Difference between revisions of "Purpose of the Pesach/2"
(Original Author: Neima Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
(Original Author: Neima Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
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<p>The Pesach strengthened the bond between the Children of Israel and Hashem, in preparation for the Exodus.</p> | <p>The Pesach strengthened the bond between the Children of Israel and Hashem, in preparation for the Exodus.</p> | ||
<opinion name="">Meriting Redemption | <opinion name="">Meriting Redemption | ||
− | <p>The Israelites needed to accumulate mitzvot in order to compensate for their sinful behavior in Egypt and be worthy of | + | <p>The Israelites needed to accumulate mitzvot in order to atone and compensate for their sinful behavior in Egypt and be worthy of Hashem's deliverance.</p> |
<mekorot> | <mekorot> | ||
R. Matya b. Charash in <multilink><aht source="MekhiltaPischa5">Mekhilta</aht><aht source="MekhiltaPischa5">Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Bo Pischa 5</aht><aht parshan="Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael">About the Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael</aht></multilink>, | R. Matya b. Charash in <multilink><aht source="MekhiltaPischa5">Mekhilta</aht><aht source="MekhiltaPischa5">Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Bo Pischa 5</aht><aht parshan="Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael">About the Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael</aht></multilink>, | ||
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<multilink><aht source="CassutoShemot12-5">U. Cassuto</aht><aht source="CassutoShemot12-5">Shemot 12:5</aht><aht parshan="Umberto Cassuto">About U. Cassuto</aht></multilink> | <multilink><aht source="CassutoShemot12-5">U. Cassuto</aht><aht source="CassutoShemot12-5">Shemot 12:5</aht><aht parshan="Umberto Cassuto">About U. Cassuto</aht></multilink> | ||
</mekorot> | </mekorot> | ||
− | <point><b> | + | <point><b>Focal point of the commandment</b> – Following Hashem's instructions for the entire process, from the selection of the animal through the eating of the sacrifice, was important for the nation's religious development.</point> |
+ | <point><b>Character of the sacrifice</b> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Sin offering</b> – The Tzeror HaMor suggests that the sacrifice came to atone.<fn>Cf. Bemidbar Rabbah below.</fn> He then enumerates many of the elements common to the Pesach and general sacrifices, including the slaughtering of an unblemished animal, smearing/sprinkling of the blood, and the prohibition and burning of leftovers. He also explains that the absence of the altar was due to the impurity of the land of Egypt.<fn>Thus, the house stood in for the altar. It is also possible that each person acted as a priest, and was thus permitted to partake from his own sin offering.</fn></li> |
− | <li><b>Petitionary offering </b> – R. Hoffmann | + | <li><b>Petitionary offering </b> – R. D"Z Hoffmann posits that the Pesach was brought, in part, as a request for Hashem's protection,<fn><multilink><a href="/5#">Zvi Karl</a><a href="/5#">Commentary on Mishnayot Pesachim, pp.12-15</a></multilink>, too, views this as a request, but suggests that the nation was asking for protection from the dangers of the upcoming journey.</fn> and the sheep represented the Israelites' dependence on Hashem to be their shepherd.<fn>R. Hoffmann here is drawing off R. Hirsch who emphasizes how the nation was to see themselves in the sheep, and be ready to accept Hashem as their shepherd and to dedicate their lives to Him.</fn></li> |
− | <li><b>Redemption of the | + | <li><b>Redemption of the firstborn (פדיון בכור) </b> – Cassuto suggests that the Paschal lambs served as an exchange for the lives of the Israelite firstborns, and their blood symbolized the consecration of the Israelites to God's worship.<fn>It is unclear, though, why every individual was obligated to bring the Pesach, instead of just the firstborns.</fn></li> |
</ul> | </ul> | ||
</point> | </point> | ||
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</ul> | </ul> | ||
</point> | </point> | ||
− | |||
<point><b>Accompanying actions</b> – | <point><b>Accompanying actions</b> – | ||
<ul> | <ul> |
Version as of 23:40, 8 April 2014
Purpose of the Pesach
Exegetical Approaches
Apotropaic Blood Rite
The Pesach was commanded so that its blood would prevent the destroyer ("הַמַּשְׁחִית") from entering the Israelites' homes and harming them.
- Angel2 – According to Jubilees, Ibn Ezra, and R"Y Bekhor Shor, the "מַשְׁחִית" was a Divine messenger who received instructions from Hashem to destroy the Egyptians and spare the Israelites.3
- Celestial force – Ibn Daud, in contrast, asserts that the phrase refers to the powers of a heavenly sphere4 which were unleashed against the Egyptians. According to him, this force functioned in accordance with fixed natural laws.
- Plague – Seforno understands the "מַשְׁחִית" to be a general epidemic which wreaked havoc upon the general population of Egypt. This plague coincided with, but was distinct from, the Plague of the Firstborn.5
- The "מַשְׁחִית", rather than Hashem, did both the killing ("נֶגֶף לְמַשְׁחִית") and sparing ("וּפָסַח") – Jubilees.6 According to this reading, Hashem merely gave the original instructions but did not accompany the "מַשְׁחִית" for the implementation, and all of the verbs which speak of Hashem's actions ("וְעָבַרְתִּי", "וְהִכֵּיתִי", "וְרָאִיתִי", "וּפָסַחְתִּי", "בְּהַכֹּתִי", "וְעָבַר ה'", "וְרָאָה", "וּפָסַח", "וְלֹא יִתֵּן") really refer to the actions of the "מַשְׁחִית" (functioning as Hashem's agent).7 Jubilees does not feel obligated by the later homily in the Mekhilta of "אני ולא מלאך...".
- Hashem protected the Israelites while the "מַשְׁחִית" slew the Egyptians – Shemot Rabbah. The Midrash presents Hashem as physically preventing the destroying angel from entering the Israelite homes. This reading accounts for both "וְרָאִיתִי אֶת הַדָּם וּפָסַחְתִּי עֲלֵכֶם" and "וְלֹא יִהְיֶה בָכֶם נֶגֶף לְמַשְׁחִית", but it does not explain why Hashem did not simply order the angel not to enter the blood-marked houses.
- Hashem performed both the saving and the killing, and the "מַשְׁחִית" merely accompanied Him – Seforno.8 Seforno completely divides between the roles of Hashem and the "מַשְׁחִית", asserting that Hashem alone killed the firstborns ("וְהִכֵּיתִי כָל בְּכוֹר"), while a more general plague ("נֶגֶף לְמַשְׁחִית") was simultaneously brought upon the rest of the Egyptian nation.9 Seforno's position is undoubtedly also influenced by the Mekhilta's homily which attributes the final plague to Hashem alone, and it has the added advantage of explaining why every home, even ones in which there was no firstborn, required the smearing of blood.
- Identification sign – Perhaps the simplest understanding is that the "מַשְׁחִית" was simply incapable of distinguishing on its own between Egyptian and Israelite,10 and thus the blood was needed to serve this function. Ibn Ezra and Seforno11 note the parallel between our story and Yechezkel 9,12 where there is a similar marking of innocents in order to protect them from a "מַשְׁחִית".13
- Repellent – Ibn Daud,14 in contrast, asserts that the blood (and slaughtered sheep) had some intrinsic powers to ward off the harm of the "מַשְׁחִית", deterring him from entering the Israelite homes. Both Ibn Daud and Ibn Ezra compare our episode to the story of Moshe in the lodging place in Shemot 4. There, too, a bloody rite (circumcision) was used to ward off evil and potential death.15
- No broken bones – Jubilees suggests that the command to roast the Pesach whole and not to break any of its bones was symbolic of the nation emerging whole and unscathed from the Plague of the Firstborn.
- Haste – Ibn Ezra understands the commands relating to haste, not as a way of insuring the nation would be ready to leave at a moment's notice, but as a directive to finish eating by the time the destroying angel arrived, lest they not be granted protection.
Sacrifice to Hashem
The Pesach strengthened the bond between the Children of Israel and Hashem, in preparation for the Exodus.
Meriting Redemption
The Israelites needed to accumulate mitzvot in order to atone and compensate for their sinful behavior in Egypt and be worthy of Hashem's deliverance.
- Sin offering – The Tzeror HaMor suggests that the sacrifice came to atone.25 He then enumerates many of the elements common to the Pesach and general sacrifices, including the slaughtering of an unblemished animal, smearing/sprinkling of the blood, and the prohibition and burning of leftovers. He also explains that the absence of the altar was due to the impurity of the land of Egypt.26
- Petitionary offering – R. D"Z Hoffmann posits that the Pesach was brought, in part, as a request for Hashem's protection,27 and the sheep represented the Israelites' dependence on Hashem to be their shepherd.28
- Redemption of the firstborn (פדיון בכור) – Cassuto suggests that the Paschal lambs served as an exchange for the lives of the Israelite firstborns, and their blood symbolized the consecration of the Israelites to God's worship.29
- Proof of merit – Most of these commentators see the blood as evidence of the nation's keeping God's commands, proof that they may merit redemption.30 The blood can be likened to the blood of a covenant (similar to the blood of circumcision), for, in doing Hashem's bidding, the people connected and dedicated themselves to Hashem.
- Sacrificial rite – Tzeror HaMor views the smearing of the blood as part of the regular sacrificial service, where the blood is sprinkled on the altar (or, here, its replacement, the door of the house.)
- Exchange of life – R. Hirsch, R. D"Z Hoffmann and Cassuto all see the blood as standing in for the lives of the nation, either by representing their willingness to dedicate their lives to Hashem,31 or in substituting for the firstborns otherwise destined to die in the plague.32
- ??Hashem and Israel – According to this approach, it would seem that the blood targeted both Hashem and Israel as the blood represented either a sacrificial or covenantal act through which the nation earned their redemption.33
- Outside world – R. D"Z Hoffmann suggests that the blood was a sign for the outside world, rather than Hashem Himself, so that they should recognize how Hashem distinguished between Egyptian and Israelite.34
- Destruction – Avudraham maintains that the term "מַשְׁחִית" does not refer to a separate being but rather to the destruction wrought by Hashem Himself (משחית=השחתה).
- Hashem Himself – R. D"Z Hoffmann (in his first suggestion) proposes that the "מַשְׁחִית" is a personification of God's providence while Tzeror HaMor asserts that it refers to God's attribute of justice specifically.
- Angel – Rashi and R. D"Z Hoffmann raise the alternative possibility that it refers to an angel sent by Hashem to do his bidding.
- Haste – According to R. Hirsch, eating this way served to reflect the atmosphere of worry and imminent danger that the nation was only saved from due to their partaking of the Pesach.
- Dressed to go – According to Karl, as the nation was requesting protection for their journey, it was fitting to partake of the offering while dressed and ready to leave at a moment's notice.
- Twilight – R. D"Z Hoffmann explains that as the sacrifice was a request for salvation, it needed to be offered before the Plague came.
- Tzeror HaMor and Cassuto relate the command to the nation's departure. Tzeror HaMor asserts that Hashem simply did not want the nation to leave in the middle of the night, as if they were running away, but rather to exit in full daylight. Cassuto suggests more simply that Hashem wanted to ensure that they would be available to go at a moment's notice.
- R. D"Z Hoffmann proposes that Hashem warned the nation against leaving their home lest they see God's presence.38
Thanksgiving Offering
The Pesach was a Korban Todah, a celebratory sacrifice thanking Hashem for the nation's impending salvation.
- Twilight – R. D"Z Hoffmann suggests that it was eaten then because the offering was also a request (and not just thanksgiving) for salvation from the Plague of Firstborns and, thus, needed to be offered before the Plague was brought.40
- Male – Philo proposes that in our show of gratitude we choose a male since Paroh's decrees had been aimed against male children.
- Sheep – R. Crescas suggests that it was fitting to sacrifice the god of the Egyptians to highlight their undoing. The Egyptians expected the destruction of the Israelites but in turn the Israelites were saved while their own nation was defeated.
- Ready to go – It seems that the commands regarding eating the Pesach roasted, with matzah and bitter herbs, while belted and ready to go, have no connection to the thanksgiving aspect of the offering. Philo suggests that most of these details represent haste.41
- It is referred to as a זבח, like other offerings that are eaten.
- The choice of animal, its age, the sprinkling or smearing of blood and the laws regarding leftovers being burnt are shared by other sacrifices.
- The missing components, the altar and priest, were here replaced by the house (with the blood being thrown on its doorposts) and the Israelites themselves.42
Demonstrative Act Against Idolatry
The Egyptians worshiped sheep, and the slaughtering of the Pesach proclaimed the sovereignty of Hashem and His supremacy over the Egyptian gods. This approach subdivides regarding the intended audience:
Cleansing the Israelites
The Paschal rite facilitated and symbolized the Israelites' rejection of Egyptian idolatry.
- Active demonstration – Most of the commentators focus on the nation's need to actively demonstrate their rejection of idolatry in order to merit redemption. By slaughtering the Egyptian god the Israelites portrayed their denunciation of Egyptian beliefs.45
- Educational tool – Rambam and Ralbag focus less on the demonstrative aspect of the ritual, and view it instead as an educative process. In seeing the Egyptian god killed and unable either to defend itself or wreak punishment, the Israelites learned its worthlessness.
- Sin offering – Bemidbar Rabbah compares the Pesach to a sin offering brought for idolatry, suggesting that the Pesach might have served a similar expiatory function.46
- The Israelites – According to Ralbag, Akeidat Yitchak, and Abarbanel, the blood was meant not for Hashem or the destroyer but for the Israelites themselves. It served as a sign and proof for them ("וְהָיָה הַדָּם לָכֶם לְאֹת ") that they had abandoned their beliefs in the Egyptian gods and it was this rejection that led Hashem to have mercy on them and not kill them during the plague.47
- The Egyptians – HaKetav VeHaKabbalah,48 in contrast, asserts that the Egyptians were the intended audience of the blood. As part of the nation's process of repentance they needed to be willing to risk their lives for Hashem by slaughtering the sheep and putting its blood in full view of their Egyptian neighbors.49
- Hashem – Bemidbar Rabbah does not say explicitly for whom the blood was intended but his comparison of the Pesach to a sin offering would suggest that the blood was meant for Hashem.50
- Choice of sheep – As the sheep was worshiped by the Egyptians, its slaughter was necessary to eradicate similar beliefs held by the Children of Israel.
- Four days – This gave the nation ample time both to display their intended slaughtering and to reflect on their new beliefs.
- Hyssop branch – Ralbag suggests that the choice of a lowly plant to do the smearing of blood served to degrade the sheep in the eyes of Israel.
- Whole male – Ralbag suggests that in killing a whole male, which would be seen by the Egyptians as a more respected animal, and nonetheless, emerging unscathed, the nation would learn the worthlessness of the Egyptian god.
- Roasted – Ralbag proposes that since the Egyptians would normally punish any who defied their gods by fire, roasting the sheep was a sign of disrespect and further proved to the nation the inability of the god to punish.
- Matzah and maror – Rambam points out that idolaters would normally accompany their sacrifices with leavened bread and something sweet. As a reaction, Hashem commanded that the nation's sacrifices be accompanied by unleavened bread and salt. This could similarly explain the choice of matzah and bitter herbs.55
- Acts of repentance – R"M Alshikh suggests that the details helped the nation undo (or at least show regret for) past sinful actions, "measure for measure." Since the nation had desecrated Hashem's name, they were now forced to sanctify it through the public taking and slaughtering. Where the Israelites had previously bowed down to the sheep, they now slaughtered it while in a similar stance, its head on its bottom parts.
Mocking the Egyptians
The public slaughter of the sheep proved to the Egyptians that their gods were powerless.
- Four days – This provided time for the Egyptians to see their gods tied and bleating, without the ability to save themselves from the coming slaughter.
- Unblemished young male sheep – This would not allow any excuse that could justify the sheep-killing; no one could say that a particular sheep was unworthy due to its being blemished and that was the only reason it was being killed.61
- Twilight – This time was chosen to maximize exposure of the slaughtering to all those who were returning home.
- Whole – This way no one could mistake that what was killed was in fact the Egyptian god.
- Roasted – The roasting ensured that the sheep was both seen and smelled by all.
- Dressed to go, bitter herbs – Choosing a condiment that was bitter rather than sweet and eating in a hurry were both signs of disrespect.