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The Israel
Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Parashat Hashavua Yeshivat Har
Etzion
This
parasha series is dedicated Le-zekher Nishmat HaRabanit Chana
bat HaRav Yehuda Zelig zt"l.
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PARASHAT DEVARIM
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This shiur is dedicated in memory of Dr. William Major z"l.
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Dedicated in honor of the engagement of Russie Siegal (daughter of
Yitzchok and Barbara Lehmann Siegel) and Jeffrey Berger (son of Frank and Magda
Berger)
may they be zoche to build a bayit ne'eman b'yisrael.
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"These
Are the Words
"
Rav
Tamir Granot
A. Uniqueness of the Sefer
Introductory Note
This
week we begin reading and studying Sefer Devarim. Endless commentary has attempted to
understand the status and special role of this fifth book of the Torah in
relation to its predecessors. Most
of the Sefer, up until the beginning of Parashat Vayelekh, is not
a direct continuation of the preceding Books, which for the most part are set
out based on the chronological order of events and revelations. Sefer Bamidbar ends with
the story of the division of the land and the command to settle it. In Sefer Devarim, the flow of
time and events is halted to make way for a lengthy speech or perhaps several
speeches, which appear consecutively by Moshe. From this perspective, Sefer
Devarim is closer in character to the Books of the later prophets, and less
similar to the style of the Torah and the early prophets. In other words, Sefer Devarim
represents a literary genre that is different from the one that has become
familiar to us through the first four Books, where we encountered narratives of
events, chapters of laws, notes (e.g., the vessels of the Mishkan and the
order of the sacrificial service), chronicles (e.g., the stations along the
journey), etc.
At
the same time, Moshe's speech in Sefer Devarim in both its legal and
narrative aspects does not introduce subjects that are different from those
addressed thus far, but rather returns to the same themes (especially those
treated in Sefer Shemot and Sefer Bamidbar). Owing to the unique "monologue"
character of the Sefer, it is referred to as "Sefer Devarim" the
"Book of Words." And because it
comes back to subjects discussed in the previous Books, it is also known as
"Mishneh Torah Deuteronomy," literally, "repetition of the
law."
The
third special characteristic of this Sefer is the fact that it is
presented as the words of a man admittedly the most wondrous of men, Moshe
Rabbeinu himself but not as the words of God, like the other Books of the
Torah. The expressions, "And God
spoke" or "God said," so ubiquitous in the other Books, are absent here. The prevalent style here is speech in
the first person, uttered by Moshe, the speaker; it is he who describes and he
who commands. From this point of
view, Sefer Devarim is especially deserving of the title, "Sefer Torat
Moshe."
To
summarize, then, study of Sefer Devarim and an understanding of its
uniqueness require that these three points be considered:
1.
Nature
of the Sefer: a monologue, rather than prose, a book of laws, or a
chronicle.
2.
Content
of the Sefer: repetition.
3.
Source
of the Sefer: uttered by Moshe, not by God.
Below
I offer some thoughts on Sefer Devarim with reference to these three
points. The shiur is based
mainly on the classic commentary by Abarbanel, in his introduction to Sefer
Devarim, as well as on the introduction to the parasha in the
commentary of Rabbi Tzaddok ha-Kohen of Lublin (Peri Tzaddik). The former represents a study on the
level of peshat (the plain meaning of the text), while the latter is
drawn from the level of "sod" (the esoteric, mystical reading). To my mind, both interpretations lead
back to the same essential source.
B. Confusion
The
confusion regarding the status and role of Sefer Devarim is
expressed clearly by Abarbanel. He
asks: if all of Sefer Devarim is God's word, then what need is there for
another Sefer which, for the most part, repeats matters that have been
treated at length in the preceding Sefarim? And if one should argue that
new material and new details are introduced in Sefer Devarim, while in
some cases things that are written in the other Sefarim are omitted here,
then the question only becomes more perplexing: why is each matter not treated
in its entirety in one place (be it Sefer Shemot or Sefer
Bamidbar), in all its detail and with nothing added or removed? What is the
point of an author leaving previous chapters of his work "unfinished," so as to
return to them only at the end, to "fill in" that which was mistakenly forgotten
or deliberately left out?
If,
on the other hand, we propose that the Sefer is authored by Moshe, as its
style suggests, then what place does it have in the Torah? What place can mortal
words have amidst God's Torah? The crowning glory of Moshe's prophecy is that it
is like a "transparent mirror," conveying God's word with no change or
processing. Now, suddenly, we are
presented with a "Sefer Torat Moshe" a Book of Moshe's Torah,
rather than God's Torah. What can a
mortal even such a unique, unparalleled mortal as Moshe add to the words of
the King of the universe?
In
his answer, Abarbanel draws a distinction between the issues of origin and
authority. The origin
of Sefer Devarim lies with Moshe; its authority
comes from God. He explains that
Moshe did indeed utter a lengthy monologue of his own initiative and composition
before Bnei Yisrael prior to his death, in which he reminded and reproved them,
explained and commanded, and God approved his words and commanded him to write
them exactly as he had spoken them.
In other words, Moshe created the substance of the book of his own will,
but it was transcribed and included as one of the Books of the Torah by God's
command. God commanded that Moshe
preserve the original character of the material i.e., in the first person, and
in the order and formulation uttered by Moshe because his words were worthy of
being included as words of Torah.
Rav
Mordekhai Sabato argues that Sefer Devarim includes both the description
of a monologue delivered by Moshe and the writing of the Torah in a Book ("This
is the Torah which Moshe placed before Bnei Yisrael," meaning, he wrote it down
and gave it to them).
To his view, the is also the meaning of the words at the beginning of the
Sefer: "
Moshe began to declare this Torah." The word "declare"
(be'er) here means to cut into or engrave upon stone, just as a well
(be'er) is dug into the ground.
This interpretation conforms with Abarbanel's understanding of the Book
as a monologue that was eventually written down.
However,
we are still left with two major problems:
1.
Why
did Moshe feel that it was necessary to add his speech with its repetition of
the Torah which he had already given to the nation?
2.
Why
are there matters that appear in Sefer Devarim especially in the
chapters of laws and the details of specific commandments that do not appear
in the preceding Books of the Torah?
Concerning
the first question, both Abarbanel and other Rishonim have offered several
different explanations: Moshe wanted to strengthen Bnei Yisrael and to admonish
them prior to their entering the land, or he wanted to review the Torah with
them, or to leave his personal mark before his death, etc.
Abarbanel
attempts to answer the second question by asserting that Sefer Devarim
actually offers nothing that is fundamentally new; everything has already been
said before; Moshe merely elaborates or explains. He maintains that even the seemingly new
commandments that appear here have their source in other parts of the
Torah.
It
seems that we must agree with Abarbanel's assertion that the source of Sefer
Devarim is the speech delivered by Moshe at his own initiative and of his
own freewill, and which was eventually written down at God's command. However, it is difficult to accept his
perception of this Sefer in relation to the others. The differences between Sefer
Devarim and the other Books of the Torah extend to every level and
dimension. The style is different,
the structure is different, the historical perception is different, the details
of events are different, the theology is different, and even the values that are
placed at its center are different.
Moreover, the system of commandments of Sefer Devarim is
dramatically different from the systems presented in the other books (and
Abarbanel, obviously, is aware of this).
On one hand, Devarim contains no laws of concerning ritual
impurity, no obligatory sacrifices, and the body of subjects treated in
Parashat Mishpatim is also missing.
On the other hand, many new commandments appear here, especially
inter-personal commandments, and some laws that have appeared before are
mentioned here in a very different way, in terms of both style and content. For all of these reasons, it is
difficult to accept the view of those commentators who maintain that
Sefer Devarim is merely a "repetition" and elaboration or
reinforcement.
The
answers that are proposed to the first question face us with the following
fundamental problem: it is not enough that we understand why Moshe said what he
said, why he changed the details of the stories or their order, or why he gave
greater emphasis to certain laws than to others. All of the answers to these questions
satisfy us only when we examine the Torah within the limited time and historical
context in which the events took place.
These answers may indeed resolve the questions of "why Moshe did
such-and-such at the time."
However, we wish to understand the Torah not only within history, but
also from a perspective that goes beyond history. Why does the eternal Torah include
maters whose importance for their specific time may be understandable, but which
seem to contribute nothing to the eternal dimension of the Torah? The real
problem is not why Moshe said these things then,
but rather why these things are part of God's Torah now
and forever. In the terms of Abarbanel's commentary,
why did God command Moshe to record in the Written Law that which he had
conveyed orally?
C.
God's
Torah, and Man's Torah as God's Torah
We
shall not be able to arrive at a satisfying answer to these questions without
studying the whole of Sefer Devarim, in general and in its details, so as
to derive clues from individual cases to answer overall questions, and inversely
to apply the general principles to the specific issues discussed. However, over the course of the
Sefer there are certain key junctions which allow us a view of the
Sefer as a whole. The most
important of these, to my mind, is the forging of the covenant, in Parshiyot
Ki-Tavo and Nitzavim, representing in many respects the climax of the
Sefer. Great importance is
also attached to the description of the revelation at Sinai and the sections
introducing the chapters of laws, as well as the laws that discuss the "place
which God will choose," among others.
I
hope to address all of these issues in the shiurim on Sefer
Devarim, following the order of the weekly parshiyot. The discussion below is aimed at laying
the foundations for an interpretation of the Sefer a sort of system of
necessary basic assumptions upon which the future layers can be built. The basic assumptions arise from the
attempt to understand the unique aspects of Sefer Devarim and the
fundamental difficulties in understanding its status and role, as discussed so
far.
We
shall seek our answers in the teachings of Rabbi Tzaddok who, as noted, offers
an interpretation in accordance with the "hidden Torah," but it illuminates the
plain meaning of the text as well.
Rabbi
Tzaddok dwelled at length, in his writings, on the concept of Torah, and
especially the relationship between the Written Torah and the Oral Torah. Some of his fundamental ideas in this
sphere are to be found in his commentary on the beginning of Sefer
Devarim. He identifies in the
title of the Sefer "Eleh Ha-devarim" ("These are the words
")
its two most central characteristics (for the sake of the fluency of reading, we
shall explain the concepts he uses in our footnotes):
"The
reason why it says, 'These are the words,' is that this parasha contains
two matters: one is that this is a repetition of the Torah, and it is the
beginning of the Torah of Moshe Rabbienu, which represents the Oral Torah, as it
is written (Megilla 31b), 'Moshe uttered them [these words] from his own
mouth,'
and as it is written, 'Moshe began to declare this Torah,' and as Rashi
explains: 'He explained it to them in seventy languages.'
And so we learn: 'She [wisdom] has hewn out her seven pillars' this refers to
the seven days of Creation (Sanhedrin 38a). These are the seven lower attributes,
and as it is written in the Holy Zohar (Tosefet to Parashat
Beha'alotekha 151a), with the seventh attribute corresponding to the Queen
Shabbat,
or malkhut (kingship) the mouth; it is called the Oral Law.
And so it is taught (Shabbat 116a): 'She has hewn out her seven pillars
these refer to the seven Books of the Torah.'
This Book is the seventh Book, corresponding to the attribute of malkhut
And this is the reason why this Sefer includes the Ten Commandments for a
second time, as it is written (Shemot Rabba, parasha 47): 'Now
that you are contrite, I shall give you laws, midrash, and agadot,
etc.'"
Rabbi
Tzaddok explains that Sefer Devarim is the beginning of the Oral Law it
"represents the Oral Law," as he puts it.
The Gemara in Massekhet Megilla, which Rabbi Tzaddok regards as a
primary source for his interpretation, asserts that the law (in the Mishna)
which prohibits any halt during the reading of the curses, applies only to the
curses in Sefer Vayikra, which were transmitted through Moshe from God,
but it is permissible to pause in the middle of the curses in Sefer
Devarim, which were uttered by Moshe.
Rashi explains as follows:
"'Moshe
uttered them from the mouth of God' he became the messenger, as if to say: 'So
the Holy One told me,' for they are formulated in the first person ('I have
given,' 'I have appointed,' 'I sent'), referring to He Who possesses the ability
to act thus. But in the Mishneh
Torah (Sefer Devarim) it is written, 'God will strike you'; 'God will
attach to you'; Moshe uttered these [curses] himself [as if to say,] If you
transgress the commandments, He [God] will bring upon you
." (Rashi, Megilla
31b).
In
the curses in Sefer Vayikra, God speaks through Moshe. Moshe is the "medium" of revelation, a
mouthpiece for the Master of the universe.
The words issue from his mouth, but his mouth here is nothing but a
conduit for God's words. The curses
in Sefer Devarim, on the other hand, are uttered by Moshe; God is
mentioned here in the third person.
It is not the Divine Presence that speaks here through Moshe's throat,
but rather Moshe himself who is speaking about the Divine
Presence.
A
talmid chakham, a learned Torah scholar who creates Oral Law, asks
himself: what does God want? What would He say, as it were? A chiddush (a
novel insight) or a halakhic ruling is each an attempt to determine what God
would want or say concerning a certain subject. The endless debates recorded in the Oral
Law are the result of this perception of the issue at stake. Every scholar asks
himself the same question: what would God want; what does the Torah say? But the
same question is processed in a different way by each questioner; in each case
the answer is influenced by the individual and his unique makeup. The answers that different people give
to the same question may differ.
Even a great Torah scholar is not altogether transparent to Torah. He is active in its creation; he is a
tangible presence in the process of the coming-into-being of the Oral Law. This dimension of the creation is
represented, in kabbalistic terminology, by the sefira of malkhut,
which is also called "ani" I.
The matter in question is not purely objective; there is also a
subjective aspect: there is involvement of the human elements, such as
imagination and emotion, which do not belong to the absolute that lies beyond
man, but rather to the inner dimension which exists within
himself.
Thus,
Sefer Devarim as its name implies deviates from the "absolute-ness"
of the Written Law, in the direction of the speech of a human "I," in the form
of the Oral Law. It is for this
reason, according to the Gemara, that Devarim is the seventh book,
corresponding to the seventh sefira malkhut wherein the Torah
and reality as a whole find their completion and
perfection.
The
quality represented by the sefira of malkhut is not merely one of
the characteristics through which Divinity is manifest in the world. God is manifest in loving kindness,
strict justice, victory, and splendor, but He is not manifest in malkhut
kingship in the same sense.
Malkhut is a different entity; it is the "beloved woman." According to kabbalistic tradition,
malkhut is always feminine; it is always the bride. Therefore Shabbat is malkhut:
"Lekha dodi likrat kala."
The congregation of Israel is also referred to as malkhut, because
God's Kingship is revealed through it and by it. The following analogy may be proposed: I
may say, concerning a certain person, that he is revealed to me through his
goodness, his strength, his actions and his thoughts; all of these are his
outward manifestations. At the same
time, I may say that I met this person's wife, and he is revealed to me through
her. A person may come to be known
through his wife, but in a different sense than the way in which he comes to be
known through his qualities or actions.
I encounter the person through the way in which he is projected,
influences, and is recognized in his wife.
Similarly, a rabbi comes to be known through his disciples who, through
their lifestyles or their way of thinking, tell us about the teacher who
educated and molded them.
Rabbi
Tzaddok explains, then, that while in the first four Books of the Torah God
reveals Himself through Himself i.e., through His actions, His speech, His
commandments, in Sefer Devarim He reveals Himself by means of and through
Moshe. In the first four Books,
Moshe nullifies himself completely in the face of his mission, as if testifying
to the statement, "The man Moshe was exceedingly humble." In Sefer Devarim, the Torah is
Moshe's Torah. The point of it is
not to teach us about Moshe, but rather about God's Torah, which is revealed
from the midst of Moshe's Torah. To
put it in more general terms: this is the Torah of man which reveals, from its
midst, the Torah of God.
From
this perspective, Sefer Devarim is indeed altogether like the whole of
the Oral Law. This leads us to the
question: why does this book then merit the status of being included within the
Written Law? The simple answer is that, ultimately, the person who reveals God's
Torah here is not just a person, but rather the "faithful shepherd"; the only
person whose relationship with God was "face to face."
What
this means is that Sefer Devarim should be read as the reflection of
God's Torah within man's Torah. In
the first four Books of the Torah, we receive God's Torah through a prism that
is altogether transparent. In
Sefer Devarim we look in the mirror and see God's Torah in it. Here the Torah is not conveyed directly,
but rather is viewed in a mirror that is held up to it. Moshe is that clear mirror the
clearest and most spotless mirror that a mortal can hold up to the Divine
Law.
If
we study Sefer Devarim with this perspective in mind, we discover that
its unique contents and emphases arise, for the most part, from this very
point. We shall seek to find, in
Sefer Devarim, the human perspective on God's will or God's
manifestation. We shall encounter
the social view, and human morality; more emphasis will be placed on the
obligation of human kindness, and less on the demands of Divine law; and history
will be presented principally from the human, national angle, rather than from
the direct, Divine perspective.
These concepts are not neutral to the revelation of God; rather, they are
the way in which God is revealed within and through the human
dimension.
D. Writing that is Heard as
Speech
As
we recall, Rabbi Tzaddok discovers two elements in the title of the
Sefer, "These are the words," and thus far we have discussed the first of
them. The second element concerns
the "quality of dialogue" in the Sefer. R. Tzaddok recounts a legend about "the
holy Jew" - R. Yaakov Yitzchak of
Peshiskha:
"According
to what is said in the name of the Holy Jew, of blessed memory, who studied some
verses from the Book of Mishneh Torah [Sefer Devarim] every day,
he said it was his book of mussar.
Why specifically Sefer Devarim? After all, there are many books of
mussar. But according to
what is written in Sefer ha-Tanya, there is a difference between moral
admonition that one learns from books, and that which one hears from a live
authority, since while he speaks his words emerge from his heart, and thus they
enter the heart [of the listener].
The expression, 'These are the words' ('Eleh ha-devarim') is like
'this is the word/matter,' only there it is in the singular, while here it is in
the plural. And according to what
is written in the Sifri (Parashat Matot, cited by Rashi): 'Moshe
added to them, for he prophesied with the words, This is the matter.' In other words, at the time when Moshe
Rabbeinu, of blessed memory, said this, this was the very matter that issued
then from the mouth of the Holy One, blessed be He; it was the Divine Presence
speaking from his throat. It was
not like the prophecy of the other prophets, who would say something like, 'So
says God,' conveying that which the blessed God had told
them.
The
same idea is indicated by the expression 'These are the words that Moshe spoke'
that this is the power of the words of Sefer Devarim, that for one who
reads them it is like hearing them right now from Moshe's mouth; these very
words are being spoken by Moshe at this moment through the mouth of the
reader. And Moshe's words are,
'This is the word/matter which God has commanded
,' as discussed above, and it
is written, 'So it shall be My word which has emerged from My mouth shall not
return to Me empty'; rather, it enters the heart [of the listener] and
faithfully has its effect.
This
is the special quality of the admonition of Sefer Devarim, as it is
written, 'These are the words' that one who reads them hears, at that moment,
these things which are being spoken by Moshe through the mouth of the
reader."
R.
Tzaddok describes here the unique quality of Sefer Devarim, whereby
reading or hearing it makes the same impression on us as if they were spoken by
Moshe right now.
The
first four Books of the Torah convey what was. If we had only these books, we would
live today with a Torah that was written then,
with a truth that was uttered then, with a law that was conveyed then in the
desert.
In
Sefer Devarim, "then" becomes "now": "These things which I command you
today shall be upon your hearts" literally, today. This is not the "today" of the time when
these words were spoken; rather, every day is its own "today." As we utter this verse in Shema
every morning and evening, we are not repeating words that were spoken then;
rather, we hear Moshe's voice and the echo of the Divine Presence speaking with
us right now.
Just
as Moshe's prophecy in the other Books (as explained above) is not a narrative
in the present about what God said in the past (reported, indirect speech), but
rather the living word of God emerging from Moshe's mouth in "real time," as it
were, so Sefer Devarim is not a story about what was said then, but
rather Moshe's word which lives on and rises up from the
text:
"You
are standing today,
all of you
every man of Israel
to pass you into the covenant of the Lord your
God and into His oath, which the Lord your God forges with you today
but he who is here, standing with us today, and he who is not with us
today."
Franz
Rosenzweig, in his work Star of Redemption, explains that the Torah is
not a book of laws, and that the concept of the Law is of secondary importance
in it. Rather, the nation of Israel
has "commandments." What is the
difference between a commandment and a law? Law (in Hebrew, "chok") is
something that is inscribed ("chakuk") on something, written down in a
book of laws, printed in notes, and that which gives it validity is the
acquiescence of the nation or the authority of the ruler. A "commandment" mitzva is not
inscribed. In order for there to be
a mitzva, there must be someone who commands "metzaveh." A mitzva is something that is
spoken; it is itself speech. A
mitzva is not a section in the Shulchan Arukh, but rather God's
call and demand in the present, directed towards me and you and every Jew. Hence, while a chok can be a fact
in the past which we observe, or commemorate, today, a mitzva can only be
in the present; it can only be "today."
Only a mitzva, uttered in the present tense, has the ability to be
"upon your heart." Sefer
Devarim, then, is the transition from chok to mitzva or, to
put it differently, it infuses the laws (chukkim) of the Torah with the
quality of mitzvot.
This
is also the deeper reason why it is Sefer Devarim that is read on the
occasion of Hakhel. The
whole point of the Hakhel ceremony is a reliving of the experience of
Sinai. God's revelation at Sinai
left us with the Book of Torah, and since then we have the object that which
was said. What is missing is the
"saying" itself; the echoing of the voice and the impression that the live voice
makes on the heart. At
"hak'hel" we once again listen to the "voice" of the Torah, and therefore
it is specifically Sefer Devarim whose unique quality lies in the fact
that it is "speech" and not just a written record that is
read.
On
a smaller scale, this is also the function of the Torah reading. Every Jew can read the Torah from a
book, but then he encounters content, with a subject, rather than a voice and
speech. The function of the public
reading is to give voice to the Torah's speech, to cause it to come alive. Among many tzaddikim it was and
still is customary that the Tzaddik himself would be the Torah reader for the
congregation. The Admor of
Zanz-Klausenberg, for example, is said to have insisted on reading from the
Torah himself, with great self-sacrifice, even when he was very ill, so as to
enable the congregation to hear, through the reading, the voice of God emanating
from the Torah.
Summary
The
unique qualities of Sefer Devarim render it a vital completion of the
Torah:
·
Up
until Sefer Devarim, God was revealed to man, but He had not yet been
revealed within man and as emanating from him. The contents of this Sefer its
mitzvot, ideas and narratives highlight the human perspective on faith
and the Torah.
·
The
four preceding Books of the Torah record the Book of God's Torah; Sefer
Devarim eternalizes the speech itself, the Divine
voice.
·
The
preceding Books eternalize the past of God's revelation and of the Torah; in
Sefer Devarim it becomes a perpetual "present"
"today."
In
the shiurim that follow we shall attempt to apply these fundamental ideas
concerning the Sefer to its various parashot and to understand, in
light of these ideas, the new ideas, changes, additions and omissions that
characterize the style and content of Sefer
Devarim.
Translated
by Kaeren Fish
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