Difference between revisions of "The Spies – Where Did They Tour/2"
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(Original Author: Neima Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
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<h2>Overview</h2> | <h2>Overview</h2> | ||
− | <p></p> | + | <p>Commentators on our story attempt to both solve the difficulty of fitting the long trek of the spies within the allotted forty days, and to resolve the contradiction between verses which alternately portray the spies as either visiting all of Israel or focusing only on the Southern portion of the land. In trying to do so, they challenge various assumptions commonly made about the episode. The Tanchuma and Rashi posit that the spies were the beneficiaries of a miraculous shortening of their journey which enabled them to complete their mission within forty days. In contrast, the Netziv and Hoil Moshe propose that the spies splintered into multiple groups, divvying up the country between them, while some modern commentators suggest that the spies may, in fact, have only scouted out a small section of the land. Finally, other contemporary exegetes maintain that the spies' undertaking was really a synthesis of two disparate missions.</p> |
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<category name="">The Entire Land | <category name="">The Entire Land | ||
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− | <point><b>"וַיָּתֻרוּ אֶת הָאָרֶץ מִמִּדְבַּר צִן עַד רְחֹב לְבֹא חֲמָת"</b> – This approach reads these words as describing the route | + | <point><b>"וַיָּתֻרוּ אֶת הָאָרֶץ מִמִּדְבַּר צִן עַד רְחֹב לְבֹא חֲמָת"</b> – This approach reads these words as describing the route literally traversed by the spies. |
<ul> | <ul> | ||
<li><b>The itinerary</b> – Rashi (v. 21) suggests that they followed the western border northward,<fn>He asserts that they begin in the southeast, moved westward and then traveled along the sea towards רְחֹב לְבֹא חֲמָת.</fn> while Hoil Moshe proposes that they began in the south and then followed the eastern boundaries.<fn>He points out that in the spies' report (verse 29) they make no mention of the Philistines on the west nor do they mention any details regarding the middle and north of the country. He further supports his claim from the choice of verb, "לָתוּר", which he claims relates to the root "תאר" which mean to surround.</fn> Chizkuni and R. Hirsch posit that the spies crossed the country on a diagonal, from the southeast to northwest.</li> | <li><b>The itinerary</b> – Rashi (v. 21) suggests that they followed the western border northward,<fn>He asserts that they begin in the southeast, moved westward and then traveled along the sea towards רְחֹב לְבֹא חֲמָת.</fn> while Hoil Moshe proposes that they began in the south and then followed the eastern boundaries.<fn>He points out that in the spies' report (verse 29) they make no mention of the Philistines on the west nor do they mention any details regarding the middle and north of the country. He further supports his claim from the choice of verb, "לָתוּר", which he claims relates to the root "תאר" which mean to surround.</fn> Chizkuni and R. Hirsch posit that the spies crossed the country on a diagonal, from the southeast to northwest.</li> | ||
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<category name="">Only the Negev | <category name="">Only the Negev | ||
<p>The spies did not explore the entire country, but rather only the Negev region.</p> | <p>The spies did not explore the entire country, but rather only the Negev region.</p> | ||
− | <mekorot>Olam HaTanakh, <aht source="YoelbNun">R. Yoel b. Nun</aht> | + | <mekorot><aht source="OlamHaTanakh">Olam HaTanakh</aht>, <aht source="YoelbNun">R. Yoel b. Nun</aht> |
</mekorot> | </mekorot> | ||
<point><b>"עֲלוּ זֶה בַּנֶּגֶב וַעֲלִיתֶם אֶת הָהָר"</b> – Moshe directed the leaders to the southern region of the land since this was the only place they were supposed to scout.</point> | <point><b>"עֲלוּ זֶה בַּנֶּגֶב וַעֲלִיתֶם אֶת הָהָר"</b> – Moshe directed the leaders to the southern region of the land since this was the only place they were supposed to scout.</point> | ||
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</category> | </category> | ||
<category name="">Dual Mission | <category name="">Dual Mission | ||
− | + | <p>The spies had two missions, a military reconnaissance mission which focused only on the Negev, as well as a surveying mission to determine the tribal inheritances which required them to visit the entire country.</p> | |
− | + | <mekorot>R. Yaacov Medan<fn>See R. Yaacov Medan, <a href="http://www.herzog.ac.il/tvunot/fulltext/mega10_medan.pdf">"בכייה לשעה ובכייה לדורות"</a>‎, Megadim 10 (1990): 21-37.</fn> and other modern commentators | |
− | + | </mekorot> | |
− | + | <point><b>The mission's dual focus</b> | |
− | + | <ul> | |
− | + | <li>R. Medan proposes that there were two parallel missions in which different configurations of the spies participated:<fn>According to R. Medan, Moshe erred in combining the two very different tasks into one.</fn> | |
− | + | <ul> | |
− | + | <li>A "holy" one to appraise the quality of the land and allocate the tribal inheritances. This objective necessitated the participation of all twelve tribal princes to scout ("לָתוּר") the entire country.</li> | |
− | + | <li>A "secular" one to determine military strategy. This required only a couple of men to spy (לחפר/לרגל) on Chevron and its surroundings, the first area to be conquered.</li> | |
− | + | </ul> | |
− | + | </li> | |
− | + | <li>Alternatively, there was a primary mission and a secondary one, in both of which all of the spies participated equally: | |
− | + | <ul> | |
− | + | <li>The spies' primary focus was to prepare for the upcoming conquest. This necessitated giving significant attention to Chevron and its environs, their inhabitants, and fortifications, as this was the originally intended point of entry into the land.</li> | |
− | + | <li>The secondary goal was to see the overall quality of the land and affirm its goodness. For this, the spies needed to visit a variety of sites, but not to comprehensively cover the whole country or study any place in depth.</li> | |
− | + | </ul> | |
− | + | </li> | |
− | + | </ul> | |
− | + | </point> | |
− | + | <point><b>Bemidbar vs. Devarim</b> | |
− | + | <ul> | |
− | + | <li>According to R. Medan, Bemidbar focuses on the scouting mission, while Devarim highlights the military one. Thus, Bemidbar speaks of traveling throughout the country, while Devarim recounts only the visit to Chevron.</li> | |
− | + | <li>Alternatively, in Devarim, Moshe mentions only the tour of the South as that was the critical part of the trip which had the most significant impact on the morale of the spies. Moshe is recapping the event for the next generation and thus omits the less crucial details.</li> | |
− | + | </ul> | |
− | + | </point> | |
− | + | <point><b>"וַיָּתֻרוּ אֶת הָאָרֶץ מִמִּדְבַּר צִן עַד רְחֹב לְבֹא חֲמָת"</b> – These words depict the area that the spies explored.</point> | |
− | + | <point><b>Moshe's instructions of "עֲלוּ זֶה בַּנֶּגֶב וַעֲלִיתֶם אֶת הָהָר"</b> | |
− | + | <ul> | |
− | + | <li>According to R. Medan, Moshe told the people to scout the entire land but to begin in the Negev.</li> | |
− | + | <li>Alternatively, Moshe is instructing the spies, not just to begin in the South, but to concentrate their efforts there.</li> | |
− | + | </ul> | |
+ | </point> | ||
+ | <point><b>The focus on Chevron in Bemidbar</b> – R. Medan does not address this issue but if one posits that Moshe instructed the spies to focus their attention on Chevron, it is understandable why the narrator highlights this part of the trip.</point> | ||
+ | <point><b>Singular form of "וַיָּבֹא עַד חֶבְרוֹן"</b> | ||
+ | <ul> | ||
+ | <li>R. Medan asserts that this refers to Calev, who alone was not fearful of entering the fortified Chevron and facing its giants.</li> | ||
+ | <li>Alternatively, all twelve spies visited Chevron, and the Torah's use of the singular merely indicates that the group acted in concert.</li> | ||
+ | </ul> | ||
+ | </point> | ||
+ | <point><b>Doubling of the spies' going and coming</b> – The two verses (13:21-22) describing the spies' embarking on their mission speak of both the broader survey ("וַיַּעֲלוּ וַיָּתֻרוּ אֶת הָאָרֶץ") and the more focused objective ("וַיַּעֲלוּ בַנֶּגֶב וַיָּבֹא עַד חֶבְרוֹן"). Similarly, when the spies return, there are two separate verses (13:25-26), one for the completion of each mission.<fn>R. Medan, however, does not read the verses in this manner, since he assumes that Bemidbar speaks of one mission and Devarim of the other.</fn></point> | ||
+ | <point><b>In 40 days?</b> R. Medan does not address whether the spies could have realistically crossed the country and returned in forty days. According to the second variation, though, the spies tarried only in Chevron, visiting the rest of the country much more superficially, and forty days could have sufficed.<fn>Cf. above for the discussion of the position of Rashi and others.</fn></point> | ||
+ | <point><b>Undetected by the Canaanites?</b> – R. Medan asserts that in combining the two missions, Moshe encouraged its failure, in large part because in so doing the men were much more conspicuous.<fn>If the twelve men were simply touring the land to evaluate it for purposes of tribal division they would not have appeared suspicious as they could have easily blended into the many tourists and merchants passing through the land. But when twelve men investigate fortifications, water sources, and the like, it is much more difficult not to be noticed.</fn> He suggests that the spies were met with suspicion as they neared Chevron and thus panicked at the site of the giants' questioning eyes.<fn>R. Medan proposes that the phrase "וַנְּהִי בְעֵינֵינוּ כַּחֲגָבִים וְכֵן הָיִינוּ בְּעֵינֵיהֶם" refers to their being viewed as spies rather than scouts or merchants. The beady eyes of grasshoppers match those of inquiring spies, not innocent bypassers.</fn></point> | ||
+ | <point><b>Understanding the sin</b> – The fear of the spies and their emphasis on the incidents in Chevron is readily understandable given that this was the focal point of their visit.<fn>R. Medan places much of the blame for the mishap on Moshe for mismanaging the mission. He suggests that had there been two separate delegations, with appropriate men chosen for each task and each traveling to the locations relevant to them, the spies would have likely returned with a very different report.</fn></point> | ||
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− | + | <point><b>Crux of the position</b> – </point> | |
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Version as of 02:31, 13 June 2014
The Spies – Where Did They Tour?
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Commentators on our story attempt to both solve the difficulty of fitting the long trek of the spies within the allotted forty days, and to resolve the contradiction between verses which alternately portray the spies as either visiting all of Israel or focusing only on the Southern portion of the land. In trying to do so, they challenge various assumptions commonly made about the episode. The Tanchuma and Rashi posit that the spies were the beneficiaries of a miraculous shortening of their journey which enabled them to complete their mission within forty days. In contrast, the Netziv and Hoil Moshe propose that the spies splintered into multiple groups, divvying up the country between them, while some modern commentators suggest that the spies may, in fact, have only scouted out a small section of the land. Finally, other contemporary exegetes maintain that the spies' undertaking was really a synthesis of two disparate missions.
The Entire Land
The twelve spies traversed the entire land from the Zin Wilderness in the South to the road leading to Chamat in the North. This position subdivides as to whether the spies traveled together or divided up the territory amongst themselves.
Joint Endeavor
All twelve spies toured the land together.
- Begin with the worst – According to most of these commentators, although Moshe wanted the spies to traverse the entire land, he told them to begin in the mountainous region of the Negev due to tactical reasons:
- Tanchuma and Rashi assert that Hashem wanted them to initially see the least fertile part of the land, so that they would conclude their mission on an uplifting note with the choicest areas of the country.
- Alternatively, Chizkuni proposes that Hashem wanted them to first figure out how to conquer the most difficult mountainous region, so that the rest would then seem easy in comparison.2
- Cover the whole land – Abarbanel, in contrast, maintains that Moshe's words were actually an explicit directive to visit the entire land from South to North. They were to proceed from the Negev toward "the mountain" ("הָהָר"), i.e. Hor HaHar, which is located at the northern border of the country.3
- The itinerary – Rashi (v. 21) suggests that they followed the western border northward,4 while Hoil Moshe proposes that they began in the south and then followed the eastern boundaries.5 Chizkuni and R. Hirsch posit that the spies crossed the country on a diagonal, from the southeast to northwest.
- The entire land – From Rashi's comments on v. 25, it appears that the spies covered every square meter of the country. Malbim also emphasizes that the scouts toured individual cities in the middle of the land, and did not just walk along the borders,6 while Abarbanel writes that they walked in all four directions.
- For Hoil Moshe who suggests that the spies hiked merely along the eastern perimeter of the land, it is probably a doable feat.7
- Tanchuma and Rashi, who suggest that the spies passed through the center of the country as well,8 solve the problem of the longer route by suggesting that Hashem miraculously aided them and quickened their way.9
- Following Bavli Sota, Rashi and Hoil Moshe suggest that only Calev12 entered Chevron.13
- Other commentators point out that from the report of the spies to Moshe regarding the giants, it appears that they had all visited the Chevron area. Thus, Chizkuni and R. Hirsch explain that Torah sometimes uses a singular form to describe a group acting together as one unit,14 while Abarbanel and Malbim suggest that, to avoid detection, the scouts had arrived in the city one by one.15
- Miracle – Tanchuma and Rashi suggest that this too was due to supernatural Divine intervention. Hashem ensured that a plague befell the inhabitants of Canaan, preoccupying them with their dead so that the spies could tour undetected.
- One by One – Malbim asserts that when traveling through areas where they might arouse suspicion, the spies split up. Abarbanel, similarly, asserts that the spies entered the land one by one and not as a group of twelve.
Divide and Conquer
The spies split the land up amongst themselves, with each person visiting a different section of the country.
- Hoil Moshe suggests that the spies had split the land amongst themselves, and thus only one of them arrived in Chevron.
- Netziv agrees that the spies divvied up the mission, but he maintains that they traveled in pairs. Consequently, he is compelled to propose that Calev's partner was frightened away by the giants and fortifications in Chevron, and only Calev was left to enter alone.
Only the Negev
The spies did not explore the entire country, but rather only the Negev region.
Dual Mission
The spies had two missions, a military reconnaissance mission which focused only on the Negev, as well as a surveying mission to determine the tribal inheritances which required them to visit the entire country.
- R. Medan proposes that there were two parallel missions in which different configurations of the spies participated:28
- A "holy" one to appraise the quality of the land and allocate the tribal inheritances. This objective necessitated the participation of all twelve tribal princes to scout ("לָתוּר") the entire country.
- A "secular" one to determine military strategy. This required only a couple of men to spy (לחפר/לרגל) on Chevron and its surroundings, the first area to be conquered.
- Alternatively, there was a primary mission and a secondary one, in both of which all of the spies participated equally:
- The spies' primary focus was to prepare for the upcoming conquest. This necessitated giving significant attention to Chevron and its environs, their inhabitants, and fortifications, as this was the originally intended point of entry into the land.
- The secondary goal was to see the overall quality of the land and affirm its goodness. For this, the spies needed to visit a variety of sites, but not to comprehensively cover the whole country or study any place in depth.
- According to R. Medan, Bemidbar focuses on the scouting mission, while Devarim highlights the military one. Thus, Bemidbar speaks of traveling throughout the country, while Devarim recounts only the visit to Chevron.
- Alternatively, in Devarim, Moshe mentions only the tour of the South as that was the critical part of the trip which had the most significant impact on the morale of the spies. Moshe is recapping the event for the next generation and thus omits the less crucial details.
- According to R. Medan, Moshe told the people to scout the entire land but to begin in the Negev.
- Alternatively, Moshe is instructing the spies, not just to begin in the South, but to concentrate their efforts there.
- R. Medan asserts that this refers to Calev, who alone was not fearful of entering the fortified Chevron and facing its giants.
- Alternatively, all twelve spies visited Chevron, and the Torah's use of the singular merely indicates that the group acted in concert.