Why Was the Ark Taken/2
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Why Was the Ark Taken?
Exegetical Approaches
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Taking the Ark to Battle
The Children of Israel sinned by 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, making this approach difficult.3 These commentators respond to this argument in one of two ways:
- Wrong ark – Rashi, following R. Yehuda b. Lakish in 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 one with the full tablets which normally resided in the Mishkan.6 This distinction could support Rashi' 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.
Measure for measure punishment – 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 Its destruction, thus, might have been for entirely different reasons.
Wrong Worship
The severe defeat resulted from the nation's sinning in the area of religious worship.
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.
Why this specific punishment? 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.
Improper Cultic Practices
The Children of Israel believed that the Ark itself 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 אֱלֹהִים אֶל הַמַּחֲנֶה... אוֹי לָנוּ מִי יַצִּילֵנוּ מִיַּד הָאֱלֹהִים הָאַדִּירִים הָאֵלֶּה". Ironically, only they recognize that behind the Ark stands Hashem, and it is Hashem whom one must fear, not the Ark itself.
- 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".16 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.17 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.
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 wars between Israel and the Philistines that take place at the site Even Ha'ezer.18 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 אֱלֹהֵינוּ וְיֹשִׁעֵנוּ ). As such, in place of the Israelites being defeated (וַיִּנָּגֶף יִשְׂרָאֵל), it is the Philistines who lose in Chapter 7 ("וַיִּנָּגְפוּ לִפְנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל").19 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 support that prayer had become secondary in people's relating to Hashem, while the power of cultic acts had risen.20 His sons turn even such cultic practices into imitations of Canaanite worship, as they scorn proper sacrificial procedures,and take of sacrifices for their own benefit.
The ark: measure for measure punishment – 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.
Ark in Philistine land
Parallel to Sin of Golden Calf
Sins of Eli's Sons
The nation as a whole was punished for the sins of the sons of Eli.
Prophecies of Chapters 2-3 – These commentators point to the prophecies to Eli in Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 which speak of the sins of his sons and their 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.21 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 הָאֱלֹהִים" – Radak asserts that the mention of Eli's sons being next to the ark hints to the fcat that they were the ones to cause the disaster.
Mentioning of the sin – This is the only sin which is explicitly mentioned in the opening chapters of Sefer Shemuel.
Collective punishment – The main problem with this approach is that the whole nation is being punished for the sins of only two people. However, this is not the only case in Tanakh where this occurs.22