Difference between revisions of "Repairing the Destroyed Altar/2"
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<point><b>Mizbeach as metaphor</b> – Tanchuma suggests that the altar represents the nation itself, who needed to repair its wayward actions. Rashi and R. Yosef Kara, in contrast, maintain that it symbolizes the nation's service of Hashem. Both readings, however, are somewhat difficult, as there is no indication that the verse is not meant to be taken literally.  The phrase is found in the midst of a prose account which contains no other symbolic language, but is rather replete with concrete actions.<fn>Had the image been a common one, used throughout Tanakh as a metaphor, there might be room to suggest that here, too, it should be understood as such, but this is not the case.</fn></point> | <point><b>Mizbeach as metaphor</b> – Tanchuma suggests that the altar represents the nation itself, who needed to repair its wayward actions. Rashi and R. Yosef Kara, in contrast, maintain that it symbolizes the nation's service of Hashem. Both readings, however, are somewhat difficult, as there is no indication that the verse is not meant to be taken literally.  The phrase is found in the midst of a prose account which contains no other symbolic language, but is rather replete with concrete actions.<fn>Had the image been a common one, used throughout Tanakh as a metaphor, there might be room to suggest that here, too, it should be understood as such, but this is not the case.</fn></point> | ||
<point><b>Private altars after building the Mikdash</b> – According to this position, those in the Northern Kingdom did not build private altars after the ban was in effect.  As above, it is possible that this did not stem from their righteousness, but rather from a lack of desire to worship Hashem.</point> | <point><b>Private altars after building the Mikdash</b> – According to this position, those in the Northern Kingdom did not build private altars after the ban was in effect.  As above, it is possible that this did not stem from their righteousness, but rather from a lack of desire to worship Hashem.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Fix or build</b> – According to this position, there is no contradiction between the verses.  If verse 30 is metaphoric, then Eliyahu did not physically fix anything; he constructed | + | <point><b>Fix or build</b> – According to this position, there is no contradiction between the verses.  If verse 30 is metaphoric, then Eliyahu did not physically fix anything; he constructed a new altar, from scratch, in an effort to cure the nation from its spiritual ills.</point> |
− | <point><b> | + | <point><b>Eliyahu's actions</b> – These sources assume that Hashem had approved Eliyahu's decision to build a private altar due to the great benefit it was to have on the people's belief. Bereshit Rabbah even suggests that the event was foretold already in the time of Yaakov.</point> |
</category> | </category> | ||
</approaches> | </approaches> | ||
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</aht-xml> | </aht-xml> |
Version as of 01:26, 16 April 2018
Repairing the Destroyed Altar
Exegetical Approaches
New Altar
The altar had been erected by Eliyahu himself earlier in the day, but was intentionally destroyed by the Baal prophets as they called upon their god to accept their offering.
Recent Altar
The altar was built after the Beit HaMikdash was constructed, when the general prohibition against private altars was already in effect. This position subdivides regarding whether this prohibition applied to residents of the Northern Kingdom of Israel or not.
Permitted in Israel
The prohibition against private altars did not apply to those living in the Northern Kingdom because the Mikdash was inaccessible to them.
Prohibited in Israel
Though the prohibition applied equally to those living in the Northern and Southern Kingdoms, like their Judean counterparts, the nation of Israel had never stopped building private altars despite the ban.
Old Altar
The altar had been made much earlier, in one of the eras in which it was permitted to erect private altars.
- According to this approach, there might have been many altars remaining in the Northern kingdom from earlier permitted eras and this one need not have had any special significance.
- Rashi and Radak ("על פי הדרש"), nonetheless, identify the altar with that erected by Shaul after the war with Amalek, as Shemuel I 15:12 shares, "בָּא שָׁאוּל הַכַּרְמֶלָה וְהִנֵּה מַצִּיב לוֹ יָד". However, it is doubtful whether the Carmel spoken of is identical to the Mt. Carmel of our verse for Eliyahu was in the North, while Sefer Shemuel suggests that Shaul was close to Gilgal.
No Altar
The verse's description of Eliyahu fixing the destroyed altar is simply a metaphor for repairing the nation's relationship with Hashem. In reality, there had not been a destroyed altar on the mountain.