Midrash sobre Jeremias 3:19
וְאָנֹכִ֣י אָמַ֗רְתִּי אֵ֚יךְ אֲשִׁיתֵ֣ךְ בַּבָּנִ֔ים וְאֶתֶּן־לָךְ֙ אֶ֣רֶץ חֶמְדָּ֔ה נַחֲלַ֥ת צְבִ֖י צִבְא֣וֹת גּוֹיִ֑ם וָאֹמַ֗ר אָבִי֙ תקראו־[תִּקְרְאִי־] לִ֔י וּמֵאַחֲרַ֖י לֹ֥א תשובו [תָשֽׁוּבִי׃]
Pensei como te poria entre os filhos, e te daria a terra desejável, a mais formosa herança das nações. Também pensei que me chamarias meu Pai, e que de mim não te desviarias.
Devarim Rabbah
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Midrash Tanchuma Buber
(Numb. 34:1–2:) THEN THE LORD SPOKE UNTO MOSES, SAYING: COMMAND THE CHILDREN OF ISRAEL AND SAY UNTO THEM: WHEN YOU COME INTO THE LAND OF CANAAN, <THIS IS THE LAND THAT SHALL FALL TO YOU AS AN INHERITANCE>…. Let our master instruct us: Before they entered the land, how did they say the blessing over the food?13Tanh., Numb. 10:6; Numb. R. 23:7. Thus have our masters taught: Before they entered the land, they used to say a single blessing, Who Sustains All.14Cf. Philip Birnbaum, Daily Prayer Book (Hebrew Publishing Co., 1949), p. 759/760. After they had entered the land, they said the blessing, For the Land and for the Food.15Birnbaum, p. 763/764. After Jerusalem was destroyed, they added Builder of Jerusalem.16See Birnbaum, p. 765/766. The prayer also occurs as the fourteenth blessing in the Shemoneh ‘Esreh (Birnbaum, p. 89/90), as well as in other contexts. For the various versions of the prayer, see Joseph Heinemann, Prayer in the Talmud, trans. Richard S. Sarason (“Studia Judaica, IX; Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1977), pp. 48-50, 70-76. After those slain at Bethther17During the Bar Cochba war, 132-135. were buried, they added Who is Good and Does What is Good:18Cf. Birnbaum, p. 765/766. Who is Good, because they did not decay, and Who Does What is Good, because they were given burials. None of them, however, is more dear to you than the blessing of the land. The sages therefore instruct: In the blessing of the food, whoever does not mention For the Land and for the Food; A Desirable, Good, and Spacious Land; the covenant <of circumcision>; Torah; life; and food19A Desirable, Good, and Spacious Land plus the elements that follow all form part of a single prayer to be found in Birnbaum, p. 761/762. has not satisfied his obligation.20See Ber. 48b-49a. The Holy One said: the land of Israel is more dear to me than everything. I am the one who sought it out, as stated (in Ezek. 20:6): <ON THAT DAY I SWORE (literally: RAISED MY HAND) TO THEM THAT I WOULD BRING THEM OUT OF THE LAND OF EGYPT> UNTO {THE} [A] LAND WHICH I HAD SOUGHT OUT FOR THEM. So also it says (in Jer. 3:19): <HOW I WOULD PUT YOU AMONG THE CHILDREN> AND GIVE YOU A DESIRABLE LAND <THE MOST BEAUTIFUL HERITAGE OF THE NATIONS>. You find <the same love for the land>, when Joshua slew those kings. R. Jannay the Priest said: There were sixty-two kings, thirty-one at Jericho and thirty one with Sisera. When he went to fight with Israel they also were slain along with him. Why? Because they along with him yearned to drink water from the waters of Israel. They made a request of Sisera and said to him: If you please, let us come with you for free, because we yearn to fill our stomachs with water from the land of Israel. Thus it is stated (in Jud. 5:19): THE KINGS CAME, THEY FOUGHT; <THEN FOUGHT THE KINGS OF CANAAN, AT TAANACH, ON ACCOUNT OF21Heb.: ‘al. The more usual translation here is BY. THE WATERS OF MEGIDDO;> THEY TOOK NO GAIN OF MONEY. <This verse serves> to inform you of the esteem in which the land of Israel was held. The Holy One had said to Moses: This land is dear to me, as stated (in Deut. 11:12): A LAND FOR WHICH THE LORD YOUR GOD CARES. Israel also is dear to me, as stated (in Deut. 7:8): BECAUSE THE LORD LOVES YOU…. The Holy One said: [Because Israel] is dear to me, I will bring [them] into a land that is dear to me. {Thus it is stated} [Where is it shown? From what they read on the subject] (in Numb. 34:2): WHEN YOU COME INTO THE LAND <OF CANAAN, THIS IS THE LAND THAT SHALL FALL TO YOU AS AN INHERITANCE>….
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Ein Yaakov (Glick Edition)
(Lam. 2, 2) The Lord hath swallowed up unsparingly all the habitations of Jacob. When Ravin came to Babylon he said in the name of Jochanan: "These refer to the sixty myriads of cities which King Jannai possessed on the royal mount; for R. Juda said in the name of R. Assi that King Jannai had sixty myriads of cities on the royal mound, the population of each equalled the number that went out of Egypt, except that of three cities in which that number was doubled. And these three cities were K'far Bish (the village of evil), K'far Shichlayim (village of water-cresses), and K'far Dichraya (the village of male children). K'far Bish it was called because there was no hospice for the reception of strangers therein; K'far Shichlaiim, it was called, because the inhabitants derived their support from that herb; K'far Dichraya, it was called, according to the opinion of Jochanan, because its women first gave birth to boys and afterwards to girls, and then left off bearing. "I have seen that place," said Ulla, "and am sure that it could not hold even sixty myriads of sticks." When a Sadducee remarked to Chanina concerning the above: "Ye do not speak the truth," the latter's response was: "It is written (Jer. 2, 19) The inheritance of a deer; i.e., as the skin of a deer [if once flayed off] cannot again cover its body (it shrinks), so also the land of Israel unoccupied by its rightful owners contracts."
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