히브리어 성경
히브리어 성경

창세기 35:1의 미드라쉬

וַיֹּ֤אמֶר אֱלֹהִים֙ אֶֽל־יַעֲקֹ֔ב ק֛וּם עֲלֵ֥ה בֵֽית־אֵ֖ל וְשֶׁב־שָׁ֑ם וַעֲשֵׂה־שָׁ֣ם מִזְבֵּ֔חַ לָאֵל֙ הַנִּרְאֶ֣ה אֵלֶ֔יךָ בְּבָרְחֲךָ֔ מִפְּנֵ֖י עֵשָׂ֥ו אָחִֽיךָ׃

하나님이 야곱에게 이르시되 일어나 벧엘로 올라가서 거기 거하며 네가 네 형 에서의 낯을 피하여 도망하던 때에 네게 나타났던 하나님께 거기서 단을 쌓으라 하신지라

Midrash Tanchuma

And God said unto Jacob: “Arise, go up to Beth-El” (Gen. 35:1). May our master teach us: How many times is a man’s “account book”7The heavenly ledger wherein man’s deeds are recorded. open? Thus did our masters teach us: A man’s account book is opened three times: when he journeys alone upon a highway; when he resides in a dilapidated house; when he vows and fails to fulfill. R. Aha the son of Jacob deduced the first statement from the biblical verse If harm befall him by the way (Gen. 42:3). R. Eliezer the son of R. Yosé the Galilean stated: If you should discover that a righteous man is setting out on a journey, leave even three days earlier or three days later in order to travel with him. But if you should see a wicked man setting out on a journey, leave three days earlier or three days later in order not to go with him, as it is said: Set thou a wicked man over him; and let an adversary stand at his right hand (Ps. 109:6). A righteous man, however, is accompanied by angels of peace, as it is said: For He will give his angels charge over thee (ibid. 91:11).
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Midrash Tanchuma

The Holy One, blessed be He, declared: How long shall this righteous man continue to be punished without comprehending the sin for which he is being afflicted? Indeed, I will inform him. And it is written: God said unto Jacob: “Arise, go up to Beth-El, and dwell there” (Gen. 35:1). R. Aibu said: When your sieve is clogged, strike it.9A proverb telling us that Jacob’s mind had become clogged, causing him to forget his vow, and so God beat upon it by causing him to suffer. The Holy One, blessed be He, told him: These trials have befallen you only because you have not fulfilled your vow. If you do not wish to experience other afflictions, Arise, go up to Beth-El, dwell there, and erect an altar, at the very place at which you made your vow. I am the God of Beth-El, where thou didst anoint a pillar, where thou didst vow a vow unto Me (ibid. 31:13). R. Abba the son of Kahana stated: The Holy One, blessed be He, said to Jacob: When a man has problems he will make a vow, but when he is enjoying ease and comfort he will quickly disregard his vow. When you were in difficulty you made a vow, but after you attained security you forgot it. Then Jacob said unto his household, and to all that were with him: “Let us arise, and go up to Beth-El” (ibid. 35:2–3).
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Midrash Tanchuma

And God said unto Jacob (Gen. 35:1). Scripture states elsewhere in allusion to this verse: Thou art not a God that hath pleasure in wickedness; evil shall not sojourn with Thee (Ps. 5:5).
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Midrash Tanchuma

Observe what is written: Be in pain, and labor to bring forth, O daughter of Zion, like a woman in travail; for now thou shalt go forth out of the city and shalt dwell in the field (Micah 4:10). The ketiv (traditional spelling) is “I shall dwell” (rather than the Masoretic “thou shalt dwell” as in the preceding quotation) to indicate that though I shall exile you from its midst, my Shekhinah will not depart from the city. The field mentioned here alludes only to Zion, as it is said: Zion unto a field will be plowed (ibid. 3:12). The Holy One, blessed be He, declared: You shall pray unto me in the direction of the Holy City, and I will hearken from heaven and heal your land. Therefore Jacob said to his sons: Let us arise, and go up to Beth-El. What shall we do there? they asked. And he answered: The Holy One, blessed be He, has commanded me to arise, go up to Beth-El and dwell there.
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Sefer HaYashar (midrash)

and Jacob was ninety-nine years of age when he went up to Beth-el. And Jacob with his sons ‎and all the people that were with him dwelt in Beth-el in Luz, and he built there an altar to the ‎Lord who appeared unto him; and Jacob and his sons tarried in Beth-el for six months. At that ‎time Deborah daughter of Uz, the nurse of Rebekah who had been with Jacob, died and Jacob ‎buried her beneath Beth-el under an oak which was there. And Rebekah daughter of Bethuel, ‎Jacob’s mother, died at that time in Hebron, in Kirjath-arba, and she was buried in the cave of ‎Machpelah which Abraham had bought from the children of Heth. And the days of Rebekah ‎were one hundred and thirty-three years. And when Jacob heard that his mother Rebekah ‎had died he wept greatly for his mother, and he made a great mourning for her, and for ‎Deborah her nurse, beneath the oak; and he called the name of that place Allon-bachoth, the ‎oak of weeping. And Laban the Aramite died in those days, for the Lord punished him for ‎transgressing the covenant which was established between him and Jacob. And Jacob was one ‎hundred years old when the Lord appeared unto him and blessed him, and he called his name ‎Israel. And Rachel, Jacob’s wife, conceived in those days. And Jacob journeyed at that time ‎with all belonging to him from Beth-el, to his father's house in Hebron. And while they were on ‎the road, only a short distance before coming to Ephrath, Rachel bare a son, and having hard ‎labor she died. And Jacob buried her on the road to Ephrath, in Bethlehem, and he set there a ‎pillar which is upon her grave even to this day. And the days of Rachel were forty-five years ‎when she died. And Jacob called the name of the son that Rachel bare unto him, Benjamin, for ‎in the land “on the right hand” he was born unto him. And after Rachel’s death Jacob ‎transferred his tent into the tent of Bilhah her maid-servant. And Reuben became jealous in ‎behalf of Leah his mother, and he entered Bilhah’s and forcibly removed thence the bed of his ‎father. At that time Reuben was deprived of the portion of the first-born, the kingdom, and ‎the priesthood, for having profaned his father's bed; and the right of the first-born was given ‎unto Joseph, and the kingdom to Judah, and the priesthood to Levi, because Reuben had ‎profaned the bed of his father.‎
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Midrash Tanchuma Buber

(Gen. 35:1:) THEN GOD SAID UNTO JACOB: ARISE, GO UP TO BETHEL. Let our master instruct us: When one prays,69The particular prayer under consideration is the Tefillah, also known as the ‘Amidah or the “Eighteen Benedictions” (Shemoneh ‘Esreh). This prayer, which ultimately came to contain nineteen benedictions, is recited as part of the daily services. where should he direct his heart? Thus have our masters taught: One who prays should (according to Ber. 4:5-6) DIRECT HIS HEART TOWARD THE HOUSE OF THE HOLY OF HOLIES.70PR 33:1; also Sifre Deut. 3:26 (29); TBer. 3:14-16; yBer. 4:5 (8bc); Ber. 30a; see Yev. 105b; Cant. R. 4:4:9. R. Eliezer ben Jacob says: One who prays outside of the land [is to direct his heart towards the land of Israel. One who prays in the land of Israel is to direct his heart toward Jerusalem. One who prays in Jerusalem is to direct his heart toward the Sanctuary. When one prays in the Sanctuary], he is to direct his heart to the House of the Holy of Holies. R. Abbin the Levite said: It is written (in Cant. 4:4): LIKE THE TOWER OF DAVID (i.e., the Temple), YOUR NECK IS BUILT FOR TLPYWT (TURRETS). What is the meaning of FOR TLPYWT? That all mouths PYWT pray through it.71Cf. PR 33:1: “The hill (TL) towards which all mouths (PYWT) turn.” This explanation succeeds in accounting for all the letters in TLPYWT. [R. Judah the Levite said: It is written (in I Kings 6:17): THAT IS THE TEMPLE LPNY. What is the meaning of LPNY? That all the faces (PNYM) turn to72The Buber text here reads B (“in,” “on,” “by means of,” etc.). A more likely reading is that of the Hebrew Bible, i.e., L (“to” or “toward”), which accounts for the L in LPNY. it.] The Holy One said: Everyone is going to and yearning for my house. Are you not going there? (Gen. 35:1) ARISE, GO UP TO BETHEL.73BETHEL means “the house of God.”
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Midrash Tanchuma Buber

It is written (in Ps. 50:14): SACRIFICE A THANK OFFERING TO GOD. When Jacob left his father's house, he left with nothing but his staff, as stated (in Gen. 32:11 [10]): WITH ONLY MY STAFF I CROSSED THIS JORDAN. Immediately Jacob had made a vow before the Holy One, as stated (in Gen. 28:20): THEN JACOB VOWED A VOW. What is written at the end of the passage (in vs. 22)? AND OF ALL THAT YOU GIVE ME. But, when he enriched him, as stated (in Gen. 30:43): SO THE MAN (Jacob) BECAME VERY VERY PROSPEROUS, he forgot his vow. Immediately he provoked Laban against him, as stated (in Gen. 31:23): SO HE (Laban) TOOK HIS RELATIVES WITH HIM < AND PURSUED HIM (Jacob) SEVEN DAYS' JOURNEY >. When he had escaped from Laban, Esau was incited against him. Immediately the angel appeared to him. He said to him: Are you not aware of all this trouble? Why has all the trouble come over you? Because you have been late with your vow. Jacob said to him (in Gen. 32:30 [29]) {WHAT IS} [PLEASE TELL] YOUR NAME. He said to him (ibid.): WHY IS IT THAT YOU ARE ASKING FOR MY NAME? Sometimes the angel is made into a spirit, as stated (in Ps. 104:4): HE HAS MADE HIS ANGELS SPIRITS. Sometimes he is made a into lightning bolt, as stated (in Job 38:35): CAN YOU SEND FORTH LIGHTNINGS SO THAT THEY GO? But as for the miracles (of transformation), he (God) acts himself. And so the angel said to Manoah (in Jud. 13:18): YOU ARE NOT TO ASK MY NAME. (Gen. 32:30 [29]:) WHY IS IT THAT YOU ARE ASKING FOR MY NAME?74Yalqut Shim‘oni, Jud., 69, explains that names are useless because the angel would not know into what form God might change him. Immediately the angel blessed him, as stated (in Gen. 32:30 [29]): AND HE BLESSED HIM THERE. (Hos. 12:5 [4]:) SO HE STROVE WITH AN ANGEL AND PREVAILED. What did he say to him? Go, fulfill your vow. (Eccl. 5:4 [5]:) IT IS BETTER NOT TO VOW < THAN TO VOW AND NOT FULFILL >. What did Simeon and Levi do immediately? TWO OF JACOB'S SONS, [SIMEON AND LEVI, BROTHERS OF DINAH, EACH TOOK HIS SWORD] … < AND KILLED EVERY MALE >. < Jacob > immediately fell on his face and did not get up until < the Holy One > gave him permission (in Gen. 35:1): ARISE, GO UP TO BETHEL. So also with Joshua (according to Josh. 7:6 & 10): [AND HE FELL ON HIS FACE] < .. . > THEN THE LORD SAID UNTO JOSHUA: ARISE, GO. WHY IS IT THAT YOU FALL UPON YOUR FACE? So also with David (according to I Chron. 21:16): SO DAVID AND THE ELDERS, COVERED IN SACKCLOTH, FELL UPON THEIR FACES. Then what was said to him (in II Sam. 24:18)? GO UP, ERECT AN ALTAR TO THE LORD ON THE THRESHING FLOOR OF ARAUNAH. It is therefore stated (in Gen. 35:1): ARISE, GO UP TO BETHEL. He immediately journeyed with his whole house; and the Holy One put his fear upon all about him, as stated (in Gen. 35:5): AND, AS THEY JOURNEYED, A TERROR FROM GOD CAME < UPON THE CITIES THAT WERE ROUND ABOUT THEM >. It is also stated (in Deut. 28:10): AND ALL THE PEOPLES OF THE EARTH SHALL SEE THAT THE NAME OF THE LORD IS PROCLAIMED OVER YOU, AND THEY SHALL BE AFRAID OF YOU.
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Midrash Tanchuma Buber


< Once > When he went away from his father's house, as stated (in Gen. 28:13): AND BEHOLD, THE LORD STOOD OVER HIM.
Once with Laban (in Gen. 31:3): < THEN THE LORD SAID UNTO JACOB > : RETURN UNTO THE LAND OF YOUR ANCESTORS.
Once (in Gen. 35:1): < THEN GOD SAID UNTO JACOB >: ARISE, GO UP TO BETHEL.
Once (in Gen. 35:9): NOW GOD APPEARED UNTO JACOB AGAIN.
And once (in Gen. 46:2,4): THEN GOD SPOKE TO ISRAEL AND SAID…. I MYSELF WILL GO DOWN WITH YOU….
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