Difference between revisions of "Repairing the Destroyed Altar/2"

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<category>Recent Altar
 
<category>Recent Altar
 
<p>The altar was built after the Beit HaMIkdash was constructed, but was permitted since the Mikdash was inaccessible to those living in the Northern Kingdom.</p>
 
<p>The altar was built after the Beit HaMIkdash was constructed, but was permitted since the Mikdash was inaccessible to those living in the Northern Kingdom.</p>
<point><b>The prohibition of private altars</b> – This position might understand the prohibition to be in effect only when the nation has access to a centralized place of worship.&#160; See, for instance, R. D"Z Hoffman, who explains that private altars were allowed during the period of the conquest and judges because conditions of war impeded the nation from traveling to/constructing a permanent site of worship.&#160; This position would take his stance one step further and claim that even after the construction of the Mikdash, if circumstances were such that the nation could not access it, they would be allowed to build private altars.&#160; Thus, those in the Northern Kingdom resumed building private altars after the split of the kingdom.</point>
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<point><b>The prohibition of private altars</b> – This position might understand the prohibition to be in effect only when the nation has access to a centralized place of worship.&#160; See, for instance, R. D"Z Hoffman, who explains that private altars prohibited during the peaceful eras of Shiloh and Yerushalayi, butm were allowed during the period of the conquest and judges because conditions of war impeded the nation from traveling to/constructing a permanent site of worship.&#160; This position would take his stance one step further and claim that even after the construction of the Mikdash, if circumstances were such that the nation could not access the Mikdash (as was true o thoe lining in the Northern kingdom) , they would be allowed to build private altars.</point>
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<point><b>Eliyahu's building of the altar</b> – As a resident and prophet of the North, it was totally permitted for Eliyahu, too, to build private altars.</point>
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<point><b>"אַךְ הַבָּמוֹת לֹא סָרוּ"</b> – With regards to many of the Judean kings, we are told that despite their upright ways, there was still one area in which the nation transgressed; they still maintained private altars (הַבָּמוֹת לֹא סָרוּ). Interestingly, no such statements are not found by any of the Israelite Kings, perhaps because in the North this was not a transgression.<fn>Others might claim that building private altars to Hashem paled in comparison to the idolatry committed in the North, so there was no reason for the text to point out such minor transgressions.</fn></point>
 
</category>
 
</category>
 
<category>Old Altar
 
<category>Old Altar

Version as of 10:47, 15 April 2018

Repairing the Destroyed Altar

Exegetical Approaches

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

New Altar

The altar was erected by Eliyahu himself, earlier in the day, but was destroyed by the Baal prophets.

"וַיְפַסְּחוּ עַל הַמִּזְבֵּחַ אֲשֶׁר עָשָׂה" – Malbim finds support for his reading from this verse, suggesting that it teaches that the Baal prophets trampled an altar built by Eliyahu (hence the singular "אֲשֶׁר עָשָׂה").  Malbim assumes that at the beginning of the contest, both sides erected altars, and when the false prophets failed to get a response from the Baal, they blamed the presence of Eliyahu's altar and set out to destroy it.
Altars after the Beit HaMIkdash – According to this approach, the nation as a whole had not been making private altars after the prohibition was in effect. Eliyahu's action was a one time-event, sanctioned by Hashem, as he later says, "‎‏[וּבִדְבָרְךָ] (ובדבריך) עָשִׂיתִי אֵת כׇּל הַדְּבָרִים הָאֵלֶּה".
Fixed or built? Malbim claims that verses 30-32 are a "כלל ופרט"(general statement followed by details).  The text first shares that Eliyahu repaired his altar, and then details how that was done: via taking twelve new stones etc.  The assumption is that the stones originally used to build the altar had been dispersed by the Baal prophets.
"עַד מָתַי אַתֶּם פֹּסְחִים עַל שְׁתֵּי הַסְּעִפִּים" – When Eliyahu challenged the people's dual belief, he questioned: "עַד מָתַי אַתֶּם פֹּסְחִים עַל שְׁתֵּי הַסְּעִפִּים".  In using the same verb to convey the prophets' trampling on Eliyahu's altar, the text might be highlighting the irony of the situation. Eliyahu tells the people not to waver between two sides, and the prophets echo him, trampling Hashem's altar in a move to eliminate Hashem from the picture.  Despite their best efforts, however, their god remains absent while Hashem shows Himself in full force.
Nature of the contest – Malbim's reconstruction adds an element of violence to the competition, which is not evident at first glance.
אֶת מִזְבְּחֹתֶיךָ הָרָסוּ – According to this approach,

Recent Altar

The altar was built after the Beit HaMIkdash was constructed, but was permitted since the Mikdash was inaccessible to those living in the Northern Kingdom.

The prohibition of private altars – This position might understand the prohibition to be in effect only when the nation has access to a centralized place of worship.  See, for instance, R. D"Z Hoffman, who explains that private altars prohibited during the peaceful eras of Shiloh and Yerushalayi, butm were allowed during the period of the conquest and judges because conditions of war impeded the nation from traveling to/constructing a permanent site of worship.  This position would take his stance one step further and claim that even after the construction of the Mikdash, if circumstances were such that the nation could not access the Mikdash (as was true o thoe lining in the Northern kingdom) , they would be allowed to build private altars.
Eliyahu's building of the altar – As a resident and prophet of the North, it was totally permitted for Eliyahu, too, to build private altars.
"אַךְ הַבָּמוֹת לֹא סָרוּ" – With regards to many of the Judean kings, we are told that despite their upright ways, there was still one area in which the nation transgressed; they still maintained private altars (הַבָּמוֹת לֹא סָרוּ). Interestingly, no such statements are not found by any of the Israelite Kings, perhaps because in the North this was not a transgression.1

Old Altar

The altar had been made much earlier, in one of the eras in which it was permitted to erect private altars.

Whose altar? 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 the verse 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 which is in the North, as Sefer Shemeul suggests that Shaul was close to Gilgal at the time.

No Altar

Eliyahu's fixing of the destroyed altar is a metaphor for his repairing the nation's relationship with Hashem.