תנ"ך ופרשנות
תנ"ך ופרשנות

Chasidut על שמות 24:3

Kedushat Levi

Exodus 24,3. “Moses came and told the people all the ‎words of Hashem, and all the “social laws.”
According ‎to the opinion of Rashi, the events recorded in this chapter ‎occurred chronologically before the giving of the Torah on the 6th ‎of Sivan. He adds that the ‎משפטים‎, laws governing inter ‎personal relations, must refer to the 7 Noachide laws that apply ‎to all of mankind and to the laws governing the red heifer and ‎part of the Sabbath legislation revealed to the people at ‎‎Marah, as well as to the law to honour father and mother.‎
Nachmanides questions at least part of Rashi’s ‎commentary, finding it most unlikely that at this time and place ‎Moses told the people about the 7 Noachide laws. He also argues ‎that the expression ‎ויספר‎, “he told,” used in our verse is ‎inappropriate for use with matters that were already known.‎
Personally, I do not see anything wrong with Rashi’s ‎commentary. According to the understanding of the sages in the ‎Talmud, the events described in this chapter preceded the ‎revelation at Mount Sinai as explained in Or Hachayim, see ‎page 751 in this editor’s translation of the Or Hachayim’s ‎commentary, where the author quotes a Mechilta on this ‎subject describing it as “undisputed.” As to the words in ‎‎Rashi referring to what Moses told the people being the ‎seven Noachide commandments, etc., this was not the subject he ‎told them about, i.e. ‎ויספר‎, “he told,” but refers to the altar which ‎Moses had built on the 5th day of Sivan, the day prior to the ‎revelation which the Torah mentions in verse 4 of our chapter. ‎On that day Moses concluded a covenant with the people ‎confirming as law the seven Noachide laws, etc., laws that had ‎first been introduced during the people’s stopover at Marah, ‎where G’d had demonstrated how “bitter” waters could be ‎sweetened. Moses told the people that their having observed the ‎laws given on that occasion was truly a major achievement on ‎their part. He added that G’d had been greatly pleased by this. ‎When the people heard about how pleased G’d had been, they ‎were encouraged to spontaneously promise that any further laws ‎G’d were to instruct them to observe they would honour without ‎hesitation. In other words, they “invited” G’d to inform them of ‎additional laws He had in mind to reveal to them for their own ‎good. This was followed a little while later by the most famous ‎declaration of the people when they proclaimed: ‎נעשה ונשמע‎, “we ‎will do, now let’s hear,” in that order. (verse 7)‎
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