Difference between revisions of "Chronology of Bemidbar 1 – 10/2"
m |
m |
||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
<point><b>Purification of the Levites in Bemidbar 8</b> – According to this position, this chapter is in its proper place and took place in the second month, after the dedication of the altar.  Abarbanel distinguishes between the Levites' appointment to replace the firstborns in Chapter 3 and their actual preparation for service in Chapter 8.  The two events were distinct, but both happened in the second month within a few days of each other.</point> | <point><b>Purification of the Levites in Bemidbar 8</b> – According to this position, this chapter is in its proper place and took place in the second month, after the dedication of the altar.  Abarbanel distinguishes between the Levites' appointment to replace the firstborns in Chapter 3 and their actual preparation for service in Chapter 8.  The two events were distinct, but both happened in the second month within a few days of each other.</point> | ||
<point><b>Pesach in Bemidbar 9</b> – Abarbanel asserts that Chapter 9 opens with Pesach in the first month only as a prelude to the main topic of the chapter which is Pesach Sheni, celebrated in the second month.<fn>For the reader to understand what prompted the new law, it was necessary to first explain that there were people who were impure during the original festival.</fn>  Thus, this chapter, too, focuses on events of the second month, continuing where the previous ones left off.</point> | <point><b>Pesach in Bemidbar 9</b> – Abarbanel asserts that Chapter 9 opens with Pesach in the first month only as a prelude to the main topic of the chapter which is Pesach Sheni, celebrated in the second month.<fn>For the reader to understand what prompted the new law, it was necessary to first explain that there were people who were impure during the original festival.</fn>  Thus, this chapter, too, focuses on events of the second month, continuing where the previous ones left off.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Relationship Between Shemot, Vayikra, and Bemidbar</b> – According to Abarbanel, there is chronological order between the different books with minimal or no overlap.  Sefer Shemot recounts the events of the first year in the wilderness, and ends with the first day of the second year.  Sefer Vayikra picks up where Shemot left off, describing the events of the first month of the second year | + | <point><b>Relationship Between Shemot, Vayikra, and Bemidbar</b> – According to Abarbanel, there is chronological order between the different books with minimal or no overlap.  Sefer Shemot recounts the events of the first year in the wilderness, and ends with the first day of the second year.  Sefer Vayikra picks up where Shemot left off, describing the events of the first month of the second year which focused primarily on the consecration of the priests and their responsibilities.  Then Sefer Bemidbar continues with the second month of the second year, as the focus shifts to the rest of the nation.</point> |
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
<opinion name="Chapters 1–4 Earlier"> | <opinion name="Chapters 1–4 Earlier"> |
Version as of 00:09, 5 June 2016
Chronology of Bemidbar 1 – 10
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
As in most cases of questionable dating, in Bemidbar too, commentators struggle to determine the true order of events and whether they match the order in which they are recorded. Abarbanel attempts to maintain chronology, suggesting that events in the book which appear to have happened earlier really occurred later. He, thus, downplays the scope of the dated headings of Chapters 7 and 9, claiming that despite the fact that each references the first month, the main focus of each chapter is really events of the second month. A second position does the opposite, suggesting that the first chapter actually serves to summarize a several month long process which began in the first year, despite its heading speaking only of the second month.
Other commentators read the dated verses according to their simple sense, leading to the conclusion that the chapters are indeed not in chronological order. Ramban suggests that certain later events are recorded earlier because they are not part of the book's main core and instead serve as an epilogue to the Books of Shemot and Vayikra. Rashi and Seforno, instead, suggest that earlier events are pushed off and recorded only later so as to present the nation in a more positive light.
In Chronological Order
Despite first impressions, Bemidbar 1–10 maintains a basic chronological order. This approach subdivides regarding which chapters are not as they seem:
Chapters 7–9 Occurred Later
Though Bemidbar 7 and 9 make passing references to the first month, their main focus is on events which took place in the second month. Thus, the entire unit of Bemidbar 1–10 recounts events of the second month, and there is no achronology.
Chapters 1–4 Conclude an Earlier Process
Though the census in Bemidbar 1 mentions the second month, the initial chapters of Bemidbar are actually the summary of a more extended process which began already in the first year and stretched until the second month of the second year.
Not in Chronological Order
The events of Bemidbar 1–10 are not recorded in the order in which they occurred. This approach subdivides regarding which chapters were the ones shifted out of their chronological position and why.
Later Events Recorded Earlier
The opening chapters of Sefer Bemidbar are a distinct unit to themselves, and as such, need not conform to the chronology of the core of the book and speak of events that only occurred later. The approach subdivides regarding where it assumes the central part of Sefer Bemidbar begins and whether to view the previous chapters as an appendix to Shemot and Vayikra or as an introduction to Sefer Bemidbar:
Appendix
Bemidbar 1-8 constitute an appendix to the Books of Shemot and Vayikra, while the main focus of the book starts in Bemidbar 9 and proceeds chronologically from there.
- Chapters 1-2 speak of the arrangement of the camp around the Mishkan.8
- Chapters 3-4 focus on the status of the Levites and their tasks as porters for the Tabernacle.
- The laws of Chapters 5-6 open with a discussion of the impure who must leave the holy camp, and then speak of the ritual procedures of the Sotah and Nazirite which take place in the Mishkan.9
- Chapter 7 deals with the tribal princes' gifts to the Levites and their dedication of the altar.
- Finally, the Levites' consecration is described in Chapter 8.
Introduction
The opening chapters of Sefer Bemidbar form an introduction to the rest of the book, and therefore veer from the chronology of the later chapters.
- Chapters 1-6 – Chapters 1-4 all focus on the censuses and setup of the camp, and thus serve as a natural prelude to a book which deals with the nation's wanderings. Chapters 5-6 are simply a legal appendix to this introduction, tangentially related due to the opening law that speaks of those who must leave the camp. According to this approach the core of the book opens with Chapter 7 and continues chronologically from there.
- Chapters 1-8 – Alternatively, one could suggest that Chapters 7-8 are also part of the introduction. They finish the discussion of the roles played by both sets of leaders mentioned previously: the tribal princes and the Levites.
- Chapters 1-4 – The censuses occurred as dated, in the second month.
- Chapters 5-6 – It is unclear when the laws of these chapters were given.
- Chapter 7 and 9 – These chapters (speaking of the altar's dedication and the Pesach) both took place in the first month, as their headings imply.
- Chapter 8 – The two variations of this position would disagree regarding the dating of this chapter. See below.
- First month – According to the position that the core of Sefer Bemidbar begins in Chapter 7 and proceeds chronologically from there, the purification of the Levites must have also taken place in the first month.14 This, however, is difficult considering that Chapter 3 suggests that the Levites were first appointed in the second month! As such, this approach must suggest that Hashem had previously appointed the Levites but that their official assignments and census only took place afterwards, close to the nation's travels.15
- Second month – The position that includes Chapters 7-8 in the introduction could more simply suggest that the consecration occurred after the Levites' appointment in the second month. This, however, creates internal achronology within the introduction.16
Earlier Events Recorded Later
The events of Chapters 7–9 are recorded out of order, after they really occurred, in order to present the nation in the best possible light.
- To avoid denigrating the nation – 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.19
- To praise the nation – Seforno suggests that though the description of the nation's travels in Chapter 10 really flows straight from Chapters 1–6,20 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.21 The events described in these chapters (the dedication of the altar, purification of the Levites, Paschal sacrifice, and willingness to follow Hashem in the Wilderness) were all praiseworthy deeds which made them deserving of a miraculous conquest.22
- First month – Seforno claims that this occurred in the first month. This preserves the internal chronology within the larger unit of Chapters 7–9, but must posit that the Levites were both chosen and purified before they were officially counted to replace the firstborns.23
- Second month – Alternatively, this approach could suggest that the purification occurred in the second month, only after the census and the Levites' official appointment.24