Difference between revisions of "Did Moshe Need Yitro's Advice/2/en"
(Original Author: Ariella Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
(Original Author: Ariella Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
<point><b>Why Hashem didn't command Moshe</b> – Ralbag does not explain why Hashem worked through the agency of Yitro and did not previously advise Moshe to appoint judges. See <a href="Commentators:R. Levi b. Gershom (Ralbag, Gersonides)" data-aht="page">Ralbag's Exegesis</a> for Hashem utilizing man and nature. Tzeror HaMor proposes that Hashem waited to advise Moshe on this matter so that Yitro would receive credit for making the suggestion and the entire nation would understand why Moshe married Yitro's daughter.<fn>See <a href="Moshe's Family Life" data-aht="page">here</a> regarding Moshe's marriage to Zipporah. The idea of giving Yitro credit is based in part on <a href="SifreBemidbar78" data-aht="source">Sifre Bemidbar 78</a> which explains that Moshe was already commanded at Mount Sinai regarding the judges, but the implementation eluded him, in order that Yitro would get credit. The Sifre appears to place at least the second half of Chapter 18 after the Decalogue – see <a href="Chronology – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Chronology</a>. See also R. Saadia Shemot 18:23.</fn> See also <a href="OrHaChayyim18-21" data-aht="source">Or HaChayyim</a> who suggests that Hashem wanted to demonstrate that there is much wisdom among Gentiles, and that He did not select the Jewish people because of their intellect.</point> | <point><b>Why Hashem didn't command Moshe</b> – Ralbag does not explain why Hashem worked through the agency of Yitro and did not previously advise Moshe to appoint judges. See <a href="Commentators:R. Levi b. Gershom (Ralbag, Gersonides)" data-aht="page">Ralbag's Exegesis</a> for Hashem utilizing man and nature. Tzeror HaMor proposes that Hashem waited to advise Moshe on this matter so that Yitro would receive credit for making the suggestion and the entire nation would understand why Moshe married Yitro's daughter.<fn>See <a href="Moshe's Family Life" data-aht="page">here</a> regarding Moshe's marriage to Zipporah. The idea of giving Yitro credit is based in part on <a href="SifreBemidbar78" data-aht="source">Sifre Bemidbar 78</a> which explains that Moshe was already commanded at Mount Sinai regarding the judges, but the implementation eluded him, in order that Yitro would get credit. The Sifre appears to place at least the second half of Chapter 18 after the Decalogue – see <a href="Chronology – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Chronology</a>. See also R. Saadia Shemot 18:23.</fn> See also <a href="OrHaChayyim18-21" data-aht="source">Or HaChayyim</a> who suggests that Hashem wanted to demonstrate that there is much wisdom among Gentiles, and that He did not select the Jewish people because of their intellect.</point> | ||
<point><b>Ideal and reality</b> – In a private conversation, Prof. Uriel Simon suggested that Moshe's system was a model for an ideal world, but Yitro's plan was designed to account for a reality in which the demands on Moshe's time were simply too great.</point> | <point><b>Ideal and reality</b> – In a private conversation, Prof. Uriel Simon suggested that Moshe's system was a model for an ideal world, but Yitro's plan was designed to account for a reality in which the demands on Moshe's time were simply too great.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Yitro the consultant</b> – <a href="http://www.yu.edu/faculty/emayer/parsha_shiurim/18yitro.html | + | <point><b>Yitro the consultant</b> – <a href="http://www.yu.edu/faculty/emayer/parsha_shiurim/18yitro.html">R. Eitan Mayer</a> presents a variation of this approach employing a "corporate metaphor" which portrays Moshe as the CEO of the not-for-profit organization of the Jewish people, and Yitro as the outside management consultant. According to him, Yitro is the outsider who brings a fresh perspective to the insiders who have become accustomed to the status quo.</point> |
</category> | </category> | ||
<category name="Moshe and Yitro Both Correct">Moshe and Yitro Were Both Correct | <category name="Moshe and Yitro Both Correct">Moshe and Yitro Were Both Correct | ||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
<p>Chizkuni, in explaining why the Torah notes that "it happened on the next day" posits that on the day of Yitro's arrival Moshe was busy with Yitro and had not judged the people. This might explain why he needed to work overtime on the following day.<fn>Cf. <a href="Saadia18-13" data-aht="source">R. Saadia in his Commentary to Shemot 18:13</a> who says that Moshe only judged the people on certain assigned days, and thus did not judge them on the day Yitro came.</fn></p></subopinion> | <p>Chizkuni, in explaining why the Torah notes that "it happened on the next day" posits that on the day of Yitro's arrival Moshe was busy with Yitro and had not judged the people. This might explain why he needed to work overtime on the following day.<fn>Cf. <a href="Saadia18-13" data-aht="source">R. Saadia in his Commentary to Shemot 18:13</a> who says that Moshe only judged the people on certain assigned days, and thus did not judge them on the day Yitro came.</fn></p></subopinion> | ||
<subopinion name="War Spoils">Newly acquired wealth | <subopinion name="War Spoils">Newly acquired wealth | ||
− | <mekorot>R. Yaacov Medan<fn>In his <a href="http://www.herzog.ac.il/tvunot/fulltext/mega17_medan.pdf | + | <mekorot>R. Yaacov Medan<fn>In his <a href="http://www.herzog.ac.il/tvunot/fulltext/mega17_medan.pdf">article</a>, "איפה ואיפה – עיון בפרשיות נדודי ישראל במדבר", Megadim 17 (1992): 79-80.</fn></mekorot> |
<p>R. Medan offers an alternative predicated on the assumption that most of the Yitro story appears in chronological order – see <a href="Chronology – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Chronology</a>, and that Yitro arrived and observed Moshe shortly after the battle with Amalek. According to him, the division of the spoils with Amalek caused significant strife and was responsible for Moshe's heavy caseload on that particular day.<fn>Cf. Lekach Tov and Sekhel Tov 18:13 who attribute the workload to disputes regarding the spoils from the Egyptian army, and Chizkuni's note (18:13) that this would not make chronological sense.</fn> R. Medan posits that shortly thereafter things settled down and while the nation was encamped at Mount Sinai there was little need for additional judges. It was only in the second year, when the nation resumed their journey that complaints spiked once again and Moshe needed assistance – compare <multilink><a href="HoilDevarim1-9" data-aht="source">opinion cited in Hoil Moshe</a><a href="HoilDevarim1-9" data-aht="source">Hoil Moshe Devarim 1:9</a><a href="R. Moshe Yitzchak Ashkenazi (Hoil Moshe)" data-aht="parshan">About Hoil Moshe</a></multilink> and see <a href="Appointing Moshe's Assistants" data-aht="page">Relationship of Shemot 18 – Bemidbar 11 – Devarim 1</a>.</p></subopinion> | <p>R. Medan offers an alternative predicated on the assumption that most of the Yitro story appears in chronological order – see <a href="Chronology – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Chronology</a>, and that Yitro arrived and observed Moshe shortly after the battle with Amalek. According to him, the division of the spoils with Amalek caused significant strife and was responsible for Moshe's heavy caseload on that particular day.<fn>Cf. Lekach Tov and Sekhel Tov 18:13 who attribute the workload to disputes regarding the spoils from the Egyptian army, and Chizkuni's note (18:13) that this would not make chronological sense.</fn> R. Medan posits that shortly thereafter things settled down and while the nation was encamped at Mount Sinai there was little need for additional judges. It was only in the second year, when the nation resumed their journey that complaints spiked once again and Moshe needed assistance – compare <multilink><a href="HoilDevarim1-9" data-aht="source">opinion cited in Hoil Moshe</a><a href="HoilDevarim1-9" data-aht="source">Hoil Moshe Devarim 1:9</a><a href="R. Moshe Yitzchak Ashkenazi (Hoil Moshe)" data-aht="parshan">About Hoil Moshe</a></multilink> and see <a href="Appointing Moshe's Assistants" data-aht="page">Relationship of Shemot 18 – Bemidbar 11 – Devarim 1</a>.</p></subopinion> | ||
<subopinion name="Water Shortage">Recent water shortage | <subopinion name="Water Shortage">Recent water shortage |
Version as of 07:15, 20 January 2015
Did Moshe Need Yitro's Advice?
Exegetical Approaches
The Akeidat Yitzchak notes that in trying to understand this story, one is caught between a rock and a hard place. If Yitro's plan was an obvious and appropriate corrective for a difficult situation, then Moshe looks foolish for not solving the problem on his own. On the other hand, if Yitro's plan was unhelpful or unnecessary, then why would Moshe implement it at all? There are three basic approaches to understanding the thought processes of Yitro and Moshe, and they paint differing portraits of the two protagonists and their interaction:
Moshe Needed Help
Moshe needed help in correcting his system, and Yitro was able to provide him with an outsider's insight and perspective.
Moshe and Yitro Were Both Correct
Moshe was making the best of a difficult situation, but Yitro correctly advised him that there was a need for God to fix the underlying cause of the problem by giving a code of civil law.
R. Yitzchak Arama in his Akeidat Yitzchak charts this middle ground in attempting to portray both Moshe and Yitro in the best possible light.
Yitro's Advice was Unhelpful
Moshe's system was the best possibility for the time being, and Yitro's advice was unnecessary or unhelpful. There are a number of distinct variations of this possibility,19 but they all agree that the appointment of judges which ultimately occurred was not directly connected to Yitro's advice (see Chronology) and took place only significantly afterwards:
Long lines were an anomaly
The long line for judgment was a one-time aberration on the day of Yitro's visit, while in general there was no need for additional judges at this time.
Moshe had been away
According to the Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael and Rashi, Yitro observed Moshe judging the people on the day after Yom HaKippurim (when he descended from Mount Sinai with the second tablets) – see Chronology. If Moshe had spent the last four months on Mount Sinai, one can readily understand why a huge backlog of cases had accumulated in his absence.
Moshe had taken the previous day off when Yitro visited
Chizkuni, in explaining why the Torah notes that "it happened on the next day" posits that on the day of Yitro's arrival Moshe was busy with Yitro and had not judged the people. This might explain why he needed to work overtime on the following day.20
Newly acquired wealth
R. Medan offers an alternative predicated on the assumption that most of the Yitro story appears in chronological order – see Chronology, and that Yitro arrived and observed Moshe shortly after the battle with Amalek. According to him, the division of the spoils with Amalek caused significant strife and was responsible for Moshe's heavy caseload on that particular day.22 R. Medan posits that shortly thereafter things settled down and while the nation was encamped at Mount Sinai there was little need for additional judges. It was only in the second year, when the nation resumed their journey that complaints spiked once again and Moshe needed assistance – compare opinion cited in Hoil Moshe and see Relationship of Shemot 18 – Bemidbar 11 – Devarim 1.
Recent water shortage
R. Medan offers an additional possibility that Moshe's busy schedule resulted from the need to allocate the water which the nation had just received.24 According to this explanation, the people's complaints and the need for more judges arose only while they were in transit and not during the year they were at Mount Sinai.
There were additional prerequisites
There was a consistent need for additional judges to assist Moshe, but additional preparatory steps needed to be taken before they could be appointed:
The nation needed to first receive the laws
Moshe needed to build support
Initially, Moshe needed to judge the people himself in order to win over their hearts so that they would accept the Torah and its commandments.