Difference between revisions of "MiMachorat HaShabbat/2"
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<point><b>"וַיֹּאכְלוּ מֵעֲבוּר הָאָרֶץ מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח"</b><ul> | <point><b>"וַיֹּאכְלוּ מֵעֲבוּר הָאָרֶץ מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח"</b><ul> | ||
− | <li>Since the Karaites maintain that the Omer can be offered as early as the 15th, they<fn>See Alkumisi and Salmon b. Yerucham.  Aharon b. Yosef further points out that according to the Rabbi's position, in contrast, the verse in Yehoshua suggests that the Israelites sinned in eating from the new harvest before the day of bringing the Omer!  See below how the sages understand the verse.</fn> are thereby able to harmonize the passage in Yehoshua with their interpretation of "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת", by assuming that Chag HaPesach (i.e. the 14th of Nisan) was on Shabbat in the year the Israelites entered the land.  Thus, the Omer offering was brought on the | + | <li>Since the Karaites maintain that the Omer can be offered as early as the 15th, they<fn>See Alkumisi and Salmon b. Yerucham.  Aharon b. Yosef further points out that according to the Rabbi's position, in contrast, the verse in Yehoshua suggests that the Israelites sinned in eating from the new harvest before the day of bringing the Omer!  See below how the sages understand the verse.</fn> are thereby able to harmonize the passage in Yehoshua with their interpretation of "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת", by assuming that Chag HaPesach (i.e. the 14th of Nisan) was on Shabbat in the year the Israelites entered the land.  Thus, the inaugural Omer offering was brought on the following day ‎‏(‎"‏‎‏מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח‎"),<fn>Pesach is understood to be the fourteenth of Nisan, the day the Pesach offering was brought.  This fits with the usage and dating of the term in <a href="Bemidbar33-3" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 33:3</a>.</fn>‎‏ i.e. Sunday, the 15th of Nisan, allowing the nation to eat of the new harvest already on that very day.</li> |
<li>Since the Samaritans do not accept Sefer Yehoshua as part of their canon they are not troubled by any contradictions from it.<fn>As they maintain that one can never bring the Omer before the sixteenth of the month, they cannot explain the verse as do the Karaites.</fn></li> | <li>Since the Samaritans do not accept Sefer Yehoshua as part of their canon they are not troubled by any contradictions from it.<fn>As they maintain that one can never bring the Omer before the sixteenth of the month, they cannot explain the verse as do the Karaites.</fn></li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>"תִּסְפׇּר לָךְ מֵהָחֵל חֶרְמֵשׁ בַּקָּמָה"</b> – Aharon b. Yosef suggests that this time marker is equivalent to that of "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת", with both referring to the day on which the Omer is offered.  He compares the phrase to that in <a href="DivreiHaYamimII31-10" data-aht="source">Divrei HaYamim II 31:10</a>, "מֵהָחֵל הַתְּרוּמָה לָבִיא בֵית י"י" suggesting that both point to a day when a sacrifice is brought to the Mikdash.</point> | <point><b>"תִּסְפׇּר לָךְ מֵהָחֵל חֶרְמֵשׁ בַּקָּמָה"</b> – Aharon b. Yosef suggests that this time marker is equivalent to that of "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת", with both referring to the day on which the Omer is offered.  He compares the phrase to that in <a href="DivreiHaYamimII31-10" data-aht="source">Divrei HaYamim II 31:10</a>, "מֵהָחֵל הַתְּרוּמָה לָבִיא בֵית י"י" suggesting that both point to a day when a sacrifice is brought to the Mikdash.</point> | ||
− | <point><b> | + | <point><b>External motivating factors</b> – This reading might in part be motivated by a desire to prevent the possibility of the day of the Omer sacrifice falling on a Shabbat, which would necessitate reaping on Shabbat.<fn>See Tosefta Meanchot 10:23 which suggests that the Boethusians opposed the date for this reason. See also Salmon b. Yerucham's similar argument above regarding the desire to eliminate any problems bringing the Shelamim offering if Shavuot were to fall on Shabbat.</fn>  Setting a fixed day of the week eliminated the need to ever have to transgress the regular laws of Shabbat.<fn>This discomfort was not shared by the Rabbinic sages who suggest in several cases that another law might supersede the laws of Shabbat.</fn></point> |
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
<opinion name="">After Chag HaMatzot | <opinion name="">After Chag HaMatzot | ||
− | <p>The Omer offering is brought on the day following the first | + | <p>The Omer offering is brought on the day following the first Saturday after the festival of Chag HaMatzot.</p> |
<mekorot><multilink><a href="QumranScroll4Q325Fragment1Column2" data-aht="source">Qumran Scrolls</a><a href="QumranScroll4Q321Fragment4Column5" data-aht="source">4Q321 Fragment 4 Column 5</a><a href="QumranScroll4Q325Fragment1Column2" data-aht="source">4Q325 Fragment 1 Column 2</a><a href="Qumran Scrolls" data-aht="parshan">About the Qumran Scrolls</a></multilink></mekorot> | <mekorot><multilink><a href="QumranScroll4Q325Fragment1Column2" data-aht="source">Qumran Scrolls</a><a href="QumranScroll4Q321Fragment4Column5" data-aht="source">4Q321 Fragment 4 Column 5</a><a href="QumranScroll4Q325Fragment1Column2" data-aht="source">4Q325 Fragment 1 Column 2</a><a href="Qumran Scrolls" data-aht="parshan">About the Qumran Scrolls</a></multilink></mekorot> | ||
<point><b>Meaning and mentions of Shabbat</b> – As above, the understanding that Shabbat refers to the seventh day of the week is supported by many verses throughout Tanakh.  This interpretation also allows one to explain all three appearances of the word in the same manner.</point> | <point><b>Meaning and mentions of Shabbat</b> – As above, the understanding that Shabbat refers to the seventh day of the week is supported by many verses throughout Tanakh.  This interpretation also allows one to explain all three appearances of the word in the same manner.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>How would one know that the Shabbat is after Chag HaMatzot?</b> According to this approach, the verses which speak of the Omer offering follow | + | <point><b>How would one know that the Shabbat is after Chag HaMatzot?</b> According to this approach, the verses which speak of the Omer offering chronologically follow those which precede them. As such, it is natural to assume that the referred to "Shabbat" is the one which falls right after Chag HaMatzot and not within it.</point> |
− | <point><b>Dating of "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת"</b> – Unlike the above | + | <point><b>Dating of "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת"</b> – Unlike the Karaite approach above, due to the unique 364 day calendar of the Dead Sea sect<fn>The Torah does not lay forth rules as to how one should set up a calendar and different sects chose different methods.  While the sages opted to make a combination lunar-solar calendar, the Qumran sect preferred  a solar one of 364 days and 52 weeks.  As this is divisible by seven, all monthly dates consistently fall out on the same day of the week.  New months were not determined by the moon but set to be 30 days each, with every third month being 31.<br/>The sect set יום רביעי as the first day of its year, perhaps because on this day of creation the luminaries were established to be "לְאֹתֹת וּלְמוֹעֲדִים וּלְיָמִים וְשָׁנִים".  As such, both the first of Nisan and the 15th of Nisan fall out on a Wednesday, and the day following Shabbat Bereshit after Chag HaMatzot is always the 26th of Nisan.</fn> which is evenly divisible by seven, the Omer offering was always brought, not only on a set day of the week, but also on a set date of the month, the 26th of Nisan.<fn>Others who adopt this approach but do not abide by the Dead Sea sect calendar would say that the date is variable and could fall anywhere between the 22nd and 28th of Nisan, making Shavuot fall anywhere between the 12th and 18th of Sivan.</fn> As such, according to the Qumran calendar,<fn>Since they maintain that Nisan and Iyyar always have thirty days, a count of fifty days from the 26th of Nisan would end with the 15th of Sivan.</fn> Shavuot always falls on the 15th of Sivan.<fn>Compare with <multilink><a href="Jubilees1-1-3" data-aht="source">Jubilees</a><a href="Jubilees1-1-3" data-aht="source">1:1-3</a><a href="Jubilees15-1-4" data-aht="source">15:1-4</a><a href="Jubilees16-16-18" data-aht="source">16:16-18</a><a href="Jubilees44-1-6" data-aht="source">44:1-6</a><a href="Jubilees" data-aht="parshan">About Jubilees</a></multilink> which also sets the holiday on the fifteenth of the month, the day which it understands to be the revelation at Sinai.  As is its wont, Jubilees roots this date with earlier events associated to the Patriarchs, suggesting that the Covenant between the Pieces, Avraham's circumcision and the birth of Yitzchak all occurred on this date as well.  As such, from early on the date was related to covenant making.<br/>Qumran might also associate the date with the revelation at Sinai, in which case, despite their different starting point for the fifty day count, they agree with Rabbinic position that Shavuot is "חג מתן תורה". [This would be another point of difference between this position and that of the Karaites above.]</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>Lack of date for Shavuot</b> – Since the Qumran sect does assert that the holiday of Shavuot has a set date<fn>See above point.</fn> it is surprising that the Torah never mentions one.  | + | <point><b>Lack of date for Shavuot</b> – Since the Qumran sect does assert that the holiday of Shavuot has a set date<fn>See above point.</fn> it is surprising that the Torah never mentions one.  This position could respond that it was simply unnecessary since the law requires one to count from the Omer offering until the holiday.<fn>Compare this response with the similar one of the Rabbis below.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>"וַיֹּאכְלוּ מֵעֲבוּר הָאָרֶץ מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח"</b> – This verse in Yehoshua is difficult for this approach as it implies that the Israelites ate from the new wheat on the 15th or 16th of Nisan, while | + | <point><b>"וַיֹּאכְלוּ מֵעֲבוּר הָאָרֶץ מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח"</b> – This verse in Yehoshua is difficult for this approach, as it implies that the Israelites ate from the new wheat on the 15th or 16th of Nisan, while according to Qumran, this should have been prohibited until the 26th of Nisan when the Omer was brought.  They might answer that the verse is speaking of eating old produce rather than new.<fn>See Ibn Ezra in the name of R. Saadia who raises this possibility below.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>Significance of Sunday?</b> As above, this approach might suggest that | + | <point><b>Significance of Sunday?</b> As above, this approach might suggest that there was really no inherent significance to the day, but Hashem specifically chose a Sunday for both the bringing of the Omer and Shavuot so as to eliminate any need for desecration of Shabbat (in reaping or the sacrificing of the festive peace offerings).</point> |
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
<opinion name="">After the First Harvest | <opinion name="">After the First Harvest |
Version as of 07:11, 1 May 2015
MiMachorat HaShabbat
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
On one side of the controversy surrounding the dating of the Omer stand various groups of Sectarians who unanimously understand the word "Shabbat" to refer to Saturday and date the Omer sacrifice to the following day (Sunday). They disagree, however, regarding when this "Shabbat" falls out. Many Karaites view the two Biblical passages which speak of the Omer sacrifice and Chag HaMatzot as referring to simultaneous time periods and thus associate the Omer offering with the festival itself. The Qumran Sect, in contrast, assumes that the Biblical text is chronological and thus have the Omer offering follow the festival. A more marginal Karaite approach completely disconnects the two holidays and instead dates the Omer to the first harvest.
In opposition to all of the above, the Tannaim established that "Shabbat" in our verses is an alternative designation for the first day of Chag HaMatzot, thus setting the 16th of Nisan as the fixed lunar date for the Omer sacrifice. Traditional commentators, ever since, have struggled to harmonize the Rabbinic interpretation with the simple meaning of the Biblical text. Many have attempted to defend the position that the word "Shabbat" can literally mean Yom Tov, while others have tried to find alternative understandings of the word which would still allow for maintaining the Halakhic date of 16 Nisan.
Sunday
The word Shabbat refers to the seventh day of the week (שבת בראשית), and the Omer offering is always brought on the following day. This position subdivides regarding the Saturday to which the verses refer:
Within Chag HaMatzot
The Omer is sacrificed on the morrow of the first Saturday which falls within or immediately preceding the holiday of Chag HaMatzot.
- Sunday – The Karaites assume that it is the Omer offering itself (the day which is "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת") which must overlap with Chag HaMatzot. Thus, the Omer offering could be brought as early as the 15th of Nisan,2 but never after the 21st.
- Shabbat – The Samaritans, in contrast, maintain that the Shabbat itself 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 Nisan, 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 very brief one day holiday.11
- Prevent Sabbath desecration – Salmon b. Yerucham the Karaite suggests instead that Shavuot was fixed on Sunday to ensure that the holiday never fell on a Shabbat, as one is prohibited from sacrificing the festival's peace offerings on Shabbat.
- Since the Karaites maintain that the Omer can be offered as early as the 15th, they12 are thereby able to harmonize the passage in Yehoshua with their interpretation of "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת", by assuming that Chag HaPesach (i.e. the 14th of Nisan) was on Shabbat in the year the Israelites entered the land. Thus, the inaugural Omer offering was brought on the following day ("מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח"),13 i.e. Sunday, the 15th of Nisan, allowing the nation to eat of the new harvest already on that very day.
- Since the Samaritans do not accept Sefer Yehoshua as part of their canon they are not troubled by any contradictions from it.14
After Chag HaMatzot
The Omer offering is brought on the day following the first Saturday 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.
Day After Yom Tov
The term Shabbat is another way of referring to Yom Tov. The Omer offering is brought on the day after the Yom Tov of Chag HaMatzot. This approach divides based on which Yom Tov is referred to:
First Yom Tov
The Omer offering follows the first Yom Tov of the festival and falls out on the 16th of Nisan.
- The Scholion to Megillat Taanit, Lekach Tov and Ibn Ezra32 respond that many other holidays are called a "Shabbaton", pointing to Rosh HaShanah, Yom HaKippurim and Sukkot as examples.33 From these one can learn that the word Shabbaton, and hence, Shabbat, is not limited in meaning to a specific day of the week, but can refer to any Yom Tov.34
- Other commentators attempt to maintain the Sages' dating of the Omer sacrifice to the 16th, but offer other definitions for the word Shabbat.35 Ramban proposes that it means "week", as it does in the rest of the passage. The bringing of the Omer begins a new week (for purposes of the future counting) and thus starts on the morrow of the week ending on the 15th.36 Others relate the word to the Akkadian "sabattu" which refers to the day of the full moon, and is thus simply another way of saying the 15th of the month.37
- Fifteenth of Nisan – According to Ibn Ezra "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח" refers to the fifteenth of Nisan,44 when eating of the new wheat was still prohibited. To solve the problem, he suggests45 that the verse speaks of eating from the old grain.46 An opinion in Yerushalmi Challah 2:1 alternatively asserts that the prohibition of "new wheat" only took effect after the conquest.47
- Sixteenth of Nisan – Other exegetes48 maintain that "מִמׇּחֳרַת הַפֶּסַח" is the 16th of Nisan. Since the Pesach sacrifice is eaten on the evening of the fifteenth, the next new day is the 16th. This is equivalent to ""מִמׇּחֳרַת הַשַּׁבָּת49 when the Omer is brought and the new grain is permitted.50
- Transgressing of Shabbat – As opposed to the Sectarians, the Sages were not bothered by the potential transgressing of Shabbat were the day of the offering of the Omer to fall on it.51 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 Rabbi's 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.
Last Yom Tov
The Omer is sacrificed on the 22nd of Nisan, the day following the last day of Chag HaMatzot.
Morrow of a Cessation
The word Shabbat refers to something which ceased, and the Omer offering is brought on the day following this event.
- Leavened bread – According to HaKetav VeHaKabbalah55 the 15th of Nisan 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 assert that the Torah is referring to the future56 cessation of the manna,57 which took place on the 15th of Nisan in the year of the nation's arrival in Israel.58
- 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.
- Date – By dating one event to the other, the Torah connects them.
- Amount – 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.
- Food source – 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.