Difference between revisions of "Foreigners and Eunuchs in Yeshayahu 56/2"
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<div class="overview"> | <div class="overview"> | ||
<h2>Overview</h2> | <h2>Overview</h2> | ||
− | <p>Commentators debate both the historical backdrop of Yeshayahu 56 and why the prophet feels the need to single out the foreigners and eunuchs for comfort.  A. | + | <p>Commentators debate both the historical backdrop of Yeshayahu 56 and why the prophet feels the need to single out the foreigners and eunuchs for comfort.  A. Chakham sets the prophecy on the eve of the nation's return from Babylonia. Though most of the nation assumed that the return would mark an improvement in their status, the foreign converts and eunuchs who had served in Babylonian courts feared a worsening of their situation. As such, the prophet turns to encourage them specifically.</p> |
− | <p>The Biur places the prophecy slightly later, in the era of | + | <p>The Biur places the prophecy slightly later, in the era of Nechemyah, when the people were faced with threats from those who had moved into the land while they were in exile. The prophet calls out to the fledgling community to ensure unity from within so that they can better face their external foes. To this end, he calls for acceptance of the foreign converts, distinguishing them from other foreigners who had not taken on the yoke of Heaven.  Finally, Radak claims that the prophecy relates to the current exile and future redemption.  The prophet calls on all to do good deeds to hurry the salvation, turning specifically to those outsiders who have lost all hope.</p></div> |
<approaches> | <approaches> | ||
<category name="Babylonian Exile"> | <category name="Babylonian Exile"> | ||
− | + | Privileged Classes in the Babylonian Exile | |
− | <p>The prophet's words are addressed to the nation in Babylonia on the eve of their return to Israel.  The prophet comforts those foreigners and eunuchs who | + | <p>The prophet's words are addressed to the nation in Babylonia on the eve of their return to Israel.  The prophet comforts those privileged foreigners and eunuchs who feared a worsening of their status with the move back to Israel.</p> |
− | <mekorot>A. Chakham<fn>A. Chakham, Da'at Mikra Commentary to Sefer Yeshayahu (Jerusalem, 1984): 595-600.</fn></mekorot> | + | <mekorot>perhaps A. Chakham<fn>A. Chakham, Da'at Mikra Commentary to Sefer Yeshayahu (Jerusalem, 1984): 595-600. The position below draws off A. Chakham's commentary, but differs significantly on several points.</fn></mekorot> |
<point><b>"כִּי קְרוֹבָה יְשׁוּעָתִי לָבוֹא"</b> – The salvation mentioned refers to the return from the Babylonian exile.</point> | <point><b>"כִּי קְרוֹבָה יְשׁוּעָתִי לָבוֹא"</b> – The salvation mentioned refers to the return from the Babylonian exile.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Emphasis on Shabbat</b> – Yeshayahu might highlight | + | <point><b>Emphasis on Shabbat</b> – Yeshayahu might highlight observance of Shabbat because its desecration was what led to the exile.<fn>Cf. Radak who suggests this but assumes that the prophecy speaks of the current exile. See <a href="Vayikra26-34-35" data-aht="source">Vayikra 26:34-35</a> which speaks of the exile being caused by non-observance of "Shabbatot", though the verses appear to be speaking of the Sabbatical Year rather than the weekly Shabbat.</fn>  In addition, it is possible that this was the commandment which most distinguished the people from their neighbors while in Bavel, marking them as members of Israel.</point> |
− | <point><b>"בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" and "סָרִיסִים": Who are they?</b> A. | + | <point><b>"בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" and "סָרִיסִים": Who are they?</b> A. Chakham maintains that these terms refer to two distinct groups of people, those Gentiles who converted to Judaism while the nation was in exile,<fn>Cf. the similar phenomenon in Esther 8:17, "וְרַבִּים מֵעַמֵּי הָאָרֶץ מִתְיַהֲדִים כִּי נָפַל פַּחַד הַיְּהוּדִים עֲלֵיהֶם".</fn> and those Israelites who were forced to work in the Babylonian palaces.  The latter marked the fulfillment of Yeshayahu's prophecy to Chizkiyahu: "וּמִבָּנֶיךָ אֲשֶׁר יֵצְאוּ מִמְּךָ אֲשֶׁר תּוֹלִיד יִקָּחוּ וְהָיוּ סָרִיסִים בְּהֵיכַל מֶלֶךְ בָּבֶל".</point> |
− | <point><b>Concerns of the "בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" and "סָרִיסִים"</b> – According to this position, these two groups feared a lowering of their status upon return to Israel. In exile, the converts were not treated as second-class citizens | + | <point><b>Concerns of the "בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" and "סָרִיסִים"</b> – According to this position, these two groups feared a lowering of their status upon return to Israel. <br/> |
− | <point><b>Consolation of the prophet</b> – The eunuchs are comforted with the promise that despite their barren state, they will be remembered forever.  If they do good deeds (the "מִשְׁפָּט וצְדָקָה" mentioned in the beginning of the chapter), monuments will be erected in their honor, enshrining their memories. The converts' fears, too, are allayed, as they are told that the Mikdash is a "בֵּית תְּפִלָּה לְכׇל הָעַמִּים". They will participate equally with the rest of the nation in service of Hashem.</point> | + | <ul> |
+ | <li>In exile, the converts were not treated as second-class citizens.  Due to their native status, they enjoyed more rights and security than most Israelites.  With the return to Israel, though, they feared that this was likely to change.</li> | ||
+ | <li>Similarly, the Israelites who had served in Babylonian courts would lose whatever privileges they had been granted, and be left only with their shameful childless state.</li> | ||
+ | </ul></point> | ||
+ | <point><b>Consolation of the prophet</b> – The eunuchs are comforted with the promise that, despite their barren state, they will be remembered forever.  If they do good deeds (the "מִשְׁפָּט וצְדָקָה" mentioned in the beginning of the chapter), monuments will be erected in their honor, enshrining their memories. The converts' fears, too, are allayed, as they are told that the Mikdash is a "בֵּית תְּפִלָּה לְכׇל הָעַמִּים". They will participate equally with the rest of the nation in service of Hashem.</point> | ||
</category> | </category> | ||
<category name="Era of Nechemyah"> | <category name="Era of Nechemyah"> | ||
Converts in the Era of Nechemyah | Converts in the Era of Nechemyah | ||
− | <p>The prophecy is aimed at the people living in Israel in the time of Nechemyah | + | <p>The prophecy is aimed at the people living in Israel in the time of Nechemyah. It constitutes a call for acceptance of the foreign converts who lived among them.</p> |
<mekorot>Biur, Y. Ben-Ze'ev <fn>Y. Ben-Ze'ev, "'הנלוים אל ה" Beit Mikra 15:2 (1970): 180-186.</fn></mekorot> | <mekorot>Biur, Y. Ben-Ze'ev <fn>Y. Ben-Ze'ev, "'הנלוים אל ה" Beit Mikra 15:2 (1970): 180-186.</fn></mekorot> | ||
− | <point><b>Setting of the prophecy: "כִּי קְרוֹבָה יְשׁוּעָתִי לָבוֹא"</b> – The Biur maintains that the prophet is | + | <point><b>Setting of the prophecy: "כִּי קְרוֹבָה יְשׁוּעָתִי לָבוֹא"</b> – The Biur maintains that the prophet is addressing the nation that had already returned from Babylonia to Israel.  The "ישועה" that is promised refers to salvation from "the enemies of Yehuda and Binyamin" ("צָרֵי יְהוּדָה וּבִנְיָמִן"), such as Sanbalat and Toviah, who had attempted to prevent the nation from rebuilding the city's walls.<fn>See Nechemyah Chapters 3, 4 and 6.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>"בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" and "סָרִיסִים": Who are they?</b><ul> | + | <point><b>"בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" and "סָרִיסִים": Who are they?</b> Both the BIur and Ben-Zeev maintain that both groups were converts to Judaism, but they disagree about the status of each:<br/> |
− | <li>According to Y. Ben-Ze'ev, both of these groups were non-Jews who had taken on Hashem's commandments<fn>See the descriptions of them as being: "הַנִּלְוִים עַל י"י" and "מַחֲזִיקִים בִּבְרִיתִי".</fn> in Bavel, and joined the nation when they returned to Israel.<fn>One could also suggest that some people had joined the nation later, after the Beit HaMikdash was rebuilt.  See, for example, <a href="Zekharyah2-14-15" data-aht="source">Zekharyah 2:14-15</a> and <a href="Zekharyah8-22-23" data-aht="source">8:22-23</a> which similarly speak of Gentiles joining the nation and seeking out God. It seems that with the return from exile and rebuilding of the Mikdash, interest in God and Israel grew, leading to | + | <ul> |
− | <li> | + | <li><b>Laymen and courtiers</b> – According to Y. Ben-Ze'ev, both of these groups were non-Jews who had taken on Hashem's commandments<fn>See the descriptions of them as being: "הַנִּלְוִים עַל י"י" and "מַחֲזִיקִים בִּבְרִיתִי".</fn> in Bavel, and joined the nation when they returned to Israel.<fn>One could also suggest that some people had joined the nation later, after the Beit HaMikdash was rebuilt.  See, for example, <a href="Zekharyah2-14-15" data-aht="source">Zekharyah 2:14-15</a> and <a href="Zekharyah8-22-23" data-aht="source">8:22-23</a> which similarly speak of Gentiles joining the nation and seeking out God. It seems that with the return from exile and rebuilding of the Mikdash, interest in God and Israel grew, leading many to convert to Judaism.</fn> The "בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" were laymen, while the "סָרִיסִים" were of the courtier class.<fn>He notes that throughout Tanakh, "סָרִיסִים" serve kings in their courts and palaces. See, for instance, Bereshit 40:2, Shemuel I 8:15 and Esther 1:12. Ben-Ze'ev further posits that one need not assume that all "סָרִיסִים" were castrated. Potiphar, for example, was married.</fn></li> |
+ | <li><b>New and old converts</b> - According to the Biur, in contrast, only the בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר were "new" converts. The "סָרִיסִים" refer to Canaanites who had been converted during the wars of conquest or monarchic period.  They include either "בְּנֵי עַבְדֵי שְׁלֹמֹה" or the "נְתִינִים", who are mentioned in <a href="Ezra2-43" data-aht="source">Ezra 2</a> as being among those who returned to Israel.  The first were descendants of the remnants of the Seven Nations enslaved by Shelomo, and the second were the Givonites, tasked by Yehoshua with being servants in the Mikdash. These "סָרִיסִים" held diminished social and legal status.</li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
− | <point><b>Concerns of the "בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" and "סָרִיסִים"</b> – According to the Biur, the common denominator between the two groups was their inability to marry into Israel, | + | <point><b>Concerns of the "בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" and "סָרִיסִים"</b> – According to the Biur, the common denominator between the two groups was their inability to marry into Israel, either because of their legal status as slaves or "נְתִינִים",‎<fn>Even if these "סָרִיסִים" were actually full Jewish eunuchs, they might have nonetheless shared this worry, as <a href="Devarim23-2" data-aht="source">Devarim 23:2</a>  prohibits a castrated person from entering into "קהל ה'".</fn> or because of the general perception that their foreign roots made them unworthy.<fn>Thus, the "בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" complain, "הַבְדֵּל יַבְדִּילַנִי י"י מֵעַל עַמּוֹ", and the "סָרִיסִים" bemoan their childless state, "הֵן אֲנִי עֵץ יָבֵשׁ".</fn> During the era of Ezra-Nechemyah there was an outcry against foreign marriages and an attempt to abolish all such unions, leading the converts to feel that they, too, would not be accepted in society.<fn>In Nechemyah 13:3 we read, "וַיְהִי כְּשׇׁמְעָם אֶת הַתּוֹרָה וַיַּבְדִּילוּ כׇל עֵרֶב מִיִּשְׂרָאֵל".</fn></point> |
<point><b>Consolation of the Prophet</b> – The prophet comforts both groups:<br/> | <point><b>Consolation of the Prophet</b> – The prophet comforts both groups:<br/> | ||
<ul> | <ul> |
Version as of 04:16, 6 August 2018
Foreigners and Eunuchs in Yeshayahu 56
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Commentators debate both the historical backdrop of Yeshayahu 56 and why the prophet feels the need to single out the foreigners and eunuchs for comfort. A. Chakham sets the prophecy on the eve of the nation's return from Babylonia. Though most of the nation assumed that the return would mark an improvement in their status, the foreign converts and eunuchs who had served in Babylonian courts feared a worsening of their situation. As such, the prophet turns to encourage them specifically.
The Biur places the prophecy slightly later, in the era of Nechemyah, when the people were faced with threats from those who had moved into the land while they were in exile. The prophet calls out to the fledgling community to ensure unity from within so that they can better face their external foes. To this end, he calls for acceptance of the foreign converts, distinguishing them from other foreigners who had not taken on the yoke of Heaven. Finally, Radak claims that the prophecy relates to the current exile and future redemption. The prophet calls on all to do good deeds to hurry the salvation, turning specifically to those outsiders who have lost all hope.
Privileged Classes in the Babylonian Exile
The prophet's words are addressed to the nation in Babylonia on the eve of their return to Israel. The prophet comforts those privileged foreigners and eunuchs who feared a worsening of their status with the move back to Israel.
- In exile, the converts were not treated as second-class citizens. Due to their native status, they enjoyed more rights and security than most Israelites. With the return to Israel, though, they feared that this was likely to change.
- Similarly, the Israelites who had served in Babylonian courts would lose whatever privileges they had been granted, and be left only with their shameful childless state.
Converts in the Era of Nechemyah
The prophecy is aimed at the people living in Israel in the time of Nechemyah. It constitutes a call for acceptance of the foreign converts who lived among them.
- Laymen and courtiers – According to Y. Ben-Ze'ev, both of these groups were non-Jews who had taken on Hashem's commandments6 in Bavel, and joined the nation when they returned to Israel.7 The "בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר" were laymen, while the "סָרִיסִים" were of the courtier class.8
- New and old converts - According to the Biur, in contrast, only the בְנֵי הַנֵּכָר were "new" converts. The "סָרִיסִים" refer to Canaanites who had been converted during the wars of conquest or monarchic period. They include either "בְּנֵי עַבְדֵי שְׁלֹמֹה" or the "נְתִינִים", who are mentioned in Ezra 2 as being among those who returned to Israel. The first were descendants of the remnants of the Seven Nations enslaved by Shelomo, and the second were the Givonites, tasked by Yehoshua with being servants in the Mikdash. These "סָרִיסִים" held diminished social and legal status.
- He tells the "סָרִיסִים" that even if they cannot have children with Israelites, they can still leave a mark, and will be mentioned and remembered among the builders of the wall ("וְנָתַתִּי לָהֶם בְּבֵיתִי וּבְחוֹמֹתַי יָד וָשֵׁם").12
- The converts are reassured that they are not included in the prohibition against foreign marriages since they are believers in Hashem. In fact, they are encouraged that they might even merit to marry priests and have their descendants sacrifice in the Temple.
The Hopeless in the Present Exile
Yeshayahu's words relate to the current exile and the redemption of Messianic times. The prophet encourages all to hasten the redemption through good deeds, promising even those outsiders who feel that all is for naught, that they will share in the rewards.
- Fundamental – Radak16 suggests that Shabbat is highlighted since it is so fundamental to belief, and its observance testifies to Hashem's role as Creator.
- Cause of exile – He also points out that as desecration of Shabbat led to the exile, it is fitting that its observance should bring the redemption.17
- All inclusive – Shadal states that, in this exhortation, the prophet includes both all the mitzvot between man and Hashem (included in "שֹׁמֵר שַׁבָּת מֵחַלְּלוֹ") and all the commandments that relate to one's fellow man (included in "וְשֹׁמֵר יָדוֹ מֵעֲשׂוֹת כׇּל רָע").