7-9, but must posit that the Levites were already chosen (and purified) before they were counted to replace the firstborns.  <fn>See Seforno who suggests this, even though he maintains chronology within the chapters.</fn> </li> | ||
+ | <li>Seforno could have alternatively suggested that it occurred in the second month after the census and their official appointment. This must assume that the internal order of chapters 7-9 is not based on chronology but the relative importance of each of the events discussed.<fn>See Seforno who suggests this, even though he maintains chronology within the chapters.</fn></li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> |
Version as of 05:03, 2 June 2016
Chronology of Bemidbar 1 – 10
Exegetical Approaches
In Chronological Order
The events of Chapters 1-10 are told chronologically.
Chapters 7-9 Happen Later
Though Chapters 7 and 9 refer to events of the first month, their main focus is what took place the second month. As such, Bemidbar 1-10 really all speak of the events of Iyar, and happen in the order written.
Chapters 1-4 Happen Earlier
Though the censuses of Chapters 1-4 are dated to the second month, they were really part of an extended process which began when the Tabernacle was being constructed. As such, the book of Bemidbar opens with a summation of events begun in the first year, and then continues in order.
Not in Chronological Order
The events of Bemidbar 1-10 are not written in the order in which they occurred.
Later Events Told Earlier
The early chapters of Sefer Bemidbar speak of events that occurred only later, because they are not part of the book's core. Rather, they serve as either an introduction to Sefer Bemidbar or as appendix to the Books of Shemot and Vayikra.
- Appendix – According to Ramban, Bemidbar 9 really opens the book, while the first eight chapters only come to finish topics (להשלים את הענין) discussed in the Books of Shemot and Vayikra.6 As such, there is no attempt to arrange them chronologically and some of the events discussed there happened after events spoken of only later in Bemidbar.
- Introduction – Alternatively, the core of Bemidbar really begins with Chapter 7, "the day that Moshe finished erecting the Tabernacle" and proceeds chronologically from there. However, the census and set up of the camp in the second month are recorded earlier (in Chapters 1-4) because they comprise a necessary introduction to the book.7 Chapters 5-6 might be viewed as a legal appendix to this unit,8 as in other places where a narrative section ends with a legal passage.
- According to Ramban, within the appendix, thematic order takes precedence over chronology. The book opens with the censuses and set up of the camp around the Mishkan (perhaps because the book focuses on the nation's travels), and then discusses laws which relate to this.9 Only after all the legal material is covered does the Torah return to narrative to speak of the prince's offerings and the Levite's purification.
- According to the alternative opinion, it is only one set of chapters that is out of order, those dealing with the censuses and camp, and within these there is no achronology.
- The Levites were actually chosen beforehand, but they were only officially counted in the second month, as this was right before the nation's travels, when they were to begin their jobs as porters. See Selection of the Priests and Levites for a full discussion of when they might have first been chosen.
- Alternatively, Bemidbar 7:5-7 is out of place. Though the princes' gifts and sacrifices were brought to the Mishkan in the first month, the wagons and cattle were only given to the Levites after their appointment in the second month.10 The verses are only recorded here to finish the story of the princes' offerings.
- According to the position that the core of Sefer Bemidbar begins in Chapter 7 and proceeds chronologically, the purification of the Levites took place in the first month. This assumes that not only were the Levites chosen before the census11 but that they were purified as well. Presumably this was done so that they would be prepared for their tasks as soon as they needed to travel.
- Ramban is ambiguous, but seems to imply in contrast, that the purification took place in the second month, soon after the Levites' official census and appointments.12
Earlier Events Told Later
Certain events are told out of order, after they really occurred, in order to show the nation in the best possible light.
- Avoid denigration – Rashi only addresses the achronological placement of Chapter 9. He suggests that Hashem did not want to open the book with the story of the nation's observance of the Pesach in the first month since it was shameful that this was the only Pesach they observed throughout their 40 years in the wilderness. This, however, is difficult since the book could have begun with Chapter 7 (the description of the princes' sacrifices in the first month) which would have both maintained chronological order and also opened the book with a positive action. Moreover, it is hard to say that speaking of the Pesach is denigrating, as in the first year the nation had not done anything wrong.
- Give praise – Seforno suggests that though the description of the nation's travels in Chapter 10 really flows straight from Chapters 1-6,14 Chapters 7-9 are inserted in the middle as an introduction to Chapter 10 to explain why the nation merited to enter the land immediately without war.15 The events described in these chapters (the dedication of the altar, purification of the Levites, Pesach sacrifice, and willingness to follow Hashem in the Wilderness) were all praiseworthy deeds which merited them entry into the land..
- Seforno claims that this occurred in the first month.16 This preserves the internal chronology within the larger unit of Chapters 7-9, but must posit that the Levites were already chosen (and purified) before they were counted to replace the firstborns. 17
- Seforno could have alternatively suggested that it occurred in the second month after the census and their official appointment. This must assume that the internal order of chapters 7-9 is not based on chronology but the relative importance of each of the events discussed.18