Difference between revisions of "Why Was the Ark Taken/2"

From AlHaTorah.org
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Import script)
 
 
(56 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 3: Line 3:
 
<page type="Approaches">
 
<page type="Approaches">
 
<h1>Why Was the Ark Taken?</h1>
 
<h1>Why Was the Ark Taken?</h1>
 
+
<div><b><center><span class="highlighted-notice">This topic has not yet undergone editorial review</span></center></b></div>
 
<div class="overview">
 
<div class="overview">
 
<h2>Overview</h2>
 
<h2>Overview</h2>
<p></p>
+
Commentators struggle to understand what sin was so grievous that it caused not only a defeat in battle, but also the taking of the ark captive and destruction of Shiloh.&#160; Rashi and others assume that the punishment must relate to the crime and conclude that if the ark was taken captive, the sin must have been that it should never have been taken to war.&#160; Others question if this is really prohibited and focus instead on the nation's problematic worship of Hashem.&#160; Radak claims that the people were mired in idolatry, worshiping other gods.&#160; Abarbanel instead suggests that they placed too much trust in the capabilities of the ark, assuming it had the power to save them.&#160; In this they came close to another form of idolatry. Finally, Seder Eliyahu Rabbah posits that the sons of Eli were to blame for the disaster.&#160; Since the nation took no steps to prevent their actions, they were collectively responsible for their misdeeds.</div>
<continue>
 
<p></p>
 
</continue>
 
</div>
 
<p></p>
 
 
 
 
 
 
<approaches>
 
<approaches>
  
<category name="Nation's Sin">The Children of Israel's Sins
+
<category>Taking the Ark to Battle
<p>The entire nation sinned and their punishment was given for that reason.</p>
+
<p>The Children of Israel were punished for taking the Ark to battle.</p>
<opinion name="General Sing">General Sins
+
<mekorot>
<p>The Children of Israel were defeated due to their general bad actions including worshiping idols.</p>
+
<multilink><a href="RashiDevarim10-1" data-aht="source">Rashi</a><a href="RashiDevarim10-1" data-aht="source">Devarim 10:1</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Shelomo Yitzchaki</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Abarbanel #3</a><a href="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:41</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink>,<fn>Abarbanel brings five different reasons why the ark was taken.&#160; This is the third on his list.</fn> <multilink><a href="MalbimShemuelI4-3" data-aht="source">Malbim #3</a><a href="MalbimShemuelI4-3" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:3-4</a><a href="R. Meir Leibush Weiser (Malbim)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Meir Leibush Weiser</a></multilink><fn>Malbim also brings five reasons, all drawn from Abarbanel.</fn>
<mekorot>
+
</mekorot>
<multilink><aht source="RadakShemuelI4-4">Radak</aht><aht source="RadakShemuelI4-4">Shemuel I 4:4</aht><aht parshan="Radak">About R. David Kimchi</aht></multilink>,  
+
<point><b>Was this forbidden?</b> There are many verses in Tanakh which imply that it is permitted to take the ark to battle,<fn>For example, in <a href="Bemidbar10-35-36" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 10:35-36</a>, Moshe speaks of the ark traveling in front of the camp and vanquishing Israel's enemies and in&#160;<a href="Bemidbar31-6" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 31:6</a> Pinchas takes the "holy vessels" to war against Midyan.&#160; Similarly, in&#160;<a href="Yehoshua6-1-5" data-aht="source">Yehoshua 6</a>, the ark plays a role in the battle of Yericho, and in <a href="ShemuelII11-11" data-aht="source">Shemuel II 11:11</a>, Uriyah tells David that he feels uncomfortable sleeping in his home while the ark is at battle.&#160; In addition the very name, "אֲרוֹן בְּרִית י"י <b>צְבָאוֹת</b>" might further suggest that it was meant to play a military role.</fn> making this approach difficult. These commentators respond to this argument in one of two ways:
First option in <multilink><aht source="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4">Abarbanel</aht><aht source="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4">Shemuel I 4:41</aht><aht parshan="Abarbanel">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</aht></multilink>,  
+
<ul>
First option in <multilink><aht source="MalbimShemuelI4-3">Malbim</aht><aht source="MalbimShemuelI4-3">Shemuel I 4:3-4</aht><aht parshan="Malbim">About R. Meir Leibush Weiser</aht></multilink>
+
<li><b>Wrong ark</b> –&#160;Rashi, following R. Yehuda b. Lakish in the <multilink><a href="YerushalmiShekalim6-1" data-aht="source">Yerushalmi</a><a href="YerushalmiShekalim6-1" data-aht="source">Shekalim 6:1</a><a href="Talmud Yerushalmi" data-aht="parshan">About the Yerushalmi</a></multilink>, claims that there were two arks, only one of which was permitted to be taken to war, while the other was supposed to stay in the Mishkan.<fn>Rashi explains that the ark which went to battle was the wooden one made by Moshe when he went to get the Tablets, as described in <a href="Devarim10-1-2" data-aht="source">Devarim 10</a>.&#160; The other ark was the golden one made by Bezalel when he constructed all the vessels of the Tabernacle.&#160; It was supposed to remain in the Mishkan.&#160; R. Yehuda b. Lakish says that the former held the broken tablets, while the latter housed the full ones.</fn> The people sinned in that they took the wrong ark to battle.</li>
</mekorot>
+
<li><b>No Divine permission</b> – Abarbanel and Malbim suggest that the people were only allowed to take the Ark to war with explicit Divine permission.&#160; In our chapter this was lacking.</li>
<point><b>Getting rid of the idols in Shemuel I 7:2-4</b> – This approach uses the verses in chapter 7 as a proof that only then they believed in Hashem and before they believed in idols and that is why Shemuel commands them to get rid of the idols.  As a result they won in that battle right after while over here they lost.</point>
+
</ul></point>
<point><b>Mentions of Shilo in Other Places</b> – All these verses (in Yirmiyahu 7:12-14, Yirmiyahu 26:3-6 and Tehillim 78:56-60) imply that Shiloh was destroyed because of idol worship that happened there.  Yirmiyahu compares what will happen in the first temple destruction at his time to what already happened in Shiloh and it seems that the sins are the same.</point>
+
<point><b>"וַיִּשְׁלַח הָעָם שִׁלֹה וַיִּשְׂאוּ מִשָּׁם אֵת אֲרוֹן"</b> – Malbim attempts to prove from this phrase that the decision to take the Ark was that of the nation alone (וַיִּשְׁלַח<b> הָעָם</b>) and that they did not consult either Shemuel or Eli, as they were required.</point>
<point><b>The story of Micha's idol</b> – The Abarbanel and Malbim bring the story of Micha's idol as an example for the Children of Israel's worshiping of idols.  In Shoftim it mentions that the idol of Micha was there the whole time of Shiloh. This proves that there was idolatry all the way until Hashem destroys Shiloh.</point>
+
<point><b>"אֲרוֹן בְּרִית י"י צְבָאוֹת יֹשֵׁב הַכְּרֻבִים"</b> – When the Ark is taken to battle during the conquest of Yericho it is referred to simply as&#160; "הָאָרוֹן".&#8206;<fn>See also <a href="Bemidbar10-35-36" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 10:33-36</a> which also links the Ark and war and refers to it as simply "הָאָרוֹן".</fn>&#160; Here in contrast, it is give the special title, "אֲרוֹן בְּרִית י"י צְבָאוֹת יֹשֵׁב הַכְּרֻבִים", perhaps suggesting that this is a different ark, the golden one with cherubs atop and the full tablets inside.<fn>See Radak who explicitly makes this point to prove that this ark contained the full tablets.&#160; He brings further proof from the fact that it is the one later taken by David to Yerushalayim (the only other place where it gets the full title "אֲרוֹן הָאֱ-לֹהִים אֲשֶׁר נִקְרָא שֵׁם שֵׁם י"י צְבָאוֹת יֹשֵׁב הַכְּרֻבִים עָלָיו"). However, he does not agree that it was a problem to bring it to war.&#160; Those who maintain that there was only one ark, with cherubs atop, might suggest that the different titles are not significant, and that the text is simply brief&#160; in some places and lengthy in others.</fn> This distinction could support Rashi's contention that the wrong ark was taken.<fn>According to him, the ark which was permitted to be taken to battle was the wooden made by Moshe, which would not have had cherubs on top and as such would not be called "יֹשֵׁב הַכְּרֻבִים".</fn></point>
<point><b>Mentioning the sin</b> – There is no mention of this sin in these chapters and only after and in Yirmiyahu and Tehillim this sin is mentioned.  This is probably the reason that motivates other commentators not to take this approach.</point>
+
<point><b>Initial defeat in battle</b> – This approach has difficulty explaining the deaths which occurred in the first stage of the battle before the Ark was brought.&#160; At that point the nation had not yet sinned, so they should not have been deserving of defeat.</point>
<point><b>Why was the ark taken</b> – This approach mainly explains why the Children of Israel defeated though it is unclear why the ark had to be taken.  Abarbanel tries to explain this by bringing a proof from Vayikra 26:19 that if you do not listen to the Hashem's commandments he will break what the Children of Israel are proud of which possibly is the ark.</point>
+
<point><b>Taking the Ark</b> The singular punishment of the Ark being captured by the Philistines can be viewed as a measure for measure punishment for the nation's having wrongfully taken it to war.</point>
<point><b>Deaths before the bringing of the ark</b> – These commentators have no problem with the 4000 people that died before the ark was brought to battle because for them the sin was from the beginning and not only when the ark was brought.</point>
+
<point><b>References to Shiloh's destruction</b> – In later references back to the destruction of Shiloh, the verses never blame the nation's taking of the Ark to battle as the reason for Hashem's decision.&#160; This position might claim that though the nation suffered defeat and the Ark was taken, Shiloh as a whole was not yet destroyed during this war.<fn>See <a href="ShemuelI14-3" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 14:3</a> which mentions Achiyah the priest wearing the Efod "in Shiloh", suggesting that Shiloh was still a center of priestly activity during Shaul's reign.&#160; See, though, Radak and Ralbag who maintain that the words "in Shiloh" in the verse refer not back to Achiyah who is mentioned at the beginning of the verse, but only to the immediately preceding word, Eli. As such the verse would just be saying that Eli had presided in Shiloh, but nothing about Ahiyah's abode, allowing for the possibility that Shiloh indeed had been destroyed in our chapter.</fn>&#160; As such, its later destruction might have been for entirely different reasons (as enumerated in Yirmeyahu and Tehillim).</point>
</opinion>
+
</category>
 
+
<category>Wrong Worship
<opinion name="Specific Sins">Specific Sins
+
<p>The severe defeat resulted from the nation's sinning in the area of religious worship.&#160; These sources differ regarding the specific nature of the sin:</p>
<p>There was a specific sin that happened in the battle itself that caused the defeat and the exile of the ark. There are a few options for what the sin was:</p>
+
<opinion name="Foreign Gods">
<subopinion name="Asking Before War">Not Asking to go to War
+
Worship of Foreign Gods
<p>The Children of Israel did not ask if they should go to war like one is supposed to and as a result they were defeated.</p>
+
<p>The nation was punished for their idolatrous ways.</p>
<mekorot>
+
<mekorot>
<multilink><aht source="RalbagShemuelI4-1">Ralbag</aht><aht source="RalbagShemuelI4-1">Shemuel I 4:1</aht><aht parshan="Ralbag">About R. Levi b. Gershon</aht></multilink>
+
<multilink><a href="RadakShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="RadakShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:4</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About R. David Kimchi</a></multilink>,<fn>Radak combines this approach with that below, saying that both the nation and Eli's sons were guilty.</fn> <multilink><a href="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Abarbanel #1</a><a href="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:41</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="MalbimShemuelI4-3" data-aht="source">Malbim #1</a><a href="MalbimShemuelI4-3" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:3-4</a><a href="R. Meir Leibush Weiser (Malbim)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Meir Leibush Weiser</a></multilink>
</mekorot>
+
</mekorot>
<point><b>Did they not ask</b> – According to Radak actually Hashem commanded them to go to war and there was no need for the Children of Israel to ask if they should. This is how Radak explains the first words in the chapter that the speech of Shemuel came to all Israel to go to war.  Ralbag in contrast explains those words in different way as part of the last chapter.</point>
+
<point><b>Evidence of idolatry</b> – Though the opening chapters of Sefer Shemuel do not speak of idolatry,<fn>In contrast to the Books of Shofetim and Melakhim, Sefer Shemuel only speaks of the nation worshiping foreign gods once, in Shemuel I Chapter 7.</fn> these sources find evidence for it elsewhere:<br/>
<point><b>Other times in Tanakh</b> – We lots of times do not hear of the Children of Israel asking if they should go to war.<fn>For examples see Shemuel II 8:1-8, Shemuel II 12:26-31, and Shemuel II 21:18-22.</fn>  However we do hear in the last chapter of Shemuel I that Shaul dies in war because Hashem did not answer him and in Melakhim I 22 that Achav does not want to ask a prophet so he dies as oppose to Yehoshafat that does ask a prophet so he lives.</point>
+
<ul>
<point><b>Motivation</b> – It is unclear how Ralbag gets his approach especially since there are no verses that speak of that sin.</point>
+
<li><a href="Shofetim18-30-31" data-aht="source">Shofetim 18</a>&#160;Abarbanel and Malbim point to the idol of Michah as evidence of idolatry during this era, as Shofetim 18:31 notes that Mikhah's idol existed for as long as the Mishkan was in Shiloh.</li>
<point><b>Why was the ark taken</b> – This approach explains the defeat but it is unclear why the ark was taken.</point>
+
<li><a href="ShemuelI7-1-13" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 7</a>&#160;– Abarbanel also points to Chapter 7 which speaks of Shemuel's calling on the nation to rid itself of foreign gods, telling them that if they do so they will be victorious over the Philistines.&#160; This suggests that until that moment, they had been worshiping idolatry and that it was the reason for the defeat described in Chapter 4.</li>
<point><b>Winning in Shemuel I 7</b> – According to Ralbag possibly in Shemuel I 7 they win since they do ask Hashem if they should go to war.  This may be how one can explain Shemuel I 7:9 were Shemuel calls to Hashem that he should save the Children of Israel and Hashem answers him.</point>
+
<li><a href="Yirmeyahu7-1-14" data-aht="source">Yirmeyahu 7</a>&#160;– Yirmeyahu compares the destruction of Shiloh to that of the impending destruction of the Mikdash, implying that the reason for both was one and the same. Among the sins listed as causes for the latter's destruction is treachery against Hashem and straying after foreign gods, suggesting that this was prevalent in Shiloh as well.</li>
<point><b>Mentions of Shilo in Other Places</b> – Ralbag might explain that the idolatry sins mentioned in those verses might be general sins that they did at that time though that's not why the ark was taken and this battle was defeated.</point>
+
<li><a href="Tehillim78-56-64" data-aht="source">Tehillim 78</a>&#160;– The psalmist also explains that Shiloh was destroyed due to the worshiping of idols ("יַּכְעִיסוּהוּ בְּבָמוֹתָם וּבִפְסִילֵיהֶם יַקְנִיאוּהוּ").</li>
</subopinion>
+
</ul></point>
 
+
<point><b>"וַיְהִי דְבַר שְׁמוּאֵל לְכׇל יִשְׂרָאֵל"</b> – Radak claims that this verse teaches that the nation went to battle at the behest of Shemuel,<fn>Cf. Ralbag who disagrees and even suggests that the fact that the nation did not ask Hashem before fighting is what caused their defeat. See also Abarbanel who argues against Radak that it is not possible that Shemuel's first prophecy and directive to the nation would be one that led to national disaster.&#160; It would have led the people never to listen to him or believe that he truly heard the word of Hashem.</fn> and that Hashem intentionally urged them to war in order to punish them.<fn>Radak compares it to the battle of Givah in Shofetim 20 where the people also ask Hashem before fighting, are answered, but nonetheless suffer defeat. There too, Hashem pushed them to battle only in order to punish them.</fn>&#160; This would support the idea that the people sinned not during the battle itself (as claimed by the above approach) but beforehand.</point>
<subopinion name="Taking the Ark">Taking the Ark
+
<point><b>Taking of the Ark</b> – While subjugation to an enemy is often the punishment for idolatry<fn>See, for example, the cycle of Sefer Shofetim in which every time the nation turns to foreign gods, Hashem hands them over to a different foreign power.</fn> it is not clear why the Ark was also taken.&#160; Abarbanel attempts to address this by citing&#160;<a href="Vayikra26-15-19" data-aht="source">Vayikra 26:19</a> which says that the punishment for continuously not listening to Hashem's commandments<fn>Throughout the period of the judges until now the nation returned to idolatry over and over, leading to a more severe (and shocking) punishment than subjugation alone.</fn> is that He will shatter the "pride of the nation".&#160; He claims that this "pride" might refer to the Ark.</point>
<p>The Children of Israel sinned by taking the ark to battle when they were not suppose to and due to that they were defeated.</p>
+
<point><b>The Ark by the Philistines</b> – In allowing the Philistines to capture the Ark, there was a danger lest the nation conclude that the event occurred because the Philistine gods were more powerful than Hashem.&#160; If so, the punishment would have backfired, leading the nation not to repent but to instead turn to even more idolatry.&#160; Hashem, thus, dispelled any such notion by proving the Philistine gods worthless and having Dagon fall and break.</point>
<mekorot>
+
</opinion>
<multilink><aht source="YerushalmiShekalim6-1">Yerushalmi Shekalim</aht><aht source="YerushalmiShekalim6-1">Shekalim 6:1</aht><aht parshan="Yerushalmi">About the Yerushalmi</aht></multilink>,  
+
<opinion>Mistaken Cultic Beliefs
<multilink><aht source="RashiDevarim10-1">Rashi</aht><aht source="RashiDevarim10-1">Devarim 10:1</aht><aht parshan="Rashi">About R. Shelomo Yitzchaki</aht></multilink>,  
+
<p>The Children of Israel believed that the Ark would ensure their victory, forgetting that only Hashem controls their destiny, and He does so according to their merits.</p>
<multilink><aht source="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4">Abarbanel's</aht><aht source="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4">Shemuel I 4:41</aht><aht parshan="Abarbanel">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</aht></multilink> third reason,
 
Third option in <multilink><aht source="MalbimShemuelI4-3">Malbim</aht><aht source="MalbimShemuelI4-3">Shemuel I 4:3-4</aht><aht parshan="Malbim">About R. Meir Leibush Weiser</aht></multilink>
 
</mekorot>
 
<point><b>Real problem</b> – It is unclear from the verses in Tanakh if this is a real problem or not. There are a lot of verses where it seems that the Children of Israel do take the ark to battle and they are not defeated. The ark takes a role in the battle against Yericho, Moshe says when the ark is moving that Hashem's enemies should be destroyed, Pinchas takes the holy vessels which might be the ark to the war against Midyan, and Uriyah tells David that he cant sleep in his home when the ark is in battle.  These verses imply that one can take the ark to war and not like this approach.  The commentators explain in two ways this contradiction:
 
<ul>
 
<li>Talmud Yerushalmi and Rashi explain that one was allowed to take the ark but there were two arks that were made and only one went to war with them and the second stayed and they only took it out here.</li>
 
<li>Abarbanel and Malbim on the other hand explain that in general one is not allowed to take the ark to war and only when there is permission.  Over here they did not ask Shemuel or the Urim VeTumim.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</point>
 
<point><b>Mentions of Shilo in Other Places</b> – It is possible to say that these verses that speak of idolatry sins in Shilo are viewing the sin of taking the ark as bad as idolatry.  One may also explain that the idolatry and destruction of Shilo are two separate things.</point>
 
<point><b>Deaths before the sin</b> – This approach has a difficulty with all the deaths before the ark was brought and there was not any sin.</point>
 
</subopinion>
 
 
<subopinion name="Attitude to Ark">Attitude to Ark
 
<p>The Children of Israel believed that the ark will perform the winning by itself and they forgot that Hashem does the winning if they keep the Torah.</p>
 
<mekorot>
 
Fourth option in <multilink><aht source="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4">Abarbanel</aht><aht source="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4">Shemuel I 4:41</aht><aht parshan="Abarbanel">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</aht></multilink>,
 
Second option in <multilink><aht source="MalbimShemuelI4-3">Malbim</aht><aht source="MalbimShemuelI4-3">Shemuel I 4:3-4</aht><aht parshan="Malbim">About R. Meir Leibush Weiser</aht></multilink>,
 
Prof. Yehuda Elitzur, Yisrael VeHamikrah (Jerusalem, 2000): "Even HaEzer" p. 96-102
 
</mekorot>
 
<point><b>The sin</b> – These commentators use a few verses in the chapter to show that this is what the Children of Israel believed.
 
<ul>
 
<li>In verse 3 the Elders of the nation ask why Hashem defeated them and then say that they should bring the ark and it itself will save us from are enemies.</li>
 
<li>Then in verse 5 they use the shout of the Children of Israel to show that they only believed in physical part of the ark and they did not cry to Hashem that he should help them.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</point>
 
<point><b>Winning is Shemuel I 7</b> – Prof. Yehuda Elitzur suggests in his article that Tanakh is brining these two battles against the Philistines from all to compare them. He says that Tanakh is showing that only if one believes in Hashem and cries out to him will it help to win the war but if one believes in the ark that it by it self does it one would not win.</point>
 
<point><b>Mentions of Shilo in other places</b> – In Yirmiyahu 7 we hear that the Children of Israel are believing in The Mikdash and are trusting in what they lie to them that the Heikhal will save them. Then after Yirmiyahu mentions the destruction of Shilo and it is possible that the same sins are happening in the time of Yirmiyahu and the time of Shilo. Also the belief in the ark and not in Hashem could be similar to idolatry and possibly that is what Yirmiyahu and Tehillim are talking about when they mention Shilo.</point>
 
<point><b>Deaths before the sin</b> – The deaths of the 4000 people that died before the actual sin of bringing the ark are hard to explain but possibly one can say that from the beginning they were not believing that Hashem would save them rather something else.</point>
 
</subopinion>
 
</opinion>
 
</category>
 
 
 
<category name="Eli Sons Sin">Eli's Sons Sins
 
<p>Only Eli's sons sinned but the whole nation was defeated for that.</p>
 
 
<mekorot>
 
<mekorot>
<multilink><aht source="EliyahuRabbah12">Eliyahu Rabbah</aht><aht source="EliyahuRabbah12">12</aht><aht parshan="Eliyahu Rabbah" /></multilink>,
+
<multilink><a href="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Abarbanel #4</a><a href="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:41</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="MalbimShemuelI4-3" data-aht="source">Malbim #2</a><a href="MalbimShemuelI4-3" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:3-4</a><a href="R. Meir Leibush Weiser (Malbim)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Meir Leibush Weiser</a></multilink>, Prof. Yehuda Elitzur<fn>See "אבן העזר", Yisrael VeHamikra (Jerusalem, 2000): 96-102.</fn>
<multilink><aht source="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4">Abarbanel's</aht><aht source="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4">Shemuel I 4:41</aht><aht parshan="Abarbanel">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</aht></multilink> second reason,  
 
Fourth option in <multilink><aht source="MalbimShemuelI4-3">Malbim</aht><aht source="MalbimShemuelI4-3">Shemuel I 4:3-4</aht><aht parshan="Malbim">About R. Meir Leibush Weiser</aht></multilink>
 
 
</mekorot>
 
</mekorot>
<point><b>Shemuel's prophecy in last chapter</b> – These commentators use the prophecy of Shemuel in last chapter as a proof that Hashem was going to make the defeat due to Eli's son's sins. Also the first verse in the chapter that refers back according to some approaches to Shemuel's prophecy shows that this war itself is happening as a fulfillment to what Hashem told Shemuel will happen because of Eli's children's sins.</point>
+
<point><b>Evidence of mistaken attitude</b><ul>
<point><b>Eli's sons bringing the ark</b> – The Malbim also suggests that the mentioning of Eli's sons being right next to the ark when it was taken shows that the ark was taken as a result of Eli's sons sins and it is possible that the whole defeat was also as a result for the same sin.</point>
+
<li><b>"וְיֹשִׁעֵנוּ מִכַּף אֹיְבֵינוּ"</b> – The nation's mistaken attitude towards the Ark is apparent in their decision to bring it to battle so that "it" might save them ( "נִקְחָה אֵלֵינוּ מִשִּׁלֹה אֶת אֲרוֹן בְּרִית י"י... <b>וְיֹשִׁעֵנוּ</b> מִכַּף אֹיְבֵינוּ").&#160; They do not pray to Hashem that He save them, but assume that the Ark itself will provide victory.&#160;</li>
<point><b>Mentioning of the Sin</b> – This is the only clear sin that is mentioned in last few chapters and this might prompt these commentators to take this approach.</point>
+
<li><b>Contrast to Philistines</b>&#160;The error is highlighted when the nation's reaction to the Ark is contrasted with that of the Philistines.&#160; Upon the Ark's arrival in the camp, the Philistines cry out: "בָּא <b>אֱ-לֹהִים</b> אֶל הַמַּחֲנֶה... אוֹי לָנוּ מִי יַצִּילֵנוּ מִיַּד <b>הָאֱ-לֹהִים</b> הָאַדִּירִים הָאֵלֶּה".&#160; Ironically, only they recognize that behind the Ark stands Hashem, and it is Hashem whom one must fear, not the Ark itself.<fn>One could instead read these verses to suggest that the Philistines' beliefs were worse than those of Israel and that they saw the Ark itself as a god.</fn></li>
<point><b>Collective punishment</b> – The main problem with this approach is that there are only two people that are sinning and the whole nation is being defeated for that. Though this is not the only case in Tanakh were it happens:
+
<li><b>Allusions to the Exodus</b> – In Chapters&#160;<a href="ShemuelI4-1-11" data-aht="source">4:8</a> and&#160;<a href="ShemuelI6-6" data-aht="source">6:6</a> the Philistines explicitly warn each other of Hashem's wondrous punishment of the Egyptians, recalling the plagues and their goal: "so that you shall know that I am your God".<fn>This idea serves as a refrain throughout the opening chapters of Sefer Shemot.&#160; See, for instance, Shemot: 6:7; 7:1-5; 7:17; 8:18; 10:2; and 14:18.&#160; For elaboration, see <a href="Purpose of the Plagues" data-aht="page">Purpose of the Plagues</a>.</fn>&#160; This is the same message that needs to be taught here: recognition of Hashem (and not his symbols) as the supreme power.</li>
<ul>
+
</ul></point>
<li>The famous case is in Yehoshua 7 were Achan takes from the cheirem and the nation is defeated in their battle against the Ay.</li>
+
<point><b>Later references to Shiloh's destruction</b> – Much of&#160;<a href="Yirmeyahu7-1-14" data-aht="source">Yirmeyahu 7</a> focuses on the nation's wrong belief that the Mikdash was invincible and would always protect the people regardless of their actions.<fn>Yirmeyahu tells the people not to rely on their false belief in the security of the Temple (אַל תִּבְטְחוּ לָכֶם אֶל דִּבְרֵי הַשֶּׁקֶר לֵאמֹר הֵיכַל י"י הֵיכַל י"י הֵיכַל י"י הֵמָּה), thinking that they can steal, murder and swear falsely, and then come to the Mikdash and be saved ("וַאֲמַרְתֶּם נִצַּלְנוּ"). He compares the Mikdash to a robber's den where thieves come to hide after committing their crimes. See the similar message relating to the Ark specifically in Yirmeyahu 3:16.</fn> To prove his point, Yirmeyahu points to the destruction of Shiloh.&#160; The comparison suggests that in both stories the nation's sin was identical: forgetting that cultic objects are purely symbolic and power lies not in them but Hashem.&#160; It is one's actions which will lead to Hashem's salvation, not possession of a holy building or artifact.</point>
<li>Hashem tells Moshe and Aharon in Bemidbar 16 that he is going to get rid of the nation and Moshe asks him that he is going to punish the hole nation for a sin of one person.</li>
+
<point><b>Victory in Shemuel I 7</b> – The many points of contact between the wars of Chapter 4 and Chapter 7 might further support this reading of the sin. Both involve battles between Israel and the Philistines that take place at the site Even Ha'ezer.<fn>Commentators disagree if the two אֶבֶן הָעֵזֶר's refers to identical sites or to distinct places with the same name. Radak identifies the two, but claims that the site only got its name after the second battle, since in the original battle, אֶבֶן הָעֵזֶר (lit. Stone of Salvation) had really been an "אבן נגף" (Stone of Plague).&#160; Prof. Elitzur disagrees, suggesting that the text is not implying geographic overlap, but rather prophetic identity.&#160;&#160; The text is intentionally calling on the reader to compare the two battles and question why in one case the site is really a "stone of salvation" and in the other it is not.</fn>&#160; However, while in the former the people say "let us take the Ark and it will save us ("נִקְחָה ... אֶת אֲרוֹן... וְיֹשִׁעֵנוּ") in the latter, they pray to Hashem that He may save them ("אַל תַּחֲרֵש... מִזְּעֹק אֶל י"י "אֱ-לֹהֵינוּ וְיֹשִׁעֵנוּ).&#160; As such, in place of the Israelites being defeated ("וַיִּנָּגֶף יִשְׂרָאֵל"), it is the Philistines who lose in Chapter 7 ("וַיִּנָּגְפוּ לִפְנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל").<fn>There are other literary allusions as well. Compare 4:6-7 "וַיִּשְׁמְעוּ פְלִשְׁתִּים... וַיִּרְאוּ הַפְּלִשְׁתִּים" with 7:7, "וַיִּשְׁמְעוּ בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל וַיִּרְאוּ מִפְּנֵי פְלִשְׁתִּים", and 4:5 "וַיָּרִעוּ ... תְּרוּעָה גְדוֹלָה וַתֵּהֹם" with 7:10 "וַיַּרְעֵם י"י בְּקוֹל גָּדוֹל...וַיְהֻמֵּם ".&#160; For a full list of parallels and analysis of them see M. Garsiel, ספר שמואל: עיון ספרותי במערכי השוואה באנאלוגיות ובמקבילות, (Ramat Gan, 1983): 42-44.</fn>&#160; Chapter 7, thus, provides a model of correct worship to rectify the corrupted worship of Chapter 4.</point>
</ul>
+
<point><b>Initial defeat</b> – This approach might account for the deaths of the first four thousand people (before binging the Ark to battle) by saying that the nation's hopes in the Ark merely reflected a problem that already existed. Chapters 1-3 of the book already hint to corrupt cultic practices.&#160; Eli's oblivion to the fact that Channah was praying might imply that prayer had become secondary in people's relating to Hashem, while the power of cultic acts had risen.<fn>Contrast this situation with Shelomo's words upon building the Mikdash where he requests that the Mikdash be a place or prayer, never mentioning sacrifices. See, though, Bavli Berakhot 31 which points to Channah as an innovator from whom we learn laws of silent devotion.</fn>&#160; His sons go further to corrupt the cultic practices themselves, as they imitate Canaanite worship, scorning proper sacrificial procedures, and taking of sacrifices for their own benefit.</point>
</point>
+
<point><b>Taking the Ark</b> – The capture of the Ark served as an apt measure for measure punishment, but also as a lesson to correct the people's misconceptions. As the nation believed the Ark to be all powerful, Hashem taught them that not only did it not have the power to save them, it could not even save itself.</point>
</category>
+
<point><b>The need for Shiloh's destruction</b> – According to this approach, Shiloh as a whole needed to be destroyed since the whole site was corrupt.</point>
 
+
<point><b>The Ark by the Philistines</b> – As above, this position might suggest that although it was necessary to have the Ark taken so as to teach the Israelites an important lesson, Hashem wanted to ensure that His name was not desecrated among the nations who might have concluded from its capture that their gods were more powerful than Hashem.&#160; He therefore had Dagon fall, and plagued the Philistines.</point>
 +
<point><b>Parallel to Sin of the Golden Calf</b> – This view of the sin matches certain understandings of the sin of the Golden Calf as well. There, too, the people looked to worship a physical symbol of Hashem, rather than Hashem Himself. For details, see <a href="Sin of the Golden Calf" data-aht="page">Sin of the Golden Calf</a>.</point>
 +
</opinion>
 +
</category>
 +
<category>Sins of Eli's Sons
 +
<p>The nation as a whole was punished for the sins of Chofni and Pinchas, the sons of Eli.</p>
 +
<mekorot>
 +
<multilink><a href="EliyahuRabbah12" data-aht="source">Seder Eliyahu Rabbah</a><a href="EliyahuRabbah12" data-aht="source">12</a><a href="Seder Eliyahu" data-aht="parshan">About Seder Eliyahu</a></multilink>,&#160;<multilink><a href="RadakShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="RadakShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:1,4</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About R. David Kimchi</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Abarbanel #2</a><a href="AbarbanelShemuelI4-4" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:41</a><a href="R. Yitzchak Abarbanel" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yitzchak Abarbanel</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="MalbimShemuelI4-3" data-aht="source">Malbim #4</a><a href="MalbimShemuelI4-3" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:3-4</a><a href="R. Meir Leibush Weiser (Malbim)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Meir Leibush Weiser</a></multilink>
 +
</mekorot>
 +
<point><b>Evidence of Sin</b> – As the actions of Chofni and Pinchas are the only sins explicitly mentioned in the opening chapters of the Book,<fn>See <a href="ShemuelI2-12-17" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 2:12-17</a>.</fn> it is logical that it was their misdeeds that might have caused the punishment..</point>
 +
<point><b>Prophecies of Chapters 2-3</b> – These commentators point to the prophecies to Eli in <a href="ShemuelI2-27-36" data-aht="source">Chapter 2</a> and <a href="ShemuelI3-11-14" data-aht="source">Chapter 3 </a>which speak of his sons' upcoming death, together with an unheard of catastrophe that was to befall Israel, as evidence that the nation's defeat was due to the sins of Eli's sons.</point>
 +
<point><b>"וַיְהִי דְבַר שְׁמוּאֵל לְכׇל יִשְׂרָאֵל וַיֵּצֵא יִשְׂרָאֵל"</b> – Abarbanel claims that this opening phrase means that the prophecy of the previous chapter regarding Eli's sons was known throughout Israel, and came true when the nation went to battle.<fn>See&#160;<multilink><a href="RalbagShemuelI4-1" data-aht="source">Ralbag</a><a href="RalbagShemuelI4-1" data-aht="source">Shemuel I 4:1</a><a href="R. Levi b. Gershom (Ralbag, Gersonides)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Levi b. Gershom</a></multilink> who is not explicit but might understand the opening in the same way.</fn> As such, the chapter itself links the events of the war with the sins of Eli's sons further suggesting that they were the cause of the defeat.</point>
 +
<point><b>"וְשָׁם שְׁנֵי בְנֵי עֵלִי עִם אֲרוֹן בְּרִית הָאֱ-לֹהִים"</b> – Radak<fn>See also Abarbanel and Malbim in his wake.</fn> asserts that the mention of Eli's sons being next to the Ark hints to the fact that they were the ones to cause the disaster. He even suggests that Hashem orchestrated that the elders would request the Ark, so as to ensure that Chofni and Pinchas would join the battle.</point>
 +
<point><b>Why this specific punishment?</b> According to this approach, it is not clear why Hashem did not suffice by punishing the nation through defeat in battle, but decided to also have the Ark be taken captive:<br/>
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>Abarbanel asserts that this was simply a consequence of the punishment of Chofni and Pinchas.&#160; Since they were holding the Ark when they were killed it was captured.</li>
 +
<li>Eliyahu Rabbah implies that this was a punishment for the people's not safeguarding the Mikdash and its vessels when they saw them being desecrated by the actions of the sons of Eli.</li>
 +
</ul></point>
 +
<point><b>Collective punishment</b> – This position must explain why the entire nation was punished for the sins of just two people:<br/>
 +
<ul>
 +
<li><b>Blameworthy</b> – Radak asserts that they were actually punished for their own sins of idolatry,<fn>See position above.</fn> while Eliyahu Rabbah blames them for not rebuking the sons of Eli for their misdeeds.</li>
 +
<li><b>Collective responsibility</b> – Alternatively, these sources could simply suggest that collective punishment is part of Hashem's mode of justice and sometimes innocents suffer together with the guilty.&#160; For a full discussion of the issue, see <a href="Philosophy:Collective Punishment" data-aht="page">Collective Punishment</a>.</li>
 +
</ul></point>
 +
<point><b>Later references to Shiloh's destruction</b> – None of the later discussions of Shiloh's destruction blame it on the sons of Eli specifically.</point>
 +
</category>
 
</approaches>
 
</approaches>
 
+
</page>
<!--
 
<opinion name=""> <span class="unbold"> – There are two variations of this possibility:</span>
 
 
 
<point><b></b> –
 
<ul>
 
<li></li>
 
<li></li>
 
<li></li>
 
</ul>
 
</point>
 
-->
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
</page>
 
 
</aht-xml>
 
</aht-xml>

Latest revision as of 13:25, 24 July 2019

Why Was the Ark Taken?

Exegetical Approaches

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

Overview

Commentators struggle to understand what sin was so grievous that it caused not only a defeat in battle, but also the taking of the ark captive and destruction of Shiloh.  Rashi and others assume that the punishment must relate to the crime and conclude that if the ark was taken captive, the sin must have been that it should never have been taken to war.  Others question if this is really prohibited and focus instead on the nation's problematic worship of Hashem.  Radak claims that the people were mired in idolatry, worshiping other gods.  Abarbanel instead suggests that they placed too much trust in the capabilities of the ark, assuming it had the power to save them.  In this they came close to another form of idolatry. Finally, Seder Eliyahu Rabbah posits that the sons of Eli were to blame for the disaster.  Since the nation took no steps to prevent their actions, they were collectively responsible for their misdeeds.

Taking the Ark to Battle

The Children of Israel were punished for taking the Ark to battle.

Was this forbidden? There are many verses in Tanakh which imply that it is permitted to take the ark to battle,3 making this approach difficult. These commentators respond to this argument in one of two ways:
  • Wrong ark – Rashi, following R. Yehuda b. Lakish in the YerushalmiShekalim 6:1About the Yerushalmi, claims that there were two arks, only one of which was permitted to be taken to war, while the other was supposed to stay in the Mishkan.4 The people sinned in that they took the wrong ark to battle.
  • No Divine permission – Abarbanel and Malbim suggest that the people were only allowed to take the Ark to war with explicit Divine permission.  In our chapter this was lacking.
"וַיִּשְׁלַח הָעָם שִׁלֹה וַיִּשְׂאוּ מִשָּׁם אֵת אֲרוֹן" – Malbim attempts to prove from this phrase that the decision to take the Ark was that of the nation alone (וַיִּשְׁלַח הָעָם) and that they did not consult either Shemuel or Eli, as they were required.
"אֲרוֹן בְּרִית י"י צְבָאוֹת יֹשֵׁב הַכְּרֻבִים" – When the Ark is taken to battle during the conquest of Yericho it is referred to simply as  "הָאָרוֹן".‎5  Here in contrast, it is give the special title, "אֲרוֹן בְּרִית י"י צְבָאוֹת יֹשֵׁב הַכְּרֻבִים", perhaps suggesting that this is a different ark, the golden one with cherubs atop and the full tablets inside.6 This distinction could support Rashi's contention that the wrong ark was taken.7
Initial defeat in battle – This approach has difficulty explaining the deaths which occurred in the first stage of the battle before the Ark was brought.  At that point the nation had not yet sinned, so they should not have been deserving of defeat.
Taking the Ark – The singular punishment of the Ark being captured by the Philistines can be viewed as a measure for measure punishment for the nation's having wrongfully taken it to war.
References to Shiloh's destruction – In later references back to the destruction of Shiloh, the verses never blame the nation's taking of the Ark to battle as the reason for Hashem's decision.  This position might claim that though the nation suffered defeat and the Ark was taken, Shiloh as a whole was not yet destroyed during this war.8  As such, its later destruction might have been for entirely different reasons (as enumerated in Yirmeyahu and Tehillim).

Wrong Worship

The severe defeat resulted from the nation's sinning in the area of religious worship.  These sources differ regarding the specific nature of the sin:

Worship of Foreign Gods

The nation was punished for their idolatrous ways.

Evidence of idolatry – Though the opening chapters of Sefer Shemuel do not speak of idolatry,10 these sources find evidence for it elsewhere:
  • Shofetim 18 – Abarbanel and Malbim point to the idol of Michah as evidence of idolatry during this era, as Shofetim 18:31 notes that Mikhah's idol existed for as long as the Mishkan was in Shiloh.
  • Shemuel I 7 – Abarbanel also points to Chapter 7 which speaks of Shemuel's calling on the nation to rid itself of foreign gods, telling them that if they do so they will be victorious over the Philistines.  This suggests that until that moment, they had been worshiping idolatry and that it was the reason for the defeat described in Chapter 4.
  • Yirmeyahu 7 – Yirmeyahu compares the destruction of Shiloh to that of the impending destruction of the Mikdash, implying that the reason for both was one and the same. Among the sins listed as causes for the latter's destruction is treachery against Hashem and straying after foreign gods, suggesting that this was prevalent in Shiloh as well.
  • Tehillim 78 – The psalmist also explains that Shiloh was destroyed due to the worshiping of idols ("יַּכְעִיסוּהוּ בְּבָמוֹתָם וּבִפְסִילֵיהֶם יַקְנִיאוּהוּ").
"וַיְהִי דְבַר שְׁמוּאֵל לְכׇל יִשְׂרָאֵל" – Radak claims that this verse teaches that the nation went to battle at the behest of Shemuel,11 and that Hashem intentionally urged them to war in order to punish them.12  This would support the idea that the people sinned not during the battle itself (as claimed by the above approach) but beforehand.
Taking of the Ark – While subjugation to an enemy is often the punishment for idolatry13 it is not clear why the Ark was also taken.  Abarbanel attempts to address this by citing Vayikra 26:19 which says that the punishment for continuously not listening to Hashem's commandments14 is that He will shatter the "pride of the nation".  He claims that this "pride" might refer to the Ark.
The Ark by the Philistines – In allowing the Philistines to capture the Ark, there was a danger lest the nation conclude that the event occurred because the Philistine gods were more powerful than Hashem.  If so, the punishment would have backfired, leading the nation not to repent but to instead turn to even more idolatry.  Hashem, thus, dispelled any such notion by proving the Philistine gods worthless and having Dagon fall and break.

Mistaken Cultic Beliefs

The Children of Israel believed that the Ark would ensure their victory, forgetting that only Hashem controls their destiny, and He does so according to their merits.

Evidence of mistaken attitude
  • "וְיֹשִׁעֵנוּ מִכַּף אֹיְבֵינוּ" – The nation's mistaken attitude towards the Ark is apparent in their decision to bring it to battle so that "it" might save them ( "נִקְחָה אֵלֵינוּ מִשִּׁלֹה אֶת אֲרוֹן בְּרִית י"י... וְיֹשִׁעֵנוּ מִכַּף אֹיְבֵינוּ").  They do not pray to Hashem that He save them, but assume that the Ark itself will provide victory. 
  • Contrast to Philistines – The error is highlighted when the nation's reaction to the Ark is contrasted with that of the Philistines.  Upon the Ark's arrival in the camp, the Philistines cry out: "בָּא אֱ-לֹהִים אֶל הַמַּחֲנֶה... אוֹי לָנוּ מִי יַצִּילֵנוּ מִיַּד הָאֱ-לֹהִים הָאַדִּירִים הָאֵלֶּה".  Ironically, only they recognize that behind the Ark stands Hashem, and it is Hashem whom one must fear, not the Ark itself.16
  • Allusions to the Exodus – In Chapters 4:8 and 6:6 the Philistines explicitly warn each other of Hashem's wondrous punishment of the Egyptians, recalling the plagues and their goal: "so that you shall know that I am your God".17  This is the same message that needs to be taught here: recognition of Hashem (and not his symbols) as the supreme power.
Later references to Shiloh's destruction – Much of Yirmeyahu 7 focuses on the nation's wrong belief that the Mikdash was invincible and would always protect the people regardless of their actions.18 To prove his point, Yirmeyahu points to the destruction of Shiloh.  The comparison suggests that in both stories the nation's sin was identical: forgetting that cultic objects are purely symbolic and power lies not in them but Hashem.  It is one's actions which will lead to Hashem's salvation, not possession of a holy building or artifact.
Victory in Shemuel I 7 – The many points of contact between the wars of Chapter 4 and Chapter 7 might further support this reading of the sin. Both involve battles between Israel and the Philistines that take place at the site Even Ha'ezer.19  However, while in the former the people say "let us take the Ark and it will save us ("נִקְחָה ... אֶת אֲרוֹן... וְיֹשִׁעֵנוּ") in the latter, they pray to Hashem that He may save them ("אַל תַּחֲרֵש... מִזְּעֹק אֶל י"י "אֱ-לֹהֵינוּ וְיֹשִׁעֵנוּ).  As such, in place of the Israelites being defeated ("וַיִּנָּגֶף יִשְׂרָאֵל"), it is the Philistines who lose in Chapter 7 ("וַיִּנָּגְפוּ לִפְנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל").20  Chapter 7, thus, provides a model of correct worship to rectify the corrupted worship of Chapter 4.
Initial defeat – This approach might account for the deaths of the first four thousand people (before binging the Ark to battle) by saying that the nation's hopes in the Ark merely reflected a problem that already existed. Chapters 1-3 of the book already hint to corrupt cultic practices.  Eli's oblivion to the fact that Channah was praying might imply that prayer had become secondary in people's relating to Hashem, while the power of cultic acts had risen.21  His sons go further to corrupt the cultic practices themselves, as they imitate Canaanite worship, scorning proper sacrificial procedures, and taking of sacrifices for their own benefit.
Taking the Ark – The capture of the Ark served as an apt measure for measure punishment, but also as a lesson to correct the people's misconceptions. As the nation believed the Ark to be all powerful, Hashem taught them that not only did it not have the power to save them, it could not even save itself.
The need for Shiloh's destruction – According to this approach, Shiloh as a whole needed to be destroyed since the whole site was corrupt.
The Ark by the Philistines – As above, this position might suggest that although it was necessary to have the Ark taken so as to teach the Israelites an important lesson, Hashem wanted to ensure that His name was not desecrated among the nations who might have concluded from its capture that their gods were more powerful than Hashem.  He therefore had Dagon fall, and plagued the Philistines.
Parallel to Sin of the Golden Calf – This view of the sin matches certain understandings of the sin of the Golden Calf as well. There, too, the people looked to worship a physical symbol of Hashem, rather than Hashem Himself. For details, see Sin of the Golden Calf.

Sins of Eli's Sons

The nation as a whole was punished for the sins of Chofni and Pinchas, the sons of Eli.

Evidence of Sin – As the actions of Chofni and Pinchas are the only sins explicitly mentioned in the opening chapters of the Book,22 it is logical that it was their misdeeds that might have caused the punishment..
Prophecies of Chapters 2-3 – These commentators point to the prophecies to Eli in Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 which speak of his sons' upcoming death, together with an unheard of catastrophe that was to befall Israel, as evidence that the nation's defeat was due to the sins of Eli's sons.
"וַיְהִי דְבַר שְׁמוּאֵל לְכׇל יִשְׂרָאֵל וַיֵּצֵא יִשְׂרָאֵל" – Abarbanel claims that this opening phrase means that the prophecy of the previous chapter regarding Eli's sons was known throughout Israel, and came true when the nation went to battle.23 As such, the chapter itself links the events of the war with the sins of Eli's sons further suggesting that they were the cause of the defeat.
"וְשָׁם שְׁנֵי בְנֵי עֵלִי עִם אֲרוֹן בְּרִית הָאֱ-לֹהִים" – Radak24 asserts that the mention of Eli's sons being next to the Ark hints to the fact that they were the ones to cause the disaster. He even suggests that Hashem orchestrated that the elders would request the Ark, so as to ensure that Chofni and Pinchas would join the battle.
Why this specific punishment? According to this approach, it is not clear why Hashem did not suffice by punishing the nation through defeat in battle, but decided to also have the Ark be taken captive:
  • Abarbanel asserts that this was simply a consequence of the punishment of Chofni and Pinchas.  Since they were holding the Ark when they were killed it was captured.
  • Eliyahu Rabbah implies that this was a punishment for the people's not safeguarding the Mikdash and its vessels when they saw them being desecrated by the actions of the sons of Eli.
Collective punishment – This position must explain why the entire nation was punished for the sins of just two people:
  • Blameworthy – Radak asserts that they were actually punished for their own sins of idolatry,25 while Eliyahu Rabbah blames them for not rebuking the sons of Eli for their misdeeds.
  • Collective responsibility – Alternatively, these sources could simply suggest that collective punishment is part of Hashem's mode of justice and sometimes innocents suffer together with the guilty.  For a full discussion of the issue, see Collective Punishment.
Later references to Shiloh's destruction – None of the later discussions of Shiloh's destruction blame it on the sons of Eli specifically.