Difference between revisions of "Purifying Midianite Spoils – From What/2"
(Original Author: Neima Novetsky) |
(Original Author: Neima Novetsky) |
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<li><b>Tangential mention</b> – Hoil Moshe maintains that the law had actually been applied after earlier battles, but the Torah did not find it necessary to mention the fact. Only in this story when the text was already discussing Moshe's anger at the nation and his ensuing speech, did it also include his words regarding the laws of purification.</li> | <li><b>Tangential mention</b> – Hoil Moshe maintains that the law had actually been applied after earlier battles, but the Torah did not find it necessary to mention the fact. Only in this story when the text was already discussing Moshe's anger at the nation and his ensuing speech, did it also include his words regarding the laws of purification.</li> | ||
− | <li><b>First practical application</b> – This position might alternatively assert, like Ramban below, that in the previous | + | <li><b>First practical application</b> – This position might alternatively assert, like Ramban below, that in the previous wars there actually was no problem of impurity since all of Israel participated in those wars<fn>This is in contrast to the war against Midyan in which only one thousand men per tribe fought.</fn> and "communal impurity is permitted". It is questionable, though, whether this applies when there is no time bound obligation involved.<fn>Normally the leniency applies to bringing sacrifices which are time bound. If there is no time limit, though, all agree that one should only bring the sacrifice after a process of purification. So too, here, one might assume that as there was no necessity to use the spoils of war immediately, the collective character of the impurity should not have sufficed to annul the need for purification.</fn></li> |
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− | <point><b>What type of utensils?</b> The Karaite fragment emphasizes that the verses do not speak specifically of food utensils, and the inclusion of gold and silver amidst the list of metals | + | <point><b>What type of utensils?</b> The Karaite fragment emphasizes that the verses do not speak specifically of food utensils, and the inclusion of gold and silver amidst the list of metals more likely refers to jewelry than to pots or pans.<fn>It is for this reason that the Karaite rejects the possibility that the verses are referring to purging utensils of the traces of non-kosher foods.</fn></point> |
− | <point><b>"כׇּל דָּבָר אֲשֶׁר יָבֹא בָאֵשׁ"</b> – According to the Karaite fragment and Hoil Moshe, this | + | <point><b>"כׇּל דָּבָר אֲשֶׁר יָבֹא בָאֵשׁ"</b> – According to the Karaite fragment and Hoil Moshe, this expression includes all materials which can withstand fire, rather than being limited only to something which is regularly used with fire (like pots or pans).</point> |
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<point><b>Why this method of purification?</b></point> | <point><b>Why this method of purification?</b></point> | ||
− | <point><b>"בְּמֵי נִדָּה יִתְחַטָּא"</b> – According to these commentators this refers to purification by the liquid mixture of the ashes of the red heifer, as is implied by the term's usage in Bemidbar 19.</point> | + | --> |
− | <point><b>"תַּעֲבִירוּ בַמָּיִם"</b> – According to Hoil Moshe, this is an additional directive beyond the sprinkling | + | <point><b>"בְּמֵי נִדָּה יִתְחַטָּא"</b> – According to these commentators, this refers to purification by the liquid mixture of the ashes of the red heifer, as is implied by the term's usage in Bemidbar 19.</point> |
+ | <point><b>"תַּעֲבִירוּ בַמָּיִם"</b> – According to the Hoil Moshe, this is an additional directive beyond the sprinkling of "מֵי נִדָּה", but it is not clear whether it refers to immersion in boiling or cold water.<fn>This position could have suggested, instead, that the command is parallel to the earlier directive to purify via "מֵי נִדָּה". If so, Elazar is introducing just one new law beyond what is known from Bemidbar 19, that metal utensils need to be passed through fire in addition to being sprinkled. Other vessels, though, can suffice with a sprinkling of "מֵי נִדָּה".</fn></point> | ||
</category> | </category> | ||
<category name="">Heathen Status | <category name="">Heathen Status |
Version as of 03:05, 18 July 2014
Purifying Midianite Spoils – From What?
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Exegetes dispute both the nature of the laws of purification of utensils in Bemidbar 31 and what was unique about the war with Midyan that led to the transmitting of these additional laws. The Hoil Moshe maintains that the commands revolve solely on cleansing from the defilement of dead bodies, and he thus claims that Moshe did the same in other wars as well and that there was nothing unusual here. Others like Shadal suggest that there was a special impurity of idolatry related to the special religious character of the war, as the Midianites had lured the Israelites into worshiping Baal Peor. Most exegetes though, following Rabbinic interpretation, explain that the verses speak of impurity of non-Kosher cooking, and Ramban, adopting this position, explains that there had been a special dispensation which permitted this in previous battles.
Corpse Contamination
The utensils needed to be decontaminated because they came into contact with dead bodies.
- Tangential mention – Hoil Moshe maintains that the law had actually been applied after earlier battles, but the Torah did not find it necessary to mention the fact. Only in this story when the text was already discussing Moshe's anger at the nation and his ensuing speech, did it also include his words regarding the laws of purification.
- First practical application – This position might alternatively assert, like Ramban below, that in the previous wars there actually was no problem of impurity since all of Israel participated in those wars12 and "communal impurity is permitted". It is questionable, though, whether this applies when there is no time bound obligation involved.13
Heathen Status
The objects required purification since they were owned by Gentiles or used for idolatry.
- Idols vs. accessories – This approach might explain that the items mentioned here were not actual idols but rather accessories to idolatry or simply objects owned by idolaters with no explicit religious function.
- Both refer to purification by fire – Alternatively, perhaps the phrase "תִּשְׂרְפוּן בָּאֵשׁ" in Devarim is equivalent to the words "תַּעֲבִירוּ בָאֵשׁ" here and both simply refer to purifying by fire.21
- Ad hoc law relating to Midyan – According to Shadal, this law is specific to this war and not meant to be for generations. Since the Midianites lured the nation into worship of Baal Peor through these items, they were prohibited from use by the nation until they underwent a process of purification.22
- Context of spoils of war – The other commentators might explain that this was not really the first application of the law, but simply the first mention of it in the text. Only in this war was there a focus on the spoils of war and in that context, the laws regrading purifying these spoils from idolatrous use were also mentioned.23
- Decontamination from corpse – According to the Damascus Document, Sifre Zuta, and Shadal this refers to the additional purification from contact with corpses via the ashes of the red heifer.28 Elazar is warning the people that they should not think that the new purification makes the other unnecessary; both are needed.29
- Purification from Heathens – Alternatively, this position could suggest that this is another part of the process of purification from idolatry (and unconnected to corpses). Later prophets refer to the idolatrous nation as contaminating the land "כְּטֻמְאַת הַנִּדָּה" and assert that their purification will come by throwing upon them "pure water".30 This is perhaps not a metaphoric description of purification, but a description of the actual process.
Non-Kosher Substances
The vessels needed to be purged of any residue from non-kosher foods.
- Purification from contact with a corpse – Sifre, Sifre Zuta, Rashi,42 and Abarbanel43 all explain that the phrase refers to the water of the ashes of the red heifer used for purification from contact with a coprse. Elazar is telling the nation, that the kashering process alone is not enough to permit the vessels for use; they also need to be purified from contact with the dead. This preserves the usual connotation of the phrase "מֵי נִדָּה".
- Immersion in a ritual bath – Bavli, Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, R. Yosef Bekhor Shor, and Ramban44 claim instead that this phrase is speaking of water in which a woman who is a "נִדָּה" (in a state of ritual impurity) immerses herself.45 Elazar is telling the nation that in addition to purging vessels of non kosher taste, vessels made of metal also need to be immersed in a ritual bath before use.46
- Purging of non kosher residue – R. Yosef Bekhor Shor, Ramban and Abarbanel all maintain that this refers to the method of kashering substances that "do not come through fire". While R. Yosef Bekhor Shor and Abarbanel assert that it includes all purging done by water - either via boiling47 or by cold water48, Ramban maintains that it only refers to cleansing in cold water.49
- Immersion in ritual bath – Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and Rashi, in contrast suggest that this phrase is equivalent to the clause "בְּמֵי נִדָּה יִתְחַטָּא" found in the first half of the verse, and refers not to cleansing items from non kosher taste50 but to immersing them in a ritual bath.51