Hebrajska Biblia
Hebrajska Biblia

Komentarz do Habakuka 2:21

Rashi on Habakkuk

On my watch I will stand Habakkuk dug a circular hole, stood within it, and said, “I will not budge from here until I hear what He will say to me concerning this, my question why He looks and sees the prosperity of a wicked man.”
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and what I will reply to those who come to contend with me.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

when I am reproved mon aprobement in O.F.; the reproach one addresses to me. when I am reproved For they reprove me to my face that one should criticize the Divine standard of justice.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

And the Lord answered me and said: Write for yourself the vision that will be revealed to you, and explain it well on the tablets so that one may read it swiftly. And this is the vision that you shall write.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

For there shall be another vision for the appointed time A prophet shall yet arise at the end of the years, to whom a vision shall be revealed concerning when the appointed time shall be for the downfall of Babylon and the redemption of Israel.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and He shall speak of the end The speech that He shall say to him concerning the end of Babylon, (Jer. 29:10) “For at the completion of seventy years of Babylon.” וְיָפֵחַ is an expression of speech; and there are many uses of this root with similar meaning in the Book of Proverbs. Since speech is only the wind emanating from the mouth, he [the writer of the Scriptures] calls it פִּיחַ, blowing, and he calls it wind, e.g., (Ps. 33:6) “And with the wind of His mouth all their host.”
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and it shall not fail; though it tarry it shall not fail to come, though that appointed time may take long to come. wait for it for...; it shall not delay at all after the seventy years. This clause can also be explained to mean: though he tarry, meaning the prophet Jeremiah. Jonathan renders: the prophecy is written and explained in the Book of the Torah. He translated כְּתֹב as כָּתוּב. It has already been alluded to in the Torah (Lev. 26:34): “Then shall the land placate [God concerning] its Sabbaths.” Israel sinned by violating seventy Sabbatical Years, in which they did not release the land, and, corresponding to them, they were exiled therefrom for seventy years. And so it is stated in II Chronicles (36:21): “Until the land placated its Sabbaths; all the days it lay waste, it rested to complete seventy years.” And so you find in Ezekiel (4:5): “And I have given you the years of their iniquity according to the number of days, three hundred and ninety days... (verse 6) I gave you a day for a year.” And Scripture says (verse 4): “And you lie on your left side, etc.” You are found saying that Israel provoked God for three hundred and ninety years until the Ten Tribes were exiled, and the tribe of Judah sinned for forty years, and from the time the Ten Tribes were exiled until the destruction of Jerusalem are the twenty-two years of Manasseh. The rest of Manasseh’s years were spent in repentance, for it is stated concerning him (II Kings 21:2f.) “And he did what was evil, etc.,... as Ahab... had made.” Therefore we count Manasseh’s evil years according to the number of Ahab’s years, and he reigned for twenty-two years. With two years of his son Amon’s reign, and eleven of Jehoiakim’s, and eleven of Zedekiah’s, the evil years total forty-six, and this prophecy was said to Ezekiel in the fifth year of Zedekiah. In any case, we find the time of their sinning four hundred and thirty years, for after this prophecy they tarried there six years. [I.e., the two tribes of Judah and Benjamin remained in the land for six more years] In four hundred years, there are eight Jubilee Years, and in every Jubilee cycle there are seven Release Years, making a total of fifty-six Release Years and eight years consecrated as Jubilee Years making all together sixty-four. In thirty-six years there are five Release Years, totaling sixty-nine consecrated years, and this final Jubilee year is also counted in the number, since it was not completed because of their iniquity. And here, this is what the Holy One, blessed be He, said to Habakkuk: A vision is already written in the Torah, but it is sealed. You write and explain on the tablets, for a vision of this appointed time will yet be revealed.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and He shall speak It is an expression [denoting] speech, and there are many similar instances throughout the book of Proverbs. Since speech is merely wind that goes out of the mouth, it is called פיח or רוח, wind, as in (Psalms 33:6) “and with the breath of His mouth, all their host.”
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Rashi on Habakkuk

Behold, it is puffed up The soul of the wicked man is always wroth and full of desire, longing to swallow and never satisfied. עֻפְּלָה is an expression of insolence, as in (Num. 14:44) “And they acted insolently (וַיַעְפִּילוּ)”; and (Isa. 32:14) “Rampart (עֹפֶל) and tower.”
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Rashi on Habakkuk

his soul is not upright within him His spirit is not satisfied within him, and he does not say, “What I have already acquired is enough.” Therefore, retribution shall come upon him.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

but the righteous shall live by his faith Jeconiah the king, whom this wicked man is destined to exile - his righteousness shall stand for him, and on the day this one is cast out of his grave, Evil-merodach shall raise Jehoiachin’s head and place his throne above the thrones of the kings.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

And surely he, whom wine betrays And surely, when Belshazzar, this one’s grandson, comes; the one whose wine shall betray him for he drank as much wine as a thousand (Dan. 5:1).
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Rashi on Habakkuk

a haughty man whose dwelling shall not remain [Belshazzar’s] dwelling and his residence shall not remain in existence, for he was haughty and said, with the counsel of the wine, to bring the vessels of the Temple; and he drank with them. That shall cause him to be slain, and the seed of Nebuchadnezzar to be destroyed, for a haughty man is a scorner; he shall not have a dwelling. Neither he nor his dwelling shall remain in existence.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

who widened Nebuchadnezzar
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Rashi on Habakkuk

his desire like the nether-world to attain all his desire with a full heart.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and he is like death Like the angel of death, who is not sated with slaying. So is this one not sated with all his possessions.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

Shall not all these whom he [Belshazzar] collected for himself to pay himself tribute?
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Rashi on Habakkuk

take up a parable against him and a figure they shall take up in their mouth an expression of a riddle concerning him. against him like עָלָיו, upon him.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

And he shall say The one who says the figure of the riddle
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Rashi on Habakkuk

Woe to him who increases what is not his! This is the figure: Woe to him who increases wealth and kingdom, and it is not his, for the kings of Media shall come and take everything.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

How long? will he continue to increase when he is only loading upon himself a burden of iniquity like a beam of mud? עַב is an expression of a heavy beam, as we find concerning the Tabernacle of Ezekiel (Ezek. 41: 25): “And a wooden beam (וְעָב),” and (ibid. 26) “The casings of the House and the beams (וְהָעֻבִּים).”
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Rashi on Habakkuk

awaken like וְיָקִּיצוּ
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Rashi on Habakkuk

Since you have cast away many nations You have cast them and thrown them from their place.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

all remaining peoples shall cast you away The nations that escaped.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

because of the blood of man As revenge for the blood of Israel, called ‘man,’ as it is said (Ezek. 34:31): “You are man.”
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and the violence done to the land The land of Israel.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

the city Jerusalem.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

Woe to him who gains evil gains Who robs money which is harmful to him. for his house To build a house for himself
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Rashi on Habakkuk

to place his nest on high As it is written in the Book of Daniel (4:27): “Is this not the great Babylon, which I built up as a royal residence with the might of my power, etc.?” At the time this statement emanated from his mouth, [Nebuchadnezzar] was driven away from men, as it is said (ibid. 28): “When this word was still in the king’s mouth, etc.”
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Rashi on Habakkuk

With this matter, you advised shame for your house For you advised to cut off many peoples, and you caused a loss for yourself.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

to cut off an expression of stripping and peeling, as in (Lev. 14: 43) “Scraping the house.”
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and you have sinned against your life As in (Prov. 20:2) “He who provokes him sins against his life.” He sins to lose his life; forsfait sa arme in O.F. he forfeits his soul.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

For a stone For the stones that you stole shall cry from the wall.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and a chip of the wood shall answer it [the stone]. It shall answer aloud the stone that is opposite it; hence both of them cry.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and a chip shall answer it from a beam Jonathan renders: וְשִׁפָּא מִגּוֹ מָרֵישָׁא. שִׁפָּא is an expression of a chip; שְׁפָאִים in the language of the Sages; dokldours in O.F. - chips. מָרֵישׁ is a beam.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

Behold, is it not from the Lord that the retribution has been requited to the perpetrators of wickedness?
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Rashi on Habakkuk

And peoples shall toil until they are sated with fire When My wrath, which is like fire, shall come upon them until they are sated. בְּדֵי אֵשׁ - Asec in O.F.; enough; assez in modern French.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

Woe to him who gives his friend to drink wine; and into that drink he adds and gathers his venom upon him, and also makes him [his friend] drunk with his venom. All this he does... in order to gaze upon their nakedness Upon their exposure, to see their nakedness. This is the wicked Nebuchadnezzar, who would give the kings wine to drink, intoxicate them, and practice pederasty upon them, as we state in Tractate Shabbath (149b). Another explanation. Woe to him who gives his friend to drink In Seder Olam, it [this verse] is expounded regarding Belshazzar, who gave the princes to drink with the vessels of the Temple, because of which they were smitten with zaraath and intoxicated by the wrath of the Holy One, blessed be He. On that night he [Belshazzar] was slain.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

upon their nakedness So that their disgrace be revealed, and their enemies see their disgrace.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and become clogged up The “he” serves in this word as an expression of the reflexive, as in (Deut. 32:50) “And you shall be gathered to your people.” Here, too, הֵעָרֵל - you shall become clogged up with bewilderment and with astonishment of heart. Every expression of עָרְלָה is an expression of clogging, like (Jer. 6:10) “Their ear is clogged” and (Ezek 44:7) “Of clogged heart and of uncircumcised flesh.” Jonathan rendered: And become naked, an expression of (ibid. 16:7) “Naked and bare.”
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Rashi on Habakkuk

the violence of the Lebanon the Temple.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and the plunder of cattle The plunder of your cattle, and your hordes that plundered My people Israel, shall break you.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

because of the blood of man Because of the violence done to the blood of Israel.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

and the violence of the land The land of Israel.
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a city Jerusalem.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

What did a graven image avail Babylon?
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Rashi on Habakkuk

that the maker of his work trusted The man who formed it, who is the maker of this god of his.
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in it He trusts in this creation of his, that it assists him, so he comes to make dumb idols.
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Shall it teach? This is a question.
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But the Lord is in His Holy Temple ready to exact retribution.
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Rashi on Habakkuk

Silence the whole earth before Him הַס is an expression of silencing and the silence of destruction.
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