Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Seeing God's presence on the festivals

At the end of the laws in Parashath Mishpatim, we are told some final laws about the three annual Pilgrimage Festivals. Here's Exodus 23:17:
שָׁלֹ֥שׁ פְּעָמִ֖ים בַּשָּׁנָ֑ה יֵֽרָאֶה֙ כָּל־זְכ֣וּרְךָ֔ אֶל־פְּנֵ֖י הָֽאָדֹ֥ן ׀ יְהוָֽה׃
Three times in the yeere all thy males ſhall appeare before the Lord God.
(Why only males? Let's leave that difficulty aside for now.)

Our commentator writes:

י'ראה כ'ל ז'כורך. זכ"י: מי שזכאי וראוי לכך.
כל זכורך: כל זכרונך
אל פני האדן יי. רמז לעתיד לבא יבואו אל פניו וכת' כי עין בעין יראו וכת' הנה אלהינו זה קוינו. ועוד אל פניו יהיו ניזונין מזיו שכינתו. ולכך פני משונה תיבה זו אותן הפנים הנעלמים מזה העולם אז ייראו לפניו ויראו זיו השכינה וזהו פני

All thy males shall appear. The initials of the words yera'e kol zekhurkha, [reversed] spell zakkai, "worthy" -- whoever is worthy.
All thy males (zekhurkha). [This means] zikhronkha, thy memorial/mention/memory.
Before the presence of the Lord, the LORD. This is an allusion to the eschatological future, when they will come to His presence. And it is written (Isaiah 52:8): for they shall see each other eye to eye and it is written (Isaiah 25:9): This is our God, for whom we have waited. And, moreover, in His presence they will be fed by the sheen of His presence (shekhina). And therefore, [the letter pé] in the word פני is different, for it refers to the face
which is hidden from this world, which will be revealed [in the future], and they will see the sheen of the Shekhina.




Relevance for writing Nakh:

Too bad there's no pé in Isaiah 25:9. There is one in 52:8 (in the word צפיך); it's earlier in the sentence, before this phrase, but still might be close enough to cheat. Ah, well.

Friday, February 10, 2012

The sound of the shofar

Exodus 19:19:

וַֽיְהִי֙ ק֣וֹל הַשֹּׁפָ֔ר הוֹלֵ֖ךְ וְחָזֵ֣ק מְאֹ֑ד מֹשֶׁ֣ה יְדַבֵּ֔ר וְהָֽאֱלֹהִ֖ים יַֽעֲנֶ֥נּֽוּ בְקֽוֹל׃ כ וַיֵּ֧רֶד יְהוָ֛ה עַל־הַ֥ר סִינַ֖י אֶל־רֹ֣אשׁ הָהָ֑ר וַיִּקְרָ֨א יְהוָ֧ה לְמֹשֶׁ֛ה אֶל־רֹ֥אשׁ הָהָ֖ר וַיַּ֥עַל מֹשֶֽׁה׃





וחזק. יש עליו תגין, רמז שקול השופר הולך וחזק בראש השנה להבעית את השטן שמערבבין אותו בשופר, וזהו הולך וחזק מא'. משה ידבר והאלהים יעננו בקול. רמז כשישר' תוקעין בשופר ושליח ציבור מתפלל בכוונ' בראש השנ' הק' עונה אותו וזה משה ידבר. רמז לשליח ציבור. והאלהים יעננו בקול. ששומע התפילה ועונה אותם. וזהו וחזק -- מרמז על שופר של ראש השנה. י'ע'נ'נ'נו' -- ע'נ'י'נ'ינו' מתוך הענני'
Tagin on the ḥeth of וחזק; this alludes to the fact that the sound of the shofar goes long and strong on Rosh Hashana, to terrify the Satan, when we confuse him with the shofar; this is why the verse says continuing long and very strong. And it says: Moses would speak, and God would answer him with a Sound [or: voice] -- this alludes to the idea that when the Jews blow the shofar and the praecentor prays with kavvana on RH, God responds them; the words Moses would speak refer to the praecentor, and God would answer him with a Sound, for He listens to their prayer and answers them. And thus, the word would grow stronger alludes to the shofar of RH. He would answer him (יעננו) -- answer thou us (ענינו) from the clouds (עֲנָנֵי)!

Thursday, February 9, 2012

What God has done for the Israelites...

We are finally in the middle of Parashath Yithro. God has brought the Israelites to the foot of Mt. Sinai, and he is going to do some theophanizing later in the week. Right now, he is telling Moses to give a speech to the Israelites, in which he should ask them if they are willing to accept the Torah.

God's speech begins by reminding the Israelites what He has already done for them.
אַתֶּ֣ם רְאִיתֶ֔ם אֲשֶׁ֥ר עָשִׂ֖יתִי לְמִצְרָ֑יִם וָֽאֶשָּׂ֤א אֶתְכֶם֙ עַל־כַּנְפֵ֣י נְשָׁרִ֔ים וָֽאָבִ֥א אֶתְכֶ֖ם אֵלָֽי׃
Ye haue ſeene what I did vnto the Egyptians, and how I bare you on Eagles wings, and brought you vnto my ſelfe.
(Note that the lexical meaning of the word נֶשֶׁר in Scripture is usually not eagle, but some kind of vulture. This was noted already by Rabbenu Tam. (See Tosafoth on Ḥullin 63a.) There is a good discussion of this issue in T. Kronholm’s article ‘נֶשֶׁר – nešer’ in the Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament, vol. X (Eerdmans Publishing Company: Grand Rapids, Michigan. 1999), pp. 77 ff. Kronholm notes that because of the European ‘low estimation of the vulture and high estimation of the eagle as a royal bird’, European translations of Scripture, since the Septuagint, have translated נֶשֶׁר as eagle. Moreover, Kronholm writes that in Ezekiel 1:10, the source-text about the נשרים in the Merkava, the word means ‘probably the royal eagle’. (82))

Let's look at our commentator's notes on the tagin in this verse:


אשר עשיתי למצרים. רמז בתגין זה שר של מצרים.
What I did unto the Egyptians. The tagin here allude to [the idea that] this refers to the [heavenly] archon of Egypt.
This is a reference to the doctrine that each nation is represented in the heavenly court by an angelic archon, who bears the name of the nation. When the archon is being beaten up in heaven, that is when the nation is suffering down on earth. (The Jewish version of this doctrine preaches that it applies to all nations other than the Jewish people, for they are under the direct tutelage of God, the Lord Most High, above all the petty national archons.) So, in this case, the tagin mean that God is saying not only that he smote the Egyptians with plagues, but also that He has beaten up their archon in heaven. (I'm not sure what the practical difference is between these two, unless the nation and the archon are not as strictly linked as I have presented them. Nonetheless, reading the verse in this way transfers the action from the terrestrial plane to the celestial -- and, as we have seen, that is not uncommon in Ḥasidé Ashkenaz commentaries on Scripture.)

Let us now look at the next comment:


ואשא אתכם על כנפי נשרים. ותרגומו: כד על גדפי נישרין. כנפי יש לתיבה זו תגין, רמז כמו על כנפי המלאכים, וזהו על כנפי נשרים. ולכך מרמז התגין.
And how I bare you on eagles' wings. The Targum (Onqelos) translates this as: "[and how I bare you] as if on eagles' wings". Now, this word כנפי has tagin, which hints that the actual meaning is as if on angels' wings. This is the meaning of on eagles' wings.
Again, the change from eagle's wings to angels' wings is a change from a terrestrial read to a celestial one.

It's interesting to think of the Torah as being on these two planes, with one (the tagin / celestial plane) literally being on top of the other (letters / terrestrial plane). Of course, the tagin do not work at all by themselves; they create meaning only by modifying the existing meaning which is inherent in the words, which are made up of the letters.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

The statutes...

Same verse as last post, Exodus 18:16:
כִּֽי־יִהְיֶ֨ה לָהֶ֤ם דָּבָר֙ בָּ֣א אֵלַ֔י וְשָׁ֣פַטְתִּ֔י בֵּ֥ין אִ֖ישׁ וּבֵ֣ין רֵעֵ֑הוּ וְהֽוֹדַעְתִּ֛י אֶת־חֻקֵּ֥י הָֽאֱלֹהִ֖ים וְאֶת־תּֽוֹרֹתָֽיו׃

When they haue a matter, they come vnto mee, and I iudge betweene one and another, and I doe make them know the ſtatutes of God and his Lawes.
Here, we're going to look at a different word in the verse, namely חקי, the ſtatutes.



Our commentator writes:
את חקי. רמז בתגין: אותם חוקים הכתובים במקום אחר, הם העריות. וכן דורש במכילתא, כמו שכתבנו למעלה. לכך מרמז בחקי. וכתיב מחוקות התועבות אשר וגו
ח רמוז בג' תגין הם כ"ד, כי כ"ד ערות לא תגלה וכ"ד לשם: כ"ד ספרים. ואת תורותיו. ב' תורות: שבכתב ושבעל פה
The statutes. This is hinted with tagin, to indicate that it refers to those specific statutes which are written in another place, namely the ‘arayoth (laws against illegal sexual relations). The Mekhilta explains [our verse] thus, as we have written above. Therefore, there is this hint [of tagin on the word statutes, alluding to the verse any of the statutes of the abominations [Leviticus 18:30, in the passage about ‘arayoth].
The letter ḥeth [here, and perhaps also in Leviticus?], adorned with three tagin, equals 24 (because ḥeth = 8, so 8*3 = 24], for Scripture says thou shalt not uncover the nakedness... 24 times, and 24 is unto the Lord (or: unto the Name). And there are 24 books [in Scripture. And indeed, the next words of the verse are] ואת תורותיו, and his Torahs -- two Torahs, the Oral and the Written.
I don't know what this is about; in my text of the Torah, it says ערות ... לא תגלה ("thou shalt not uncover the nakedness of...") only 14 times.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Judges...

In Exodus 18:16, Moses explains his daily work schedule to his father-in-law:
כִּֽי־יִהְיֶ֨ה לָהֶ֤ם דָּבָר֙ בָּ֣א אֵלַ֔י וְשָׁ֣פַטְתִּ֔י בֵּ֥ין אִ֖ישׁ וּבֵ֣ין רֵעֵ֑הוּ וְהֽוֹדַעְתִּ֛י אֶת־חֻקֵּ֥י הָֽאֱלֹהִ֖ים וְאֶת־תּֽוֹרֹתָֽיו׃

When they haue a matter, they come vnto mee, and I iudge betweene one and another, and I doe make them know the ſtatutes of God and his Lawes.
Our commentator discusses the word ושפטתי, and I judge, which has four tagin on the letter ṭeth:



He writes:
ושפטתי -- תגין. רמז כאילו אומר הקב"ה על פיו אני שופטן, ולכך מרמז
And I judge (veshafatṭi).
There are tagin on the ṭeth. This alludes to the idea that God Himself said: "I am judging them on the basis of Moses's decisions. This is the hint [in the ṭeth].
He gives a second explanation, as well, which should be familiar to those who have read last week's posts on this blog:
ושפטתי -- ארבעה תגין על ט', ארבעה טיתין הם ל"ו, רובן של סנהדרין, ול"ו מסכתות יש להן גמרא
And I judge (veshafatṭi). There are four tagin on the ṭeth. Four times ṭeth (9) is 36, which is a majority of the (71-member) Sanhedrin. And it is the 36 tractates which have Gemara.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

All that goodness...

Our parasha opens with the meeting of Moses and his father-in-law Jethro, who has come to see him. Moses updates Jethro about all the events that he and the Israelites have experienced, and Jethro rejoices when he hears about this:
וַיִּ֣חַדְּ יִתְר֔וֹ עַ֚ל כָּל־הַטּוֹבָ֔ה אֲשֶׁר־עָשָׂ֥ה יְהוָ֖ה לְיִשְׂרָאֵ֑ל אֲשֶׁ֥ר הִצִּיל֖וֹ מִיַּ֥ד מִצְרָֽיִם׃
And Iethro reioyced for all the goodneſſe which the Lord had done to Iſrael: whom he had deliuered out of the hand of the Egyptians.
Our commentator is concerned with the word הטובה, “the goodness”. This word has the following tagin on it:

However, before discussing the tagin, he begins by quoting a discussion from the Mekhilta (‘Amaleq §1):
על כל הטובה. ר' יהושע אומר בטובת המן. אמר לו: המן אנו טועמין בו טעם פת טעם בשר טעם דגין וטעם חגבין וטעם כל המטעמים שבעולם. וזהו: הטובה, כל הטובה
ר' אלעזר [המודעי] אמר בטובת הבאר. אמר לו: הבאר הזה אנו טועמין בה טעם יין חדש טעם יין ישן טעם חלב טעם דבש טעם כל הממתקים שבעולם. שנאמר: טובה, על כל הטובה
ר' אל[י]עזר אומר: בטובת ארץ ישראל

For all the goodness. R. Joshua says: The goodness of the manna. [Moses] said to [Jethro]: "In this manna, we taste the flavor of bread, the flavor of meat, the flavor of fish, and the flavor of locusts -- and the flavor of all delicious foods in the world." This is why the text says [not only] goodness, [but] all the goodness.
R. Eleazar [the Moda‘ite] says: The goodness of the [miraculous] well. [Moses] said to [Jethro]: "In this well, we taste the flavor of grape juice, the flavor of wine, the flavor of milk, the flavor of honey -- and the flavor of all delicious drinks in the world." This is why the text says [not only] goodness, [but] all the goodness.
R. Eliezer say: The goodness of Eretz Yisrael.
Our commentator now shows a way to derive these Tannaitic explanations from the verse itself:
הטובה. ה' טובה. (א) טעם פת (ב) טעם בשר (ג) טעם דגין (ד) טעם חגבין (ה) טעם כל המטעמים. הרי ה' מטעמים וזהו ה' טובה.
דבר אחר: ה' טובה. (א) טעם יין חדש (ב) טעם יין ישן (ג) טעם חלב (ד) טעם דבש (ה) טעם כל הממתקים: הרי ה' טובה.

The goodness (הטובה). [Read this as] ה' טובה -- five goodnesses. (1) The taste of bread; (2) the taste of meat; (3) the taste of fish; (4) the taste of locusts; (5) the taste of every delicious food.
Or, alternatively: (1) The taste of grape juice; (2) the taste of wine; (3) the taste of milk; (4) the taste of honey; (5) the taste of all delicious drinks.


It is interesting that he does not mention the tagin in this first piece, because he could have argued that the tagin indicate that we should read the initial not as the definite article, but as something different, namely the number five.

In the next piece, though, he goes on to discuss the tagin:
דבר אחר: הטובה. תגין על ה' ועל ט'. רמז ה' חומשי תורה שעתיד ליתן להם שנקראו טוב שנאמר: טוב לי תורת פיך:
Another explanation: The word ha-tova הטובה has tagin on the hé and on the teth. This is an allusion to the five books of the Torah, which [God] would soon give to them. They are called "good" (tov), as it is written: Psalm 119:2: The Torah of Thy mouth is good unto me...


This explains only the tagin on the hé. But why on the teth? I don't know. The following explanation does not deal with the individual letters at all, but cares only that there are tagin on the word as a whole:
דבר אחר: הטובה. מצויין בתגין. זו טובה הברורה והמצויינת זו טובת עולם הבא וכתיב: מה רב טובך אשר צפנת ליראיך

Another explanation: The word ha-tova is marked by tagin, for it refers to the purest, most marked (=ultimate) goodness, namely, that of the World to Come. As it is written: Oh how great is thy goodness which thou hast laid up for them that fear thee.... (Psalms 31:20).

Thursday, February 2, 2012

And something from the end of the parasha

The last episode in Parashath Beshallaḥ is that of the war with Amalek. This tends to get lost on Shabbath Beshallaḥ, because there's so much else to discuss in this rich, long parasha, but people discuss it in the season devoted directly to this issue, the week of Shabbath Zakhor and Ta‘anith Ester* and Purim.

(At least, that's how it falls this year. In the past two years, the order has been Ta‘anith Ester and then Shabbath Zakhor, and that's how it will be again next year, apparently, unless the calendar doesn't proceed as planned.)

Anyway, when Amalek attacks Israel, Moses sends Joshua to find warriors to fight Amalek (Exodus 17:9):

וַיֹּ֨אמֶר מֹשֶׁ֤ה אֶל־יְהוֹשֻׁ֨עַ֙ בְּחַר־לָ֣נוּ אֲנָשִׁ֔ים וְצֵ֖א הִלָּחֵ֣ם בַּֽעֲמָלֵ֑ק מָחָ֗ר אָֽנֹכִ֤י נִצָּב֙ עַל־רֹ֣אשׁ הַגִּבְעָ֔ה וּמַטֵּ֥ה הָֽאֱלֹהִ֖ים בְּיָדִֽי׃

And Moses ſaid vnto Ioshua, Chooſe vs out men, and goe out, fight with Amalek: to morrow I will ſtand on the top of the hill, with the rodde of God in mine hand.
Our commentator comments on the word צא, "go out":
וצא. צ' מצויינת. רמז על מעשה מעלה: למעלה המלאכים ילחמו מלחמתינן. בחר לנו אנשים. אין אנשים אלא מלאכים, שנאמר: והנה שלשה אנשים. [...] וצא מצויין בתגין, רמז כאילו אומר להקדוש: אתה תצא להלחם מלחמתנו. וזהו וצא, מצויין למעלה, להקדוש אומר, וזהו שנאמר: מלחמה ליי בעמלק. צא בגימטריא השם ככתיבתו וכקריאתו.
And go out (ve-tzé). The tzadi is marked [with tagin], alluding to activities going on On High (in heaven): on high, the angels will fight our battle. Choose men for us -- the word men here means "angels"; for indeed, we see this word used for angels, as in Genesis 18:1: And behold, there were three men [coming to visit Abraham].
[...]
The word ve-tzé ("and go out!") is marked with tagin, indicating that it is as if [Moses] is addressing God directly: "Thou, go thou out to fight our battle!" This is the meaning of ve-tzé, marked [with tagin], that he is speaking to God. As the verse says: the Lord will have war with Amalek [Exodus 17:16, the last verse of our story and our parasha]. And the word צא in gematriya [equals 91, which is] the Name as written [יהוה, i.e. 26] plus the Name as pronounced [אדני, i.e. 65].


Now, although I wouldn't say that this is a great peshat interpretation of the word אנשים, men, in the direct context of the verse, it works very well in the broader context of the story. As our commentator himself says, the idea that God fights the battle against Amalek, on a cosmic level, is mentioned even in the Biblical text of the story, in the last first. (Compare this with other stories in Scripture, where the literal meaning of the verses seems to have nothing to do with God, but only with human skirmishes, and midrashic literature reads God into the story.)

Besides the Biblical verse, there is another text which I am sure must have been somewhere in our commentator's mind, namely, piece of a piyyut by R. El‘azar beribbi Qallir, for Shabbath Zakhor.

Not only was this piyyut universally part of Ashkenazic liturgy for that Shabbath in the Middle Ages, and even in many Ashkenazic synagogues even today, but we also know that the Ḥasidé Ashkenaz greatly esteemed piyyut, especially the piyyutim of R. El‘azar beribbi Qallir, the renowned old Palestinian master of piyyut. In fact, there are places in our manuscript, Bodleian 202, where our commentator directly quotes piyyutim of the Qalliri (though, as far as I have seen, without attribution -- perhaps because the quotations were so famous as to not need attribution).

Here is the quote, from the Silluq of the Qerova for Zakhor:

וְאַתָּה יְהֹוָה לְעוֹלָם תֵּשֵׁב / וְהוּא נֶגְדְּךָ בְּמַטָּה יוֹשֵׁב
תָּפוּשׂ מִדְבָּר וְכָל הַיִשּׁוּב / אֲנִי וְאַפְסִי עוֹד בְּלֵב מִתְחַשֵׁב
אִם לֹא עַתָּה תָקוּם וְתַקְשֵׁב / בִּשְׁלֹשׁ עֶשְׂרֵה קִימוֹת נְקָמוֹת לְחַשֵּׁב
בְּפַחַד וָפַחַת וָפַח לִפְקוֹד עַל הַיּוֹשֵׁב / וְאִם אַיִן כַּגֵּר תֵּחָשֵׁב
וְכָל הַמּוֹנֶה וְסוֹפֵר וְחוֹשֵׁב / קֵץ הַפְּלָאוֹת לְהָבִין וּלְחַשֵׁב
נָשְׁתָה גְבוּרָתוֹ מִמְּחַשֵׁב / וְלֹא יִמְצָא מַעֲנֶה לְהָשֵׁב
וְיֶחֱשֶׁה דוּמִיָּה מֵהַקְשֵׁב / וּבֶאֱמוּנָה כְּסָלָיו יְיַשֵׁב
וְזֹאת עַל לִבּוֹ יָשֵׁב / וְיֹאמַר עַד יַשְׁקִיף וְיֵרֶא וְיַקְשֵׁב

And Thou, O Lord, sittest [enthroned] forever, / and he [Amalek], opposite you, sitteth down below.
All the land, both wild and settled, is caught up [in his possession?].* / He thinks in his heart: "There is just me, and nothing else!" --
Unless Thou wilt arise, and heed [our prayer]**, / calculating acts of vengeance, in accordance with Thy thirteen acts of rising up,***
To wreak dread, and a pit, and a trap, upon all who sit [against Thee]; / and if [Thou dost not take vengeance], Thou will be considered like a foreigner [without vested interest]
And all who count, and calculate, and figure / the time for the eschaton, to ponder and consider its wonders,
Have lost all skill at calculation, / and have no answer to respond [to Amalek].

*I'm not sure exactly what this means; it could mean that Amalek himself is somehow "caught" [trapped] in the wilderness and the settled lands.
**Taqshev here could mean "heed our prayer", as in most dialects of Hebrew; but paytanic Hebrew often uses the hif‘il of קשב to mean to announce, so it could mean that here.
***Thirteen acts of rising up: according to the first interpretation in this commentary here, this refers to the thirteen times in Scripture where it says: "Arise, O Lord!"
The Qalliri thus is identifying Amalek not only with the Roman Empire of his day (which the European Jews would identify with the Christian Kingdoms of their own day, as, indeed, the medieval Christians did)*, but also with the Devil. And certainly, he is locating the primary battle as being on the divine plane: We're not going to fight Amalek, but we pray to You, O God, to fight for us -- as in our tagin commentator's interpretation of the verse: "And go Thou out, fight against Amalek!"

*See, e.g. Michael T. Clanchy, Abelard: A Medieval Life. Blackwell. 1997, p. 17:
Abelard and Heloise did not know that they were 'medieval' and that they would therefore be classified as peculiar and primitive 900 years later. [...] Abelard and Heloise would have been astonished to be told that they had lived in the Dark Ages, when the Latin classics were no longer understood and the Roman Empire had ceased to exist. They would have found this unrecognizable. [...] In Abelard's time the Roman Emperor semper Augustus was still the most important ruler in the West, even though he was elected in Germany and was often opposed by the Papacy. As for the ancient classics, Abelard and Heloise and their fellow writers were living proof that Latin learning flourished. They did not think, as later humanists did, that the only true Latin had been written in ancient Rome and the best they could do was imitate it, as that could only be the death of Latin and the end of Roman power.

"Bread" from heaven...

There's tons of tagin stuff in the Song of the Sea, as well as in the narrative preceding it, and I'm sure a lot of it is very interesting, but I have access to this manuscript only in the microfilm room at the National Library, and that is closing in under 45 minutes, and will not be open tomorrow (Friday), so I'm afraid we'll have to skip that all. Gives us something for next year, if I decide to re-open the blog when we hit Exodus again next time. (We should all be alive and healthy, and say ye Amen.)

Anyway, here's an example from later in the parasha, the story of the manna. In this example (unlike, apparently, the one in my previous post), the number of tagin is important:

Exodus 16:4:
וַיֹּ֤אמֶר יְהוָה֙ אֶל־מֹשֶׁ֔ה הִנְנִ֨י מַמְטִ֥יר לָכֶ֛ם לֶ֖חֶם מִן־הַשָּׁמָ֑יִם וְיָצָ֨א הָעָ֤ם וְלָֽקְטוּ֙ דְּבַר־י֣וֹם בְּיוֹמ֔וֹ לְמַ֧עַן אֲנַסֶּ֛נּוּ הֲיֵלֵ֥ךְ בְּתֽוֹרָתִ֖י אִם־לֹֽא׃

Then ſaid the Lord vnto Moses, Behold, I will raine bread from heauen for you: and the people ſhall goe out, and gather a certaine rate euery day, that I may proue them, whether they will walke in my Law, or no.
Our commentator writes:
הנני ממטיר לכם לחם מן השמים. הנני ממטיר, אף לעתיד לבא הקדוש נותן להם מן, כדאיתא בחגיגה שחקים ששוחקין מן לצדיקים:

דבר אחר: אנני ממטיר לכם לחם: זו רוח הקודש שתבא עליהם מן השמים וידעו התורה מאת הקב"ה, וזהו לחם זה תלמוד. וזהו ולקטו שילקטו כל יום תורה וזהו הילך בתורתי:

ממטיר. התגין מרמזין לעתיד לבא. על ט' ארבעה תגין, ארבע טיתין ל"ו -- ל"ו מסכתות גמרא. דבר אחר: רמז על העתיד:

Behold, I will rain bread from heaven for you. Also in the [messianic] future, too, God will give them manna, as it says in Ḥagiga [12b]: Sheḥaqim is [the level of heaven] where they grind up manna for the righteous.

Another interpretations: Behold, I will rain down bread. This means the holy spirit, which will descend upon them from heaven, and they will know the Torah from God. This is what it means when it says [in Ḥagiga 14a]: "Bread refers to the Talmud." Thus, they will gather a certain rate means that they should collect some Torah every day. Thus, the verse ends: "They will walk in my Law [Torah]".

I will rain (mamṭir). The tagin allude to the [messianic] future. There are four tagin on the ṭeth. Four times ṭeth (9) is 36, which refers to the 36 tractates of Gemara. Another interpretation: [The tagin] allude to the messianic future.



What's this about 36 tractates of Gemara? Well, there are 63 tractates of the Mishna, but the Talmud Bavli happens to contain exposition on only 36 of them. (This is mentioned already in the poem אזהרת ראשית, from late antique / early Gaonic Babylonia, which we recite in Musaf on the second day of Shavu‘oth.)

This is classic Ḥasidé Ashkenaz exposition of the Torah -- find in the verse an allusion to some work of Torah literature which would be written far later than Biblical times. (For example, Rabbenu Ephraim reads the word פרח, in the phrase כפתר ופרח, as being initials of the phrase פירוש רבינו חננאל.)

God and His Retinue

Second verse of the parasha (13:18):
וַיַּסֵּ֨ב אֱלֹהִ֧ים ׀ אֶת־הָעָ֛ם דֶּ֥רֶךְ הַמִּדְבָּ֖ר יַם־ס֑וּף וַֽחֲמֻשִׁ֛ים עָל֥וּ בְנֵֽי־יִשְׂרָאֵ֖ל מֵאֶ֥רֶץ מִצְרָֽיִם׃

But God ledde the people about through the way of the wilderneſſe of the Red ſea: and the children of Iſrael went vp harneſſed out of the land of Egypt.
Our commentator notes a number of different interpretations of the verb vayyassev (translated here by the KJV as "ledded the people about"): Surrounded them with His presence, gave them couches on which to lie down, as at a meal; gave them a meal.

And who did all this for them?
אלהים. תגין. כלומר הוא וצבאו הסיבן, אלהים המעוטר והמצויין

The word "Elohim" has tagin, to indicate: He and His retinue did this for them; Elohim, the crowned and distinguished.


(Note that he draws this word twice, and the tagin appear differently in the two places; it seems that here, as in many other places, the number of tagin isn't important. Sometimes the number is important, but only when he specifically says so. I think. Interestingly, here there's also the discrepancy in the placement of tagin; I think, based on my limited exposure to this manuscript, that that is true specifically in divine names, which are viewed as unitary items, rather than composed of letters. I think.)

More Abraham

Here's an extended comment on that same verse:
וַיְהִ֗י בְּשַׁלַּ֣ח פַּרְעֹה֮ אֶת־הָעָם֒ וְלֹֽא־נָחָ֣ם אֱלֹהִ֗ים דֶּ֚רֶךְ אֶ֣רֶץ פְּלִשְׁתִּ֔ים כִּ֥י קָר֖וֹב ה֑וּא כִּ֣י ׀ אָמַ֣ר אֱלֹהִ֗ים פֶּֽן־יִנָּחֵ֥ם הָעָ֛ם בִּרְאֹתָ֥ם מִלְחָמָ֖ה וְשָׁ֥בוּ מִצְרָֽיְמָה׃

And it came to paſſe when Pharaoh had let the people goe, that God led them not through the way of the land of the Philiſtines, although that was neere: For God ſaide, Leſt peraduenture the people repent when they ſee warre, and they returne to Egypt.


[See, tagin on the final mem.]

What does it mean, "when they see war"? Our commentator writes:
בראתם מלחמה. אותה מלחמה שעשו פלשתים עם בני אפרים שהרגום כשיצאו ל' שנה קודם הקץ, שנאמר: והרגום אנשי גת הנולדים בארץ. וזהו בראותם מלחמה.

בראתם, תגין: אותה המלחמה שכתוב בדברי הימים, שנאמר: והרגום אנשי גת

בראותם: מ' שנה הלכו במדבר. ועכשיו אם היו רואין היו וחזרין מיד למצרים, בׄרׄאׄתׄ םׄ: ו' מאות אלף אם היו רואים, וזהו בראות מ

בׄרׄאׄתׄ םׄ: ת' אברם. לאברהם נאמר כי גר יהיה זרעך ת' שנה, ולא סיימו עדיין כשיצאו בני אפרים ולכך הכום פלשתים כי עדיין לא היה (לכם) [להם] לצאת. ושמא כך היו עושין לישראל. וזהו בׄרׄאׄתׄםׄ: אברם ת: ומלידת יצחק היו ת' ואותם מנו מברית בין הבתרים ואז היה הברהם בן ע' שנה

When they see war. That war which the Philistines had waged against the Ephraimites, killing them when they left [Egypt] 30 years before the Designated Time, as it is written: [...] whom the men of Gath, that were borne in that land slewe (I Chron. 7:21). And this is what our verse means when it says that the Israelites might see war.

When they see (bir’otham). There are tagin on the [final] mem to indicate that this refers to that specific war mentioned in Chronicles.*

When they see (bir’otham). [The tagin on the mem] refer to the 40 years during which they would travel in the wilderness, [in accordance with the numerical value of mem, namely 40. If they would see war now, they would return immediately to Egypt: בראות מ.** If the 600,000 would see -- this is בראות מ.

When they see (bir’otham). [The letters of בראתם are an anagram of] אברם ת, Abram 400. For Abraham had been told that his descendants would be sojourners for 400 years, and this time had not been completed when the Ephraimites attempted to leave Egypt, and that is why they were slain by the Philistines, for they should not have left yet. And lest [you think] that this would happen [now] to the Israelites, [Scripture tells us]: בראתם, Abram 400, [that is, Abraham's 400 years were now up, so there was no need to worry]. The count of 400 begins at Isaac's birth***, but [the Ephraimites] calculated it from the time of the Covenant Between the Pieces [when the prophecy was told to Abraham], which was when Abraham was 70 years old, [thirty years before Isaac's birth].
*I don't get this, exactly. How do the tagin on the final mem allude to the war mentioned in Chronicles? Perhaps these are hyperlink tagin, referring to a similarly-adorned mem in the Chronicles passage? If so, when I order my scroll of Chronicles, I should have the final mem of והרגום adorned with tagin.
**I really don't get what's going on here. What do the forty years of wilderness wandering, which haven't happened yet, have to do with the problem of seeing (evidence of the old) war now? Is the idea that if the Israelites are scared by seeing the bones of their Ephraimite brethren, and thus return to Egypt, they will forfeit the entire upcoming forty years? But why specifically forty years -- couldn't they have another Exodus a year later, or a hundred years later, or never? And why the reference to 600,000. Of course, that's the (rounded) number given for the male able-bodied Israelites during the wilderness years, but is their some kind of gematria that is flying over my head?
***This is the standard calculation: The 400 years in which "Abraham's seed" would be "sojourning" starts from the birth of Isaac, 30 years after the Covenant Between the Parts, because Abraham doesn't have any (relevant) "seed" until Isaac. The 430-year figure given in Exodus 12:40 is considered to begin at the time of the Covenant itself. Either way, only 210 of the years are spent in Egypt.

"Most of the time, the letter quf is a reference to Abraham"

The first verse (Exodus 13:17) in this week's portion, Beshallaḥ, reads as follows:

וַיְהִ֗י בְּשַׁלַּ֣ח פַּרְעֹה֮ אֶת־הָעָם֒ וְלֹֽא־נָחָ֣ם אֱלֹהִ֗ים דֶּ֚רֶךְ אֶ֣רֶץ פְּלִשְׁתִּ֔ים כִּ֥י קָר֖וֹב ה֑וּא כִּ֣י ׀ אָמַ֣ר אֱלֹהִ֗ים פֶּֽן־יִנָּחֵ֥ם הָעָ֛ם בִּרְאֹתָ֥ם מִלְחָמָ֖ה וְשָׁ֥בוּ מִצְרָֽיְמָה׃

And it came to paſſe when Pharaoh had let the people goe, that God led them not through the way of the land of the Philiſtines, although that was neere: For God ſaide, Leſt peraduenture the people repent when they ſee warre, and they returne to Egypt.
Our commentator comments on the word קרוב, near:
כי קרוב. ק' מצויינת בתגין. רמז על אברהם כי הקו"ף סימן לאברהם ברוב מקומות לפי שילד לק' שנה

For it was near (qarov). The quf is adorned with tagin.* This is an allusion to Abraham.** For the quf refers to Abraham in most instances, for he sired [Isaac] at age 100, [the numerical value of the letter quf].

*In the manuscript, the quf has two tagin protruding from its head, thus:


**Presumably, this means either that God took the Israelites out of Egypt in the merit of their ancestor Abraham (if we read the tagin as referring to the broader context of the passage); or that God kept the Israelites away from the Land of the Philistines, so as not to violate the treaty which Abraham had made with the Philistines in Genesis 21 (if we read the tagin as referring to the narrow context of the specific sentence).

What is fascinating here is that our commentator says that quf refers to Abraham "in most places". The idea that a letter of the alphabet could have one and only one specific meaning, and mean this in all (or even, as he says here) most places (in Scripture? in the language?) seems bizarre. And yet, that is the kind of reading we find here. (Of course, if quf almost always refers to Abraham, then why does only this specific one get tagin?

Incidentally, Douglas Hofstadter uses this kind of reading as an absurd example, and assumes that his readers will agree:

Douglas Hofstadter, Gödel, Escher, Bach, p. 332:

Anteater: Imagine you have before you a Charles Dickens novel.

Achilles: The Pickwick Papers — will that do?

Anteater: Excellently! And now imagine trying the following game: you must find a way of mapping letters onto ideas, so that the entire Pickwick Papers makes sense when you read it letter by letter.

Achilles: Hmm ... You mean that every time I hit a word such as "the", I have to think of three definite concepts, one after another, with no room for variation?

Anteater: Exactly. They are the `t'-concept, the `h'-concept, and the `e'-concept-and every time, those concepts are as they were the preceding time.

Achilles: Well, it sounds like that would turn the experience of "reading" The Pickwick Papers into an indescribably boring nightmare. It would be an exercise in meaninglessness, no matter what concept I associated with each letter.

Anteater: Exactly. There is no natural mapping from the individual letters into the real world. The natural mapping occurs on a higher level between words, and parts of the real world. If you wanted to describe the book, therefore, you would make no mention of the letter level.
See also Moshe Idel's article "Midrashic versus Other Forms of Jewish Hermeneutics", in The Midrashic imagination: Jewish exegesis, thought, and history (SUNY, 1993):



I think that what Idel describes as the Sefer Yetzira approach, that the important thing is not the semantic meaning of the Torah's narratives, but merely the power of each platonic letter in the alphabet, can be related to today's common practice of always adding ziyyunin to שעטנ"ז ג"ץ, whereas the midrashic approach, which is interested in reading and re-reading the stories and laws, can be related to the older approach of adding specially significant tittles to specific letters of the text.