Difference between revisions of "The Story of the Spies in Bemidbar and Devarim/2"
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<point><b>Initiator</b> – Hashem is presented as the initiator in Bemidbar since it was He who commanded the "holy" scouting mission so that the princes could evaluate the land and allocate it among the tribes. Devarim, in contrast, focuses on the nation's request as it was the people themselves who initiated the spying mission in their desire to prepare for the conquest.</point> | <point><b>Initiator</b> – Hashem is presented as the initiator in Bemidbar since it was He who commanded the "holy" scouting mission so that the princes could evaluate the land and allocate it among the tribes. Devarim, in contrast, focuses on the nation's request as it was the people themselves who initiated the spying mission in their desire to prepare for the conquest.</point> | ||
<point><b>Who is sent?</b> The scouting mission necessitated that the twelve princes of each tribe be chosen as representatives, while the military mission could have sufficed with anonymous men.</point> | <point><b>Who is sent?</b> The scouting mission necessitated that the twelve princes of each tribe be chosen as representatives, while the military mission could have sufficed with anonymous men.</point> | ||
− | <point><b>Moshe's instructions</b> – In Bemidbar, Moshe tells the spies to appraise the quality of the land, its trees and agriculture, as the division of the land required such knowledge. In Devarim, he instead tells them to determine the route of conquest, crucial for their military strategy. It should be noted, however, that several of Moshe's instructions in Bemidbar, such as those related to the fortifications of the cities or strength of the inhabitants, | + | <point><b>Moshe's instructions</b> – In Bemidbar, Moshe tells the spies to appraise the quality of the land, its trees and agriculture, as the division of the land required such knowledge. In Devarim, he instead tells them to determine the route of conquest, crucial for their military strategy. It should be noted, however, that several of Moshe's instructions in Bemidbar, such as those related to the fortifications of the cities or strength of the inhabitants, also appear to relate to military rather than scouting needs.<fn>See R"Y Bekhor Shor and Rashbam who suggest that almost all of Moshe's instructions relate to the upcoming conquest:  For example, they maintain that Moshe told them to check if the was forested so they would know whether they could use the wood for military supplies and whether there was plenty of grain so they would know whether there would be readily available food for the army.  According to them, then, Moshe's questions present a difficulty for this position as they suggest that Bemidbar, too, speaks of a military rather than scouting mission.</fn></point> |
+ | <point><b>Keywords</b> – The keywords<fn>To easily find the keywords in each set of chapters, access the Tanakh Lab on both <a href="https://mg.alhatorah.org/TanakhLab/Bemidbar/13/1/14/39">Bemidbar 13-14</a> and <a href="https://mg.alhatorah.org/TanakhLab/Devarim/1/1/1/40">Devarim 1</a>, and click the on the "דירוג" column which will order keywords taking into account both the number of appearances of the entry in the unit and their relative frequency in Tanakh as a whole.</fn> of each chapter highlights their differing emphases.  The root "תור" appears 12 times in Sefer Bemidbar (and only once in Devarim), making it one of the most significant guiding words in the story and emphasizing the scouting aspect.  In Devarim, in contrast, the roots "דרך" and "עלה"  serve as guiding words.  These highlight how the nation focused on finding the best military route ("דרך") through which to enter the land (while simultaneously hinting that they forgot that Hashem had been guiding their path ("דרך") throughout the wilderness period, perhaps their sin).</point> | ||
<point><b>The scouted area</b> – The survey required that the spies scout out the entire land as described in Bemidbar, while the military mission required them to spy only on the hilly region of Chevron, the original intended site of entry for the conquest.</point> | <point><b>The scouted area</b> – The survey required that the spies scout out the entire land as described in Bemidbar, while the military mission required them to spy only on the hilly region of Chevron, the original intended site of entry for the conquest.</point> | ||
<point><b>Who is to blame?</b> R. Medan suggests that Moshe blames himself in Devarim because he realized that the mishap of the spies was largely due to his combining two missions which should have remained separate.  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 likely have returned with a very different report.</point> | <point><b>Who is to blame?</b> R. Medan suggests that Moshe blames himself in Devarim because he realized that the mishap of the spies was largely due to his combining two missions which should have remained separate.  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 likely have returned with a very different report.</point> | ||
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</category> | </category> | ||
<category>Literary Variation | <category>Literary Variation |
Version as of 12:25, 13 June 2020
The Story of the Spies in Bemidbar and Devarim
Exegetical Approaches
Purposeful Recasting
The differences introduced in Devarim are intentional changes made by Moshe so as to best get across his message to the new generation. Moshe purposefully presents the story in a way that emphasizes the guilt of the nation rather than the sin of the individual spies.
Two Perspectives
The variations between the two books can be explained by positing that each is telling the story from a different perspective, with Sefer Bemidbar focusing on one aspect of the mission and Sefer Devarim on another.
Literary Variation
The differences between the two accounts are not fundamental, but simply the result of literary variation. When recounting events, Torah is often brief in one place and lengthy in another, relying on the reader to fill in the gaps from knowledge of the combined accounts.
- Our story is one of many in which a character repeats an incident to another and some of the details are found only in the original story or only in the retelling. See, for example, Ramban on Bereshit 42:21, Radak on Bereshit 41:17, R"Y Bekhor Shor on Bereshit 31:3, and R"Y Kara on Shofetim13:12 ho all suggest that these are all cases of the same literary trend.
- Ramban notes also the similar phenomenon in which Torah might mentions a command but not its fulfillment or the opposite.9
Local Harmonization
Many other commentators relate to each difference individually, without trying to account for all of the changes together. Some examples follow: