Difference between revisions of "Shabbat Table Topics – Parashat Pinechas/0/en"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This topic has not yet undergone editorial review
m |
|||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
<category>What is so Special about Pinechas? | <category>What is so Special about Pinechas? | ||
− | What about Pinechas' slaying of Zimri made it so praiseworthy that it stopped a Divine plague and merited him special status and Divine favor? | + | What about Pinechas' slaying of Zimri made it so praiseworthy that it stopped a Divine plague and merited him special status and Divine favor?<br/> |
<ul> | <ul> | ||
<li>In his act, was Pinechas taking the law into his own hands or was he merely following orders?  If the former, why was this not only allowed, but praised?  If the latter, what made Pinechas' act unique?  Compare the approaches of the Bavli and the Sifre, and bring support for each possibility from the verses. </li> | <li>In his act, was Pinechas taking the law into his own hands or was he merely following orders?  If the former, why was this not only allowed, but praised?  If the latter, what made Pinechas' act unique?  Compare the approaches of the Bavli and the Sifre, and bring support for each possibility from the verses. </li> |
Version as of 05:33, 10 July 2017
Shabbat Table Topics – Parashat Pinechas
What is so Special about Pinechas? What about Pinechas' slaying of Zimri made it so praiseworthy that it stopped a Divine plague and merited him special status and Divine favor?
- In his act, was Pinechas taking the law into his own hands or was he merely following orders? If the former, why was this not only allowed, but praised? If the latter, what made Pinechas' act unique? Compare the approaches of the Bavli and the Sifre, and bring support for each possibility from the verses.
- Was Zimri's sin one of fornication or idolatry? How did it relate to the sin of the nation? How do the different possibilities affect your understanding of Pinechas' actions? For a full discussion of these issues, see Pinechas – Action and Reward.