Exodus 33:12-34:26 – Numbers 29:17-22 – Ezekiel 38:18-39:16 – John 7:37-44
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Shabbat Sukkot
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Shabbat Sukkot
1. Our reading chronicles an amazingly intimate encounter
between God and Moses from Parashat Ki
Tissa. Why is this reading associated with Sukkot?
David Nichol
As our passage opens, Moses is in the middle of his
efforts to repair the damaged relationship between God and the Children of
Israel. In the wake of the sin of the golden calf, he has convinced God not to
destroy the people altogether, but all is not yet resolved; tension still hangs
in the air. The Ohel Mo‘ed, the physical indicator of God's presence
among Israel,
was moved from the center of the camp to outside. God's relationship with the
children of Israel,
and thus with all of humanity, appears to be in great danger.
While the community's connection with the LORD is
now somewhat tenuous, Moses himself speaks with God as "one man speaks to
another" (Exodus 33:11), acting as the mediator between God and the people. He
is acutely aware of the damaged relationship between the LORD and Israel
and its implications. He is not
satisfied to be personally on good terms with God, but pleads:
Now, if I have truly gained your favor, pray let me know your
ways, that I may know you and continue in your favor. Consider, too, that this
nation is your people.
Exodus 33:13
In a deft maneuver, he at once expresses his desire
to know God's ways, to learn Torah, and asks the LORD to keep Israel
as his special people.
Why would Moses link these two sentiments? Why does
he in a single sentence ask that he may know God's ways and that God would keep
Israel
as his unique people? Perhaps it is like
the way I might coincidentally tell my wife of her astounding beauty . . .
immediately before mentioning that I want to buy an XBox 360. Romantic words
and expressions of devotion can help smooth the rocky parts of a relationship.
In fact they are central to some kinds of relationships. While we can't exactly
buy God flowers (even lambs and rams sacrificed in elaborate rituals are of
dubious value to him according to the prophets), we can express our love and
devotion by eagerly studying Torah.
So Moses begs for knowledge of Torah, which is
bound to rouse God's love for his people, allowing for the restoration of the
relationship. In the end, God has mercy
on his repentant people (Exodus 33:17).
The arc of the narrative in our reading is
instructive. It begins immediately after
the people make teshuva (Exodus 34:8-9), when Moses expresses his thirst for knowing God's ways (33:13), and
climaxes with God relenting to go forth with Israel and keep us as his people
and Moses being the first and only living person to behold a part of God's
glory. It ends with the revelation of mitzvot, commandments (Exodus
34.10-26). God's giving of commandments and Israel's
receiving them is, in a sense, the "love language" that maintains their
relationship to God.
So it is today. Torah has been compared to a "love
letter" to us. It may take effort to see it that way, but that very effort and
the struggle to seek after and understand Torah is our way of expressing our
devotion to God.
Sukkot is a time when, living in tents like our
ancestors in the wilderness, we remember and rejoice in our special
relationship with God, hearkening back to when we lived in faith, and all our
needs were met for forty years - food fell from heaven and even our shoes did
not wear out. We should take care to remember that it is teshuva and a
passion for Torah that sustains that relationship with our Creator.
2. We read in Torah about the ceremony of Hakhel (Deuteronomy 31:10-13), which
takes place during the holiday of Sukkot. This ceremony (which is not possible
to observe in its fullness since there is no Temple)
could have taken place at any time of the year; why during Sukkot? In addition,
what does the shemita year have to do
with this ceremony?
Nick Amic
I want to offer three brief ideas from different
perspectives--symbolic, midrashic and mystical regarding the connection between
hakhel and Sukkot. Lastly, I will posit a reason as to what all this has
to do with the shemita (sabbatical year see Exodus 23:10-11; Leviticus 25:1-7; and Deuteronomy 15:1-6).
On Sukkot we sit in a booth (sukka) with a covering
(sekhach see Leviticus 23:43).
The Talmud states that the covering of the sukka is compared to "the clouds of
glory [with which God] enveloped the Jewish people in the desert, forming a
protective shelter for them against wild beasts and enemies" (b. Suk
11b). This idea is parallel to the clouds that enveloped Mount Sinai
during the giving of the Torah (see Exodus 19:9 and 16). Besides celebrating
God's protection of Israel
during Sukkot, another theme arises: the unity of Israel.
This is symbolized in the combination of the four species (see Leviticus 23:40) which the Midrash tells us represents
the binding together of Jews having differing dominant character traits (see Leviticus
Rabba 30:12). This is again symbolically parallel to the unity of Israel
at the time of the giving of the Torah. The Torah tells us that Israel "camped"
at the mountain (see Exodus 19:2) where the Hebrew word for camped - vayyichan
- is in the singular form, denoting that symbolically they encamped there as
"one man with one heart" (Mekhilta deRabbi Yishmael to Exodus 19:2).
The midrashic sections of the Talmud, known as aggada,
see Sukkot as the holiday representing all nations: "The seventy Sukkot
offerings (outlined in Leviticus 23) correspond to and protect the seventy
nations (b. Suk 55b). Additionally, the Torah also calls Sukkot chag
ha'asif (the harvest festival). This brings to mind Yeshua's statement
regarding the nations, "Then he said to his talmidim, ‘The harvest is
rich, but the workers are few. Pray that the Lord of the harvest will send out
workers to gather in his harvest'" (Matthew 9:37-38).
Mystically, the mitzva of hakhel
connects the Torah and the sukka. Shaul refers mystically to our bodies as a
sukka (see 2 Corinithians 5:3 where the Greek word corresponds to the word
sukka). The author of Yochanan says, "The Word (Torah) became a human being and
lived (literally inhabited the earthly sukka) with us" (1:14). Yeshua is the culmination of both the gathering (hakhel)
of the nations and the embodying of the Torah in the earthly sukka.
Lastly, linking all these themes together, we come
to one last relation between hakhel, Sukkot and the shemita. The
purpose of Yeshua - the physical embodiment of God's Torah - was to hakhel
(ingather) all Israel,
and all the nations through Israel.
He tied this to the concept of the yovel ("jubilee year", which is made
of seven shemita years) by epitomizing his mission quoting from Isaiah
61 speaking of the yovel (see Luke 4:18).
May the day soon come when all Israel,
and all the world experience the "New Jerusalem" where "the Sukkat Adonai will
dwell among us" (Revelation 21:1-4).

Dr. Noel Rabinowitz
John
7:37-44 - Yeshua and Sukkot
In this week's besora, the narrative comes to a
dramatic climax. In John 7:37-38, John reports that on the last and greatest
day of the Feast, Yeshua stood up and proclaimed in a loud voice:
If anyone is thirsty, let him come to me and drink. Whoever
believes in me, as the Scripture has said, streams of living water will flow
from within him.
These words have been the subject of many a Sunday
sermon, but I would venture to say that few of the well-meaning speakers who
preached on them were aware of their Jewish context, which provides us with the
key to unlocking its meaning.
In vv. 37-39, John alludes to one of two customs
that developed during the second Temple
period, namely the water-pouring ceremony described in m. Suk 4:1, 9-10.
During the feast of Sukkot, a priest led a procession of worshippers to the
Pool of Siloam. As the priest filled a golden pitcher with water from the pool,
the choir around him recited the words of Isaiah 12:3: "You will draw with joy
from the wells of salvation." The priest then led the worshippers back to the Temple
where he poured the water out at the base of the altar. The ceremony petitions
God to pour out his spirit over the people of Israel
and to send the messianic king who would reign over Jerusalem
and all the nations. Sukkot was originally a harvest festival, during which
time the people of Israel
were to remember God's provision for them in the wilderness (Leviticus 23:42-43).
For that reason, of course, Israel
was dependent upon God for water and rain. In other words, the people of Israel
were dependent upon God for their physical survival. Eventually, these physical
themes took on spiritual significance and Sukkot took on spiritual and
messianic connotations. Water and rain are symbols of spiritual renewal and
spiritual refreshment. Numerous passages in the Tanakh link the concept of
water and the outpouring of God's Spirit upon his people. As we read in Isaiah
44:3: "I will pour water on the thirsty land, and streams on the dry ground; I
will pour out my Spirit on your offspring, and my blessing on your
descendants."
On a messianic level, these themes weave together
and Sukkot becomes the context in which the messianic king comes to Jerusalem.
"On that that day living water will flow out from Jerusalem . . . The LORD will
be king over the whole earth" (Zechariah 14:8-9). Yeshua's offer of living
water, set against the backdrop of the water-drawing ceremony, becomes a
messianic declaration of his kingship and consequently, a declaration that he
has come to bring spiritual healing and refreshment to those that drink the
living water he offers.
Initially, Sukkot was simply a harvest festival.
However, by the time of the first century, the festival had come to symbolize
"the joyful restoration of Israel
and the ingathering of the nations." It is against this backdrop, that Yeshua
declares, "If any one is thirsty, let him come to me and drink."
John 7:37-38 is indeed about the restoration of Israel
and the inauguration of the Messianic Kingdom. Let us never forget that Yeshua
is also speaking here to each of us on a profoundly personal and individual
level. We each need to come back to the well of Living Water to slake our
spiritual thirst. Life is full of sadness, hardship and struggles. Without the
life-giving water he offers, we would all surely perish in the desert. He gives
us the water we need to quench our spiritual thirst.
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- SHABBAT BERESHIT
Genesis 1:1-6:8
Isaiah 42:5-43:10
John 1:1-18
UPCOMING YACHAD NETWORK EVENTS
4th Annual Young Leaders Shabbaton
New
York City ●
June 2008
7th Annual Young Messianic Jewish
Scholars Conference
New
York City ●
June 2008
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