Structure – Sefer Bemidbar/0

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Structural Analysis – Sefer Bemidbar
"From the Generation of the Wilderness to the Generation Which Entered Israel"

Boundaries of the Book

  • Names – The book is commonly called "ספר בְּמִדְבַּר"‎1 after its opening words.2 Rabbinic sources,3 though, often refer to it as "חומש הפקודים", referring to the two censuses that frame the book: the census of the second year, discussed in Chapters 1-4 and that in the fortieth year, discussed in Chapter 26. The two names capture much of the essence of the book, the preparation for entry into the land at both ends of the book and the 38 years in the wilderness described in the middle.
  • Themes – Commentators have picked on various aspects of the book which set it apart from surrounding ones:
    • Abarbanel suggests that, in contrast to Sefer Vayikra which focuses on laws of holiness and purity, the main theme of Sefer Bemidbar is leadership.
    • Netziv asserts that the book is about the transition from miraculous providence to natural order, as the nation moves from the supernatural existence of the wilderness towards life in Israel. The book, thus segues from earlier ones which focused on the miraculous, to Devarim in which Moshe prepares the people for self-government.
    • One might also suggest that while much of Torah speaks of the development of the nation's relationship with Hashem, Sefer Bemidbar stands out in that much of the book discusses the people's challenging of that relationship.
  • The above notwithstanding, the themes and laws of the opening chapters of the book clearly relate back to those of Sefer Vayikra, dealing with the Mishkan and priestly responsibilities, and it is not clear why they were not included there.4 
  • Setting – While the events of each of Sefer Vayikra and Sefer Devarim all transpire in but one place (Mount Sinai and the plains of Moav respectively), the events of Sefer Bemidbar occur in multiple sites throughout the wilderness.
  • Timing – Sefer Bemidbar describes a 38 year time-span. The surrounding books, in contrast, take place over a very short period. Though undated, Vayikra appears to take place over less than a month,5 and the vast majority of Sefer Devarim6 spans no more than five weeks.7
  • Characters – The main characters of Sefer Bemidbar, like those of the books of Shemot, Vayikra, and Devarim, are Moshe and the nation. Shemot and Vayikra speak of the generation that left Egypt (דור יוצאי מצרים), while Devarim turns to the next generation, דור באי הארץ. Sefer Bemidbar segues between the two, with the first half of the book focusing on the first generation and the second half of the book devoted to the second generation.
  • Genre – While both Sefer Vayikra and Devarim are mainly prescriptive in nature, the majority of Sefer Bemidbar consists of narrative rather than legal material.
  • A Parenthetical Book

Division into Units

I. The Generation of the Wilderness (1:1 – 20:29)
II. The Generation Which Entered Israel (21:1 – 36:13)

  • Characters
  • Setting
  • Plot
  • Timing