Talmud su Osea 5:2
וְשַׁחֲטָ֥ה שֵׂטִ֖ים הֶעְמִ֑יקוּ וַאֲנִ֖י מוּסָ֥ר לְכֻלָּֽם׃
E quelli che cadono sono andati profondamente nel massacro; E io sono respinto da tutti.
Jerusalem Talmud Avodah Zarah
The haughtiness of Jeroboam damned him absolutely21Jeroboam is the only person of those mentioned in Mishnah Sanhedrin11:2 as having no part in the Future World who is not rehabilitated in the Yerushalmi Halakhah. The following argument is reproduced in Babli Sanhedrin101b.. Rebbi Yose ben Jacob said, Jeroboam became king at the end of a Sabbatical year. This refers to what is written22Deut. 31:11., at the end of seven years, at the time of the Sabbatical year, on the festival of Tabernacles, when all of Israel comes to appear before the Eternal, your God, at the place which He shall choose, you shall read this Torah in the presence of all of Israel to their ears. He said, if I am asked to read23By tradition, on this occasion it is the king who has to read selected portions (Mishnah Sotah6:7). It is presumed that the same was true for the First Temple. There is no provision that two kings could read alternate portions, or if they did, the local king certainly would have precedence. The assertion of the book of Kings that there was a perpetual state of war between the Northern and the Southern kingdoms in the time of Jeroboam (1K. 15:6) is interpreted as a war of words conducted in the House of Study.
Another tradition (mentioned frequently but not undisputed) holds that nobody is allowed to sit in the Temple but a Davidic king (Pesaḥim5:10, Yoma3:2, Soṭah7:7; Babli Sanhedrin101b, Soṭah40a,41a, Yoma25a, Qiddušin78a, Tamid27a). If Yeroboam would have to stand while Rehabeam was sitting, an impossible situation would be created., I have to stand. They will say, the local king has precedence. But if I am reading as second, it is a shame for me. If I do not read, it is a disgrace for me. And if I let them go24Letting the people go to Jerusalem while he remains at Sichem would emphasize the legitimacy of Rehabeam’s rule., they will ascend and desert me. They will go to Rehabeam, Solomon’s son. This is what is written251K. 12:26.: If this people would go up to sacrifice in the Temple in Jerusalem will this people’s heart return to their master, to Rehabeam. What did he do? He made two golden calves and wrote on their hearts, “they will kill you.” He said, any king who will succeed me will look at them26The king would see the words engraved on the calves and understand that their purpose was to prevent people from observing the assembly in Jerusalem which would undermine his rule.. Rebbi Ḥuna said, companions of ingenious conjurations27Ps. 58:6.. Anybody who joined with him he will make a coconspirator28Correctly reading the first חבר in the verse from the root meaning “to connect” but the second from the homonym meaning “to conjure, to practice sorcery.” Since all kings of Israel adopted his institution of official worship at Bethel as long as that place existed, they became his co-conspirators.. Rebbi Ḥuna said, a slaughtering place deepened by seducers29Hos. 5:2., for he deepened in crime. He said, anybody, I shall kill anybody who makes this public30The reason for the worship of the calves was never made public. Therefore, the sin was the king’s only..
Another tradition (mentioned frequently but not undisputed) holds that nobody is allowed to sit in the Temple but a Davidic king (Pesaḥim5:10, Yoma3:2, Soṭah7:7; Babli Sanhedrin101b, Soṭah40a,41a, Yoma25a, Qiddušin78a, Tamid27a). If Yeroboam would have to stand while Rehabeam was sitting, an impossible situation would be created., I have to stand. They will say, the local king has precedence. But if I am reading as second, it is a shame for me. If I do not read, it is a disgrace for me. And if I let them go24Letting the people go to Jerusalem while he remains at Sichem would emphasize the legitimacy of Rehabeam’s rule., they will ascend and desert me. They will go to Rehabeam, Solomon’s son. This is what is written251K. 12:26.: If this people would go up to sacrifice in the Temple in Jerusalem will this people’s heart return to their master, to Rehabeam. What did he do? He made two golden calves and wrote on their hearts, “they will kill you.” He said, any king who will succeed me will look at them26The king would see the words engraved on the calves and understand that their purpose was to prevent people from observing the assembly in Jerusalem which would undermine his rule.. Rebbi Ḥuna said, companions of ingenious conjurations27Ps. 58:6.. Anybody who joined with him he will make a coconspirator28Correctly reading the first חבר in the verse from the root meaning “to connect” but the second from the homonym meaning “to conjure, to practice sorcery.” Since all kings of Israel adopted his institution of official worship at Bethel as long as that place existed, they became his co-conspirators.. Rebbi Ḥuna said, a slaughtering place deepened by seducers29Hos. 5:2., for he deepened in crime. He said, anybody, I shall kill anybody who makes this public30The reason for the worship of the calves was never made public. Therefore, the sin was the king’s only..
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