Difference between revisions of "MiMachorat HaShabbat/2"
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<p>The word Shabbat refers to the seventh day of the week and the Omer offering is always brought on the following day.  This position subdivides regarding when in the calendar this Shabbat falls:</p> | <p>The word Shabbat refers to the seventh day of the week and the Omer offering is always brought on the following day.  This position subdivides regarding when in the calendar this Shabbat falls:</p> | ||
<opinion name="">Within Chag HaMatzot | <opinion name="">Within Chag HaMatzot | ||
− | <mekorot>Perhaps the Boethusians,<fn>See <a href="סכוליוןלמגילתתעניתחניסן" data-aht="source">Megillat Taanit, Scholion 8 Nissan</a>, <a href="MishnaMenachot10-3" data-aht="source">Mishna Menachot 10:3</a>, <a href="ToseftaRoshHaShanah1-15" data-aht="source">Tosefta Rosh HaShanah 1:15</a>, and <a href="ToseftaMenachot10-23" data-aht="source">Tosefta Menachot 10:23</a> who all bring their opinion in order to combat it. These sources all have the Boethusians mark both the day of bringing the Omer and Shavuot on "the day after Shabbat Bereshit", but it is not clear if this refers to the Shabbat Bereshit within Chag HaMatzot or afterwards. </fn> the Samaritans, <multilink><a href="DanielAlKumisitheKaraiteVayikra23-15-16" data-aht="source"> | + | <mekorot>Perhaps the Boethusians,<fn>See <a href="סכוליוןלמגילתתעניתחניסן" data-aht="source">Megillat Taanit, Scholion 8 Nissan</a>, <a href="MishnaMenachot10-3" data-aht="source">Mishna Menachot 10:3</a>, <a href="ToseftaRoshHaShanah1-15" data-aht="source">Tosefta Rosh HaShanah 1:15</a>, and <a href="ToseftaMenachot10-23" data-aht="source">Tosefta Menachot 10:23</a> who all bring their opinion in order to combat it. These sources all have the Boethusians mark both the day of bringing the Omer and Shavuot on "the day after Shabbat Bereshit", but it is not clear if this refers to the Shabbat Bereshit within Chag HaMatzot or afterwards. </fn> the Samaritans, <multilink><a href="DanielAlKumisitheKaraiteVayikra23-15-16" data-aht="source">the Karaites</a><a href="DanielAlKumisitheKaraiteVayikra23-15-16" data-aht="source">Daniel AlKumisi Vayikra 23:15-16</a><a href="RSaadiaGaonSeferHaHavchanah" data-aht="source">Karaite opponents in R. Saadia Gaon Sefer HaHavchanah</a><a href="SalmonbYeruchamtheKaraiteMilchamotHashemShaar10" data-aht="source">Salmon b. Yerucham Milchamot Hashem Shaar 10</a><a href="" data-aht="source">Yefet</a><a href="LevibYefettheKaraitetheKaraiteSeferHamitzvot2p404" data-aht="source">Levi b. Yefet Sefer Hamitzvot 2 p. 404</a><a href="Kuzari3-41" data-aht="source">Karaite opponents in the Kuzari 3:41</a></multilink></mekorot> |
<point><b>What must be within Chag MaMatzot?</b><ul> | <point><b>What must be within Chag MaMatzot?</b><ul> | ||
<li><b>ממחרת השבת</b> – According to the Karaites, the "day following the Shabbat" (rather than Shabbat itself) must fall within the week of Chag Hamatzot.  Thus, one could conceivably bring the Omer offering and start counting as early as the 15th of Nissan.<fn>This would happen any year in which the fourteenth of Nissan coincided with Shabbat.</fn></li> | <li><b>ממחרת השבת</b> – According to the Karaites, the "day following the Shabbat" (rather than Shabbat itself) must fall within the week of Chag Hamatzot.  Thus, one could conceivably bring the Omer offering and start counting as early as the 15th of Nissan.<fn>This would happen any year in which the fourteenth of Nissan coincided with Shabbat.</fn></li> |
Version as of 00:08, 1 May 2015
MiMachorat HaShabbat
Exegetical Approaches
The Day After Shabbat Bereshit
The word Shabbat refers to the seventh day of the week and the Omer offering is always brought on the following day. This position subdivides regarding when in the calendar this Shabbat falls:
Within Chag HaMatzot
- ממחרת השבת – According to the Karaites, the "day following the Shabbat" (rather than Shabbat itself) must fall within the week of Chag Hamatzot. Thus, one could conceivably bring the Omer offering and start counting as early as the 15th of Nissan.2
- השבת – The Samaritans, in contrast, maintain that the Shabbat itself (not the "day following the Shabbat") must fall within the holiday. As such, one would never bring the Omer offering before the 16th, but depending on when Shabbat were to fall, one might bring it as late as the 22nd of Nissan, after the conclusion of the festival.
- Two days of rest – In the Scholion to Megillat Taanit, a Boethusian tells R. Yochanan b. Zakkai that Hashem wanted the nation to rest for two consecutive days on Shavuot, which otherwise would be a short one day holiday.11
- Prevent Sabbath desecration – Salmon b. Yerucham the Karaite suggests instead that Shavuot was set on Sunday to ensure that the holiday never fell on Shabbat which would be problematic for bringing a Shelamim offering.
- The Karaites12 assert that the year the Israelites entered the land, Chag HaPesach fell on a Shabbat, and the Omer offering was brought on the next day ("מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח"),13 Nissan 15, allowing the nation to eat of the new harvest on that very day. The passage in Yehoshua, thus, could support their understanding of "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת".
- Since the Samaritans do not accept Sefer Yehoshua as part of their canon they are not bothered by any contradictions therefrom.14
After Chag HaMatzot
The Omer offering and counting of fifty days began on the day following the first Shabbat Bereshit after the festival of Chag HaMatzot.
After the First Harvest
The Omer is brought on the first Sunday following the initial harvest of the season.
The Day After Yom Shabbaton (Yom Tov)
Shabbat is another way of referring to Yom Tov. The Omer offering is brought on the day after the Yom Tov of Chag HaMatzot. The approach divides based on which Yom Tov is referred to:
The First Yom Tov
The Day of the Waving of the Omer follows the first Yom Tov of the festival, falling out on the 16th of Nissan.
- Fifteenth of Nissan – According to Ibn Ezra "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח" refers to the fifteenth of Nissan,42 when eating of the new wheat was still prohibited. To solve the problem, he suggests43 that the verse speaks of eating from the old grain.44 An opinion in Yerushalmi Challah 2:1 alternatively asserts that the prohibition of "new wheat" only took effect after the conquest.45
- Sixteenth of Nissan – Other exegetes46 maintain that "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח" is the 16th of Nissan. Since the Pesach sacrifice is eaten on the evening of the fifteenth, the next new day is the 16th. This is equivalent to ""מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת47 when the Omer is brought and the new grain is permitted.48
- Transgressing of Shabbat – As opposed to the Sectarians, the Sages were not bothered by the potential trangressing of Shabbat were the Day of the Waving of the Omer to fall on it. As such, they were more concerned with setting a monthly date rather than a day of the week for the offering.
- Shavuot and Matan Torah – It is possible that part of the Rabbinate disagreement with the Karaites related to their desire to connect Shavuot with the revelation at Sinai. Since this was associated with the sixth of Sivan, they had an incentive to date Shavuot then.
The Second Yom Tov
The Omer is sacrificed on the morrow of the second Yom Tov of Chag HaMatzot, which dates to the 22nd of Nissan.
The Day After the Cessation
The word Shabbat refers to something that has ceased. The Omer offering is dated to the day following such an event.
- Leavened bread – According to HaKetav VeHaKabbalah52 the 15th of Nissan is referred to as a Shabbat since it is a day in which one is obligated to desist from leavened bread.
- The manna – Lichtenschtadt and I. Kislev asserts that the Torah is referring to the future53 cessation of the manna,54 which historically took place on the 15th of Nissan.55
- Essence of day – According to HaKetav VeHaKabbalah, the entire essence of the first day of Yom Tov is the cessation from leavened bread. This was especially true during the year of the Exodus when leavened bread was only prohibited for that one day. HaKetav VeHaKabbalah does not explain, though, why it is only here that the first Yom Tov is so called.
- Recall the manna –According to I. Kislev the Torah purposefully wants to connect the bringing of the Omer and the cessation of the manna. In fact, the entire ritual comes, in part, to commemorate the miracle and the subsequent transition from supernatural providence to natural living. Giving a calendrical date would have obscured the connection. In addition, at this point it was not yet known what specific date the people were to enter the land and stop eating manna.
- By dating one event to the other, the Torah connects them.
- The specific measure of an omer's worth of the harvest recalls the omer's worth of manna that was allotted to each Israelite each day.
- While the harvest focuses on man's natural food supply, the manna represents Hashem's supernatural source of sustenance. The cessation of the latter is what led to man's harvesting.