Difference between revisions of "Sin of the Golden Calf/2"
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<li><b>Aharon's perspective</b> – Rashi, however, asserts that, in contrast to the nation, Aharon had no idolatrous thoughts, and was really speaking about Hashem Himself when he said "חַג לַי"י מָחָר".  He was certain that by the morrow, Moshe would arrive and the people would return to serving Hashem.</li> | <li><b>Aharon's perspective</b> – Rashi, however, asserts that, in contrast to the nation, Aharon had no idolatrous thoughts, and was really speaking about Hashem Himself when he said "חַג לַי"י מָחָר".  He was certain that by the morrow, Moshe would arrive and the people would return to serving Hashem.</li> | ||
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
− | <point><b>Offering sacrifices and "צחוק"</b> – The fact that the people prostrate themselves<fn>Though this is not mentioned in the narrator's description of the event, when Hashem tells Moshe what the people have done, he includes their bowing.</fn> and offer sacrifices before the Calf supports the idea that they were worshiping it as a god.  Rashi maintains that the "צחוק" refers to sexual relations,<fn>He compares it to the same term found in Bereshit 39:17 whose context suggests that it refers to sexual play.</fn> which | + | <point><b>Offering sacrifices and "צחוק"</b> – The fact that the people prostrate themselves<fn>Though this is not mentioned in the narrator's description of the event, when Hashem tells Moshe what the people have done, he includes their bowing.</fn> and offer sacrifices before the Calf supports the idea that they were worshiping it as a god.  Rashi maintains that the "צחוק" refers to sexual relations,<fn>He compares it to the same term found in Bereshit 39:17 whose context suggests that it refers to sexual play.</fn> which may also have been part of the idolatrous rite.</point> |
<point><b>"וַיָּמִירוּ אֶת כְּבוֹדָם בְּתַבְנִית שׁוֹר"</b> – According to this approach, the "honor of the people" referred to in this verse is Hashem.  The psalmist, too, reads the sin as one of foreign worship, claiming that, in creating the Calf, the nation replaced Hashem with the likeness of an ox.</point> | <point><b>"וַיָּמִירוּ אֶת כְּבוֹדָם בְּתַבְנִית שׁוֹר"</b> – According to this approach, the "honor of the people" referred to in this verse is Hashem.  The psalmist, too, reads the sin as one of foreign worship, claiming that, in creating the Calf, the nation replaced Hashem with the likeness of an ox.</point> | ||
<point><b>Breaking of the Luchot</b> – According to Rashi, after Moshe saw how the people had betrayed Hashem he considered them unworthy of receiving the Torah.  This position might also suggest, like <multilink><a href="IbnEzraShemotShortCommentary32-19" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra</a><a href="IbnEzraShemotShortCommentary32-19" data-aht="source">Shemot Short Commentary 32:19</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About R. Avraham ibn Ezra</a></multilink> below, that the tablets were like a marriage document; when the people proved to be unfaithful, it was torn up.<fn>One could similarly say that the tablets were representative of the covenant between the nation and Hashem; once the people transgressed its conditions, the covenant was nullified.</fn></point> | <point><b>Breaking of the Luchot</b> – According to Rashi, after Moshe saw how the people had betrayed Hashem he considered them unworthy of receiving the Torah.  This position might also suggest, like <multilink><a href="IbnEzraShemotShortCommentary32-19" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra</a><a href="IbnEzraShemotShortCommentary32-19" data-aht="source">Shemot Short Commentary 32:19</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About R. Avraham ibn Ezra</a></multilink> below, that the tablets were like a marriage document; when the people proved to be unfaithful, it was torn up.<fn>One could similarly say that the tablets were representative of the covenant between the nation and Hashem; once the people transgressed its conditions, the covenant was nullified.</fn></point> | ||
− | <point><b>Drinking of the Calf's ashes</b> – Rashi, following R. Yose in <multilink><a href="BavliAvodahZarah43b-44a" data-aht="source">Bavli Avodah Zarah</a><a href="BavliAvodahZarah43b-44a" data-aht="source">Avodah Zarah 43b-44a</a><a href="Bavli Avodah Zarah" data-aht="parshan">About Bavli Avodah Zarah</a></multilink>, asserts that this was comparable to the test of a suspected adulteress (סוטה).  Moshe used the water to test and punish those who had been unfaithful to Hashem.<fn>According to Rashi drinking the water was not just a test but actually caused the deaths of those who had worshiped the Calf.  While the Levites punished according to judicial law, killing any who acted in front of witnesses and with warning, the water killed the people who might have slipped through the judicial process because there were no witnesses to their deed.</fn>  One might also posit that in destroying the Calf and having the people actually consume its ashes, Moshe highlighted how powerless and unworthy of worship it was.<fn>See Ramban below..</fn></point> | + | <point><b>Drinking of the Calf's ashes</b> – Rashi, following R. Yose in <multilink><a href="BavliAvodahZarah43b-44a" data-aht="source">Bavli Avodah Zarah</a><a href="BavliAvodahZarah43b-44a" data-aht="source">Avodah Zarah 43b-44a</a><a href="Bavli Avodah Zarah" data-aht="parshan">About Bavli Avodah Zarah</a></multilink>, asserts that this was comparable to the test of a suspected adulteress (סוטה).  Moshe used the water to test and punish those who had been unfaithful to Hashem.<fn>According to Rashi drinking the water was not just a test but actually caused the deaths of those who had worshiped the Calf.  While the Levites punished according to judicial law, killing any who acted in front of witnesses and with warning, the water killed the people who might have slipped through the judicial process because there were no witnesses to their deed.</fn>  One might also posit that, in destroying the Calf and having the people actually consume its ashes, Moshe highlighted how powerless and unworthy of worship it was.<fn>See Ramban below..</fn></point> |
<point><b>Role of Aharon</b> – These sources agree that Aharon did not worship the Calf, but defend his active role in different ways:<br/> | <point><b>Role of Aharon</b> – These sources agree that Aharon did not worship the Calf, but defend his active role in different ways:<br/> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
− | <li><b>Test the people</b> – R. Saadia compares Aharon to Yehu,<fn>See <a href="MelakhimII10-18-28" data-aht="source">Melakhim II 10:18-28</a>, and see below regarding the possible polemical motivations.</fn> who similarly pretended to promote idolatry, but only in order to discover and eliminate those who were guilty of Baal worship. Even though Yehu allowed the people to bring their sacrifices before punishing them (presumably to ascertain true guilt), he was nonetheless praised for his actions.  So, too, Aharon | + | <li><b>Test the people</b> – R. Saadia compares Aharon to Yehu,<fn>See <a href="MelakhimII10-18-28" data-aht="source">Melakhim II 10:18-28</a>, and see below regarding the possible polemical motivations.</fn> who similarly pretended to promote idolatry, but only in order to discover and eliminate those who were guilty of Baal worship. Even though Yehu allowed the people to bring their sacrifices before punishing them (presumably to ascertain true guilt), he was nonetheless praised for his actions.  So, too, Aharon acquiesced to the nation's request only to determine who was guilty of idolatry.<fn>R. Saadia questions why Hashem gets angry at Aharon when Yehu's actions were praised?  He answers that Aharon is only rebuked for pushing off the sacrifice and waiting for Moshe when he should have immediately tested and punished the people.</fn></li> |
− | <li><b>Delay tactics</b> – Pirkei DeRabbi Eliezer and Rashi | + | <li><b>Delay tactics</b> – Pirkei DeRabbi Eliezer and Rashi instead maintain that throughout Aharon tried to delay the people, hoping that Moshe would arrive before they sinned.  Thus, he asked specifically the women for their jewelry, assuming they would not give them up so easily<fn>Pirkei DeRabbi Eliezer even asserts that the tactic should have worked since the women refused to hand over their jewelry and even told their husbands that they were planning on fashioning something powerless.  The husbands, however, did not listen and instead gave of their own jewelry.</fn> and pushed off the feast until the next day. This defense, however, encounters difficulty in explaining why Aharon did not simply refuse to make the Calf, given the capital nature of the crime.  Moreover, it is not at all clear how afterwards he, not only avoids all punishment,<fn>In fact, opponents of this approach point to Aharon's role and lack of punishment, as proof that the sin could not have been one of belief in other gods.</fn> but also merits the priesthood.<fn>See <a href="Selection of the Priests and Levites" data-aht="page">Selection of the Priests and Levites</a> for different understandings of when Aharon was appointed priest, before or after the sin.</fn></li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>Severe sin so soon after revelation</b> – These sources offer several defenses of the nation: | <point><b>Severe sin so soon after revelation</b> – These sources offer several defenses of the nation: | ||
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<point><b>Why a calf?</b><ul> | <point><b>Why a calf?</b><ul> | ||
<li><b>Image of Hashem seen at Sinai</b> – <multilink><a href="LekachTovShemot32-4" data-aht="source">Lekach Tov</a><a href="LekachTovShemot32-4" data-aht="source">Shemot 32:4</a><a href="R. Toviah b. Eliezer (Lekach Tov)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Toviah b. Eliezer</a></multilink> posits that the people chose a calf since that was the image of Hashem that they saw at Sinai.<fn>In <a href="Shemot24-1-11" data-aht="source">Shemot 24</a> it says, "וַיִּרְאוּ אֵת אֱלֹהֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל וְתַחַת רַגְלָיו כְּמַעֲשֵׂה לִבְנַת הַסַּפִּיר" which Lekach Tov assumes refers to the legs of angels which resemble the feet of calves.</fn>  R"A Bazak<fn>See his article, "<a href="http://etzion.org.il/en/ideological-basis-sin-golden-calf">The Ideological Basis of the Sin of the Golden Calf.</a>"</fn> supports this idea by connecting the nation's vision of "מַעֲשֵׂה לִבְנַת הַסַּפִּיר" with Yechezkel's prophecy of  "מַרְאֵה אֶבֶן סַפִּיר".‎<fn>See <a href="Yechezkel1-4-1026" data-aht="source">Yechezkel 1</a>.</fn>  There Yechezkel describes the four headed creature that he sees as having "the legs of a calf" ("וְכַף רַגְלֵיהֶם כְּכַף רֶגֶל עֵגֶל"), suggesting that at Sinai, too, the people saw a calf.</li> | <li><b>Image of Hashem seen at Sinai</b> – <multilink><a href="LekachTovShemot32-4" data-aht="source">Lekach Tov</a><a href="LekachTovShemot32-4" data-aht="source">Shemot 32:4</a><a href="R. Toviah b. Eliezer (Lekach Tov)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Toviah b. Eliezer</a></multilink> posits that the people chose a calf since that was the image of Hashem that they saw at Sinai.<fn>In <a href="Shemot24-1-11" data-aht="source">Shemot 24</a> it says, "וַיִּרְאוּ אֵת אֱלֹהֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל וְתַחַת רַגְלָיו כְּמַעֲשֵׂה לִבְנַת הַסַּפִּיר" which Lekach Tov assumes refers to the legs of angels which resemble the feet of calves.</fn>  R"A Bazak<fn>See his article, "<a href="http://etzion.org.il/en/ideological-basis-sin-golden-calf">The Ideological Basis of the Sin of the Golden Calf.</a>"</fn> supports this idea by connecting the nation's vision of "מַעֲשֵׂה לִבְנַת הַסַּפִּיר" with Yechezkel's prophecy of  "מַרְאֵה אֶבֶן סַפִּיר".‎<fn>See <a href="Yechezkel1-4-1026" data-aht="source">Yechezkel 1</a>.</fn>  There Yechezkel describes the four headed creature that he sees as having "the legs of a calf" ("וְכַף רַגְלֵיהֶם כְּכַף רֶגֶל עֵגֶל"), suggesting that at Sinai, too, the people saw a calf.</li> | ||
− | <li><b>Hashem's choice of "throne"</b> – R" A Bazak points to the parallel verses in Yechezkel 1:10 and 10:14 to prove that a "שור" is the same form known elsewhere as  "כרובים".‎<fn>Yechezkel 1:10 lists the four faces of the beast of Yechezkel's vision as being man, lion, ox, and eagle. The parallel verse in 10:14 lists, cherub, lion, man and eagle, suggesting that the ox and cherub must be synonymous. Cf. Cassuto below who, in contrast, distinguishes between the form of the cherubs and that of the Calf, claiming that the former were fantastical creatures. It was for this very reason that they were allowed in the Mishkan; they could not be mistaken for a real animal which could eventually come to be worshiped in place of Hashem.</fn>  If so, in making a throne for Hashem the people chose the same image that Hashem Himself had designated for his "throne" in the Mishkan.<fn>The entire vision in Yechezkel also suggests that the Keruvim were meant to be Hashem's "chariot", carrying His presence.  See also R. Kasher, | + | <li><b>Hashem's choice of "throne"</b> – R" A Bazak points to the parallel verses in Yechezkel 1:10 and 10:14 to prove that a "שור" is the same form known elsewhere as  "כרובים".‎<fn>Yechezkel 1:10 lists the four faces of the beast of Yechezkel's vision as being man, lion, ox, and eagle. The parallel verse in 10:14 lists, cherub, lion, man and eagle, suggesting that the ox and cherub must be synonymous. Cf. Cassuto below who, in contrast, distinguishes between the form of the cherubs and that of the Calf, claiming that the former were fantastical creatures. It was for this very reason that they were allowed in the Mishkan; they could not be mistaken for a real animal which could eventually come to be worshiped in place of Hashem.</fn>  If so, in making a throne for Hashem the people chose the same image that Hashem Himself had designated for his "throne" in the Mishkan.<fn>The entire vision in Yechezkel also suggests that the Keruvim were meant to be Hashem's "chariot", carrying His presence.  See also R. Kasher, תורה שלמה, Volume 21 (Jerusalem, 1992): 206-208, who further develops this general idea.</fn> </li> |
− | <li><b>Convention of the time</b> – Throughout the Ancient Near East, deities were often depicted as standing on pedestals of beasts, usually a bull or lion.<fn>See N. Sarna, Exploring Exodus (New York, 1996): 217-219 and the sources cited there.</fn> Aharon might have simply copied the standard artistic convention, with the important difference of not adding any image of Hashem Himself atop the pedestal.</li> | + | <li><b>Convention of the time</b> – Throughout the Ancient Near East, deities were often depicted as standing on pedestals of beasts, usually a bull or lion.<fn>See N. Sarna, Exploring Exodus (New York, 1996): 217-219, and the sources cited there.</fn> Aharon might have simply copied the standard artistic convention, with the important difference of not adding any image of Hashem Himself atop the pedestal.</li> |
</ul></point> | </ul></point> | ||
<point><b>Sinning so soon after revelation</b> – According to this approach, Hashem's revelation at Mt. Sinai might itself have contributed to the sin.  The experience left the nation with a desire for continued connection. Having heard Hashem's voice, they had a need for a more tangible expression of His presence.</point> | <point><b>Sinning so soon after revelation</b> – According to this approach, Hashem's revelation at Mt. Sinai might itself have contributed to the sin.  The experience left the nation with a desire for continued connection. Having heard Hashem's voice, they had a need for a more tangible expression of His presence.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Aharon's role</b> – This approach presents Aharon as acting in the name of Hashem throughout, making the Calf with the sole intention of using it to serve Hashem. R. Kasher<fn> | + | <point><b>Aharon's role</b> – This approach presents Aharon as acting in the name of Hashem throughout, making the Calf with the sole intention of using it to serve Hashem. R. Kasher<fn>See discussion in תורה שלמה, Volume 21 (Jerusalem, 1992): 206-208.</fn> portrays him as making an understandable mistake; if Keruvim were allowed in the Mishkan, Aharon thought that they or their equivalent should be allowed outside as well.  R. Kasher<fn>See the <multilink><a href="NetzivShemot32-2" data-aht="source">Netziv</a><a href="NetzivShemot32-2" data-aht="source">Shemot 32:2</a><a href="R. Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin (Netziv)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin</a></multilink> who precedes him in this defense.</fn> even suggests that the prohibition "לֹא תַעֲשׂוּן אִתִּי אֱלֹהֵי כֶסֶף" found at the end of Shemot 20 is written out of place and was only given in the aftermath of and as a corrective to Aharon's error.<fn>Cf. Ibn Ezra who asserts that this was the command that Aharon and the people transgressed in creating the Calf.</fn></point> |
<point><b>"עֲשֵׂה לָנוּ אֱלֹהִים"</b> – These sources understand the word "אֱלֹהִים" to refer to Hashem.  The people were not requesting that Aharon create a new deity, but a vehicle through which they could access Hashem.</point> | <point><b>"עֲשֵׂה לָנוּ אֱלֹהִים"</b> – These sources understand the word "אֱלֹהִים" to refer to Hashem.  The people were not requesting that Aharon create a new deity, but a vehicle through which they could access Hashem.</point> | ||
<point><b>"אֵלֶּה אֱלֹהֶיךָ יִשְׂרָאֵל אֲשֶׁר הֶעֱלוּךָ מֵאֶרֶץ מִצְרָיִם"</b> – The people refer to the Calf as having taken them out of Egypt because the Calf was representative of Hashem who did in fact do so.<fn>Cassuto also raises the possibility that despite the original intentions, at some point many of the people mistook the calf for an actual god. It was these people who cried, "אֵלֶּה אֱלֹהֶיךָ יִשְׂרָאֵל אֲשֶׁר הֶעֱלוּךָ מֵאֶרֶץ מִצְרָיִם".  Their plural language suggests that although they did not forget Hashem, they thought that the Calf, too, deserved to be worshiped in its own right.</fn></point> | <point><b>"אֵלֶּה אֱלֹהֶיךָ יִשְׂרָאֵל אֲשֶׁר הֶעֱלוּךָ מֵאֶרֶץ מִצְרָיִם"</b> – The people refer to the Calf as having taken them out of Egypt because the Calf was representative of Hashem who did in fact do so.<fn>Cassuto also raises the possibility that despite the original intentions, at some point many of the people mistook the calf for an actual god. It was these people who cried, "אֵלֶּה אֱלֹהֶיךָ יִשְׂרָאֵל אֲשֶׁר הֶעֱלוּךָ מֵאֶרֶץ מִצְרָיִם".  Their plural language suggests that although they did not forget Hashem, they thought that the Calf, too, deserved to be worshiped in its own right.</fn></point> |
Version as of 02:24, 26 February 2016
Sin of the Golden Calf
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
In attempting to understand the Sin of the Golden Calf, exegetes find themselves in a quandary. On one hand, the sin must have been egregious enough to merit the nation's near-destruction, yet on the other hand it is difficult to fathom how they, and especially Aharon, could blunder so greatly so soon after the Revelation at Mt. Sinai. Commentators find different balances between these competing issues, leading to varying understandings of the people's sin and their degree of guilt.
R. Saadia Gaon prefers to read the nation as having actually betrayed Hashem. He presents them as viewing the Calf as a god and ascribes to them the sin of belief in idolatry, while trying to defend only Aharon's role. The Kuzari, in contrast, attempts to minimize both Aharon and the people's sin, portraying them as having positive, albeit misguided, intentions. The nation desired a tangible object which could represent Hashem and to whom they could direct their worship. They erred only in not recognizing that all graven images are prohibited, even of Hashem Himself.
R"Y Bekhor Shor goes the furthest in his defense of the nation, divorcing the people's actions from any form of idolatry or disloyalty to Hashem. He has the people ask to replace only the missing Moshe, not Hashem. Finally, it is also possible that different portions of the nation viewed the Calf in different ways, and that the above approaches are not mutually exclusive.
Alternative Deity
The nation viewed the Calf as a god and worshiped it either together with or instead of Hashem. In doing so, they transgressed the commandment, "You shall have no other gods before Me".
- Lost access to the Divine – R. Avraham b. HaRambam claims that the Israelites believed that only someone as perfect as Moshe could access Hashem, and that without him, they did not have the power to do so. As such, when they assumed that Moshe was not coming back,3 they decided to return to the idolatry they had known in Egypt.4
- Lost a perceived deity – Alternatively, this position could posit that the nation had actually perceived Moshe Himself as a god, thinking that all the miracles he performed stemmed from his own powers. Thus, when they believed that he was not returning, they created a new god to take his place.
- Egyptian god – Philo maintains that the people chose a bull to imitate the Egyptian God, Typhos, with whom they would have been familiar.6
- Astrological sign – R. Avraham b. HaRambam cites his father who posits instead that the people might have asked for a calf, thinking that it was under the influence of that astrological sign that they left Egypt. Thus, they refer to it as, "אֵלֶּה אֱלֹהֶיךָ יִשְׂרָאֵל אֲשֶׁר הֶעֱלוּךָ מֵאֶרֶץ מִצְרָיִם".
- People's shorthand – This approach could understand this phrase to mean that "tomorrow there will be a feast for [the god who is replacing] Hashem".
- Aharon's perspective – Rashi, however, asserts that, in contrast to the nation, Aharon had no idolatrous thoughts, and was really speaking about Hashem Himself when he said "חַג לַי"י מָחָר". He was certain that by the morrow, Moshe would arrive and the people would return to serving Hashem.
- Test the people – R. Saadia compares Aharon to Yehu,12 who similarly pretended to promote idolatry, but only in order to discover and eliminate those who were guilty of Baal worship. Even though Yehu allowed the people to bring their sacrifices before punishing them (presumably to ascertain true guilt), he was nonetheless praised for his actions. So, too, Aharon acquiesced to the nation's request only to determine who was guilty of idolatry.13
- Delay tactics – Pirkei DeRabbi Eliezer and Rashi instead maintain that throughout Aharon tried to delay the people, hoping that Moshe would arrive before they sinned. Thus, he asked specifically the women for their jewelry, assuming they would not give them up so easily14 and pushed off the feast until the next day. This defense, however, encounters difficulty in explaining why Aharon did not simply refuse to make the Calf, given the capital nature of the crime. Moreover, it is not at all clear how afterwards he, not only avoids all punishment,15 but also merits the priesthood.16
- Influence of mixed multitudes (ערב רב) – Tanchuma, Rashi, and R. Avraham b. HaRambam (in the name of his grandfather) attempt to defend the people by suggesting that the idolatry was not really their initiative, but that of the mixed multitudes who had joined the nation upon leaving Egypt. Tanchuma claims that it was their magic which produced the Calf and animated it leading the people to believe in it.17 As support, Rashi points to the fact that the people say "אֵלֶּה אֱלֹהֶיךָ יִשְׂרָאֵל", speaking from the perspective of outsiders and non-members of Israel.18
- Influence of Satan – Tanchuma, Rashi and Pirkei DeRabbi Eliezer also suggest that the Satan further negatively influenced the nation, leading the people to believe that Moshe had died, or helping to create the Calf.
- Slow to change – Alternatively, it is possible that the people had never really forsaken the idolatrous beliefs they held in Egypt.19 One time miracles, even on the scale of Hashem's revelation, are not enough to change a person's mindset for good. To instill long lasting belief the people needed continuous education and miracles.20 Thus, as soon as Moshe left, without a teacher to guide them, the people naturally fell back into their old ways.
Image of Hashem
The people viewed the Calf as a concrete object through which they could worship Hashem, similar to the role later played by the Mishkan and Ark. They did not worship foreign gods, but did transgress the prohibition of "You shall not make a graven image", which includes any representation of Hashem Himself.
- R. Yehuda HaLevi asserts that when Moshe ascended the mountain, he was supposed to return with the Tablets and Ark which would serve as a tangible object to which the nation could direct their service to Hashem.23 However, when forty days passed they feared that Moshe would never return,24 and decided to create their own physical symbol of Hashem instead.
- Cassuto explains similarly but suggests that the nation looked to create a throne for Hashem's providence, similar to the role played by the Keruvim (cherubs) in the Mishkan.25
- Image of Hashem seen at Sinai – Lekach Tov posits that the people chose a calf since that was the image of Hashem that they saw at Sinai.26 R"A Bazak27 supports this idea by connecting the nation's vision of "מַעֲשֵׂה לִבְנַת הַסַּפִּיר" with Yechezkel's prophecy of "מַרְאֵה אֶבֶן סַפִּיר".28 There Yechezkel describes the four headed creature that he sees as having "the legs of a calf" ("וְכַף רַגְלֵיהֶם כְּכַף רֶגֶל עֵגֶל"), suggesting that at Sinai, too, the people saw a calf.
- Hashem's choice of "throne" – R" A Bazak points to the parallel verses in Yechezkel 1:10 and 10:14 to prove that a "שור" is the same form known elsewhere as "כרובים".29 If so, in making a throne for Hashem the people chose the same image that Hashem Himself had designated for his "throne" in the Mishkan.30
- Convention of the time – Throughout the Ancient Near East, deities were often depicted as standing on pedestals of beasts, usually a bull or lion.31 Aharon might have simply copied the standard artistic convention, with the important difference of not adding any image of Hashem Himself atop the pedestal.
- A lesson to the nation – This approach might claim that Moshe realized that before bringing another concrete symbol of Hashem's presence to the people, he needed to make sure they recognized that it was just a symbol, and not itself worthy of worship. Destroying the tablets was a lesson to the people, dispelling any notion that it was a power on its own.
- Nullifying the covenant – Since the nation transgressed one of the conditions of the covenant, "לֹא תַעֲשֶׂה לְךָ פֶסֶל וְכׇל תְּמוּנָה", they voided the covenant as a whole.38
Guide for the Wilderness
Bereft of Moshe's leadership and his connection to the Divine, the people searched for an alternative to guide them in the wilderness. Their sin was more closely related to sorcery than to idolatry.
- Moshe the prophet – Ramban assumes that the people viewed Moshe as a prophet with special access to the Divine, giving him the ability to perform miracles and knowledge of their future path. Without such access, they felt lost, leading them to look for an alternative "איש אלהים".
- Moshe the magician – Abarbanel posits that throughout their travels, the nation constantly doubted Hashem, and even attributed the Exodus to Moshe and Aharon rather than Him. They assumed that Moshe on his own had special powers to work miracles. Thus, with his absence, they asked Aharon, whom they thought knew Moshe's secrets, to create a different being which might call on similar powers.
- Moshe the fraud – R. Ashkenazi, in contrast, asserts that the people did not doubt Hashem but rather Moshe. Aware of the prophecy that they were supposed to be in Egypt for 400 years, they worried that the early Exodus46 was proof that Moshe was not sent by Hashem but rather that he was acting on his own. As such, they took his disappearance as proof that he must not have been Hashem's messenger, and might have even been happy to replace him.
- Human replacement – R. Yosef Bekhor Shor posits that the nation requested a human alternative to Moshe, and that "אֱלֹהִים" here takes its secular connotation of judge or leader.47 It was Aharon who decided to create an object instead of appointing a person.48
- Object of magical powers – Rashbam, Ralbag and Abarbanel maintain that the Children of Israel requested a talisman which could foretell the future through sorcery or magic, and the word "אֱלֹהִים" refers to something with supernatural abilities.49
- Replacement for the Aron – R. Eliezer Ashkenazi posits that Moshe had promised to bring the people an ark whose job would be to guide and go before them, like a banner, until they reached settled lands.50 It was this "national flag" that they wished to replace.51 According to him, "אֱלֹהִים" might be short for "ארון אלהים", or simply means guide.
- Aharon's initiative – According to R"Y Bekhor Shor it was Aharon's idea to create an inanimate leader rather than appoint a human one.52 He feared that the people would be quick to switch their allegiance to a different human, leading to fighting when Moshe returned. However, if he made a golden form without any powers, as soon as Moshe returned they would abandon it and return to Moshe.
- Nation's initiative - Abarbanel, in contrast, maintains that the people specifically asked for an immobile object that could invoke heavenly powers, rather than a human, since humans are mortal and might disappear (as proven by Moshe). He suggests that they might have chosen a bull as that was the astrological sign following that of the ram which was held sacred by Egypt, and they believed that through it Moshe defeated Egypt.
- Abarbanel asserts that the people did not believe that the Calf they had just made actually took them out of Egypt but rather that a form similar to it might have been the source of Moshe's powers that enabled him to successfully lead the people. Ibn Ezra suggests more simply that the people meant that this new leader was replacing he who took them out of Egypt.
- R. Ashkenazi, in contrast, assumes that already with its creation, some people strayed after the Calf and actually believed that it was the power who took them out of Egypt. This stemmed form their belief that the God of Avraham who had decreed that they would be in Egypt or 400 years could not have been the One to lead the Exodus.
- For Hashem – R"Y Bekhor Shor maintains that the sacrifices were for Hashem's honor, a natural part of any inaugural ceremony. He compares it to the celebration when Shaul was anointed, which was similarly accompanied by sacrifices and happiness (the "צחוק" of our verse).
- For idolatry– Ibn Ezra, Ralbag, Abarbanel, and R. Ashkenazi, in contrast, all assert that part of the nation erred and began to worship the Calf as a deity, bowing and sacrificing to it.
- Intentional – Shadal posits that Moshe might have wanted to shock the nation back to their senses, while Ralbag suggests that this was a nullification of the covenant since people had turned the Calf into a deity.
- Unintentional – Rashbam, in contrast, asserts that upon seeing the Calf, Moshe's strength left him and he dropped the tablets.53 E. Touitou54 suggests that Rashbam's somewhat difficult read of the verse55 might have polemical motivations. Christians understood that the due to the sin, the Sinai Covenant was nullified and subsequent commandments were given to punish the nation for their betrayal of Hashem. As such, Rashbam goes out of his way to show that the sin was not a rejection of Hashem and that it did not involve breaking the Covenant.
- Incidental – R"Y Bekhor Shor posits that Moshe did not actively give the nation of the ashes to drink. He had simply sprinkled the Calf's remains in the water to dispose of them, but since this was the nation's water source while in Sinai they ended up drinking it.
- Intentional lesson – The other commentators who assume that some of the nation actively worshiped the Calf, assert that this action was aimed at them. Ramban and Ralbag maintain that Moshe wanted to demonstrate the Calf's futility, that a god which can be drunk is not worthy of worship.56
- According to R"Y Bekhor Shor, Aharon never even intended to infuse the Calf with any magical abilities and throughout was simply trying to placate the people by providing a powerless leader whom they would abandon as soon as Moshe arrived. As such he does not sin at all. This makes his appointment as priest understandable but Hashem's anger at him appear unwarranted.57
- The others portray Aharon as trying to procrastinate58 both so that the people would recognize that a man-made object cannot be a deity and in the hopes that Moshe would come before anyone acted. Despite his intentions, however, the people did stray, making Aharon himself also culpable.59
- Zealous for Moshe's honor – According to R"Y Bekhor Shor Hashem's actions were aimed at avenging Moshe's honor, not His own.60
- Angry at idolaters – The other sources assert that Hashem was angry at the minority who strayed after the Calf and viewed it as a god.
Combination
As the nation was not a homogeneous group, it is possible that while some people viewed the Calf as an alternative god, others believed that it was simply a tangible representation of Hashem and yet others looked to it to guide them in their travels.