When Did the Ceremony on Mt. Eival Occur/2

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When Was the Ceremony on Mt. Eival?

Exegetical Approaches

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Before the Conquest

The ceremony at Mt. Eival took place on the same day that the Israelites crossed the Jordan River and entered Israel.

Chronology of the chapters – These commentators all maintain that the ceremony at Mt. Eival is not recorded in its chronological place (which would have been in Chapter 4),1 but do not explain the reason for the achronology.
"בַּיּוֹם אֲשֶׁר תַּעַבְרוּ אֶת הַיַּרְדֵּן" – According to this approach, the word "בַּיּוֹם" is understood literally to refer to the very same day that the nation crossed the Jordan River.  It is this directive (and the statement that Yehoshua acted as commanded by Moshe) which motivates them to posit that Yehoshua must not have waited before setting up the ceremony.
How did they get to Mt. Eival? This position must explain how the entire nation (including children)2 could have traveled all the way from Gilgal to Mt. Eival (and back) in one day, especially if this was in still unconquered territory.3  The commentators offer two possible solutions:
  • Miracle – Tosefta Sotah 8:6 places Mt. Eival near Shekhem,4 but asserts that Hashem miraculously brought the nation there.
  • Different mountain – R. Eliezer,5 in contrast, maintains that the verses refers not to the Mt. Eival which is near Shekhem, but to two mountains that are close to the Jordan.6 As evidence, he points to the Torah's description of the site as being "מוּל הַגִּלְגָּל".‎7
Why now? Since the ceremony marked a renewal of the covenant between Hashem and the Nation of Israel, it was appropriate to do so immediately upon entering the land.  Furthermore, in writing the Torah on the stones, the nation announced their recognition that the imminent conquest was contingent on their observance of the Torah.8
Stones for the ceremony – According to most of these sources,9 the stones that were used for the ceremony had been taken from the Jordan, as described in Yehoshua 4:2-3.10  The people carried the twelve rocks to the mountain, and then returned them to Gilgal where they were set up as memorial. Radak points out that the description of the gathering and erecting of the stones in Gilgal concludes with "כְּכֹל אֲשֶׁר צִוָּה מֹשֶׁה אֶת יְהוֹשֻׁעַ" (Yehoshua 4:10). This might support the idea that this act was a fulfillment of the commands of Devarim 27.  Nonetheless, one would have expected some more explicit mention of the connection to the ceremony in Mt. Eival.
Why were  Mt. Eival and Gerizim chosen? If the mountains were near the Jordan, that could explain their choice.  If they were more centrally located, however, it is not clear why Hashem would choose a site that required a miracle to reach. In addition, it is strange that Hashem would choose to have the ceremony there rather than in Gilgal itself, considering that they were to dissemble the rocks from the mountain only to re-erect them in Gilgal.11
Memorial for crossing? According to Yehoshua 4, the monument in Gilgal was meant to memorialize the miracle of the crossing.  Using the very stones from Mt. Eival for this purpose might be a further expression of the idea that it is only through Torah and observance of God's covenant that the people merit miracles.
Relationship between Devarim 8:1-3 and 8:4-8 – These sources differ in how they explain the doubling:
  • Two commandments – According to Rashi the two sets of verses constitute two distinct commandments.  Verses 1-3 refer to the stones that were to be set up in the Jordan, while verses 4-8 refer to the stones which were to be erected on Mt. Eival.12
  • כלל ופרט – R. Bachya, in contrast, asserts that all of the verses speak of the stones used in the ceremony at Mt. Eival.13  The doubling is simply a "כלל ופרט", a literary technique in which a unit opens with a general statement whose details are then elaborated upon.
Purpose of the writing – Rashi, following the Midrash, asserts that the entire Torah was written upon the stones in seventy languages.  This would suggest that the stones were meant to serve as an educational tool, to help spread Torah to all the nations.

Mid-Conquest

The nation went to Mt. Eival after their defeat of the Ai, as the simple sense of the verses suggests.

Chronology of the chapters – This position maintains the chronology of the chapters in Sefer Yehoshua, asserting that the ceremony appears in the text exactly when it took place.
Relationship between Devarim 8:1-3 and 8:4-8 – Abarbanel claims that the opening verses of the unit are a description of what the people will desire to do on the day of the crossing of the Jordan, while verses 4ff represent Hashem's command of what they should do instead.15  The people, in the manner of conquerors everywhere, will naturally be inclined to memorialize the crossing in writing,16 for their own honor. Hashem therefore tells them that they should build not a monument, but an altar, and write on its stones not the narrative of the crossing but words of Torah.  These stones should be erected specifically on Mt. Eival. As such, the stones will serve to glorify God rather than man.
"בַּיּוֹם אֲשֶׁר תַּעַבְרוּ" – According to Abarbanel, Hashem had never commanded the people to enact the ceremony on the day that they entered Israel.  The statement "וְהָיָה בַּיּוֹם אֲשֶׁר תַּעַבְרוּ אֶת הַיַּרְדֵּן" referred only to what the people on their own wanted to do.  Hashem's directive was more general, "וְהָיָה בְּעׇבְרְכֶם אֶת הַיַּרְדֵּן", telling the nation only that they must erect the stones at some point after crossing into Israel.  This meant that Yehoshua had no reason to try to implement Hashem's command immediately.
Where were the mountains? Abarbanel does not definitively determine the location of the mountains, opting instead to bring the opinions of both R. Yehuda (that they were the central region of the land) and R. Eliezer (that they were near Gilgal, close to the Jordan) without deciding between the two.
Why now?
  • Abarbanel asserts that after Yehoshua saw that Akhan had violated the covenant,17 leading to the defeat against the Ai, he decided it was an opportune time to renew the covenant and warn the people of the curses to befall all offenders.
  • If the mountain was near Shekhem, it is also possible that this was simply the earliest opportunity to keep Hashem's directive.  It was only after conquering the Ai, that Mt. Eival and Mt Gerizim were accessible to the people.
Purpose of the writing on the stones – Abarbanel offers two possible explanations:
  • As mentioned above, the stones were meant to replace the victory monuments of conquering armies, highlighting how Israel perceived victory as stemming from Hashem and observance of His commandments rather than from their own might.
  • Alternatively, the stones were a fulfillment of the commandment, "וּכְתַבְתָּם עַל מְזֻזוֹת בֵּיתֶךָ וּבִשְׁעָרֶיךָ", and served as "mezuzot" at the entry into the Land of Israel.
Why were Mt. Eival and Mt Gerizim chosen? If the two mountains were close to the Jordan, and the stones were meant to serve as mezuzot, then it is logical why these might have been chosen.
Relationship to monument in Gilgal – Abarbanel claims that the stones mentioned in Yehoshua 4 have nothing to do with those erected on Mt. Eival.  The monument in Gilgal was meant only to commemorate the miracle of the splitting of the Jordan.18   Abarbanel explains that the concluding phrase, that Yehoshua spoke the words of Hashem,  "כְּכֹל אֲשֶׁר צִוָּה מֹשֶׁה אֶת יְהוֹשֻׁעַ" is unrelated to the commands of Devarim 27.19  It rather refers to Yehoshua relaying to the nation Hashem's speech of encouragement in Yehoshua 1, which paralleled Moshe's speech of Devarim 11.

After the Conquest

The Israelites first performed the ceremony after they had finished the Conquest.

Chronology of the chapters – According to this approach the description of the ceremony at Mt. Eival is not written in its chronological place, appearing earlier than where it actually occurred. It is not clear, however, why the prophet would have chosen to tell the story achronologically, considering that it would not have interrupted the story line to tell of the event in its proper place.
After the conquest or settlement? While R. Yishmael places the ceremony after the 14 years of conquest and settlement, Josephus has it occur earlier, after the final battle but before the land is divided among the tribes.
"וְהָיָה בַּיּוֹם אֲשֶׁר תַּעַבְרוּ אֶת הַיַּרְדֵּן" – This position could read the word "בַּיּוֹם" to mean "period of time" rather than "day".20 Hashem had not mandated that the people travel to Mt. Eival on the very day that they entered Israel but during that general period of time.
Where were the mountains? Josephus posits that the mountains were in the vicinity of Shekhem.
Why now? This position would likely explain that Yehoshua waited until the nation was at peace so as to be able to enact the ceremony without fear of potential attack.
Why were Mt. Eival and Mt. Gerizim chosen? The mountains might have been chosen for practical purposes as the acoustics in the area would allow the blessings and curses to be heard by all.21

Two Stages

The nation fulfilled Moshe's command in two stages.  Though the first stage took place immediately after entry into Israel, the completed ceremony only occurred later.

Sources:Sanhedrin 44, R. Yishmael in Yerushalmi SotahSotah 7:3About the Yerushalmi Malbim, perhaps R. D"Z Hoffmann