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The Image of Biblical Figures | Rabbi Shai Finkelstein (Part VI)
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okay so we are we continue with ra bazak
and uh the last thing we
saw the last thing we saw was uh about
RAB ysf K and um he was a colleague of
Rashi and he talks
about the best attribute or the best
tool in learning The Narrative ISAT
whatever is okay so now we are
on the last paragraph on that
pageant ah which
page it looks they look all look alike
um but this is the way it looks like
it's really if
you on the top of the page
is so now at the
end
okay let's ask me the question anyone
who has social have it now good people
are holding on to it I see with two
hands
okay um no way no no it's more precious
than
diamonds
oh at the end of the page when when you
start with the essay of R bazak so if
you turn the page it's at the end of
that page the second
page
okay
so the ability to learn in every
generation to understand the in every
generation and to accomplish new
insights
who this is probably the best expression
for what for the relevancy of the
Torah always renew
itself it never sto not in the time of
the sages and not in the Middle
Ages and we continue to renew it every
day
every generation also develop different
tools to what to to have a better
understanding and enrichment of theat
you know there are some generations that
talk more about
theik okay why this word and not that
word then you have something else you
have methods of what we called um also
by the way just as a side note the same
not the same way but some tools that are
being developed in other
departments you can use them for what
for tanak and for other things I mean
for example it's just met a side note
statistics okay statistics have nothing
to do with Tor necessarily but sometimes
when you for example you want to be you
want to um to research to research for
example uh let's see uh I just saw a
research interesting not my not my
department and not my expertise at all
but I saw someone who was researching
okay and basically with the usage of
statistics and other tools tools nothing
to do with ch nothing to do with talm
nothing to do with tanak basically what
he tried to do is to try to see where
was the peak of the CH in what year
what's the reason for that and then he
compared it to other PIM in America and
why was it that MOA was becoming the
posek when when he was in
Russia he was
epos okay you understand the difference
between EPC and the POC okay so this is
fascinating because he used tools that
has nothing to do with shoot and and all
of that but he used it in order to prove
a very interesting point so basically
what razak says we have different tools
that are being developed in the Academia
and also in in just also and um and
basically they give us a better two to
try to
understand and with the people who are
with the approach of what of the the
expansion they basically fulfill rash's
values that um which
is to learn the T from the itself form
and theim that you that you have from
yourself not from yourself that you look
at T and oh I'm going to decide
obviously we all understand if you are a
serious tanak learner what do you do
first what you do in any other research
you see and you learn what people before
you said said after you went through
everyone who is relevant then you have
your own opinion you can form your own
opinion you can agree you can disagree
you can partially agree but you don't
come and say
okay I'm going to tell you how to read
it and even if you have aot that no one
else thought about it you also
understand that what that today you came
with this chat and tomorrow someone else
can come up with a different chat so if
you are really intellectually honest you
do a research of what was before you and
you understand that you are not the last
word on everything okay
so let's
continue
okay everyone
agree meaning you can't just
say yeah that's what I think that's what
I
feel that's very nice we can go to a
psychologist with that but not to have a
per for the narrative okay you need to
have something that it's based on
something based on what on the narrative
itself based on another Paran based on
many
things agenda politic also don't give
interpretation based on what on your
political agenda or ideolog or even
ideological
anti against the
tradition says I need to admit sometimes
when you
read biblical biblical critics you see
that it's really driven by
agenda as we
saw on the other side as well look
people will never be able to be totally
clear from their own upbringing mindset
education agenda but the question is is
that what leads you or is that just part
of your background and then he
says here he says something very
interesting he says you might know that
this guy has an agenda political agenda
that you totally disagree but it does
not mean that his research and his parut
is what is strafe you are basically
being required to do almost like to
which is
Zak but may was the ofish who became a
he took the core and he threw the pit
not the P the
P which means the fact that someone that
you you you know that he or she writes
within a political agenda or with a
anti- religion agenda whatever it is
does not mean that he or she does not
have something that it's truth and it
might have been even be helpful by the
way I'm going to maybe shake your bubble
a bit or burst your bubble a bit um we
know we know that
um sometimes especially uh in early
years in the 10th and 11th century uh
sometimes we took interpretations from
the
Karim the way the Karim read the
PUK they adopted
because it was not wrong so it does not
mean because you are AAR you are
immediately tra okay now we obviously
have more
stigmatization
then accept the truth from whoever he
said it okay so we have
that to have this interpretation on has
many ramifications on many
areas one of the major points of dispute
is how to approach sins
of our Biblical
figures because really many figures in
tanak really committed sin or failed in
different
events he says this dispute
between versus Gish you remember Gish
okay is that how should we approach the
of our Biblical Heroes and they used the
way we look at them as a tool to what to
say oh you don't know how to and you
dismiss the heroes and you have no and
all of that okay
says he says that g you remember the
Gish which
basically the what no no no
no no no it's not about Zionism at all
it's about the approach that basically
says biblical Heroes didn't commit any
sins we are you are not even in a madga
to judge them leave them alone and is
what we spoke about before which yes
they committed sins they are not exactly
like us but we still need to learn from
them something so he says uh he says
that um gav the opposition basically
portray the people of with someone with
political agenda so he says that's not
fair says on the contrary exactly the
opposite says exactly the opposite we
believe that we need to what to try to
understand to
create a mindset of the T not based on
my mindset and my Paran but rather
exactly the opposite which means I need
to try to understand the world based on
not to understand the based on my
perspective on the world
he says be honest if you come to the T
without too much of an agenda you
understand that our Biblical heroes are
complicated not saying bad not saying
great I'm just saying complicated they
have different layers to them okay even
if you don't know anything let's just
think you come from you just came from
Mars and you came to this planet okay
and you read bit and then you see that
Abraham is so hospitable and he's so
great and at the same time he sends his
son out to the desert with his mother
with a little bottle of water and a
piece of bread you're not going to ask
yourself a question
of you feed everyone else and your own
son you expel and you give him a little
bit of bread and one piece of and one
bottle of
water obviously you need to ask yourself
some kind of a question you're not going
to ask how come that yov says to his
father if you don't ask those questions
something is
um I don't know maybe you read a
different t or maybe I don't know what
you do but you definitely need to ask a
question so then he says
which means basically to deviate from
the truth he says exactly the opposite
if you come to tanak and you put blinds
on your eyes and you think all of them
are so Pious and so righteous and they
are so
blameless and sinless you are going to
at the end of the day you're going to
come out with a wrong outcome
this is not the place to try to
understand why is it that the T describe
and delineates those heroes in such a
complicated
way he says in short I would like just
to suggest that I think that the Torah
described them in such a complicated way
to show that they were humans and we can
learn something from
them teaches us also about the
responsibility that we each one of us
has and also our ability to do
CH us that there is no person he can be
the greatest
one that you are basically immune from
committing sins and that you can keep
yourself always
sinless says the main issue don't lose
sight how we approach biblical Heroes
and their sins this is a subcategory the
main category is what are we allowed to
continue to
learn which G says no
and we say yes
sorry not we it's not fair to say we I'm
not going to include all of you I don't
know what you think I okay David oh oh
everyone is getting
excited okay by the way did I because if
not we can do it after we finish with we
learned of it in B right
sh we did I I thought we
did
ah ah okay okay okay so let's put it
like that how many of you remember what
we
learned about theid
and no I thought it I remember I thought
was many years ago ago
okay okay okay maybe so let's talk a
little bit about
okay says another point of discussion
between
and is the
awareness of disputes among Kazan
meaning this I always try to tell you
that in among the shim if you hear Rabbi
says the gamar holds that you need to do
a b and c not I'm talking
about don't believe him the talmud is a
basically a book that compile many
opinions different opinions from
different rabbis different times about
the same issue and some of them saying
that from experience some of them saying
that because of their interpretation to
different PIM in a different way some of
them has a different M from their RAB
okay so the does not have one opinion
about what you need to do not in but in
we have framework but in definitely not
he says you need to know that there is
dispute between the between our sages
and
the and what the dispute that we have
over today it's not that far from what
we used to have in Generations before us
basically suggests and and and and
prefers to do what to take one opinion
in kazal and to say Kadesh this is the
only opinion and to ignore other
opinions despite the fact that it might
be that the other opinions might be
closer to theat rather than this one
and says no we need to to share all the
opinions and then you it's your
responsibility to choose whatever you
think it's the
best you hear that's the rambam the
rambam says if you have a dispute
between two three
four and it's not about of how to do
something but it's about what it's a
what is Ash your mindset how you look at
life or whatever it is so then you can't
say meaning you cannot determine this is
the only ashfa in hash and look I'm not
naive
I understand and I'm know little maybe
little bit about education when you give
too many
choices to the younger generation and
even to adult sometimes but especially
to the younger generation it's
confusing it's
hard so it's
easier to teach one
opinion and
yeah and z and everyone and that's what
you are being raised with and this is
the way you are educated and it's less
confusing when you have too many options
it's too
confusing and it's hard to educate
people and to teach people however first
you need to be a fool to think that he
or she will not discover later on in
their lives that there are other
opinions and if and if they are not
trained to think that there is more than
one opinion you are Inus that's a B I
don't think it's fair
I don't think it's fair to hide opinions
I'm not talking about some opinions that
are totally out of the and you need to
understand the age and the
sophistication and all of that but you
cannot I think it's to minimize the
Torah A and B you will be responsible
that whenever that person go out to the
world and he discover he or she
discovers that what that there are other
opinions they will blame you for that
and probably they will take the other
opinions over your opinion now in groups
and camps that their kids don't go
anywhere else but rather continue in the
same isot and the same isar basically
are teaching them the same thing over
and over and over so you have less of
concern okay because if you are in Al
and they tell you that uh David for
example was waiting for the get from to
come okay and that's what they teach you
in second grade and in third grade and
then in high school and then in yes so
you don't know there are any other
opinions and even if you learn you don't
really get there because they right so
you just skip it over right but if you
are you have children that go to other
places to Other M and then they go to
university and then they might take
a you need to make them you need to
prepare them you need to make them ready
yes are there many cases in Russia
people come about this Russ brings quite
a few explanations about something say
Obviously Russ wasn't himself happy an
explanation maybe not with the second
one that's why he brings so many and
leaves to the to
deci that many yeah there are many
opinions about why why Rashi chose what
ever me Rashi chose a b why he cut it
off after the first one when in adim he
gave you know three example yeah so
there are there are many speculations
really uh we don't know I mean I don't
know
okay so he continues and he says
like so he's now he's going to what to
illustrate his point with two examples
okay so he's going to illustrate it by
pointing out few things with
without to go into too many details I'm
just going to um highlight what is
known really based on the simple
understanding committed two major
sins that's based on that's what that in
that's what it
says You Killed you the cause and the
second one is you took his
wife he admitted his sin and because he
admitted his sin so Hashem had some
mercy on him and he didn't kill him but
there are some punishments about him and
his descendants
okay the main approach in is
most of the commentators and by the way
he is
correct that's why I ask if anyone
remembers the most of the basically
blame theid for this
two there is some kind of
variation but the is there however there
is an opinion
which means the justification that Gish
always like to take is
she was not really a married woman
because there is a a g before you go to
war there is a g and also deserved death
why because he was now before we go any
further read the
story when David was with Beva urya was
still
alive the entire idea of the get is that
what
if he does not come back because just
imagine it needs to be like that why
because if you tell me that every wom
that her husband went to war she's
basically meet it means what married
that when they come back they need to do
what did you see that anywhere inaz
definitely not so basically it only says
that in order to save her from a if
don't if he does not come from the
battlefield and you don't find him and
you try to find him and I guess a year
goes by and you don't find him so then
we decided that
why and if you want to tell me that if
someone had an she had an affair with
someone she will not be considered as
what
as at the time at that
moment so you say
so was what
I don't know what's worse worse okay but
whatever it is whatever it
is
no May if you do it retroactively it
doesn't make it better okay so so that's
that's one the second thing is so now
you tell me that what
that when later when David ordered urya
to come back urya was a great Soldier
and not only that okay so he
said okay why he was because he said
first my general you have is in the
field
and I understand why you can understand
someone who rebel against the king but
at the same time I can tell you what do
you want from him he just came from the
battlefield the only people he remembers
now are what his generals and his
Colonels and his his his soldiers and
that's it that's that's what he
remembers with all du respect this King
sits like on on the throne and drinking
coffee okay he's not with them in the
battlefield
so of Shalom is
a okay this is someone who is
a so he said you before the king no I
understand I don't know what is King all
about and the King it's good to be a
king right you can do whatever you want
and if he decided but that was only
after now I'll take you in a second so
the thing is basically what he says he
says look most of the parim say what he
committed a sin variations of sins but
he committed two
sins so but Gish ignores it and Bas
their idea and we saw it at R desler and
ra that says what we going to say
a no everyone who says that David
committed a sin he himself he's mistaken
and why because of these two things
now the question that we need to ask
really is not so much about
Gish about that approach we need to
really
ask how do they read
T when when natana
came
to and says to him
this and
says and
says how do they read it
leave I don't
know how did they read
the oh so they say oh my might level in
a way what I did is to explain to you
how they are they are smart people okay
the fact that we don't agree does not
mean that they are not smart they are
very smart people that led them to the
idea that what not our level not your
level based on his level it considered
like okay very good yes so basically
picks and shows who he would punish for
being because when shim cursed him he
let him go when said before him that's
marus but the fact of the matter is he
probably did this TOA because he wanted
his
wife
correct
correct I think when they
say they're basically saying you don't
have a right to judge you weren't
there no no we we try wait wait wait
wait wait let's see wait wait wait let's
see
[Music]
okay so the already dealt with the issue
how come that David was with
B if she was an is at that
moment the question is how was she
allowed to marry him after that's the
question why
because that's
the ramification okay if she had an
affair leave alone kill her later
but she's not allowed to go back to her
husband and she's not allowed to be with
her
lover the first opinion is what
raped
heram which means he took her by force
which is horrible okay he took her by
force and she couldn't resist and
therefore
zash L it was not an affair okay it was
not an affair so
basically that's how she was allowed to
what to marry him after not only that
she was allowed to marry him after in a
way he had he had to if she wanted
the second opinion says that what that
she was really you know retroactively
she was and therefore she was
not
okay says other opinion says that was a
married woman a that
momentan says that David begged God to
forgive him and andm says no I'm not
going to forgive you not in your days
I'll forgive you only in schlomo's days
and why I will not forgive you because
your son is going to say in a in a mish
that like you are walking on fire there
is no way that you are not going to what
to get burned if you're going to set
fire in your shirt obviously your shirt
is going to what to get burned if you're
going to be with a married woman you're
going to get
burnt but if she was a married woman
oh you're asking a very good question
very good question you are asking rega
we are going to add to it not only that
she was allowed to go back to David the
king that came after David who build a
mikdash was a no
was didm hasem loved him we spoke about
him so the idea is
is that we obviously we have we have a
major question
so that's that he needs to to pay four
times
the the
Sheep says says
to what
is no no no adultery enough not
enough you will get
16 punishments or whatever it
was you murdered
someone mid is a little bit of mid
around I think 11th
century for example he understood
that what even though he was an older
person he was walking on the roof he was
looking at the places that he shouldn't
look he was attracted and he committed a
sin so if an older person can do it a
young man even more so so what do you
see from me this is
rabid he was called rabid for a reason
right he was definitely not a liberal he
was not a pluralistic and he was not a
didn't come with a political agenda okay
he was not from Gish and he was not from
Gish okay he was just a good Jew
okay in Germany and basically he looked
at the and he says it's come to teach
you something it's come to teach you
that you should never say I'm not going
to commit what a sin a sin because you
can commit a sin you know is says what
the mishna
says remember that that you shouldn't on
Shabbat you shouldn't read learn next to
a candle because you what you're going
to what to tilt a candle in order to see
more he says no I'm going to learn and
I'm not going to and obviously what he
do he did it and he
says I need to bring a big cow
for sounds very similar to
right right I will have more women more
gold more horses and I will not
Dev we know exactly what
happen learned a different lesson
he learned from that that you should not
have a wonderful life when your friends
are
in this is unbelievable basically says
it
says
David is a king and yeah I understand he
did not want to join the war that his
that he sent his people he was also
older and they asked him stay home but
stay home
and and Dav say to he say to heal
him compose some yeah um do mishpat take
care of the people don't go on your
balcony looking for
women and which by the way I would just
say one thing and which I still after so
many years I I still don't get
exactly why her mik was on the
roof says that she was bathing in a mik
okay but so at least he knew that she
was not n right
so what you have to understand real
estate you never buy a building for the
you don't know what someone else build
they built her house was the highest
one built a higher one
interesting I don't know but the thing
is is
that
look if we what says is that instead of
being he basically looked for pleasures
and that led him to what to he calls a
what
he knew it and by the way the T says
that he knew it he asked people about
her and they told her they told him a b
and he says it also add a different
crime and what was the crime to kill her
husband and now we are in the 15th
century in
Spain I will not tolerate
the idea to be lenient with David and
I'm not going to deny the simple
truth the narrative says you are he
himself says so I am going to say that
what I'm I'm better
than and he says
it's better for me to say he committed a
sin he admitted the sin he repented he
went through toua theem atoned for
it who
David oh first child died first child
died and also a Shalom the story with a
Shalom was probably as a result of it as
well but never never admitted
right right that's
true
right it's enough I think with just few
ex few of those examples
says this approach that basically
understand that David committed really a
sin and also explains that that we have
lessons that we can learn from it
theel this is what an ancient approach
it's not a new approach you know some of
the accusations is oh this is a new
approach approach you liberal modern
that's not modern and liberal this is
what I'm just repeating we going to the
the
sources this approach
basically
denies their students from having any
access to to their opinions yeah
now let's play a
game yeah why not we can play a
game if I teach you that Beva was not a
married
woman and that
um
and and when it says it's in his M what
are your lessons from the
story I don't I'm not sure you are not
in that madrea okay what different
levels for different people and what are
the and what are the the day-to-day
lessons I think it's going to lead to
confusion and also
when God forbid God forbid and I'm not
saying that it but when God forbid there
is something that it's totally
unappropriate that's going on there is
some kind of a
justification because this person is on
such a high madga maybe it's a different
thing it's very
dangerous now let's go back now let's go
to the other approach we need to be
intellectually honest and we also need
to be careful there is danger in every
approach now let's play the game I'm
telling you that
the might be might be etish how exactly
she was allowed to be back with him
little bit problematic it's complicated
God forgave him half partially but not
totally and now what are the lessons
that you can have oh okay
a even
David did chuva he can fail and he was
able to overcome this by the
embarrassment and everyone knew that
this was terrible embarrassment and
everyone knew about
him so he did it third you know you need
to be careful where you're looking D um
I what else um you need to when you send
people to war you can't uh you
can't don't bathe on the roof um yeah um
or make sure that your neighbors don't
build higher than you right so uh so
also you see all sorts of lessons but
what's the
danger with all the
respect was written before he did or it
was after he was a know with okay so you
start in a way to look at
David with some kind of a diminished
look and this is also can be can lead
you to s David
Jakob this is why you need to
have obviously a good teacher but also
to have a balance in your life and to
understand that with all the respect
that yes you have a brain and you have a
a way to analyze
things you also need to understand that
at the end of the day he still
the he's still the one who wrote he's
still the
one and he doesn't say sh you know
say okay so they made it to T and we
didn't but they now maybe when if we
would be in their time we will make it
too I hope it's not the villains but
rather than the the righteous people but
whatever it is we need to understand
that yes there are people like us and
that's their
greatness that's their greatness when
you know that a person like that could
reach his Madre to fail in that Madre
and to be able to continue to overcome
it I know for me it's a great example
yes another the other the other uh went
CL
manyo
and after they never
spoke I'm sitting listening but you know
what the truth I been asked her check
they never spoke before the they never
spoke after
the person presented because I never
spoke
after means there was a bad problem in
their relationship and so you have to be
very
careful right this is also true and I
will say another thing that if you raise
that issue is sometimes we and it's a
it's it's very attractive to do it but
you need to be very careful in doing it
is to do a psychological
analysis to families in tanak and to
individuals in tanak based on modern
psychology no no I'm I'm not
joking it's modern psychology and
assumptions that we have might be very
different than what they had in the
ancient time um you know Fathers and
Sons didn't talk if there was no need
there is no sim you know let's have what
is
Sim like you take your child you know
each child separate you go to a coffee
or you go a trip so you have a quality
time to speak to them there's no such a
thing okay not in Jewish families and
not in non-jewish families okay there is
no such a thing it's like you know
trying to judge love and Romans Romans
was only in the 18th century okay the
first time I found in the chuva that
there is something to do with love was
the 14th century the rashba in Spain and
be and that they wanted to cancel shim
because the granddaughter told her
grandfather I really don't like the guy
that's the first Chua I found does not
mean that does not exist anything else
but I did a little bit of a research
that love was a component in the
decision before that and love love love
yes Jews and non-jews I need a woman to
cook and to bake and to do laundry and
to have children and if she's not good
for children this is really not good and
uh and I need financial stability that's
it
had a thousand of them so he had no lack
of means of money and there is a this is
just the love between
and this is a very
romantic
descript does not mean that there was no
love I'm saying that love was not the
reason to get married and the fact that
for example Rifka and didn't talk does
not mean anything about their love okay
the only time that they really talk was
when she gave him an
ultimatum since then right
so so the idea is is that it doesn't
reflect necessarily on their love or
lack of
Love shim is a very poetic and a very
love
song this is not the love of what we
[Music]
call no no the the description is
physicality but it's not the love that
we talk about no the couple love each
other there there's more desire I will
call it you with me that's why kazal
wanted to what they didn't know what to
do with ch it was a problem until they
came along and they says a between
I'll clarify my point I think this is
not clear what I'm saying is that people
didn't get married for
love so for what arrang Arrangements
exact it was between Jews and between
the Jewish communities and and the
non-jewish communities same
thing the idea is that the idea is is
that what what I wanted to say that to
take psychology modern psychology and to
try to dress
it on ancient cultures Z again so that's
what I'm saying sometimes you can hear
many RAB you know they're making like
almost a psychological analysis to
what's going on between your and his
brothers and between the and it's it's
it's nice you can learn lessons but you
need to be very careful not to determine
that they did something wrong based on
Modern psychology that's what that's
that's basically was my point yes um
when I've heard classes from people like
from very say remember
what even if they don't use that right
it's true okay um I'm not here next week
we'll be here B the following week hold
on we have one more page