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Shemot/Exodus 34:1 Hew for yourself two tablets of stone, like the first ones
HaShem: literally, Hebrew for 'The Name' - an allusion used to avoid pronouncing the Tetragrammaton, the so-called 'ineffable' name of Gd
is a Qal imperative
from the root
, which means to
cut or hew stone, to carve wood. G-d is going to do the writing, as He
did before, but Moshe has to prepared the stone.
Rashi: Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki (1040-1105CE), French rabbi who wrote commentaries on the Torah, the Prophets and the Talmud, lived in Troyes where he founded a yeshiva in 1067; focuses on the plain meaning (p'shat) of the text, although sometimes quite cryptic in his brevity
"Carve ... like the first: like them in kind and size," adds
Abraham Ibn Ezra: (1089-1167), born in Tudela, Spain; died in the South of France after wandering all around the shores of the Mediterranean and England; a philosopher, astronomer, doctor, poet and linguist; wrote a Hebrew grammar and a commentary on the Bible
Sa'adia Gaon: Sa'adia ben Yosef Gaon (882/892-942CE); prominent rabbi, philosopher and exegete; born in Egypt, studied in Tiberais, Gaon of Sura, Babylonia, fought assimilation among the richer Jews; active opponent of Karaite Judaism
The physical considerations, however interesting, should not hide what is happening at a relationship level. In the previous chapters, G-d has given Moshe a set of tablets containing His covenant with our people but, barely before the ink is dry, the people have made an idol - a golden calf - and are worshipping it at the foot of the mountain while Moshe is still on his way down. G-d decides to obliterate the people and start again with Moshe, but Moshe pleads for the people and G-d relents; three thousand people are killed by the Levites who answer Moshe's call to stand for the L-rd and G-d sends the people on their way to the Land with only an angel as guide rather than His presence, after sending a plague among the people because of their sin. Once more, Moshe intercedes, pointing out that it is only the presence of G-d among them that distinguishes the people of Israel from the other peoples; G-d not only agrees that He will come with them personally, but rewards Moshe's request to see His glory by a private theophany while he stands in a cleft of the rock. It is in that context that Moshe is told to bring two tablets so that G-d may write the covenant again for the people. This is a moment of re-making the covenant that was only so recently made and almost immediately broken.
Hirsch: Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch (1808-1888CE), German rabbi, author and educator; staunch opponent of the Reform movement in Germany and one of the fathers of Orthodox Judaism
Hirsch's next sentences, however, are exactly on target: "Our transgressions in no wise alter the contents of the Divine Law. G-d does not modify or reform the Torah to accommodate our weaknesses. Unaltered, the Torah awaits our conversion and return." Grace is neither easy or cheap; it cost Messiah His death on the stake and it costs us everything that we have in surrender to G-d as we follow Yeshua. Yeshua made this clear when He taught: "The kingdom of Heaven is like a merchant on the lookout for fine pearls. On finding one very valuable pearl he went away, sold everything he owned and bought it" (Matthew 13:45-46, CJB).
Further Study: John 15:9-10; Ezekiel 37:24-28
Application: God is calling people today to bring Him their hearts, so that He may forgive their sin and write His law inside them. Have you brought your heart to G-d, for this is something that only you can do, and are you committed to keeping the commandments of Yeshua so that you remain in covenant with G-d?
© Jonathan Allen, 2008
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