Pesach Sheni – The People's Petition/2/en

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Pesach Sheni – The People's Petition

Exegetical Approaches

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Request for Special Dispensation

The petitioners were requesting a special dispensation due to extenuating circumstances of either a personal or national nature.

Who were the petitioners? According to this position the petitioners were people whose impurity stemmed from dealing with a dead body for the purposes of fulfilling a mitzvah.1 They question why it is fair that the performance of a good deed should have negative consequences2 and thus request a special dispensation: that their impure status be ignored.
What part of the rite did they want to participate in? The impure were requesting that they be able to participate in the entire rite (both the sacrifice and the eating)  just like the rest of the nation.3
Why was Moshe not taught the law previously? According to this position, it is understandable why Moshe did not know how to respond to the petition.  The people were not asking him to clarify a matter of law but rather to override the law and so he needed Divine permission to acquiesce.
Hashem's response: is the request granted? Though Hashem does not allow the people to override the laws of impurity, He finds a different way that the people can still offer the Pesach, providing an alternative make-up date in Iyyar.  In addition, Hashem widens the special dispensation to include not only those who missed out due to involvement in a mitzvah, but also others who had a valid reason (distance/ impurity) not to bring the Pesach in Nisan.
Uniqueness of Pesach – It is possible that Hashem grants a second chance specifically for the Pesach due both to its great importance and the fact that it is a unique rite that can only be performed once a year.
Halakhic precedents – Or HaCHayyim points out that since impurity can be nullified  in a case where the majority of the community is impure, there is a precedent for ignoring a person's true status and simply considering them pure for the purposes of the sacrifice.  However, it is not likely that the petitioners would have been aware of this law and there is no evidence that they were making nay such comparison.
"בְּמֹעֲדוֹ" – According to this position it is not clear why the people emphasize the idea of wanting to bring the sacrifice in "is proper time"  (rather than simply asking to bring it).
"בְּתוֹךְ בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל" – The petitioners might add this phrase to highlight how they are hoping to be considered part of the nation, and not those who must be kept outside in an impure state.
Comparison to request of Benot Zelaphchod
When were laws of impurity given?
When is the request being made?
Focal point of Pesach: sacrifice or eating?

Claim that Impurity was Not an Impediment

The petitioners believed that their impure status was a not a good reason to prevent them from participating in the Paschal rite, and that there was a legal basis for such a claim.  The sources disagree regarding the specific reasoning given:

Purified in Time for Leil Pesach

The people were requesting that they be able to participate in the Pesach rite since by nightfall, when the Pesach was to be eaten, they would already be pure.

Who were the petitioners? The questioners were people who had become impure on the eighth of Nissan.  The seventh day of their impurity fell on the fourteenth, so that they were still impure at the hour that the sacrifice was brought, but by nightfall, when the Pesach was eaten, they were purified.
"וְלֹא יָכְלוּ לַעֲשֹׂת הַפֶּסַח בַּיּוֹם הַהוּא" – R. Yitzchak learns from the phrase "וְלֹא יָכְלוּ לַעֲשֹׂת הַפֶּסַח בַּיּוֹם הַהוּא" that it was specifically on that day (the fourteenth) that they could not bring the Pesach.  The following day, however, they would have been able to.
What part of the rite did they want to participate in? The people were hoping to be counted with someone else's offering (who would do the actual sacrifice), but that they would eat of it themselves at nightfall.
Focal point of Pesach: sacrifice or eating? It is possible that the petitioners assumed that the focal point of the Peach was the act of eating, and therefore thought that if they were pure for that aspect of the rite, it should not be problematic if they had not yet been purified when the Pesach was sacrificed.  Hashem's negative response might be an indication that the sacrifice itself is a crucial part of the ceremony.
Uniqueness of Pesach – The Pesach is unique in that it is sacrificed in the afternoon of one day (14th), but only eaten at night, which is the next day (15th).  This is what allowed the petitioners to suggest that there might be some halakhic leniency to allow them to participate.
Halakhic precedents – Or HaChayyim suggests that the people compared themselves to those who have touched an insect (שרץ) whose impurity only lasts for a day. In such a case, the impure are allowed to immerse on the fourteenth and then be included with someone else's sacrifice and eat at nightfall.  The petitioners believed that the law might be the same for them.
When were laws of impurity given? This position might assume that only some of the laws of impurity had been given prior to our story.  Thus, the petitioners might have been familiar with the laws of insects (given in Vayikra 11), but perhaps not yet with all those that related to touching a dead body.  As the full discussion of the red heifer and purification from the dead first appears in Bemidbar 20, it is possible that many details of the rite were first taught then.

Could Partake Via Agent

Sacrifice Supersedes Impurity

Plea for Make-up Date