Bibbia Ebraica
Bibbia Ebraica

Chasidut su Esodo 19:3

וּמֹשֶׁ֥ה עָלָ֖ה אֶל־הָאֱלֹהִ֑ים וַיִּקְרָ֨א אֵלָ֤יו יְהוָה֙ מִן־הָהָ֣ר לֵאמֹ֔ר כֹּ֤ה תֹאמַר֙ לְבֵ֣ית יַעֲקֹ֔ב וְתַגֵּ֖יד לִבְנֵ֥י יִשְׂרָאֵֽל׃

Mosè poi salì a Dio. Il Signore cioè lo chiamò, e gli disse: Così dirai alla famiglia di Giacobbe, ed annunzierai ai figli d’Israel.

Kedushat Levi

Leviticus 1,1. “He called out to Moses;” the fact that ‎the letter ‎א‎ in this verse is written in smaller script is explained ‎by something we had discussed in Exodus 24,1 on the line: ‎ואל ‏משה אמר עלה אל ה'‏‎, “and to Moses He had said: ‘ascend towards ‎‎Hashem.’” When a person performs one of G’d’s ‎commandments this makes an impression in the celestial spheres ‎and helps to awaken in him the desire to perform additional ‎commandments so that he will constantly be occupied with doing ‎G’d’s will. It had been Moses’ will to continuously perform G’d’s ‎will and to thereby continue to ascend ever higher and come ‎closer to Hashem as stated by the Zohar when ‎explaining the line: ‎ומשה עלה אל האלוקים‎, “and Moses had ‎ascended towards G’d,” (Exodus 19,3). G’d’s invitation recorded in ‎Exodus 24 to ascend (once again) was the result of his having ‎done so in Exodus 19,3 when he had commenced to do so before ‎an invitation had been issued to do so. The Zohar II,69 ‎ascribes the invitation to Moses in our verse to ascend to ‎‎Hashem as a reward for Moses’ initiative in Exodus 19,3. ‎This is reflected here by the letter ‎א‎ being written in small script. ‎It acknowledges the humility of Moses which exceeded anyone ‎else’s humility, i.e. the “small” ‎א‎.
We have a rule when offering a sacrifice to G’d that this ‎offering is to reflect the largesse that G’d has seen fit to bestow ‎upon us, without us in the lower regions of the universe having ‎performed any good deeds to deserve this. This is the reason that ‎the animal sacrifice must be dedicated and consecrated while still ‎alive, as the ultimate gift G’d can bestow us is life itself. Life can ‎only be bestowed by G’d Himself.‎
Libations, i.e. offerings consisting of oil or wine (with ‎additives) are a form of “mini-offering,” but they represent an ‎input by the residents in this lower part of the universe, man ‎having had to seed and plant the earth before eventually ‎producing the product from which oil and wine is made. These ‎libations also reflect G’d’s largesse, i.e. the largesse bestowed upon ‎us as a direct result of our constructive activities on earth. In ‎other words, the Israelites were allowed (only after the affair of ‎the spies) to present such libations in recognition of their good ‎deeds.
While the Israelites were in the desert they were in the ‎position of receiving G’d’s largesse without having made an input ‎of their own as they could not seed or plant orchards or grow ‎grain in the desert. In recognition of their inability to do so, G’d ‎provided heavenly bread, i.e. the manna for them. In lieu of ‎their offering libations to Him, G’d provided them with a ‎travelling well which took care of their daily needs for fresh ‎water.‎
All this has been alluded to in Numbers 15,2 when the Torah ‎begins to describe how the people’s lives will change once they ‎will come to the land of their inheritance, i.e.‎כי תבאו אל ארץ ‏מושבתיכם וגו'‏‎, “when you will come to the land in which you will ‎reside permanently, etc.” The Torah there continues with listing ‎the various kinds of offerings (first animal) and then libations, in ‎that order. The reason why these sacrificial offerings are linked to ‎the people being in possession of their permanent homes in the ‎Holy Land is because the sacrifices are reflections, i.e. acts of ‎acknowledgment and gratitude for G’d’s largesse by giving them ‎an ancestral heritage. This also explains why the sages have ‎decreed ‎אין אומרים שירה אלא על היין‎, “when intoning songs of ‎thanksgiving to G’d one must only do so while saying a blessing ‎over wine (and drinking it) as an acknowledgment of the most ‎precious product that the earth (lower part for the universe) has ‎to offer us by the grace of G’d.” (Compare Rashi on Erchin ‎‎11)‎ ‎‎
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Kedushat Levi

Another approach to the verse: ‎כי תשא את ראש בני ישראל ‏לפקודיהם ונתנו איש כופר נפשו וגו'‏‎, we have a rule that we ‎learned from the Zohar on Exodus 19,3 ‎ומשה עלה אל האלוקים ‏ויקרא אליו ה' מן ההר‎, “and Moses had ascended towards G’d, and ‎‎Hashem called out to him from the Mountain, etc,” that ”all ‎spiritual ascents of man must be oriented toward his declaring ‎the Creator as his King.” This idea has also been alluded to in our ‎verse when the Torah speaks about elevating the Children of ‎Israel, i.e.‎כי תשא את בני ישראל‎. The root ‎פקד‎ occurs already in ‎Esther 2,3 where we are told that the king appointed officials by ‎writing: ‎ויפקד המלך פקידים‎, “the king appointed officials etc.” The ‎half shekel that the Israelites were to pay as ransom for their ‎souls, were intended to insure that they would progress towards ‎their task of appointing G’d as their King. This is the reason why ‎the Torah added the word ‎לה'‏‎, i.e. “for Hashem.” after the ‎word ‎נפשו‎.‎
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Kedushat Levi

Exodus 19,3. “meanwhile Moses had ascended to G’d, ‎‎[lowest of the celestial domains, Ed,], and Hashem ‎called out to him from the Mountain, saying: ‘thus you shall ‎speak to the house of Yaakov and tell in detail to the Children ‎of Israel.’”‎
We need to analyze a number of points in this verse ‎‎(paragraph). 1) What precisely is the meaning of the word ‎כה‎? ‎Why could the Torah not simply write: ‎ויקרא אליו ה' לאמור לבית ‏יעקב‎, “Hashem called to him to say to the house of Yaakov, ‎etc.?” 2) Why, in verse 4, does G’d refer only to the Exodus from ‎Egypt as examples of what He had created? 3) What is the ‎meaning of the line (verse 5) ‎והייתם לי סגולה מכל העמים‎, “you have ‎become more precious to Me than any of the other nations,” after ‎the condition: "if you will surely listen to My voice and observe ‎My covenant?“ Are we to assume, G’d forbid, that if we had not ‎been given the covenant and had accepted it enthusiastically, ‎that we would not be superior to the other nations? Does G’d love ‎us only on account of our being loyal to the covenant? Moreover, ‎G’d should have said that if we observe the covenant we are also ‎dearer to Him than all the angels, as when we –who are free to ‎choose- observe the covenant, we are on a spiritually higher level ‎than the angels, even?‎
It appears to me that the answer to all these questions can be ‎found already in the Midrash. [I have not found this ‎‎Midrash. Ed.] which describes Moses’ reception in ‎the lowest of the seven layers of the celestial regions. When ‎Moses arrived at that level he found himself surrounded by many ‎thousands of different categories of angels, including the holy ‎‎seraphim, all of whom were standing in awe and reverence ‎‎[before the Lord, I assume, Ed,] so that he was ‎overcome by a great fright and was trembling not knowing with ‎whom he should commence to speak. He remained in this ‎condition until G’d Himself spread some of the brilliance of His ‎Presence over him.‎
We find numerous occasions when other prophets when ‎addressed by G’d, stood in awe and trembling before G’d so much ‎so that their normal senses became totally disoriented and ‎dysfunctional.‎
On Leviticus 1,1 ‎ויקרא אל משה אליו מאהל מועד‎, “G’d called to ‎Moses from the Tent of Meeting,” Rashi comments that the ‎words following: ‎וידבר אליו‎, “He spoke to him,” might be ‎understood as a repetition as at first G’d’s voice was not loud ‎enough, therefore the Torah writes both in Numbers 7,89 and ‎Deuteronomy 8,20, ‎את הקול‎, “the ‘well known’ voice.” G’d’s voice ‎was powerful but could not be heard outside the confines of the ‎Tabernacle. The Bible repeatedly refers to the powerful voice of ‎G’d being such that it felled cedars. (psalms 29) If a human being ‎is fortunate enough to hear the voice of G’d proclaim the words: ‎אנכי ה' אלוקיך אשר הוצאתיך וגו'‏‎, “I am the Lord your G’d Who has ‎taken you out, etc.;” each Shavuot, this is proof of how one must ‎prepare oneself in order to hear the Lord’s voice. [Alas, ‎none of us has been found meritorious enough to hear that voice. ‎Ed.] We have a tradition that the tens of thousands of ‎angels were overcome with trembling whenever they heard the ‎voice of G’d. How much more so must we mortal human beings ‎be overcome with such tremors if even the angels are described as ‎being in such a state of terror? The three days of preparation ‎described in the Torah as preceding G’d’s revealing Himself to the ‎people at Mount Sinai are totally inadequate. Even if we were to ‎prepare ourselves for a whole year this would not suffice for us to ‎tolerate G’d’s voice without becoming seriously disoriented. Our ‎verse indicates that although Moses had prepared himself for the ‎encounter with G’d that he would face, and he had assumed that ‎what G’d had to say to him was on a level that the people could ‎not comprehend, G’d told him that this was not necessary, as ‎what He had to say to him was intended for him to teach to the ‎people.
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Noam Elimelech

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Kedushat Levi

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