Amos and Hoshea: Before the Earthquake -
Lesson 51
The Prophecies of Amos: Yom Hashem (2)
Text file
In the last shiur, we analyzed the three verses which make up Amos's rejection of the naïve optimism surrounding the much-anticipated yom Hashem, day of the Lord. As promised, in this shiur, we will take a more panoramic look at the prophetic notion of yom Hashem. We will try to identify the origins of this idea as well as follow its development within the canon.
As a refresher, here is (translation only) the text of Amos's three verses about yom Hashem:
Woe to you who desire the day of the LORD! Why would you have the day of the LORD? It is darkness, and not light; as if a man fled from a lion, and a bear met him; or went into the house and leaned with his hand against the wall, and a serpent bit him. Is not the day of the LORD darkness, and not light, and gloomy with no brightness in it? (5:18-20)
A Methodological Note
Often, as we have seen in this series, when trying to understand the meaning of a word or phrase in the world of prophetic oratory, we identify the various locations in the canon where that word or phrase appears and analyze them in light of each other, usually following a linear path from early to late appearances in Tanakh. This helps us not only to see the word or phrase in its earliest usage and context, but also to see how its meaning becomes either expanded or more narrowly defined.
For instance, in the last shiur, we saw how the lament-call hoi was originally used to mourn an actual death, with the corpse lying before the one uttering hoi. The word evolved to be used to address a group whose behavior, if left uncorrected, would lead to their demise — essentially, an anticipatory hoi.
Sometimes, however, this is an insufficient method; when examining a concept, we have to cast our net beyond exact words. This concept may be expressed using a variegated selection from a palette of phrases; sometimes each prophet uses his own adage. Sometimes, even one prophet will use a variety of words or phrase to express the same concept.
We find, in this study, that much of the material we examine doesn't explicitly mention yom Hashem, but it is clear from the text itself that it is this image of an eschaton that the prophet is picturing, a final day of God’s judgement immediately preceding the end of history. We will, as such, not address the yom Hashem in Yechezkel 13:5, which references an event in the past (see there).
In this shiur, we will rely on several studies of the concept taken up by scholars of the previous generation and then add our own suggestions. Some of these scholarly articles were listed in the "For Further Study" section at the end of the previous shiur. An expanded version appears at the end of this one.
THEOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS: THREE APPROACHES
The Background and the Premise
As mentioned briefly in the last shiur, the notion of a "day of the Lord" is first mentioned by Amos (in our passage); this is the earliest record of it explicitly in the canon. In our instance, it is clearly not a new idea that Amos is introducing. Indeed, the very opposite is the case: Amos is responding to the people's entrenched (and errant) beliefs about yom Hashem. Thus, it is a notion that predates its first mention in the canon.
Whenever we encounter a phenomenon of this sort — an idea that is presumed to be valid or true — our first move is to try to discern the origin of this notion. Is it alluded to in an earlier text or stated there explicitly but with alternate terminology? Or is it the natural outgrowth of other axiomatic notions? Or is there something essential about the human condition that causes the notion to be presumed?
I would like to provide examples for each of this to illustrate the method.
First of all, there are theological premises that are presented in one format in one formulation, but then appear with a different (ultimately more popular) phrasing. One example of this is Providence, God's awareness of His people (and, perhaps, of individuals). In the Torah, this notion appears most explicitly in Devarim 11:12, in which Moshe explains that the Land to which the Israelites are coming, unlike Egypt, is “a Land which God seeks out (doresh), constantly God's eyes are upon it from the beginning of the year to the end of the year."[1] The word which becomes the popular one for this notion is hashgacha, anchored in Shir Ha-shirim 2:9, where it is an assumed feature of the "lover" (understood traditionally to be God). Thus, if we were to look for the textual roots of hashgacha, we would need to know to look it up using a different root, darosh, as in Devarim.
Secondly, there are theological notions which are logical conclusions emerging from more foundational (given) premises. For instance, given the premise of the Exodus, with its miraculous intervention by God on behalf of His enslaved and beleaguered people, the notion that God "should" be saving His people from distress becomes the next premise, such that Gidon states to the messenger of God (Shoftim 6:13): "If God is indeed with us, where are all of His wonders that our ancestors related to us?" It becomes assumed, based on the grand story of national salvation, that tribal salvation is part of the Divine "program".
Finally, there are premises that do not seem to be presented frontally and doctrinally anywhere, yet are assumed to be valid components of the Divine-human relationship. The clearest example of this is prayer. For man (or Man) to beseech God, to thank God, to appeal to God's "better nature" or to sing God's praises, the concept of prayer is a prerequisite; though it is never mandated nor defined formally as part of the Man-God relationship, all of these applications appear organically as early as the first book of the Torah, Bereishit, long before there is a possible mandate of worship in the final book of the Torah, Devarim (Chapter 6). Thus, in Bereishit, we find:
[1] It is tempting to argue that Vayikra 20:5 describes the same notion in a punitive sense: “I will put my eyes upon that man (who offered his child to Molekh) and his family and I will cut him off along with all those who stray after him…" However, although theologically it appears to be the same principle, phenomenologically the Devarim verse is both broader and positive in its sense. [2] This was actually the focal point of an essential disagreement between mori ve-rabbi HaRav Aharon Lichtenstein zt"l and his father-in-law, mori ve-rabbi HaRav Yosef Dov Soloveitchik zt"l ("the Rav"). Whereas the Rav felt that approaching God in prayer was not something that could be done without formal "permission' (in halakhic language, a mattir), HaRav Aharon felt that it would have been most cruel for God to create Man, with all of his limitations and needs, and then not allow him to beseech his Maker, on Whom he is completely dependent, for sustenance and salvation. The Rav's positions is most clearly presented in his Ra'ayanot al Ha-tefilla, p. 245. I heard Rav Lichtenstein zt"l express his respectful disagreement regarding the need for a mattir to approach God several times. [3] Amos Hakham, Da’at Mikra: Trei Asar, Vol. II, p. 44. [4] See, however, the Midrashic take on the phrase cited by Rashi ad loc. See also R. Yosef ibn Caspi, R. Avraham b. Maimonides and Shadal there. [5] This may be part of the undercurrent of Shir Ha-shirim, in which the intense relationship between the lover (in the parable, God) and the beloved (the Jewish people) is never fully realized and concludes, oddly enough, with the beloved telling the shepherd-king: "Flee, my beloved…" It may be that Shir Ha-shirim can only describe the relationship as it has already been experienced and that waiting for the dénouement of complete revelation is beyond the range of the parable. [6] This entire prophecy is eschatological and contains the well-known image, which may help define, in part at least, the central motif of yom Hashem: “Vehaya Hashem le-melekh al kol ha-aretz, ba-yom ha-hu yihyeh Hashem echad u-shmo echad,” “On that day, Hashem will be king over the entire land, on that day, Hashem will be one and His Name one” (v. 9). [7] Contra Margaliot who interprets Amos's “choshekh ve-lo or” in a somewhat tortured manner. The simple read of the verse is that indeed the day will be the opposite of what the people expect.
- Kayin and Hevel bring offerings (4:3-5).
- Noach's offerings seem to be some form of "appeasement" to get God to commit to never again flood the world; alternatively, they are thanksgiving offerings for the salvation of his family and their sea-bound menagerie (8:20-22).
- When Avraham learns of the decree to destroy Sedom, he appeals to God (18:23-33).
- When Yitzhak and Rivka’s barrenness becomes troubling, they turn to God in prayer (25:21); when Rivka is upset or confused by her subsequent pregnancy, she seeks God out (ibid. vv. 22-23).
[1] It is tempting to argue that Vayikra 20:5 describes the same notion in a punitive sense: “I will put my eyes upon that man (who offered his child to Molekh) and his family and I will cut him off along with all those who stray after him…" However, although theologically it appears to be the same principle, phenomenologically the Devarim verse is both broader and positive in its sense. [2] This was actually the focal point of an essential disagreement between mori ve-rabbi HaRav Aharon Lichtenstein zt"l and his father-in-law, mori ve-rabbi HaRav Yosef Dov Soloveitchik zt"l ("the Rav"). Whereas the Rav felt that approaching God in prayer was not something that could be done without formal "permission' (in halakhic language, a mattir), HaRav Aharon felt that it would have been most cruel for God to create Man, with all of his limitations and needs, and then not allow him to beseech his Maker, on Whom he is completely dependent, for sustenance and salvation. The Rav's positions is most clearly presented in his Ra'ayanot al Ha-tefilla, p. 245. I heard Rav Lichtenstein zt"l express his respectful disagreement regarding the need for a mattir to approach God several times. [3] Amos Hakham, Da’at Mikra: Trei Asar, Vol. II, p. 44. [4] See, however, the Midrashic take on the phrase cited by Rashi ad loc. See also R. Yosef ibn Caspi, R. Avraham b. Maimonides and Shadal there. [5] This may be part of the undercurrent of Shir Ha-shirim, in which the intense relationship between the lover (in the parable, God) and the beloved (the Jewish people) is never fully realized and concludes, oddly enough, with the beloved telling the shepherd-king: "Flee, my beloved…" It may be that Shir Ha-shirim can only describe the relationship as it has already been experienced and that waiting for the dénouement of complete revelation is beyond the range of the parable. [6] This entire prophecy is eschatological and contains the well-known image, which may help define, in part at least, the central motif of yom Hashem: “Vehaya Hashem le-melekh al kol ha-aretz, ba-yom ha-hu yihyeh Hashem echad u-shmo echad,” “On that day, Hashem will be king over the entire land, on that day, Hashem will be one and His Name one” (v. 9). [7] Contra Margaliot who interprets Amos's “choshekh ve-lo or” in a somewhat tortured manner. The simple read of the verse is that indeed the day will be the opposite of what the people expect.
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