La Bible Hébreu
La Bible Hébreu

Midrash sur Isaïe 1:7

אַרְצְכֶ֣ם שְׁמָמָ֔ה עָרֵיכֶ֖ם שְׂרֻפ֣וֹת אֵ֑שׁ אַדְמַתְכֶ֗ם לְנֶגְדְּכֶם֙ זָרִים֙ אֹכְלִ֣ים אֹתָ֔הּ וּשְׁמָמָ֖ה כְּמַהְפֵּכַ֥ת זָרִֽים׃

Votre pays est une solitude, vos villes sont consumées par le feu! Votre sol, sous vos yeux des étrangers le dévorent, c’est une ruine, comme un bouleversement dû à des barbares.

Eikhah Rabbah

Rabbi Alexandri began: “And the leper in whom there is a mark [his garments shall be rent, the hair of his head shall be grown, he shall cover his upper lip, and he shall cry: Impure, impure]” (Leviticus 13:45). “And the leper” – this is the Temple. “In whom there is a mark” – this is idol worship, which imparts impurity like a leprous mark, as it is stated: They desecrated My Temple and defiled it.57There is no such verse, although there are several verses expressing the same idea and employing similar terminology; see, e.g., Jeremiah 7:30, 32:34; Ezekiel 5:11. “His garments shall be rent” – these are the priestly vestments. “The hair of his head shall be grown [parua]” – this is what is stated: “He laid bare the covering of Judah” (Isaiah 22:8) – exposing what was covered.58The allusion is to the roof of the Temple, which was destroyed. The word parua can mean exposed. “He shall cover his upper lip” – once Israel was exiled from among the nations, none of them was capable of expressing a matter of Torah with his mouth. “And he shall cry: Impure, impure” – the first destruction and the second destruction.
Rabbi Yosei ben Ḥalafta said: Anyone who knows how many years Israel engaged in idol worship knows when the son of David will come. We have three verses that support him. One, “I will reckon upon it the days of the Be’alim, to which it burned incense” (Hosea 2:15) – [meaning,] like the days of the Be’alim. Second, “It was, that just as He called and they did not heed, so they will call out and I will not heed” (Zechariah 7:13). Third, “it will be when you will say: For what did the Lord…do [all these to us? You will say to them: Just as you forsook Me and served strange gods in your land, so you will serve strangers in a land not yours]” (Jeremiah 5:19).
Rabbi Yoḥanan and Reish Lakish, both of them addressed this. Rabbi Yoḥanan said: “Because [yaan uvyaan]” (Leviticus 26:43) – measure for measure.59The doubling of the term yaan indicates that the punishment will mirror the sin, measure for measure. Reish Lakish said: “Your land, strangers devour it in your presence [lenegdekhem]” (Isaiah 1:7) – strangers shall devour it corresponding to you [kenegdekhem].60Corresponding to the sins you have committed; for the same length of time you worshipped idols. Rabbi Alexandri learned it from this verse: “All the days that the mark is on him he shall be impure” (Leviticus 13:46). Eikha!
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Pesikta Rabbati

... Teach us o teacher: toward where should one who prays orient his heart? This is what our Rabbis taught: one should orient his heart toward the place of the Holy of Holies (Berachot 4:5). R’ Eliezer ben Yaakov says: if one is praying outside of the land, he should orient his heart to the land of Israel. If one is praying within the land of Israel, he should orient his heart to Jerusalem. If one is praying in Jerusalem, he should orient his heart to the Holy Temple. If one is praying in the Holy Temple, he should orient his heart to the Holy of Holies. R’ Avin the Levi said: “our neck is like the Tower of David, built as a model (talpiyot)…” (Song of Songs 4:4) What does talpiyot mean? The hill (tel) toward which all turns (peniyot) are directed. And after all this praise, it is written “Open your doors, O Lebanon, and let the fire consume your cedars.” (Zechariah 11:1) And so too they said “He has hurled fire into my bones…” (Lamentations 1:13) Israel said to Him: Master of the World! How long will it be like this? Did You not write in Your Torah “…the one who ignited the fire shall surely pay” (Exodus 22:5)? And You are the one who ignited the fire, as it says “From above He has hurled fire into my bones…” (Lamentations 1:13) You need to rebuild it and to console us, not at the hands of an angel but You in Your glory. The Holy One said to them: by your life, so I will do! As it says “The Lord is the builder of Jerusalem; He will gather the outcasts of Israel.” (Psalms 147:2) And I am the one who consoles you. From where do we learn this? From that which they read in the prophets “I, yea I am He Who consoles you…” (Isaiah 51:12)
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