This week's parasha is being dedicated in loving memory of Sol
Okon, z"l, on the occasion of his yahrzeit.
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PARASHAT YITRO
The yeshiva wishes a warm mazal tov to the Head Madrich of
the Overseas Students Program
Hillel Maizels and his wife Yael
upon the birth of their daughter, Hodaya
Chana.
May they be zocheh to raise her le-Torah, le-chuppa,
u-le-ma'asim tovim!!
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The Dual Revelation at Sinai
By Rav Tamir Granot
At the heart of Parashat Yitro we find, of course, the Ten
Commandments that God proclaimed at Sinai.
The discussion concerning the particular stature of the commandments and
the traditions regarding them is both ancient and critical. During the time of Chazal, this
issue carried significant weight due to what the Talmud refers to as kefirat
ha-minim (the heretics' rejection), meaning, the rejection of the
mitzvot among Christian sects and the viewing of the Ten Commandments as
the basis of the New Testament.
Chazal therefore instructed that the ritual role of the
Commandments be minimized.
In this shiur we will explore, according to the plain reading of
the text, the status of the Ten Commandments within the general framework of
God's Revelation at Sinai.
A study of the narrative progression from Am Yisrael's arrival at
Sinai, as described in chapters 19,20,21 and 24, reveals a number of fundamental
difficulties in understanding the function of the Commandments.
Of course, the corresponding narrative in Sefer Devarim – starting
from chapter 4 – is also significant for our discussion, and we must therefore
take into account the Torah's description in that context. Nevertheless, we will limit ourselves
here to the material that appears in Sefer Shemot.
The Ten Commandments are introduced with the header, "God spoke all these
words, saying" (Shemot 20:1), indicating that the Commandments are spoken
by the Almighty. The verse does not
tell us, however, to whom they are spoken.
Who hears this divine proclamation?
It is commonly assumed that God here speaks to the entire nation, but
this is not explicit at all in the verse.
Moreover, several verses might point us in a different direction,
indicating that the primary revelation is not to the people:
1. Earlier,
when God explains to Moshe the purpose of the Revelation at Sinai, He says to
him, "Behold, I am coming to you in the thickness of the cloud, in order that
the nation hear when I speak with you, and also they will believe in you
forever…" (19:9). According to this
verse, the purpose of the Revelation is to establish the belief in Moshe's
prophecy, as the nation hears God speak to Moshe. God does not proclaim His intent to
speak to the people, nor is there any need for this in light of the essential
aim of this event. If the objective
is the belief in Moshe's prophecy, it suffices for the nation to know that God
spoke to Moshe; no direct revelation to them is necessary.
2. After the
Commandments, it says, "The entire nation beheld the sounds, the torches, the
sound of the shofar, and the smoking mountain… They said to Moshe, 'You speak
with us, and we will listen; let not God speak to us, lest we die.'" If God indeed spoke to the people and
completed what He had to say, the nation's request seems difficult to
understand. They mention the sounds and lightening, but make no mention of God
speaking to them, which is perhaps the most frightening experience of all. Furthermore, if God already spoke to
them, then either they should already be dead, or they should have nothing more
to fear. It appears that the people
are afraid that now God will speak to them, something that has not occurred
until this point.
Chazal seem to have addressed this difficulty, and explained that
the people submitted this request after the proclamation of the first two
Commandments: "They heard Anokhi and Lo yihyeh lekha [the first
two Commandments] from the mouth of the Almighty." This explanation is based on a
difference in style between the first two and subsequent eight
Commandments. The first two are
written in first-person form – "I am the Lord your God who has taken you"
("Anokhi Hashem Elokekha asher hotzeitikha");
"beside Me" ("al panai") – indicating that
they were spoken directly from God.
Alternatively, however, it is possible that the Torah simply cites God's
words to Moshe – which were certainly said in first-person form – and not His
words to the nation.
The final eight Commandments are said in third-person form: "You shall
not take the name of the Lord your God in vain… For in six days did
the Lord… on the land that the Lord your God is giving you…" These Commandments, thus, were certainly
not heard directly from God, and were rather conveyed through Moshe. Chazal understood that this
transition sheds light on the rest of the Torah: just as Benei Yisrael
heard these eight Commandments from Moshe, even though they were transmitted
on Mount Sinai, so did they learn the rest of
the Torah from Moshe. As mentioned,
in this manner Chazal resolve the difficulties we raised above: the
nation was struck with fear after the first two Commandments, and Moshe granted
their request that he convey to them the rest of God's instruction.
Nevertheless, although this explanation neatly resolves the discrepancy
in style between the first two and subsequent eight commandments, it leaves us
unsatisfied for a number of reasons:
- The
Ten Commandments are presented as a single unit, and we find no indication
whatsoever in the text that their proclamation was disrupted at any stage.
- Moshe's
response to the people does not appear to reflect his granting of their
request: "Moshe said to the people, 'Have no fear, for it is in order to test
you that God has come…'" If, as
Chazal explain, God has already spoken to the people, then He should
have continued doing so once Moshe calmed their fears. Thus, there is no indication that He
stopped speaking, with the exception, of course, of the shift in style as we
have already discussed.
- Earlier,
the Torah describes the Revelation as follows: "Moshe would speak, and God
would answer him in a voice." The
speaker is Moshe; God is not described as speaking to the nation. The expression "ya'anenu
ve-kol" ("will answer him in a voice") is a difficult one, but in any
event it seems not to refer to plain speech.
Let us now
return to our main contention, namely, that it does not appear that God speaks
to the nation directly. This claim
is reinforced by a verse that appears later, after the presentation of the laws
(mishpatim) to the people: "Moshe came and spoke to the people all the
words of the Lord and all the laws.
The entire nation responded in a single voice, saying: All the things
that the Lord has spoken – we will do and we will hear" (24:3). Moshe there speaks to Benei
Yisrael about two areas: "the words of the Lord," and "the laws"
(mishpatim).
"Mishpatim" clearly refers to the laws presented
before this narrative, in the section that begins, "Ve-eileh
ha-mishpatim" (21:1). To what,
however, does "divrei Hashem" ("words of the Lord")
refer? Seemingly, the Torah refers
here to the verse that introduces the Ten Commandments: "God spoke all these
words, saying." Meaning,
"divrei Hashem" here means the Ten Commandments. If so, we can draw evidence from the
mishpatim to the Commandments.
The mishpatim were most certainly spoken only to Moshe, as the
Torah tells, "and Moshe entered the mist… The Lord said to Moshe: So shall you
say to Benei Yisrael… And these are the mishpatim that you shall
present to them…" Moshe was
instructed from the outset to convey to the people the laws that he now receives
from God, and this is indeed what he does.
Presumably, this is true also of the divrei Hashem: "Moshe came
and spoke to the people all the words of the Lord and all the laws." Seemingly, until now only Moshe heard
God's word, and now he conveys to the people what he heard.
Moreover, the ambiguity of the introductory verse to the Commandments
requires some explanation. In all
instances where the Torah relates that God spoke, it informs us as well of to
whom He spoke. Here, however, the
Torah writes simply that He spoke: "God spoke all these things, saying."
In order to understand the progression of events in this narrative, I
would suggest the following theory as to the development of this narrative, and
that we read the verses in this light.
By way of introducing this theory, I would like to observe an inherent
contradiction in the verses' description of the nation's conduct. Three times in chapter 19, God sends
Moshe to admonish the people not to approach the mountain, lest they be harmed
as a result:
"You
shall restrict the people around [the mountain], saying: Beware of ascending the
mountain…" (verse 12)
"The
Lord said to Moshe: Descend and warn the people, lest they burst forth towards
the Lord to see…" (verse 21)
"The
Lord said to him: Go, descend… and the kohanim and the people shall not
burst forth to ascend…" (verse 23)
The Almighty's primary concern is the possibility of "pen yehersu"
– "lest they burst forth," meaning, they will approach the sacred mountain. God's revelation arouses feelings of
closeness and spiritual yearning, and, on a somewhat lower level, at least a
degree of curiosity and tension; in any event, it causes the people to want to
come forward. Even when Moshe
refuses to descend to warn the people, claiming that the people are already
barred from ascending the mountain, having already been admonished to keep back
(verse 23), God insists that he go and issue the warning.
But this concern does not correspond to what is described in the verses
following the Commandments: "The entire nation beheld the sounds… The people saw
and they trembled, and they stood from afar" (20:15-16). The people's reaction proves that the
main problem was specifically awe, which is manifest as an actual, existential
fear and a desire to flee, rather than overabundant "love" which arouses a
desire to burst forth towards the sacred ground. How, then, can we understand God's
concern?
We will attempt to find a key to the solution in the corresponding verses
in Sefer Devarim (chapter 5), where Moshe describes Ma'amad Har
Sinai:
1) Moshe
called to all Israel and said to them: Hearken, O Israel, to the statutes and
laws that I speak in your ears today; study them and ensure to perform them.
2) The Lord
our God established a covenant with us in Chorev [Sinai].
3) The Lord
did not establish this covenant with our fathers, but rather with us – we, those
who are here, all of us who live.
4) The
Lord spoke with you at the mountain face-to-face from amidst the fire.
5) I was
standing in between the Lord and you at that time to tell you the Lord's word,
because you were afraid of the fire and did not ascend the mountain –
saying:
6) I am the
Lord your God who took you from the land of Egypt, from the house of
bondage.
We will
focus our attention on verses 4-5, which are of particular importance for our
discussion. Moshe wishes to convey
to the child generation the basic memory of the Revelation, emphasizing that it
occurred not through an intermediary, but rather "face-to-face." However, his final remarks directly
contradict his earlier remarks. In
verse 4, he asserts that God spoke "face-to-face," whereas in verse 5 he tells
that he himself served as the intermediary bringing God's word to the
nation. Each verse could be stated
independently, but presenting the two together is inherently contradictory.
It seems that we can read the verses as follows. God wanted to speak with the nation
directly, but the people's fear resulted in Moshe's mediation between them and
God. Moshe's role as intermediary
apparently had physical implications, as well. "Face-to-face" communication means
closeness, and if Moshe served as intermediary, then God spoke to only him from
up close, "face-to-face," whereas the people stood from afar. It stands to reason that Moshe also
means to say that although the nation de facto stood from afar and was
not privileged to behold a direct revelation, the revelation is nevertheless
considered to have occurred "face-to-face." That is to say, fundamentally, our
memory can portray the Revelation at Sinai as a revelation to the entire nation,
even if, factually speaking, this never materialized.
Verse 5 concludes with the word "leimor" (saying), which
introduces the Ten Commandments which are presented immediately thereafter. It possibly serves as the conclusion of
verse 4, which would then be read as, "The Lord spoke with
you…face-to-face…saying: I am the Lord your God…" If so, then the explanation in verse 5
should be read as a parenthetical remark.
Either way, according to these verses, the Ten Commandments were said
after the nation expressed its fear, and Moshe served as intermediary bringing
God's word to the people. It is
thus clear from Sefer Devarim that God did not speak at all directly to
the nation; the Commandments were all conveyed through Moshe's mediation.
In light of this information from Sefer Devarim, let us now
suggest the sequence of events as portrayed in Sefer Shemot, working off
the assumption that the verses do not necessarily reflect the chronological
sequence.
In my opinion, verses 15-18 of chapter 20 in Sefer Shemot belong
(chronologically) after the verse 19:19.
The chronological presentation would thus appear as follows:
"The
sound of the shofar continued with great force; Moshe would speak and the
Almighty will answer him in a voice."
Immediately
thereafter, "The entire nation beheld the sounds, the torches, the sound of the
shofar, and the smoking mountain; the people saw and they trembled…" Meaning, the nation's fear and request
that Moshe convey to them God's word preceded the Commandments and resulted not
from the Commandments, but rather from the sounds, torches and shofar blast
described in the earlier verses ("And Mount Sinai was entirely in smoke…"). The people, who know that God will soon
speak ("in order that the nation hear when I speak with you" – 19:9), are
frightened and ask that He speak only with Moshe. Moshe assuages their fears, and it is
unclear whether he grants their request.
If we insert the Ten Commandments immediately at this point, a reasonable
progression emerges:
Moshe
said to the people: Have no fear…
The
people stood from afar, and Moshe entered the mist, where God was.
God
spoke all these words, saying: "I am the Lord…"
In other words, I suggest reading 20:15-18 (the account of the nation's
fear) as having preceded the pronouncement of the Commandments, as it parallels
Moshe's description in Sefer Devarim of what transpired before the
pronouncement:
Devarim:
I was
standing in between the Lord and you at that time to tell you the Lord's word,
because you were afraid of the fire and did not ascend the mountain –
saying:
Shemot:
And
Moshe approached… Have no fear… The nation stood from afar…
In summary,
according to our proposal, God ultimately did not speak to the nation, and spoke
only to Moshe, due to the people's fear, as explicitly described in
Devarim. The verses leave
two points unclear:
A) The introductory verse to the Ten Commandments does not clarify to whom
God speaks;
B) It is unclear whether Moshe granted the people's request that he serve
as intermediary, or simply assuaged their fears.
We can
explain this ambiguity according to the two levels that exist in the description
in Sefer Devarim. The Torah
wishes to convey the message that, fundamentally, the Ten Commandments were
indeed said at Ma'amad Har Sinai to the entire nation. Factually speaking, this did not happen,
and the nation instead stood from afar.
The ambiguity in the description enables us to accept both premises: on
the one hand, the Commandments were proclaimed to the people (again, this is the
impression given by the flow of the narrative, without being mentioned
explicitly), while at the same time, the people were frightened and therefore
God did not speak to them.
Chazal's distinction between the first two and final eight
Commandments, while not accommodating the simple reading of the verses,
beautifully expresses the theory we have proposed. God indeed spoke to the people, but He
spoke very little, perhaps just enough to confirm the occurrence of
revelation. That small amount that
He spoke contained the expression of "Anokhi" and its derivative
prohibition – "You shall have no other gods" – but no more. Anything considered a mitzva that
does not necessarily flow from the actual knowledge of revelation was said –
according to Chazal – by Moshe, and not by God.
In this same fashion we can perhaps explain the awkward sequence of the
verses. If the nation's request
indeed preceded the Commandments, why does the Torah present it later? We may suggest two answers:
- In
light of what we said earlier, we might similarly explain that the Torah seeks
to create the impression that the Commandments were indeed proclaimed directly
to the people from God, an impression that would not have emerged had the
nation's request been recorded before the Commandments. In Sefer Devarim, Moshe
achieves this goal by employing contradictory descriptions (verses 4-5, as
explained above).
- Presenting
the nation's concerns before the Commandments would have made the narrative
incomprehensible. It would be
impossible for the Torah to tell of God's requests that Moshe warn the people
not to ascend the mountain if at that moment the nation flees. Placing the commandments in between
these events gives the impression of a distance in time that is necessary for
the cohesiveness of the narrative.
Of course, in the truth of the matter this difficulty is indeed very
troubling. God's instruction to
Moshe to warn the people appears to contradict the description of the nation's
fears, and also appears to undermine our approach.
To resolve this difficulty, let us address another angle that we have yet
to consider. Throughout the
entirety of chapter 19, the Torah refers to God with the divine Name of
Havaya ("Y-H-V-H"). When
recording God's words and actions, it employs only this Name, the Name in which
God appeared to Moshe during the story of the Exodus. For example (we will employ the term
Hashem to represent the Name Havaya): "Hashem calls to him
from the mountain"; "All that Hashem spoke, we will do"; "the nation's
words to Hashem"; "Hashem said"; "because Hashem had
descended upon it with fire." In
all these instances, the Torah employs specifically the divine Name of
Havaya.
In the first section of chapter 20 (through verse 18), by contrast, God
is referred to as either Elokim or Hashem Elokim: "Elokim
spoke"; "Let not Elokim speak with us"; "it was in order to test you that
Elokim has come"; "entered the mist, where Elokim was." In the Ten Commandments themselves, the
reference to Hashem Elokim appears quite frequently: "Anokhi Hashem
Elokekha"; "ki Hashem Elokekha"; "Shabbat le-Hashem Elokekha,"
etc.
Very often, a shift in the terms used in reference to the Almighty
indicates that the Torah addresses the given subject from different perspectives
and even tells the same story from two different viewpoints. In these instances, we have two parallel
descriptions of a single event, told from two differing perspectives.[1]
It would seem that here, too, the story of Matan Torah contains
two different, concurrent processes.
The beginning of the narrative, in chapter 19, includes both
perspectives.[2] God here declares
two things: the establishment of a covenant between Him and the people, with the
condition of "if you keep My covenant"; and, His plan to reveal Himself to
Moshe, in order for the people to listen and believe in Moshe's prophecy,
through which the Torah will be given and regarding which God said earlier, "If
you indeed heed My voice…"
This description includes both the instruction to create a boundary
around the mountain, and the fact that "All the people in the camp
trembled." Verse 18 describes God's
revelation: "Mount Sinai was entirely in smoke, because the Lord had descended
upon it with fire… Moshe would speak, and God would answer him in a voice." In effect, the revelation reaches its
peak at this point. Nowhere until
this point has the Torah led us to anticipate that God will turn to the nation
and speak to them; and if we read only the verses written with the divine Name
of Havaya, this in fact never occurs.
The sequence
of the events, according to the perspective of the Name Havaya, is as
follows: God descends upon the mountain, Moshe speaks, and the voice of God
responds from behind him like an echo.
It seems that the people hear actual speech only from Moshe, but an
echo-sound of the Shekhina creates the impression that indeed God's word
is in his mouth, as if God speaks with them. Some time thereafter, God tells Moshe to
descend from the mountain and issue a warning, the reason being, presumably,
that this communication would last for quite some time, such that even if the
people were initially frightened, they are now right beneath the mountain
("Moshe brought the nation to greet God from the camp, and they took their place
beneath the mountain"), and the moment they grow accustomed and the initial
shock subsides, they may burst forth and ascend towards God.
Moshe
ultimately comes down the mountain and issues this warning to the nation, as it
says, "Moshe descended to the people and said to them." The Torah does not clarify what he said
to the people, because it is self-understood. (Recall that the narrative continues
with "God spoke" and the Ten Commandments, but according to our suggested
approach, this is not the chronological continuation.) Thus, the nation hears from Moshe what
God had commanded him, and Moshe returns to the top of the mountain to hear
God's words to him, which apparently no longer are said with sounds and
lightening, but rather from a mist (this once again reinforces the concern that
the people might seek to ascend the mountain). God then immediately begins speaking to
Moshe: "The Lord said to Moshe, 'So shall you say to Benei Yisrael: You
have seen that I spoke with you from the heavens. Do not make with me gods of silver or
gods of gold…'" This verse refers
not to the Ten Commandments, but rather to what is written before the
Commandments: "Moshe would speak and God would answer in a voice." It was therefore necessary to command
the people not to fashion gold or silver images. According to the sequence of the Torah's
presentation, this command unnecessarily repeats the second of the Commandments:
"You shall not make for yourself an idol, any image…" Meaning: the mitzvot are said
only to Moshe. But once the
people witnessed that God speaks to Moshe, anything that Moshe tells them
subsequently will be regarded as God's direct word to the nation. It must again be emphasized that
according to the narrative using only the Name of Havaya, the primary
concern involved the prospect of the nation's ascent to the mountain upon the
conclusion of the main event, where Moshe speaks and God answers him in a voice;
this event does not include the Ten Commandments at all.[3]
If we read
the continuation of chapter 19 according to the verses employing the divine Name
of Elokim (20:1-18), a different picture emerges. After the nation sees the sounds and
torches, they are frightened and do not want God to speak to them directly. Why were they afraid of God's direct
communication? It appears that
their fear stemmed from what God said, "If you indeed heed My voice…" They anticipate hearing God's command,
but are concerned that He might issue it to them directly. Moshe understood their concerns and
calmed their fears, and they then retreated and stood at a distance (20:18),
while Moshe approached the mist and heard God proclaim the Ten
Commandments. According to this
presentation, the Ten Commandments were indeed proclaimed at this point, but
only to Moshe, and not to the people.
The two parallel accounts, told with two different Names of God, express
two different, otherwise self-contained perspectives on what transpired.
According to the narrative employing the Name Havaya, the
Revelation's primary objective, as stated, is establishing the belief in
Moshe's prophecy. To this end,
the Ten Commandments are unnecessary.
The moment the nation is convinced and believes, God speaks to Moshe
alone and conveys to him the mitzvot mentioned at the end of the
parasha (regarding the altar) and in Parashat Mishpatim.
The divine Name of Havaya always expresses the notion of
prophecy and closeness to God, and indeed the primary objective here is
to firmly establish the prophecy of Moshe, and the primary concern is that the
sense of closeness to God felt during this event will result in the nation's
desire to approach God. The quality
of closeness and love of God can also be destructive, and there is thus
the need for boundaries and warnings.
According to the narrative using the Name of Elokim, the Ten
Commandments indeed stand at the center of this event, but, as mentioned, they
are said only to Moshe, and not to the people. The reason for this is different from
the reason in the previous story, in which the purpose of Ma'amad Har
Sinai is from the outset purely to affirm the belief in Moshe's
prophecy. In the story as told in
the Name of Elokim, the purpose of the Revelation is in fact the
establishment of a covenant regarding the words of God: "Now, if you indeed heed
My voice and observe My covenant…"
The Ten Commandments form the basis of this covenant; the covenant
depends on their observance.
According to what is told from the perspective of the Name of
Elokim, God had, in fact, intended to speak directly to the people, but
their fear and request to stand back resulted in Moshe's serving as intermediary
to convey to them God's word.
Indeed, the Name Elokim always signifies the notion of justice and
covenant.
The development of fear among the people likewise accommodates the Name
Elokim. The revelation of
Elokim is a source of fear – a concept closely related to the Name
Elokim. The nation is
distanced, and this distance remains even at the end of Ma'amad Har
Sinai.
Moshe Rabbenu serves a moderating role with respect to both
perspectives. He is responsible to
prevent a destructive outburst of love, from the perspective of Havaya,
and he likewise faces the task of assuaging the nation's fear and assuring them
that God does not wish upon them evil, and has rather revealed Himself "in order
that His fear be upon you, so that you do not sin."
In conclusion, let us consider the meaning of the story as it appears
before us in the Torah, and ask what is expressed by the end result.
According to what we have seen, the story of Matan Torah has two
different objectives, which determine the narrative's progression and are
expressed through the use of the two divine Names of Havaya and
Elokim.
The focal point of the first objective is the covenant which is based
upon Am Yisrael's commitment to obey the divine command, which after the
fact means fulfilling the Commandments.
This objective is expressed with the Name Elokim.
The second objective has as its central feature the Revelation itself,
which becomes the source of unwavering belief in Moshe's prophecy, rather than
the word of God. This objective is
expressed with the Name Havaya.
According to the first, the Revelation instills fear into the
people. Fear plays a central role
in the establishment of the covenant: "So that you do not sin." But fear also has a distancing effect:
"The nation stood from afar." The
Commandments therefore are not spoken to the people directly from God, and are
merely considered as having come directly from God; this is their legal
stature.
According to the second objective, the Revelation arouses love. Love finds expression in the
transmission of the divine word to Moshe, and in allowing the opportunity to
serve God and earn the merit of His revelation and blessing: "You shall make for
Me an earthen altar and sacrifice upon it… Everywhere I mention My Name I shall
come to you and bless you." The
danger inherent in love of God is excessive closeness, and one must therefore
exercise restraint and maintain a degree of distance.
The story as presented before us bridges between these two ideal
possibilities. Theoretically, each
story could be told separately, but practically, it all occurs
simultaneously. The Almighty and
His Names are all one, and thus His revelation includes all the objectives and
generates both love and fear. It
stands to reason that the nation's reactions to the Revelation were mixed and
included the desire to both escape from and run towards it. The Torah is not interested in
presenting a detailed account of what transpired among each group in the nation
or in the heart of each and every individual. Rather, it seeks to give the essential
message, and hence the arrangement in which the story is told, which synthesizes
the two separate progressions:
The two objectives of the Revelation are described in chronological
sequence at the beginning of chapter 19, one following the other:
- First
– the establishment of the covenant.
- Second
– "and also they will believe in you forever."
Thereafter
begins the Revelation (God's descent onto the mountain, in verse 18), and the
Torah then chooses to describe specifically the concern of overabundant
closeness, which is entirely true – from one perspective. The concern for excessive closeness
obviously does not negate God's revelation and speech, and God is therefore
described as the one proclaiming the Commandments, such that one could conclude
that they are proclaimed to the entire nation. This is not a misguided reading, but
rather the correct conclusion in principle. Only after the proclamation of the
Commandments does the Torah mention the problem that arose from the Elokim
perspective of Revelation – the fear that gripped the people. This is indeed a worthwhile problem that
plays an important role in forging a complete, religious relationship to God and
His revelation, which is indeed complex and dialectical. The description of this problem before
the proclamation of the Commandments could have potentially diminished the force
of the covenant, the essence of which entails the fulfillment of God's
commands. The Torah presented this
in such a way that would lend the Ten Commandment its status as the very basis
of our covenant with God, and hence the importance of their having been
proclaimed specifically by God Himself.
For the purpose of summation and added depth:
I once saw a remark cited in the name of Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Raminov
concerning the enlarged letter alef in the word Anokhi with which
the Ten Commandments begin. He
commented that only the alef was heard by the people. The alef represents the voice
that marks the very beginning of the utterance. According to this remark, only the
endless, undefined voice is what was heard directly from the Almighty. The constriction of that sound into
actual words, in the sense of a "utensil" lending the sound shape and form,
belongs strictly to the realm of prophecy.
A similar concept, albeit serving different interests, was expressed by
the Rambam, in Moreh Nevukhim (2:33):
It is
clear to me that what Moshe experienced at the Revelation on Mount Sinai was
different from that which was experienced by all the other Israelites, for Moshe
alone was addressed by God, and for this reason the second person singular is
used in the Ten Commandments; Moshe then went down to the foot of the mount and
told his fellow-men what he had heard.
Comp., "I stood between the Lord and you at that time to tell you the
word of the Lord" (Devarim 5:5).
Again, "Moshe would speak, and God would answer him with a voice"
(Shemot 19:19). In the
Mekhilta our Sages say distinctly that he brought to them every word as
he had heard it. Furthermore, the
words, "in order that the nation hear when I speak with you" (Shemot
19:9), show that God spoke to Moshe, and the people only heard the mighty sound,
not distinct words. It is to the
perception of this mighty sound that Scripture refers in the passage, "When you
hear the sound" (Devarim 5:20); again it is stated, "You heard a sound of
words" (Devarim 4:12), and it is not said "You heard words"; and even
where the hearing of the words is mentioned, only the perception of the sound is
meant. It was only Moshe that heard
the words, and he reported them to the people. This is apparent from Scripture, and
from the utterances of our Sages in general. There is, however, an opinion of our
Sages frequently expressed in the Midrashim, and found also in the Talmud, to
this effect: The Israelites heard the first and the second commandments from
God, i.e., they learnt the truth of the principles contained in these two
commandments in the same manner as Moshe, and not through Moshe. For these two principles, the existence
of God and His unity, can be arrived at by means of reasoning, and whatever can
be established by proof is known by the prophet in the same way as by any other
person; he has no advantage in this respect. These two principles were not known
through prophecy alone. Comp., "You
have been shown to know that," etc. (Devarim 4:34). But the rest of the commandments are of
an ethical and authoritative character, and do not contain [truths] perceived by
the intellect. Notwithstanding all
that has been said by our Sages on this subject, we infer from Scripture as well
as from the words of our Sages, that the Israelites heard on that occasion a
certain sound which Moshe understood to proclaim the first two commandments, and
through Moshe all other Israelites learnt them when he in intelligible sounds
repeated them to the people. Our
Sages mention this view, and support it by the verse, "God has spoken once;
twice have I heard this" (Tehillim 62:12). They state distinctly, in the beginning
of Midrash Chazit, that the Israelites did not hear any other command
directly from God; comp. "A loud voice, and it was not heard again"
(Devarim 5:19). It was after
this first sound was heard that the people were seized with the fear and terror
described in Scripture, and that they said, "Behold the Lord our God has shown
us, etc., and now why shall we die, etc.
You come near," etc. Then
Moshe, the most distinguished of all mankind, came the second time, received
successively the other commandments, and came down to the foot of the mountain
to proclaim them to the people, whilst the mighty phenomena continued; they saw
the fire, they heard the sounds, which were those of thunder and lightening
during a storm, and the loud sound of the shofar; and all that is said of the
many sounds heard at that time, e.g., in the verse, "and all the people saw the
sounds," etc., refers to the sound of the shofar, thunder and similar
sounds. But the voice of the Lord,
that is, the voice created for that purpose, which was understood to include the
diverse commandments, was only heard once, as is declared in the Torah, and has
been clearly stated by our Sages in the places which I have indicated to
you. When the people heard this
voice their soul left them; and in this voice they perceived the first two
commandments.
Notes:
1.
The story of creation, for example, is described one way in the first
chapter of Bereishit, which refers to God as Elokim, and in a much
different way in the second chapter, where the Name Havaya is used.
2.
God-willing, we will have opportunity in the future to explain how they
find independent expression in God's various comments to Moshe; in this context,
we will take the entire section until verse 19 as a single unit.
3.
According to what we are saying here, we must explain the verse later, in
chapter 24, "He [Moshe] told the people all the words of God and all the
laws." According to what we said
earlier, "all the laws" refers to the laws presented in Parashat
Mishpatim, and "all the words of God" refers to the Ten Commandments. What, then, are "the words of God" if
not the Ten Commandments? This is
not the context for an elaborate discussion of this question; we will simply
point out the Torah's narrative in Shemot 35, after the renewal of the
covenant that followed God's forgiveness of the people for the Sin of the
Calf. According to the plain
meaning of the text, "divrei Hashem" could refer to sections that do not
deal with legal issues, namely, the first and final sections of the "Sefer
Ha-berit," which includes 20:19-23 and chapters 21-23.