Bibbia Ebraica
Bibbia Ebraica

Chasidut su Esodo 32:7

וַיְדַבֵּ֥ר יְהוָ֖ה אֶל־מֹשֶׁ֑ה לֶךְ־רֵ֕ד כִּ֚י שִׁחֵ֣ת עַמְּךָ֔ אֲשֶׁ֥ר הֶעֱלֵ֖יתָ מֵאֶ֥רֶץ מִצְרָֽיִם׃

Ed il Signore disse a Mosè: Vanne, scendi, poiché commise una grave colpa il tuo popolo, che conducesti fuori della terra d’Egitto.

Kedushat Levi

Deuteronomy 9,21. “and (the object of) your sin that ‎you fashioned, the golden calf, and in Taveyrah, and at ‎Massah, ‎‏ ‏‎ and when Hashem sent you out from Kadesh ‎Barnea, etc, .you have repeatedly been defiant toward the ‎Lord. When I lay prostrate before the Lord, etc.; etc,”
It appears difficult to understand why Moses who had begun ‎in verse 18 to describe his prostrating himself before the Lord ‎after the sin of the golden calf, after reciting numerous other sins ‎of the Jewish people, once more continues with recounting his ‎pleas for his people while prostrate before G’d in verse 25.‎
I believe that in order to understand Moses better, we must ‎revert to the text of the Torah in Exodus 32,7 where G’d tells ‎Moses to descend from the Mountain because the people had ‎made themselves a golden calf as a symbol of G’d. At that time G’d ‎had told Moses not to intervene by pleading for the people in ‎order that He could proceed with annihilating them. (Exodus ‎‎32,10) At that time Moses had ignored G’d’s “suggestion,” and ‎had immediately begun pleading for the survival of the Jewish ‎people, the Torah’s report commencing with the words: ‎ויחל משה ‏וגו'‏‎, “Moses implored, etc.”‎
Nachmanides on this verse points out that seeing that Moses ‎had pleaded immediately when G’d had told him to leave Him ‎alone “at that moment,” i.e. ‎ועתה הניחה לי‎, G’d responded by ‎‎“forgiving” the people, i.e. (32,14). Seeing that G’d had ‎‎“forgiven,” why did Moses spend 40 days on the Mountain after ‎having destroyed the evidence of the sin in order to obtain G’d’s ‎forgiveness, as he tells us in this paragraph when he refers to a ‎second stay on Mount Sinai during which time he neither ate ‎bread nor drank water for 40 consecutive days? (9,18) Moses ‎attributes that stay to his fear that G’d was still angry at the ‎people!‎
Nachmanides on this verse points out that seeing that Moses ‎had pleaded immediately when G’d had told him to leave Him ‎alone “at that moment,” i.e. ‎ועתה הניחה לי‎, G’d responded by ‎‎“forgiving” the people, i.e. (32,14). Seeing that G’d had ‎‎“forgiven,” why did Moses spend 40 days on the Mountain after ‎having destroyed the evidence of the sin in order to obtain G’d’s ‎forgiveness, as he tells us in this paragraph when he refers to a ‎second stay on Mount Sinai during which time he neither ate ‎bread nor drank water for 40 consecutive days? (9,18) Moses ‎attributes that stay to his fear that G’d was still angry at the ‎people!‎
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Kedushat Levi

In order to understand the words of Nachmanides properly ‎we must remember that up until the time of the sin of the golden ‎calf, G’d had dealt with the Jewish people on the basis of the ‎attribute of Mercy, i.e. even when they committed sins, He had ‎kept in mind that this was the people who represented the ‎emanation of ‎תפארת‎, usually translated as “harmony,” but ‎perhaps here more appropriately as “glory,” i.e. they were the ‎people that enabled G’d to be glorified as they had accepted His ‎rule voluntarily. The moment this people had become guilty of ‎constructing a golden calf and deifying it, they had ceased to be ‎G’d’s people and had become Moses’ people, as G’d said to Moses ‎in Exodus 32,7 when G’d told Moses: ‎שחת עמך אשר העלית מארץ ‏מצרים‎, “your people whom you have brought up from Egypt has ‎become corrupt.”‎
Moses was now (second stay of 40 days on Mount Sinai) ‎concerned to reverse this demotion of the Jewish people from ‎being G’d’s people and having become his people. He was anxious ‎that G’d would once more deal with the Jewish people on the ‎basis He had dealt with them prior to this colossal error on their ‎part. He was afraid that even if G’d were to forgive the people the ‎sin committed at Mount Sinai, this was no guarantee that at a ‎future time they would not again commit a sin as a result of ‎which their existence as a nation would be jeopardized. If at such ‎a time the people, basically, were his people instead of G’d’s ‎people, this could prove an insurmountable barrier to G’d’s ‎forgiveness, [especially if it were to occur when they no ‎longer had a leader such as Moses. Ed.] It was this second ‎part of G’d’s forgiveness that it took Moses 40 days to secure.‎
While pardon for the sin itself occurred even before Moses ‎descended from the Mountain the first time, i.e. ‎וינחם ה' על הרעה ‏אשר דבר לעשות לעמו‎, “G’d reconsidered the harm He had said He ‎would do to His people,” (Exodus 32,14) Israel’s status as G’d’s ‎people had not been reinstated. [Seeing that in verse 14 ‎Israel is again referred to as “His people,” the presumption that ‎the whole nation had been disowned by G’d when He accused ‎Moses of the sinners being his people, is difficult to accept. ‎Ed.]
Moses foresaw that the Israelites would become guilty of ‎other sins in the future. Moses reminds the people that their ‎obstinate defiance of G’d had started long before the sin of the ‎golden calf, i.e. ‎ממרים הייתם מיום דעתי אתכם‎, “you were defiant ‎from the day I became acquainted with you.” If Moses would not ‎succeed in restoring Israel’s former status of ‎תפארת‎, being the ‎people with whom G’d could “glorify Himself,” their entire future ‎would be jeopardized. This is why on the day after Moses ‎shattered the Tablets, burned the golden calf, and executed the ‎active idol worshippers, and ritually cleansed the survivors by ‎sprinkling them with water containing gold dust of the calf, he ‎ascended the Mountain again, unbidden this time. (Exodus 32, ‎‎30-31) The mention of the various sins listed above in 9,22-24 are ‎Moses’ way of explaining why he had to ascend Mount Sinai again ‎immediately as if he would not obtain rehabilitation of the ‎people’s status in the G’d’s eyes, any one of these sins that he ‎knew they would commit in the future might have spelled their ‎doom.
When Moses recalls to the people in 9,26 that he appealed to ‎G’d with the words: ‎אל תשחת עמך‎, ”do not annihilate Your ‎people,” these were the words he had used the first time after G’d ‎told him to descend as his people had become corrupted. He had ‎immediately wanted to reject the notion that the Israelites had ‎become his people instead of G’d’s people.
We can now understand the sequence in which Moses recalls ‎past events while not sticking to the chronological order.‎ ‎ ‎
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