Bibbia Ebraica
Bibbia Ebraica

Chasidut su Esodo 18:33

Mevo HaShearim

“Thus says the young one, Hayyim son of Joseph Vital: I have seen people of ascent [bnai aliyah], few in number, desiring to rise; yet the ladder is hidden from their eyes. They examine the ancient works, searching for the paths of life, ‘the way they should go and the actions they should do’191Exodus 18:20. to rise up to their supernal roots and cleave to Him, may He be blessed. For that is the ultimate perfection, as did the prophets, who cleaved unto their Creator their entire lives, and the Holy Spirit rested upon them via that cleaving to instruct them as to the path wherein the light resides, to illuminate their eyes in the secrets of the Torah. As King David said, ‘uncover my eyes and I will see wonders from your Torah,’ to direct them in the proper path towards the place prepared for them with the bnai aliyah…”
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Kedushat Levi

Exodus 18,1. “Yitro, the priest of Midian, heard all ‎that G’d had done for Moses and His people Israel, etc.” ‎What Yitro had “heard” was that what G’d had done to Egypt had ‎not been triggered by the Egyptians having transgressed G’d’s ‎will, but for what they had done to Moses and the Israelites. Proof ‎of this is found in the words uttered by the Egyptians on the ‎point of death (Exodus 14,25) ‎אנוסה מפני ישראל כי ה' נלחם להם ‏במצרים‎, “I will have to flee on account of Israel for Hashem ‎is battling on their behalf against Egypt.”‎
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Tiferet Shlomo

Yisro heard all that Hashem the Jewish people out of Egypt: Later on, the Torah says, that Moshe told his father-in-law all that G-d did to Pharaoh and the Egyptians. Yisro rejoiced because of all the good that Hashem did. And Yisro said Blessed is Gd that saved you from Egypt and Pharaoh. We need to understand what did Moshe tell Yisro that he didn't know because the Torah says already that Yisro already heard about it at home, and that's why he came to convert. Also, why did he have joy in his hear only after Moshe told it to him, and not at home? How come it first say "All that G-d did for Moses in Israel" and "...all that G-d did for Pharaoh and Egyptian? So the answer is: the Torah is telling us that the main thing that Yisro heard and why only he was motivated to convert to Judaism. The answer is that when he heard about all the miracles that G-d did to the Egyptians that broke the order of heavens above and the earth below and changed the nature of the world. G-d did all this for the sake of the Jewish people. So Yisro understood that all that G-d desires in all that He has made is for the Jewish people. For their sake, all of creation changes. Anything else has no intrinsic purpose because the world was made only for the Jewish people. He took this heart and wanted to connect to the Jewish people. And that's what the Torah says "that he heard all that G-d did" that means all that G-d has created is for the sake of Moshe and the Jewish people. Everything was created for their sake and their needs. This is apparent because of the miracles that G-d caused because of the Jewish people. Then Moshe told Yisro something else. All that G-d did to the Pharaoh and Egyptains, he wanted to explain why did G-d create all the Egyptian and kelipa that hurt the Jewish people and caused them to sin chas veshalom and drowned them in the darkness of the bitter exile. Why does G-d do this? The Torah says Moshe told him about the Jewish people and the word "about" have the same letters "letter dalet" and the letter "dalet" interrupts G-d's name in word "Yehuda". Because in the exile as long as this unity has not been fixed, the hei remains poor, as long as hei is not attached to the vav, the hei is poor. Only through the deeds of people in this word can the hei become whole again because G-d's kindness is everlasting. This acheived through the work of the Jewish people, to correct things so that be the same way they were orignially. When they have good and evil mixed together in their lives, and the person has free choice, to turn his heart, through this, a person is elevated by his good deeds very high, as the sages say "when the world was created, G-d said it was very good." Good is the yetzer tov, very good is the yetzer hara because it elevates the Jewish people so high. Therefore, those Egyptians that prevent the Jewish people from performing good deeds are also there to help the Jewish people so that the Jewish people can overcome them and become elevated. This is the meaning of the verse, "he told all the hardship that they found on the way and that G-d had saved them." What this means is all of the hardships that a Jew will have in their journey will eventually be saved by Hashem, and that's why Yisro is so happy. Because Yisro understood the goodness of Hashem's Unity in this physical world. That was a very necessary step to recieve the world. When the Jewish people would hear about the service of G-d and what it was about. G-d begins talking to the Jewish people (before the Torah) saying "You have seen all that I've done to the Egyptians and I have carried you on eagle's wings" what this means is by making the Egyptians for you, and the hardships you, and despite this you strengthened yourself in your fear of Hashem you have been uplifted on eagle's wings, to this high, elevated state. And this is why the Ten Commandments begin with "I am the L-rd your G-d who took you out of Egypt" and not "I am the L-rd your G-d who created the world" because this is the fundamental principle of receiving the Torah; the yichud of Anochi, to subdue all of the kelipa that causes pain to the Jewish people and return it all to good. And this will bring you to have fear of Hashem's exaltedness, not merely fear of sin, because you corrected all the evil to good and can achieve a higher fear. As the Jewish people merited "they saw and they trembled and they stood at a distance." And this is the meaning of "Hashem has come in order to test you" the word "test" means to "lift up" and Moshe continues to say "you should have fear of Hashem upon your faces so that you shall not fear" so that you should have fear of G-d's exaltedness, but you should have fear of sin nonetheless like Yizthak Avinu. This explains the verse, "my eyes yearn for your salvation, and for the words of your righteousness." This refers to the Ten Commandments, but fulfill for your servant your words so that he may fear You may he merit to achieve fear of Your Exaltedness by studying Torah."
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Tiferet Shlomo

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Kedushat Levi

Exodus 18,11. “now I know that Hashem is ‎greater than any deity, by reason of His making the ‎punishment fit the crime.” We have to try and understand ‎what precisely Yitro meant with these words. When war is fought ‎and one party is victorious, the victory may become manifest in a ‎number of ways. In one type of war the victorious side merely ‎killed a great number of the troops of the opposing armies ‎without there being any changes in the boundaries between the ‎two kingdoms that fought one another. In the eyes of the world ‎the victor has not become mightier by reason of his victory. Both ‎Kings remain on their respective thrones. In a second scenario, ‎the victor may capture the opposing king and his armies, and ‎annex the lands of his former opponent. This type of victory is, of ‎course, more imposing and enhances the stature of the victor ‎considerably.‎
When G’d wished to save the Israelites from the yoke of the ‎Egyptians, He chose to defeat them by means of water, as ‎‎Rashi explained in Sh’mot, G’d could have used fire in ‎order to dry out the water. Had He done so He would not have ‎demonstrated His superiority over water, [only fire’s ‎superiority over water] as it would not have ‎demonstrated how the waters first obeyed the command to split ‎and provide passage for the Israelites, and, subsequently, how ‎they reverted to their normal condition and in the process ‎drowned the Egyptians. Not only did G’d thereby impress all those ‎who saw it or heard about it, but He also made the point that the ‎Egyptians who had considered the waters, i.e. the river Nile, as a ‎kind of deity, and their special god as it provided them with their ‎economic well being, that water had now become their undoing, ‎much more so than when the waters turned into blood for a ‎week.‎
When Yitro correctly realized that Hashem is more ‎powerful than any other force in nature that has been deified, the ‎word ‎מכל‎ is of special significance, i.e. that it is appended to the ‎word ‎כל‎ instead of Yitro saying: ‎מן כל‎. Had he said: ‎מן כל האלוקים‎, ‎‎“more than any other deity,” we would have understood this ‎quantitatively, i.e. other deities are able to lift weights of 500kg, ‎whereas G’d is able to lift weights of a ton. By saying: ‎מכל האלוקים‎, ‎Yitro made clear that he referred to G’d’s qualitative superiority, ‎His being in a class by Himself. Being able to turn what the ‎Egyptians had believed to be the source of their blessings, water, ‎into the source of their destruction, demonstrated to one and all ‎the nature of Hashem’s power.‎
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Kedushat Levi

Exodus 18,1‎‏2‏‎. “Aaron and all the elders of Israel joined ‎in breaking bread with Yitro, etc.” At this point G’d’ ‎rewarded Yitro for inviting Moses into his house (Exodus 2,2) and ‎offering him a meal. He was doubly rewarded as he enjoyed eating ‎a meal in the presence of G’d, ‎לפני האלוקים‎, (verse 13)‎
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Tiferet Shlomo

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Kedushat Levi

Exodus 18,14. “why are you alone seated while all the ‎people have to stand in attendance in your presence?” ‎Moses explains to his father-in-law what his function is, i.e. to ‎arbitrate quarrels and to teach G’d’s laws.‎
Yitro explains that he objects to the manner in which Moses ‎carries out his duties, saying that it contributes to both his ‎becoming tired and the people becoming frustrated. He points ‎out that the present arrangement is counterproductive on both ‎counts.
Our author may also have hinted at a metaphysical aspect of ‎the spectacle he had witnessed. Man, whether Israelite of high ‎caliber or of modest stature, must constantly; strive to advance ‎spiritually, and come closer to the highest level he is capable of ‎attaining considering the attributes that had been granted to him ‎at birth. By referring to Moses “sitting” and the people ‎‎“standing,” Yitro hints that the present arrangement interferes ‎with the people concerned being able to progress spiritually ‎through this tiresome arrangement. Moreover, if the ‎‎tzaddik, righteous, spiritually superior person, conducts ‎himself in a manner that shows that he considers himself ‎superior, the people on a lower level will only confuse him as they ‎resent such behaviour. When someone is an outstanding ‎‎tzaddik towering far above his peers, he may succeed in ‎elevating his peers to his level by speaking to them in the ‎appropriate manner. Yitro was under the impression that Moses ‎had initiated this system, thereby causing resentment. Moses ‎explained that the opposite was the case; the people had come to ‎him begging him to adjudicate their problems. By using words ‎judicially, he, Moses was doing his best to elevate them ‎spiritually. Upon hearing this, Yitro told Moses that in his ‎opinion Moses was assuming a greater burden than he would be ‎able to carry single-handedly.‎ ‎
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Tiferet Shlomo

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Kedushat Levi

We may understand the word ‎אתם‎ better when comparing with Exodus 14,4 “I have ‎reinforced Pharaoh’s heart so that he will pursue you, etc.” You will note that during the ‎entire song of thanksgiving after the drowning of the Egyptians, in spite of frequent ‎repetitions of the many aspects of this miracle, Moses did not for a single time refer to the fact ‎that the Israelites had been saved, although he extols the annihilation of Egypt’s armed might. ‎This was in spite of the fact that the major aspect of the miracle was the saving of the ‎Israelites who had been between a “rock and a hard place,” completely helpless before that ‎miracle.
The Talmud in Pessachim 118 is at pains to point out ‎that the Israelites of that generation were very weak in their level ‎of faith in G’d, so much so that they reasoned that just as they ‎themselves had been able to climb out of the sea bed on one side, ‎the Egyptians might have been able to do the same on the ‎opposite side of the shore. Why would such a thought be ‎justification to describe the Israelites as lacking in faith? ‎Furthermore, what does the Talmud mean by the words: ‎כשם שאנו ‏עולים‎, “just as we climbed out, etc.?” How could they compare ‎their situation to that of the Egyptians? Besides when had they ‎posed a threat to the Egyptians? In order to understand this ‎better we must remember that there are two different levels of ‎faith. The first and highest level is called ‎אמונה שלמה‎, “absolute ‎unshakable faith.” It includes that one believes absolutely ‎without reservation in the G’d of our forefathers, reveres Him and ‎loves Him. The second level of “faith,” is not “self generated,” but ‎is the result of experiencing mind-boggling events, such as the ‎miracles the Israelites had experienced both in Egypt and in even ‎greater measure at the sea of reeds. A look at what the Sifssey ‎chachamim has to say on Rashi’s explanation of Yitro’s ‎words in Exodus 18,11 ‎עתה ידעתי כי גדול ה' מכל האלוקים‎, “now I ‎know that Hashem is greater than any other deity.” ‎‎Rashi had interpreted this line to mean that in the past ‎Yitro had not left any religion untried until he had found it ‎wanting. The Sifssey chachamim points out that Rashi ‎had come to this conclusion from the apparent contradiction of ‎the word ‎עתה‎, ”now,” and the word ‎ידעתי‎, “I was familiar with,” in ‎the past tense. Yitro therefore meant that although in the past ‎he had been familiar with every deity, by now he had convinced ‎himself of Hashem’s absolute superiority.‎
However, the Egyptians, far from reacting positively to the ‎performance of G’d’s miracles reacted negatively by becoming ‎ever more obstinate. This is indicated clearly in Exodus 15,4 when ‎Moses describes the choicest of the Egyptians’ captains being ‎flung into the sea to drown. (15,4) The expression ‎ובמבחר‎, “and ‎from the choice(st)” instead of ‎ומטוב‎ “and from the best,” is a ‎double entendre, and hints at the choice the Egyptians had made ‎to rather drown than acknowledge the superiority of ‎‎Hashem. Watching G’d perform miracles had left open the ‎choice for them to do teshuvah even though G’d had ‎performed one or two acts designed to give them confidence that ‎they could defeat the Israelites and their G’d. The same miracles ‎which had brought the Jewish people closer to G’d, had the ‎opposite effect on the Egyptians, confirming them in the belief ‎that their deity Baal Tzefon had proved superior to the ‎Jewish G’d.‎
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Kedushat Levi

The sages in Rosh Hashanah 12 alluded to this when ‎they stated that “the Jewish people are in the habit of counting ‎Biblical calendar dates as based on the view of Rabbi Eliezer when ‎speaking of the deluge, (solar year), whereas they do so according ‎to the view of Rabbi Joshua when counting the seasons the ‎seasons of the year.” (lunar “year”). The Talmud adds that the ‎astronomers of the gentile nations also count the deluge ‎according to the opinion held by Rabbi Joshua. [The whole ‎statement is extremely puzzling, our author contributing a novel ‎interpretation by understanding it as relating to the mystical ‎dimension of life on earth. Ed.]
Our author raises the ‎question that seeing that the astronomers of the gentile nations ‎adopt an opinion that is contrary to halachah, how can they ‎be described as “sages of gentile nations?” We have a rule that ‎anyone contradicting what is written in the Torah or recorded as ‎wisdom by King Solomon is an absolute fool.‎
We need to explain above statement allegorically. We have ‎already explained in connection with a statement in the Talmud ‎‎Pessachim 118 that when Rabbi Yishmael, son of Rabbi ‎Yossi, (a sage of the fifth generation of the sages that belonged to ‎the Mishnaic period) fell ill Rabbi Yehudah (hanassi?) sent to ‎him asking him to tell them one or two Torah insights of his ‎father that he had not previously revealed. He responded by ‎offering an interpretation of a difficult passage in psalms 117,1 ‎where the psalmist appears to invite the nations of the world to ‎praise G’d, saying: ‎הללו את ה' כל גויים שבחוהו כל האומים‎, “praise the ‎Lord all you nations; extol Him all you peoples!” Seeing that the ‎next verse describes the miracles G’d has performed on behalf of ‎the Jewish people, what reason would the gentiles have to praise ‎G’d for this? He answered that if the gentiles are required to ‎praise the Lord for having been witnesses to miracles performed ‎for the Israelites, how much more so must the Israelites be duty ‎bound to praise Him on account of this! How much loving ‎kindness have we experienced at the hands of G’d without having ‎thanked Him adequately! Thereupon Rabbi asked for another ‎pearl of wisdom that Rabbi Yossi had not yet revealed. He told ‎them that at the time when the messiah would come, the gentiles ‎would welcome him with gifts. It seems clear that the words ‎שבחוהו‎, “praise Him,” in the psalm are not meant as ‎acknowledgement of what G’d had done for the gentiles, but for ‎what He had done for His people, the Israelites. It is the ‎overriding duty of all of G’d’s creatures, including the beasts in ‎the field to praise the Creator in accordance with the manner in ‎which they are capable of doing this. This includes even the flora ‎that appear tied to the place in which they grow, and which do ‎not even enjoy the ability to move freely on G’d’s earth. How ‎much more so must the more advanced forms of life on earth ‎praise their Creator, seeing that they are able to enjoy so much ‎more of the world they have been born into?‎
We may take a cue from the words of Rashi on ‎‎Shabbat 50, “whatever G’d created, He created for the ‎greater glory of His name.” When Jews are killed for the ‎sanctification of the Lord’s name (having had the opportunity to ‎save themselves by denying Judaism, as happened frequently ‎during the crusades) they do so joyfully.‎
It is therefore not difficult to comprehend that the psalmist ‎reminds the gentiles of their duty to praise the Lord as He has ‎given them an opportunity to carry out His will. Miracles which ‎G’d performed for the Israelites frequently were at the expense of ‎the gentiles who had oppressed them. The psalmist warns these ‎gentiles that they are obligated to praise the Lord for having been ‎privileged to experience His greatness even while they perish in ‎the process. The fact that they had been chosen to be G’d’s means ‎of showing His might to the Israelites is something they have to ‎acknowledge, not grudgingly, but joyfully. The fact that they ‎deliberately try to blind themselves to such recognition, stamps ‎them as utter fools. The perennial problem with fools is that they ‎do not wish to be enlightened, believing that they are wise.‎
However, there will come a time, when G’d will open the eyes ‎of the blind and all of them [those who have survived the ‎cataclysmic events occurring first, Ed.] will turn into ‎servants of the Lord.
At the time of the Exodus, when G’d performed miracles that ‎enabled the Israelites to be redeemed, He revealed His power to ‎the Egyptians at the same time, of course. However, the latter, ‎almost until their last breath did not acknowledge that it was G’d ‎Who was fighting them when the waves of the sea of reeds came ‎crashing over them. (Exodus 14,25)‎
The Jews have not always been better, so that Isaiah 2,5 tells ‎us that the time will come when –after the gentiles have already ‎acknowledged all this in Isaiah 2,3 – they too will experienced the ‎‎“light” of the Lord. In psalms 118 David foresees all this already ‎hundreds of years before the prophet Isaiah.‎
Let us revert to the passage in the Talmud Rosh ‎Hashanah 12, and the strange statement referring to the ‎astronomers of the gentiles as “sages.” Traditionally, the month ‎of Tishrey symbolizes that G’d’s attribute of Justice, sits in ‎judgment of His creatures on the first day of that month. The ‎month of Nissan, however symbolizes the attribute of Mercy, ‎loving kindness, as it is the month during which the Jewish ‎people, who had a minimum of merits to their credit, were ‎redeemed after hundreds of years of persecution. When looked at ‎from the perspective of the gentiles, the month of Nissan ‎symbolizes the attribute of Justice, as during that month G’d ‎brought retribution on the leading nation of the gentiles, ‎reducing a world power, Egypt, to becoming a “banana republic,” ‎practically overnight. The effect of this was so overwhelming that ‎Rahab from Jericho, who harbored Joshua’s spies, was still in awe ‎of that event. (Joshua 2,9-11).‎
Rabbi Eliezer correctly realized that for the gentiles what we ‎perceive as unmitigated disaster, actually is the catalyst that ‎brings them to recognize G’d in the end, by seeing in the month ‎of Tishrey also a harbinger of the attribute of Mercy, seeing it is ‎the gentiles’ last opportunity to change their ways and survive as ‎servants of G’d.
The Talmud introduces a reference to the period during ‎which the deluge occurred, i.e. in Marcheshvan, although neither ‎Rabbi Joshua nor Rabbi Eliezer had made reference to that event ‎at all. When the “sages” of the gentile nations are described as ‎taking their cue from the deluge as being in accord with Rabbi ‎Joshua, even when referring to the deluge, what the Talmud ‎means is that these “gentile sages” recognized that the disasters ‎that had struck them was also an outpouring of G’d’s love, as this ‎enabled the survivors to recognize G’d as a G’d of love after all. ‎‎[According to the Talmud there the gentile sages ‎recognized what Yitro recognized later also, (Exodus 18,11) i.e. ‎that when G’d brings on retribution He makes the punishment fit ‎the crime. Ed.]
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Kedushat Levi

Our sages in the Talmud Megillah 13 explain that the ‎reason why Queen Esther was known as Esther (rather than as ‎‎Hadassah, Esther 2,7) was that her beauty reminded people ‎of the brilliance of the planet (star) Venus. [possibly the ‎Talmud, which also explains her name as a reminder that she was ‎a lady who could keep a secret, sees a dual meaning in her name, ‎both brilliant light, and complete darkness, hiding things. ‎Ed.] Some of G’d’s miracles involve changes in the laws of ‎nature such as the splitting of the sea, turning the waters of the ‎Nile into blood and redeeming the Jewish people from Egypt. ‎Others are the result of a combination and timing of most ‎unlikely circumstances.
Ahasverus’ taking a liking to Haman and trusting him blindly, ‎and subsequently switching his trust to Esther who had never ‎even revealed her nationality or religion to him, is just a minor ‎example of this. Haman’s choosing to request permission from ‎Ahasverus to hang Mordechai in the middle of the night, a night ‎when the king could not sleep and he was reminded that ‎Mordechai had saved his life from assassins, and that Esther at the ‎time had brought this to his attention, and that Haman planned ‎to kill his lifesaver, etc., are just a few of these propitious ‎coincidences that resulted in Haman’s downfall and the salvation ‎of the Jewish people at that time. The former kind of miracle is ‎usually attributed to G’d in His capacity as the tetragram, ‎י-ה-ו-ה‎, ‎whereas the latter kind of miracle is attributed to G’d in His ‎capacity as ‎א-ד-נ-י‎. In the former case, G’d is “active, changing the ‎rules of the game,” whereas in the case of the “hidden” miracle, ‎the emphasis is on the recipient, ‎מקבל‎. The difference can be ‎compared to the difference between the sun and the moon, both ‎of which give forth rays of light, the sun being a source of light, ‎whereas the moon only reflects light that it had already received ‎from the sun. Esther therefore is compared to the moon in the ‎story of Purim.‎
When G’d performs supernatural miracles even the idolaters ‎are humbled and recognize (temporarily) His mastery as we know ‎from Exodus 18,1 where the Torah records that Yitro had heard ‎about these great miracles and had concluded that Hashem ‎is superior to any other force in the universe that claims the ‎status of being a deity.‎
Amalek was the only nation among the wicked people ‎denying G’d’s power, who challenged G’d by attacking His people, ‎unprovoked, on ground (Compare Yalkut Shimoni, 938, and ‎quoted by Rashi (Deuteronomy 25,18) that did not belong ‎to any nation. According to Rashi, Amalek’s being the first ‎to challenge the myth of G’d’s invincibility is compared to the ‎first person jumping into boiling hot water of a bath tub, who, ‎while being scalded nevertheless succeeds in cooling the water so ‎that the next person following will hardly be scalded at all and ‎subsequent people will feel comfortable in that tub.
[While both Rashi and Yalkut Shimoni ‎quote this analogy, Rashi could not have taken it from ‎‎Yalkut Shimoni, as the author of these Midrashim lived ‎approximately 200 years later than Rashi. Ed.]
Seeing that Amalek initiated this rebellion against G’d, the ‎Torah commands such far reaching punishment for that nation. ‎If G’d now commanded the Israelites to wage war against Amalek, ‎the reason was that seeing supernatural means of humbling ‎idolaters had not sufficed, other, better understood means, i.e. ‎warfare on earth, had to be reverted to. It was therefore ‎appropriate that Joshua should conduct this battle as Moses had ‎been instrumental in performing supernatural miracles, whereas ‎Joshua would prove that G’d is able to deal with sinners without ‎having to resort to supernatural means. Our sages alluded to this ‎when they said in the Talmud Baba Batra 75 that if Moses’ ‎face could be compared to the face of the sun, Joshua’s would be ‎comparable to that of the moon.‎
Allusions found in the written Torah usually refer to the ‎celestial regions or to matters supernatural, metaphysical, ‎whereas allusions in the oral Torah usually refer to matters in the ‎physical universe. The relationship between the written Torah ‎and the oral Torah is that the written Torah is the source, i.e. like ‎the sun, whereas the oral Torah is comparable to the moon, i.e. a ‎recipient, reflecting the origin. Here, where nature was “repaired” ‎by miracles similar to those experienced by Mordechai and Esther, ‎i.e. “hidden miracles,” as described earlier, it was appropriate that ‎we are told for the first time about parts of the written Torah to ‎be committed to writing. [I believe the author draws a ‎parallel between the antagonists of the Jewish people at that ‎time, i.e. a descendant from Amalek, and the first defeat suffered ‎by Amalek at the hands of Joshua, Ed.] The “allusions” ‎referred to are the words ‎זאת‎ and ‎זכרון‎ in this short paragraph, ‎and the written record of the Purim story in Esther as described ‎in Esther 9,29-32. (Compare Talmud Megillah 7). The words ‎זכרון בספר‎ refer to the written record in the Torah, whereas the ‎word ‎זאת‎ refers to the oral record in the halachah.‎ ‎ ‎
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