Difference between revisions of "Epilogue to the Manna Story/2"
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<h1>Epilogue to the Manna Story</h1> | <h1>Epilogue to the Manna Story</h1> | ||
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<h2>Overview</h2> | <h2>Overview</h2> | ||
Commentators differ in their understanding of when all the events recorded in the epilogue to the manna story transpired.  On one end of the spectrum, R"Y Bekhor Shor asserts that the epilogue extends over a period of forty years, from the first year in the wilderness to after the nation's arrival in Canaan in the forty-first year.  On the other end, an opinion cited in the Mekhilta suggests that the appendix deals with just a small time span, the final year in the wilderness.  In the middle, Ibn Ezra claims the epilogue speaks of events from the second to forty-first years, while Shadal thinks it covers the first to fortieth. The different opinions relate to both textual issues and larger theological concerns regarding when Moshe recorded events in the Torah and his foreknowledge of future events.</div> | Commentators differ in their understanding of when all the events recorded in the epilogue to the manna story transpired.  On one end of the spectrum, R"Y Bekhor Shor asserts that the epilogue extends over a period of forty years, from the first year in the wilderness to after the nation's arrival in Canaan in the forty-first year.  On the other end, an opinion cited in the Mekhilta suggests that the appendix deals with just a small time span, the final year in the wilderness.  In the middle, Ibn Ezra claims the epilogue speaks of events from the second to forty-first years, while Shadal thinks it covers the first to fortieth. The different opinions relate to both textual issues and larger theological concerns regarding when Moshe recorded events in the Torah and his foreknowledge of future events.</div> | ||
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<point><b>Verse 35 – "קְצֵה אֶרֶץ כְּנָעַן" versus "אֶרֶץ נוֹשָׁבֶת"</b> – All of these sources assume that the different terms refer to two distinct places, and hence that the verse discusses events of both the fortieth and forty-first years.  They differ, though, in the details:<br/> | <point><b>Verse 35 – "קְצֵה אֶרֶץ כְּנָעַן" versus "אֶרֶץ נוֹשָׁבֶת"</b> – All of these sources assume that the different terms refer to two distinct places, and hence that the verse discusses events of both the fortieth and forty-first years.  They differ, though, in the details:<br/> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
− | <li><b>Gradual cessation</b> – Ibn Ezra understands "אֶרֶץ נוֹשָׁבֶת" to refer to the lands of Sichon and Og, and suggests that upon arrival there, some of the people ate from the produce of the land, while others continued to subsist on the manna.<fn>Cf. | + | <li><b>Gradual cessation</b> – Ibn Ezra understands "אֶרֶץ נוֹשָׁבֶת" to refer to the lands of Sichon and Og, and suggests that upon arrival there, some of the people ate from the produce of the land, while others continued to subsist on the manna.<fn>Cf. Sforno who says that they ate from both.</fn>  Only when they got to "קְצֵה אֶרֶץ כְּנָעַן" in Gilgal, in the forty-first year, did the manna cease totally.<fn>Cf. Netziv who highlights that those who tired of the manna stopped eating it already in Arvot Moav, while the "righteous" people continued to eat it until they arrived in Gilgal.</fn>  R. D"Z Hoffmann explains similarly that when they had reached civilization, the manna fell only when there was a dearth of natural food to feed the nation,<fn>See also Rashbam Devarim 2:7, and see <a href="Realia:Life in the Wilderness" data-aht="page">Life in the Wilderness</a> and the position of the Hoil Moshe there that this was the case during the entire forty years.</fn> but it completely stopped only when they crossed the Jordan after Moshe's death.</li> |
<li><b>Ate even after manna ceased to fall</b> –  Rashi,<fn>Though Rashi also distinguishes between the two terms, he (in his commentaries on both Shemot and Bavli Kiddushin) reads the phrases in the opposite way of most commentators, suggesting that "אֶרֶץ נוֹשָׁבֶת" means Israel proper, and that "קְצֵה אֶרֶץ כְּנָעַן" refers to Arvot Moav.  See Tosafot Kiddushin 38a s.v. עד בואם who present the alternative reading.</fn> following Bavli Kiddushin 38a, claims that the manna stopped falling with the death of Moshe, but what had been collected lasted and was eaten until the nation's arrival in Gilgal.<fn>This position is difficult in light of Yehoshua 5:11, "וַיִּשְׁבֹּת הַמָּן מִמׇּחֳרָת", which speaks not of the manna running out, but of it stopping to fall on the morrow of the Pesach.</fn> </li> | <li><b>Ate even after manna ceased to fall</b> –  Rashi,<fn>Though Rashi also distinguishes between the two terms, he (in his commentaries on both Shemot and Bavli Kiddushin) reads the phrases in the opposite way of most commentators, suggesting that "אֶרֶץ נוֹשָׁבֶת" means Israel proper, and that "קְצֵה אֶרֶץ כְּנָעַן" refers to Arvot Moav.  See Tosafot Kiddushin 38a s.v. עד בואם who present the alternative reading.</fn> following Bavli Kiddushin 38a, claims that the manna stopped falling with the death of Moshe, but what had been collected lasted and was eaten until the nation's arrival in Gilgal.<fn>This position is difficult in light of Yehoshua 5:11, "וַיִּשְׁבֹּת הַמָּן מִמׇּחֳרָת", which speaks not of the manna running out, but of it stopping to fall on the morrow of the Pesach.</fn> </li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
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<ul> | <ul> | ||
<li>According to one opinion in Bavli Bava Batra, the last verses of Torah describing Moshe's death were written as an appendix by Moshe via prophecy, while another opinion asserts that they were added after the fact by Yehoshua. </li> | <li>According to one opinion in Bavli Bava Batra, the last verses of Torah describing Moshe's death were written as an appendix by Moshe via prophecy, while another opinion asserts that they were added after the fact by Yehoshua. </li> | ||
− | <li>According to <multilink><a href="RambanBemidbar21-1" data-aht="source">Ramban</a><a href="RambanBemidbar21-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 21:1</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Nachman (Ramban, Nachmanides)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Moshe b. Nachman</a></multilink>, the destruction of Arad described in Bemidbar 21 may have happened only in the time of Yehoshua.  <multilink><a href="AbarbanelBemidbar21" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="AbarbanelShemot16" data-aht="source">Shemot 16</a><a href="AbarbanelBemidbar21" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 21</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink> understands Ramban to be claiming that these verses were added by Yehoshua,<fn>Cf. the opinion cited by <multilink><a href="IbnEzraBemidbar21-1" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra</a><a href="IbnEzraBemidbar21-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 21:1</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About R. Avraham ibn Ezra</a></multilink> there.</fn> however Ramban appears to be | + | <li>According to <multilink><a href="RambanBemidbar21-1" data-aht="source">Ramban</a><a href="RambanBemidbar21-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 21:1</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Nachman (Ramban, Nachmanides)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Moshe b. Nachman</a></multilink>, the destruction of Arad described in Bemidbar 21 may have happened only in the time of Yehoshua.<fn>Ramban there cites the verse by the manna as a precedent which supports such a reading.  Cf. R. Yeshayah MiTrani (Ri"d) Shofetim 10:4 regarding Chavvot Yair.</fn>  <multilink><a href="AbarbanelBemidbar21" data-aht="source">Abarbanel</a><a href="AbarbanelShemot16" data-aht="source">Shemot 16</a><a href="AbarbanelBemidbar21" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 21</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink> understands Ramban to be claiming that these verses were added by Yehoshua,<fn>Cf. the opinion cited by <multilink><a href="IbnEzraBemidbar21-1" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra</a><a href="IbnEzraBemidbar21-1" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 21:1</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About R. Avraham ibn Ezra</a></multilink> there.</fn> however Ramban appears to simply be saying that Moshe prophetically added these verses.<fn>Cf. Tur HaArokh Bemidbar 21:1.  This is also Abarbanel's own position.  Abarbanel is thus consistent with his commentaries in Shemot 16 and Devarim 31:19, in both rejecting the possibility that Yehoshua wrote any portion of the Torah, and in being untroubled by Moshe writing or talking about the future before it happens.</fn></li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
</category> | </category> | ||
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<point><b>Why now?</b> The initial announcement to the people takes place in the first year when they first encounter the miracle so that, in their moment of wonder, they recognize the need to memorialize it for future generations. The command to Aharon, however, is given when practical for its fulfillment.</point> | <point><b>Why now?</b> The initial announcement to the people takes place in the first year when they first encounter the miracle so that, in their moment of wonder, they recognize the need to memorialize it for future generations. The command to Aharon, however, is given when practical for its fulfillment.</point> | ||
<point><b>Role of Aharon</b> – Aharon was charged with this responsibility because he was the guardian of the Holy of Holies where the jar of manna would be safeguarded.</point> | <point><b>Role of Aharon</b> – Aharon was charged with this responsibility because he was the guardian of the Holy of Holies where the jar of manna would be safeguarded.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Verse 35 : "קְצֵה אֶרֶץ כְּנָעַן" versus "אֶרֶץ נוֹשָׁבֶת"</b> – According to Shadal, the two terms are identical and both refer to Arvot Moav, which is on the eastern edge of Canaan.<fn>The doubling can be explained as the Torah's attempt to clarify an ambiguous term (cf. R"Y Kara above).</fn>  Thus, the verse speaks only of events which occurred in the fortieth year. The events of Yehoshua are not addressed, as the | + | <point><b>Verse 35 : "קְצֵה אֶרֶץ כְּנָעַן" versus "אֶרֶץ נוֹשָׁבֶת"</b> – According to Shadal, the two terms are identical and both refer to Arvot Moav, which is on the eastern edge of Canaan.<fn>The doubling can be explained as the Torah's attempt to clarify an ambiguous term (cf. R"Y Kara above).</fn>  Thus, the verse speaks only of events which occurred in the fortieth year. The events of Yehoshua are not addressed, as the text is not interested in discussing the cessation of the manna but only in telling the reader that it was eaten until the end of the period discussed in Torah.</point> |
<point><b>When was this epilogue written?</b> According to Shadal,<fn>He is preceded by <multilink><a href="RYehudaHeChasidShemot16" data-aht="source">R. Yehuda HeChasid</a><a href="RYehudaHeChasidShemot16" data-aht="source">R. Yehuda HeChasid</a></multilink>, who cites it in the name of his father and Rashbam.  [This position, however, is not found in the printed commentary of Rashbam.]  For a discussion of other cases (such as Vayikra 23:42-43) where R. Yehuda HeChasid suggests that verses were written only in the fortieth year (or beyond), see M. Weitman, "הדי פרשנותו של רבי יהודה החסיד בכתבי תלמידיו – המשך מול צמצום", Megadim 55 (5774): 53-89.</fn> verses 33-35 (or all of the verses which he regards as achronological) were all written by Moshe in the fortieth year.  According to him, Moshe wrote nothing via prophecy, but rather recorded everything after the fact. When discussing the length of time that the manna was eaten, he speaks only of that which he had firsthand knowledge, that the nation ate it until they arrived at the border of Canaan.</point> | <point><b>When was this epilogue written?</b> According to Shadal,<fn>He is preceded by <multilink><a href="RYehudaHeChasidShemot16" data-aht="source">R. Yehuda HeChasid</a><a href="RYehudaHeChasidShemot16" data-aht="source">R. Yehuda HeChasid</a></multilink>, who cites it in the name of his father and Rashbam.  [This position, however, is not found in the printed commentary of Rashbam.]  For a discussion of other cases (such as Vayikra 23:42-43) where R. Yehuda HeChasid suggests that verses were written only in the fortieth year (or beyond), see M. Weitman, "הדי פרשנותו של רבי יהודה החסיד בכתבי תלמידיו – המשך מול צמצום", Megadim 55 (5774): 53-89.</fn> verses 33-35 (or all of the verses which he regards as achronological) were all written by Moshe in the fortieth year.  According to him, Moshe wrote nothing via prophecy, but rather recorded everything after the fact. When discussing the length of time that the manna was eaten, he speaks only of that which he had firsthand knowledge, that the nation ate it until they arrived at the border of Canaan.</point> | ||
</category> | </category> |
Latest revision as of 11:59, 19 June 2024
Epilogue to the Manna Story
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Commentators differ in their understanding of when all the events recorded in the epilogue to the manna story transpired. On one end of the spectrum, R"Y Bekhor Shor asserts that the epilogue extends over a period of forty years, from the first year in the wilderness to after the nation's arrival in Canaan in the forty-first year. On the other end, an opinion cited in the Mekhilta suggests that the appendix deals with just a small time span, the final year in the wilderness. In the middle, Ibn Ezra claims the epilogue speaks of events from the second to forty-first years, while Shadal thinks it covers the first to fortieth. The different opinions relate to both textual issues and larger theological concerns regarding when Moshe recorded events in the Torah and his foreknowledge of future events.1st Through 41st Year
The epilogue covers events that transpired from the first year in the wilderness all the way through to the nation's arrival in Israel in the forty-first year.
- Prior to the Sin of the Golden Calf, the nation was scheduled to enter the land immediately after the revelation at Sinai. As such, now was the time to collect a sample, while the manna was still raining down.
- It is also possible that Hashem specifically wanted to preserve the manna at the outset of the miracle, when the people were still marveling at and in awe of the phenomenon. By the fortieth year, the nation were no longer appreciative of the miracle, but tired and disgusted by it.3 Announcing then that they should preserve the manna so as to show their children this wonderful gift might have been counterproductive.
R"Y Bekhor Shor does not address the issue. He could suggest, like Abarbanel apparently does,5 that the entire epilogue was written in the first year, and the events which did not yet happen (including those which happened after Moshe's death) were simply recorded via prophecy. This would mean that before the Spies had actually sinned and their punishment was decreed, Hashem already hinted to Moshe that the nation was to wander in the desert for forty years.6
2nd Through 41st Years
The appendix includes events from the second to the forty-first year, but none of it occurred in the first year.
- R. D"Z Hoffmann points out that the original plan was to enter the land soon after the Tabernacle was constructed.10 As such, right then would have been the logical time to collect a sample for future generations.
- Alternatively, Hashem simply waited until there was an appropriate place to store the manna, and only then issued the command.
- Gradual cessation – Ibn Ezra understands "אֶרֶץ נוֹשָׁבֶת" to refer to the lands of Sichon and Og, and suggests that upon arrival there, some of the people ate from the produce of the land, while others continued to subsist on the manna.11 Only when they got to "קְצֵה אֶרֶץ כְּנָעַן" in Gilgal, in the forty-first year, did the manna cease totally.12 R. D"Z Hoffmann explains similarly that when they had reached civilization, the manna fell only when there was a dearth of natural food to feed the nation,13 but it completely stopped only when they crossed the Jordan after Moshe's death.
- Ate even after manna ceased to fall – Rashi,14 following Bavli Kiddushin 38a, claims that the manna stopped falling with the death of Moshe, but what had been collected lasted and was eaten until the nation's arrival in Gilgal.15
- According to Rashbam (as cited by R. Yehuda HeChasid), everything was first recorded in the fortieth year, after the events happened. Though Rashbam does not say so explicitly, he presumably assumes that Moshe prophetically writes of the events after his death.
- The other sources do not address the question, and could either agree or suggest that each part of the epilogue was written after the particular event described occurred.16 Thus, verses 32-34 were written in the second year, while verse 35 was either prophetically written by Moshe in the fortieth year, or by Yehoshua in the forty-first year (cf. an opinion cited and rejected by Abarbanel).
- According to one opinion in Bavli Bava Batra, the last verses of Torah describing Moshe's death were written as an appendix by Moshe via prophecy, while another opinion asserts that they were added after the fact by Yehoshua.
- According to Ramban, the destruction of Arad described in Bemidbar 21 may have happened only in the time of Yehoshua.17 Abarbanel understands Ramban to be claiming that these verses were added by Yehoshua,18 however Ramban appears to simply be saying that Moshe prophetically added these verses.19
1st Through 40th Years
The appendix includes events from the first to the fortieth year, and does not relate to the forty-first at all.
Only 40th Year
All the events discussed in the epilogue are limited to the fortieth year.