{"id":48,"date":"2015-01-08T01:00:56","date_gmt":"2015-01-07T23:00:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/?p=48"},"modified":"2024-11-14T11:45:30","modified_gmt":"2024-11-14T09:45:30","slug":"pentacost-as-festival-of-the-giving-of-the-law","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/?p=48","title":{"rendered":"Pentacost as Festival of the Giving of the Law"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>It is still a prevalent view that Pentecost as a festival commemorating the revelation at Sinai and giving of the law (\u05d6\u05de\u05df \u05de\u05ea\u05df \u05ea\u05d5\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5)<sup style=\"color: #ffffff;\">l<\/sup><span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_1');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_1');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_1\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">1<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_1\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. Amidah liturgy of <em>Shavuot<\/em>. See J. Elbogen, Der J\u00fcdische Gottesdienst in seiner geschichtlichen Entwicklung<sup>3<\/sup>, 1931, p. 138.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_1').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_1', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> cannot be earlier than the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 C.E. Thus for example, E. Lohse in his article \u03a0\u03b5\u03bd\u03c4\u03b7\u03ba\u03bf\u03c3\u03c4\u03ae<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_2');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_2');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_2\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">2<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_2\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><em>Theologisches Worterbuch zum NT<\/em>, Band VI, 1959, s.v. (English translation in <em>Theological Dict. of NT<\/em>, vol. VI, 1968).<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_2').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_2', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> states that \u2018only in the Christian period do we find evidence that later Judaism linked this feast too with the events of the age of Moses, and particularly remembered the giving of the law at Sinai on this day.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>The immediate occasion for thus changing the meaning of Pentecost was the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 C.E. which meant that the ancient pilgrimage could no longer be held nor the first fruits and sacrifices offered in the temple\u2019 (Engl. Transl. p. 48).<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_3');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_3');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_3\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">3<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_3\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Compare also \u2018Shavuot,\u2019 <em>Encyc. Judaica<\/em>, vol. 14, col. 1320: \u2018In rabbinic times a remarkable transformation took place &#8230; the festival became the anniversary of the giving of the Torah.\u2019 Cf. also J. Howard Marshall, \u2018The Significance of Pentecost,\u2019 <em>Scottish Journal of Theology<\/em>, 30 (1977), p. 349.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_3').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_3', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> It is true, that in the last decade this view has been challenged especially by French scholars. Thus J. Potin in his <em>La F\u00eate Juive de la Pentec\u00f4te<\/em> (Lectio Divina 65, I-II, 1971)<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_4');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_4');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_4\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">4<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_4\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">I am grateful to Prof. R.J. Tournay O.P. for drawing my attention to this study.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_4').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_4', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> argues that Pentecost as \u2018Festival of the Covenant\u2019 goes back to the second or even the third century B.C.E. and in this he was actually anticipated by other French scholars.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_5');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_5');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_5\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">5<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_5\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Compare also R. Le D\u00e9aut, \u2018Pentecote et tradition juive,\u2019 <em>Assemblers du Seigneur<\/em> 51 (1963), pp. 22-38; M. Delcor, \u2018Pent\u00e9c\u00f4te\u2019 in <em>Diction de la Bible<\/em>, Suppl. VII 1966, 858-879, idem, <em>Rev. Bibl.<\/em> 79 (1972), pp. 610-614.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_5').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_5', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> In general however, scholars still cling to the conventional view, i.e. that Pentecost as the festival of the giving of the law is late. It is admitted that some Jewish sects associated Pentecost with the Covenant but officially &#8211; so it is argued &#8211; the festival of the giving of the law was not celebrated before the second century C.E. Thus, for example, J. Kremer in his recent monograph <em>Pfingstbericht und Pfingst\u00adgeschehen<\/em> (Stuttgarter Bibel Studien 63\/64,1973) states:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>die Erinnerung an die Gesetzgebung am Sinai, die im Rabbinischen Schriften mit Pfingsten verbunden wird, wurde allerdings erst nach der Zeit der Zerstorung des Tempels allgemein damit in Verbindung gebracht (p. 29).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>and this in spite of the fact that he himself associates the Pentecost story in Acts 2:1-13 with the Sinai tradition.<\/p>\n<p>This sceptic attitude towards Pentecost as festival of the giving of the law has penetrated Jewish scholarship too, cf. e.g., G. Alon, \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05ea\u05d5\u05dc\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc, pp. 111, n. 91 and S. Safrai, \u05d4\u05e2\u05dc\u05d9\u05d4 \u05dc\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05d1\u05d9\u05de\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05e9\u05e0\u05d9<sup style=\"color: #ffffff;\">l<\/sup>, 1965 p. 189 and n. 143, although some leading Jewish scholars in the past argued for the antiquity of the festival.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_6');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_6');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_6\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">6<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_6\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. H. Albeck, <em>Das B\u00fcch der Jubil\u00e4en und die Halacha<\/em>, pp. 15-16, J. Heinemann, <em>Philons Griechische und J\u00fcdische Bildung<\/em>, p. 128.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_6').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_6', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<p>In this study we try to clarify the covenantal nature of the Pentecost by tracing its origins to the Old Testament literature (Psalms and Chronicles) and by showing its continuation in the Second Temple period.<\/p>\n<h2>COVENANTAL FESTIVAL<\/h2>\n<p><strong>a)<\/strong> According to Ex. 19 the revelation at Sinai took place in the third month (Siwwan), the month in which Pentecost is due according to the Pharisaic as well as to the Essene and Qumran calendar. Though there is no evidence in the law that the Sinai theophany was commemorated as was Exodus, (cf. Ex. 12) indications of such commemoration may be found in the Psalmodic literature. Psalm 50 opens with a theophany which is similar to that of Sinai; (compare especially \u05de\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05df &#8230; \u05d0\u05dc\u05d4\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9\u05e2 (v. 2) with Deut. 33:2 \u05d4\u05f3 \u05de\u05e1\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d0 &#8230; \u05d4\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9\u05e2 \u05de\u05d4\u05e8 \u05e4\u05d0\u05e8\u05df). However there the scene takes place in Zion and not in Sinai.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>God, the Lord &#8230; spoke and summoned the world from east to west. From Zion, perfect in beauty God appeared &#8211; let our God come and not keep silence. Devouring fire runs before him, and rages around him fiercely. He summoned the heavens above, and the earth to the judgement of his people. Bring in my devotees who made a covenant with me over sacrifice &#8230; The heavens proclaimed his righteousness &#8230;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>It seems that this passage reflects a dramatization of the Sinai theophany in Jerusalem. As at the covenant of Sinai so here God reveals himself in storm and fire, he calls from heaven to his people and asks to gather the ones who made a covenant with him over sacrifice (cf. Ex. 24:5) . At last he proclaims:<\/p>\n<table>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Listen my people and I will speak<br \/>\nO, Israel I will instruct you<br \/>\nI am God, your God.<\/td>\n<td style=\"text-align: right;\">\u05e9\u05de\u05e2\u05d4 \u05e2\u05de\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d0\u05d3\u05d1\u05e8\u05d4<br \/>\n\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc \u05d0\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3\u05d4 \u05d1\u05da<br \/>\n\u05d0\u05dc\u05d4\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc\u05d4\u05d9\u05da \u05d0\u05e0\u05db\u05d9<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p>The last sentence is none other than a chiastic quotation of \u05d0\u05e0\u05d5\u05db\u05d9 \u05d4&#8217; \u05d0\u05dc\u05d4\u05d9\u05da of the decalogue, but because of its Elohistic setting (being embedded in the group of Elohistic psalms) the tetragrammaton was transformed into Elohim. In the continuation of the psalm we find admonition against stealing, adultery and false witness (v. 18-19), crimes enumerated in the decalogue.<\/p>\n<p>Another psalm in which the first two commandments of the decalogue are quoted is Ps. 81. Here a festival is explicitly mentioned:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Blow the horn of the New Moon<br \/>\nOn the full moon for our feast day (<em>\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05d7\u05d2\u05e0\u05d5<\/em>)<br \/>\nFor it is a law for Israel<br \/>\nA ruling of the God of Jacob.<br \/>\nHe imposed it as a decree upon Joseph<br \/>\nWhen he went forth from the land of Egypt<br \/>\nI heard a language that I know not.<br \/>\nI relieved his shoulder of the burden<br \/>\nHis hands were freed from the basket&#8230;<br \/>\nI answered you from the secret place of thunder<br \/>\nI tested you at the waters of Meribah.<br \/>\nHear my people and I will instruct you (<em>\u05d5\u05d0\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3\u05d4 \u05d1\u05da<\/em>)<br \/>\nYou shall have no foreign god<br \/>\nYou shall not bow to an alien god<br \/>\nI the Lord am your God<br \/>\nWho brought you out of the land of Egypt&#8230;<br \/>\n<em>(translation according to Psalms, JPS, 1972)<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Here we find a festival involved in a theophany which occurs after the Exodus and is associated with the decalogue. The first two commandments are quoted chiastically \u05dc\u05d0 \u05d9\u05d4\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d1\u05da \u05d0\u05dc \u05d6\u05e8 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0 \u05ea\u05e9\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d0\u05dc \u05e0\u05db\u05e8 \u05d0\u05e0\u05db\u05d9 \u05d4\u05f3 \u05d0\u05dc\u05d4\u05d9\u05da. Before the citation of the commandments the trial at the waters of Meribah is mentioned (v. 8) which reflects the sequence of the events as told in the Book of Exodus: waters of Meribah (chap. 17) and then the story of revelation (chap. 19-20).<\/p>\n<p>In this revelation God is depicted as answering from the secret place of thunder \u05d0\u05e2\u05e0\u05da \u05d1\u05e1\u05ea\u05e8 \u05e8\u05e2\u05dd which undoubtedly points to the Sinai tradition where God answered Moses in thunder (liter. <em>voice<\/em>, and see below) from the cloud (Ex. 19:19, comp. Ps. 99:7 \u05d1\u05e2\u05de\u05d5\u05d3 \u05e2\u05e0\u05df \u05d9\u05d3\u05d1\u05e8 \u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d4\u05dd) while the horn was blowing. Similarly we read in Deut. 5:19 that God spoke to the congregation out of fire and cloud with a mighty \u2018voice\u2019, compare v. 20: \u2018You heard the voice out of the darkness.\u2019 The appearance of God in secret (\u05e1\u05ea\u05e8) out of the darkness while giving his voice (= thunder) is also mentioned in Ps. 18: \u2018He made darkness around him his secret place &#8230; the Lord thundered from heaven. The Most High gave forth his voice (\u05d5\u05d9\u05e8\u05e2\u05dd \u05d1\u05e9\u05de\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05f3 \u05d5\u05e2\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05d9\u05ea\u05df \u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5)<sup style=\"color: #ffffff;\">l<\/sup>(vv. 12-14). It is clear that here \u2018thunder\u2019 equals \u2018voice\u2019 as we find elsewhere in the Bible and in the ancient Near East.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_7');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_7');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_7\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">7<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_7\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. my article in <em>Eretz Israel<\/em> vol. 14 (H.L. Ginsberg Festschrift), (forthcoming).<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_7').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_7', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<p>As in Ps. 50 where the verb \u05d4\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3 is used in connection with the commandments: \u05e9\u05de\u05e2\u05d4 \u05e2\u05de\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d0\u05d3\u05d1\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc \u05d5\u05d0\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3 \u05d4\u05f3 \u05d1\u05da so in Ps. 81 the verb \u05d4\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3 precedes the quotation from the decalogue: \u05e9\u05de\u05e2 \u05e2\u05de\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d0\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3\u05d4 \u05d1\u05da. The verse \u05e2\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05e1\u05e3 \u05e9\u05de\u05d5 which occurs there likewise refers to these commandments. In fact \u05d4\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3 paired with \u05e2\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea is found in II Kings 17:15 and Neh. 9:34 and as Veijola has shown<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_8');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_8');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_8\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">8<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_8\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">T. Veijola, <em>Ugarit Forschungen<\/em> 8 (1976), pp. 343 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_8').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_8', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> it means \u2018to impose covenantal laws.\u2019 On the other hand \u05d4\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3 has the connotation of \u2018instruct\u2019 as pointed out by Couroyer.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_9');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_9');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_9\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">9<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_9\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">B. Couroyer, <em>Revue Biblique<\/em> 82 (1975), pp. 206 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_9').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_9', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> It is interesting to note that in the Jewish Pentecost service a so called liturgy of \u05d0\u05d6\u05d4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea (linked to the decalogue) was recited (J. Elbogen, <em>Gottesdienst<\/em>, p. 217) which seems to have very ancient roots. Indeed \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05e8 like \u05d4\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3 means \u2018to warn\u2019<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_10');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_10');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_10\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">10<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_10\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">See J.L. Seeligmann, <em>Hebr\u00e4ische Wortforschung<\/em>, W. Baumgartner Festschrift (SVT 16), pp. 265 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_10').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_10', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> as well as \u2018to instruct\u2019 and it is possible that the liturgical tradition of \u05d0\u05d6\u05d4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea is traced back to liturgical situations like those reflected in Pss. 50 and 81.<\/p>\n<p>It is then plausible to assume that Pentecost stands at the background of Pss. 50 and 81. It is true that the festival implied here could also be the New Year as Mowinckel suggested<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_11');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_11');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_11\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">11<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_11\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">S. Mowinckel, <em>Le d\u00e9calogue<\/em>, 1927, p. 129 f. Cf. also G. von Rad, <em>Gesam. Studien zum A.T.<\/em>, 1961, pp. 28 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_11').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_11', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> and as was interpreted by the Rabbis<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_12');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_12');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_12\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">12<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_12\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. B. Rosh Hashanah 8a, b.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_12').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_12', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> however this still remains a conjecture, whereas the sequence of events as depicted in Ps. 81 seem to point towards Pentecost and not the New Year. The blowing of the horn in Ps. 81 belongs to the ceremony of covenant renewal as may be learned from the Asa episode in II Chr. 15:10 f., quoted below, where blowing the horn accompanies the covenantal oath. It is likely that just as the Jubilee which follows seven yearly weeks (\u05e9\u05d1\u05e2 \u05e9\u05d1\u05ea\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd) was inaugurated by\u00a0blowing the horn (Lev. 25:9) so also the Pentecost which comes after seven weeks (Lev. 23:15: \u05e9\u05d1\u05e2 \u05e9\u05d1\u05ea\u05d5\u05ea) was celebrated by blowing the horn.<\/p>\n<p><strong>b)<\/strong> A covenant ritual performed in the third month and most likely on <em>Shavuoth<\/em> is described in II Chr. 15:10 ff. Here we read that the people gathered in Jerusalem in the third month<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_13');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_13');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_13\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">13<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_13\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">The Targum adds in v. 11 here \u05d1\u05d7\u05d2\u05d0 \u05d3\u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e2\u05d9\u05d0, see A. Sperber, <em>The Bible in Aramaic<\/em> IVa, p. 45.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_13').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_13', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> and after sacrificing, entered the convenant to seek the Lord \u2018with all their heart and soul\u2019 and bound themselves by oath to the Lord through acclamation and sounds of trumpets and horns. The oath here is a covenantal oath<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_14');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_14');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_14\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">14<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_14\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">For \u2018oath and covenant\u2019 as hendiadys cf. my article \u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea in <em>Theol. Worterbuch zum AT<\/em>, 1,1973.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_14').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_14', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> undoubtedly constituting a renewal of the first Sinaitic covenant ratified by a pledge accompanied by sacrifices (Exod. 24:3 ff.)<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_15');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_15');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_15\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">15<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_15\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">II Chr. 15:15 recounts that the people \u2018rejoiced at the oath because they had bound themselves with all their heart and had sought him with all their will\u2019 (\u05d1\u05db\u05dc \u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05e0\u05dd) . The \u2018joy\u2019 (\u05e9\u05de\u05d7\u05d4) coupled with \u2018willingness\u2019 (\u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05df) found here, express the legal idea of free and uncoerced will of the one who takes upon himself the obligation, cf. V. Muffs, \u2018Joy and Love as metaphorical expressions of willingness and spontaneity in cuneiform, ancient Hebrew and related literatures,\u2019 <em>Morton Smith Festschrift<\/em>, vol. Ill, 1975, pp. 1 ff. Compare also the evening liturgy of the Shema Benediction: \u05d5\u05de\u05dc\u05db\u05d5\u05ea\u05d5 \u05d1\u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05df \u05e7\u05d1\u05dc\u05d5 \u05e2\u05dc\u05d9\u05d4\u05dd&#8230; \u05d1\u05e9\u05de\u05d7\u05d4 \u05e8\u05d1\u05d4 \u2018they took upon themselves his kingdom, willingly &#8230; with great joy.\u2019 For \u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05df and \u05e9\u05de\u05d7\u05d4 and its legal connotation cf. the discussion of Muffs, op. cit., pp. 21 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_15').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_15', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> The word \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e2\u05d4 which occurs three times in the passage points towards a connection with the name \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea<sup style=\"color: #ffffff;\">l<\/sup><span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_16');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_16');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_16\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">16<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_16\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">On the tendency for \u2018double meanings\u2019 in the Book of Chronicles, cf. Y. Zakowitch, \u05db\u05e4\u05dc \u05de\u05d3\u05e8\u05e9\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dd, MA thesis, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1971, pp. 166 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_16').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_16', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> The double meaning of \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea is explicitly referred to in the Book of Jubilees 6:21: \u2018this feast is two fold and of double nature.\u2019<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_17');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_17');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_17\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">17<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_17\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. R.H. Charles, <em>The Book of Jubilees<\/em>, 1902 ad loc. Charles comments: \u2018why this festival should be said to be \u2018of a double nature\u2019 I do not see.\u2019 (p. 53, n. 21). According to our view the double nature of the festival lies the double meaning of the root \u05e9\u05d1\u05e2 ,which underlies \u05d7\u05d2 \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea. It should be added however, that Pentecost in the Book of Jubilees is of a double nature: it is associated with the pledge of the Lord to the Patriarchs on the one hand and with the pledge of the Israelites to the Lord on the other.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_17').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_17', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script>\u00a0The sounding of horns in the discussed passage finds its analogy in the sound of the horn at the revelation at Sinai in Exodus 19:16,19. As has been seen by Ehrlich<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_18');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_18');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_18\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">18<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_18\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. A. Ehrlich, \u05de\u05e7\u05e8\u05d0 \u05db\u05e4\u05e9\u05d5\u05d8\u05d5 , ad loc.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_18').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_18', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script>, blowing the horn belongs to the oath ritual, a custom which persists in Judaism until this day.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_19');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_19');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_19\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">19<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_19\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">For blowing the horn in the oath ritual cf. <em>Aruch Completum<\/em> s.v. \u05d4\u05e1\u05ea (p. 229): \u05d5\u05ea\u05d5\u05e7\u05e2\u05d9\u05df \u05d1\u05e9\u05d5\u05e4\u05e8 \u05e2\u05dd \u05d4\u05d0\u05dc\u05d4<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_19').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_19', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<p><strong>c)<\/strong> Pentecost as the covenantal festival par excellence is most clearly presented in the Book of Jubilees. The covenants with Noah and Abraham were established on the fifteenth of the third month, which is the date of the Pentecost, in accordance with the calendar of this book<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_20');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_20');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_20\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">20<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_20\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">See Charles, op. cit. p. 52 to w. 17-18.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_20').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_20', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> as well as with the calendar of the Qumran sect.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_21');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_21');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_21\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">21<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_21\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. \u05e9. \u05d8\u05dc\u05de\u05d5\u05df, \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05de\u05d2\u05d9\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05d2\u05e0\u05d5\u05d6\u05d5\u05ea, \u05e1\u05e4\u05e8 \u05d6\u05db\u05e8\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05d0.\u05dc. \u05e1\u05d5\u05e7\u05e0\u05d9\u05e7, \u05ea\u05e9\u05d9\u05f4\u05d6, \u05e2\u05de. 77 \u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05dc\u05e8<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_21').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_21', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> We are told in the Book of Jubilees that Noah was the first one to celebrate the feast of weeks and therefore was commanded that the future generations \u2018should celebrate the feast of weeks in this month once a year, to renew the covenant every year\u2019 (6:17). A similar injunction is proclaimed right after the covenant with Abram:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>On that day we made a covenant with Abram, according as we had covenanted with Noah in this month and Abram renewed the festival and ordinance for himself forever (14:20).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Both covenants followed the offering of sacrifices (6:3,14:19) as was the case with the covenant at Sinai (Exod. 24:3 ff.) and the covenant of Asa mentioned above. The covenant with Abram, concerning circumcision, was also established in the middle of the third month, (15:1) and the revelation to Jacob also takes place in the middle of the third month after celebrating the harvest festival (44:4 ff.).<\/p>\n<p><strong>d)<\/strong> The people of Qumran used to renew the covenant annually (1 Q Serekh 1:16 ff.) and according to an unpublished text from Qumran cave 4 the annual covenant ceremony took place at Pentecost.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_22');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_22');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_22\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">22<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_22\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. J.T. Milik, <em>Ten Years of Discovery in the Wilderness of Judaea<\/em>, 1959, pp. 113 ff.; for additional possible evidence cf. M. Delcor, \u2018Pent\u00e9c\u00f4te\u2019, <em>Dict. Bibl. Suppl.<\/em>\u00a0870-871.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_22').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_22', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<h2>NAME OF THE FESTIVAL<\/h2>\n<p>The Hebrew and Aramaic names for Pentecost as reflected in the Mishnah (passim), the Targums<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_23');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_23');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_23\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">23<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_23\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Onkelos and Targum Jonathan Num. 28:26, Neofiti I (facsimile, Jerusalem 1970) Deut. 16:10 \u05d7\u05d2\u05d4 \u05d3\u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05e2\u05e6\u05e8\u05ea\u05d4<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_23').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_23', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> and Josephus are \u05e2\u05e6\u05e8\u05ea\u05d0\/\u05e2\u05e6\u05e8\u05ea (\u1f00\u03c3\u03b1\u03c1\u03b8\u03ac, Ant. 3:252). \u05e2\u05e6\u05e8\u05ea means \u2018assembly\u2019 or \u2018solemn gathering\u2019 which indicates that Pentecost was especially noted for its solemn convocation. It commemorated &#8211; in our opinion &#8211; the covenant assembly at Sinai. As has been shown by D.Z. Hoffman the designation \u05e2\u05e6\u05e8\u05ea for the Pentecost is to be explained against the background of Biblical \u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05d4\u05e7\u05d4\u05dc \u2018the day of assembly\u2019 which in Deuteronomy marks the day of revelation and giving of the law (9:10, 10:3, 18:16).<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_24');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_24');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_24\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">24<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_24\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">24 D.Z. Hoffmann, <em>Das Buch Leviticus<\/em>, 1905-1906, II. pp. 228f. Mark that Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and Neofiti translate \u05d1\u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05db\u05d2\u05d9\u05e9\u05ea \u05e7\u05d4\u05dc\u05d0: \u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05d4\u05e7\u05d4\u05dc and in Deut 18:16: \u05d1\u05d9\u05d5\u05de\u05d0 \u05d3\u05d0\u05ea\u05db\u05e0\u05e9\u05d5 \u05e9\u05d1\u05d8\u05d9\u05d0 \u05dc\u05de\u05e7\u05d1\u05dc\u05d0 \u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea\u05d0<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_24').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_24', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> Indeed this is the only reasonable explanation for the name \u05e2\u05e6\u05e8\u05ea given to the Pentecost.<\/p>\n<p>That Pentecost was notorious for its solemn massive gatherings may be learned from Josephus and the New Testament. Josephus tells us twice about big gatherings in Jerusalem on Pentecost. One is at the time of the Parthian invasion in 40 B.C.E.:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>when the feast called Pentecost came round the whole neighborhood of the temple and the entire city were crowded with country-folk (Bell. Jud. I, 253, comp. Antiq. XIV, 337).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The second time is after the death of Herod in 4 B.C.E.:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>on the arrival of the Pentecost &#8230; it was not the customary ritual so much as indignation which drew the people in crowds to the capital. A countless multitude flocked in from Galilee, from Idumaea, from Jericho, and from Peraea beyond the Jordan, but it was the native population of Judaea itself which, both in numbers and ardour, was pre-eminent (Bell. Jud. II, 43, comp. Antiq. XVII, 254).<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_25');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_25');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_25\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">25<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_25\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Translation according to Thackerey, Loeb Classical Library.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_25').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_25', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In both cases the gathering is particularly noted. It is true, the gatherings were exploited for military activities, but these could not be upheld were it not for the particular solemn occasion.<\/p>\n<p>Similarly we read in the Acts of the Apostles, Chap. 2, that the crowd witnessing the miracles of the Pentecost included:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Parthians, Medes, Elamites, inhabitants of Mesopotamia, of Judaea and Cappadocia, of Pontus and Asia, of Phrygia and Pamphylia, of Egypt and the districts of Libya around Cyrene; visitors from Rome both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and Arabs &#8230; (vv. 9 ff.).<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_26');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_26');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_26\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">26<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_26\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">For a thorough analysis of this catalogue cf. J. Kremer, <em>Pfingstbericht<\/em> etc., pp. 145 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_26').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_26', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>That Pentecost was outstanding for its pilgrimage may be also learned from Acts 20:16 according to which Paul wanted at all costs to spend Pentecost in Jerusalem. Philo marks Pentecost as a festival greater than Passover (\u1f11\u03c4\u03ad\u03c1\u03b1\u03c2 \u1f11\u03bf\u03c1\u03c4\u1fc6\u03c2 \u03bc\u03b5\u03af\u03b6\u03bf\u03bd\u03bf\u03c2) (De Spec. Leg. II, 176). In another place (De Spec. Leg. I, 183) he calls Pentecost the most national celebration (\u03b4\u03b7\u03bc\u03bf\u03c4\u03b5\u03bb\u03b5\u03c3\u03c4\u03ac\u03c4\u03b7 \u1f11\u03bf\u03c1\u03c4\u03ae) and when describing the celebration of the Pentecost by the Therapeutae he refers to the festival as \u03bc\u03b5\u03b3\u03af\u03c3\u03c4\u03b7 \u1f11\u03bf\u03c1\u03c4\u03ae\u00a0\u2018the biggest holiday.\u2019<\/p>\n<h2>PENTECOST IN THE NEW TESTAMENT<\/h2>\n<p>Most instructive for our purpose is the story about the founding of the Christian congregation on the day of Pentecost as told in the Acts of the Apostles:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>When the day of the Pentecost arrived (reached its course) they were all together, when suddenly there came from the sky a noise like that of a strong wind which filled the whole house &#8230; and there appeared to them tongues divided like flames of fire and rested on each one of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to talk in other tongues as the spirit caused them to utter &#8230; (2:1 ff.).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The main components of this story may be found in the traditions of the law-giving at Sinai.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1)<\/strong> The heavenly noise and the fiery tongues have their roots in the description of the Sinai revelation as it was elaborated in the Midrashic literature of the Second Temple period. The aramaic Targums as well as Philo explain the \u03bb\u1f79\u03b3\u03bf\u03b9\u00a0coming out of the mouth of the deity at Sinai as blazing flames becoming words or voices, a concept based appparently on Ex. 20:18: \u05d5\u05db\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05dd \u05e8\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05e7\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05dc\u05e4\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd liter.: \u2018all the people saw the voices and the flashes\/torches.\u2019 Philo recounts that the flames (\u03c6\u03bb\u1f79\u03b3\u03b5\u03c2) became articulate speech in the language (\u03b4\u03b9\u03ac\u03bb\u03b5\u03ba\u03c4\u03bf\u03c2) familiar to the audience (Decal. 46). Targum Pseudo-Jonathan as well as Genizah Targum fragments and Neofiti similarly describe the word of God departing from his mouth as blazes and torches (Exod. 20:2)<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-align: right;\"><em>\u05d3\u05d1\u05d9\u05e8\u05d0&#8230; \u05db\u05d3 \u05d4\u05d5\u05d4 \u05e0\u05e4\u05d9\u05e7 \u05de\u05df \u05e4\u05d5\u05dd \u05e7\u05d5\u05d3\u05e9\u05d0 \u05d9\u05d4\u05d9 \u05e9\u05de\u05d9\u05d4 \u05de\u05d1\u05e8\u05da \u05d4\u05d9 \u05db\u05d6\u05d9\u05e7\u05d9\u05df \u05d5\u05d4\u05d9 \u05db\u05d1\u05e8\u05e7\u05d9\u05df \u05d5\u05d4\u05d9 \u05db\u05e9\u05dc\u05d4\u05d5\u05d1\u05d9\u05d9\u05df\/\u05db\u05dc\u05de\u05e4\u05d3\u05d9\u05df \u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05e8, \u05dc\u05de\u05e4\u05d3 \u05de\u05df \u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05de\u05e4\u05d3 \u05d3\u05d0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d0 \u05de\u05df \u05e9\u05de\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d4, \u05e4\u05e8\u05d7 \u05d5\u05d8\u05d9\u05d9\u05e1 \u05d1\u05d0\u05d5\u05d9\u05e8 \u05e9\u05d9\u05d9\u05d0 \u05d5\u05d7\u05d6\u05e8 \u05d5\u05de\u05ea\u05d7\u05de\u05d9 \u05e2\u05dc \u05de\u05e9\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05df \u05d3\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc \u05d5\u05d7\u05d6\u05e8 \u05d5\u05de\u05ea\u05d7\u05de\u05d9 \u05e2\u05dc \u05de\u05e9\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05df \u05d3\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc \u05d5\u05d7\u05d6\u05e8 \u05d5\u05de\u05ea\u05d7\u05e7\u05e7 \u05e2\u05dc \u05dc\u05d5\u05d7\u05d9 \u05e7\u05d9\u05d9\u05de\u05d0&#8230;<\/em> <span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_27');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_27');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_27\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">27<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_27\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">For the variants in the Targums see J. Potin, <em>La F\u00eate Juive<\/em> etc. Tome II, pp. 37 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_27').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_27', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<p>The word that went out from the mouth of the Holy one, may his Name be blessed, was like shooting stars and lightenings and like flames and torches of fire, a torch of fire to the right and a torch of flame to the left. It flew and winged swiftly in the air of the heavens and turned around and became visible in all the camps of Israel and by turning it became engraved on the two tablets of the covenant.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><strong>2)<\/strong> The idea of the division of flames into tongues is rooted in the Midrashic notion that each one of the Lord\u2019s words was divided into seventy tongues, that is, the Ianguages of all the nations.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_28');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_28');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_28\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">28<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_28\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. the seventy nations in Gen. 10 and see my short commentary on Genesis, Masada, 1975, ad loc.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_28').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_28', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> Thus we read in B. Sabbath 88b: Rabbi Yohanan said: \u2018The Lord gives a command, those who bring the news are a great host\u2019 (Ps. 68:12), every dibbur that came out from the Almighty was divided into seventy languages.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_29');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_29');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_29\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">29<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_29\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. Midrash Tehilim (ed. Buber) 92:3.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_29').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_29', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> Another dictum by R. Yishmael: \u2018Behold my word is like fire &#8211; declares the Lord &#8211; and like a hammer that shatters rock\u2019 (Jer. 23:29). It was taught by Rabbi Yishmael: Just as the sledgehammer (when shattered by the harder rock) is divided into many slivers, so every word which was uttered by the Holy One was divided into seventy tongues.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_30');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_30');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_30\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">30<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_30\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Amongst the various Rabbinic parallels which were adduced by Strack-Billerbeck to the episode in Acts 2, this dictum was also quoted but without noting its importance for understanding of the motif.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_30').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_30', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> Most significant is the overlap in phraseology between this tradition and the account in Acts: the tongues of fire were divided.<\/p>\n<table>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td style=\"vertical-align: top;\"><em>Rabbi Yishmael<\/em><br \/>\n\u05d3\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8 (\u05db\u05d0\u05e9) \u05e0\u05d7\u05dc\u05e7<br \/>\n\u05dc\u05e9\u05d1\u05e2\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05e9\u05d5\u05df<br \/>\nthe word (like fire) was divided<br \/>\ninto seventy tongues<\/td>\n<td style=\"vertical-align: top;\"><em>Acts 2:3<\/em><br \/>\n\u03ba\u03b1\u1f76 \u1f64\u03c6\u03b8\u03b7\u03c3\u03b1\u03bd \u03b1\u1f50\u03c4\u03bf\u1fd6\u03c2 \u03b4\u03b9\u03b1\u03bc\u03b5\u03c1\u03b9\u03b6\u1f79\u03bc\u03b5\u03bd\u03b1\u03b9<br \/>\n\u03b3\u03bb\u1ff6\u03c3\u03c3\u03b1\u03b9 \u1f61\u03c3\u03b5\u1f76 \u03c0\u03c5\u03c1\u1f79\u03c2<br \/>\nthere appeared to them<br \/>\ntongues divided like\u00a0flames of fire<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p>Cf. also: \u2018R. Yosi bar Haninah says: As a man who strikes with a hammer on stone and the fire sparks sprinkle around &#8230; so the Holy discharged the <em>dibbur<\/em> from his mouth and it was divided into luminaries\u2019 (Midrash Tehilim to 92:3).<\/p>\n<p><strong>3)<\/strong> The fiery tongues which rested on each of them (Acts 2:3) remind us of the divine glory or the divine diadems<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_31');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_31');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_31\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">31<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_31\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">The divine glory \u05d4\u05d3\u05e8\/\u05d6\u05d9\u05d5\/\u05db\u05d1\u05d5\u05d3 constitutes the fiery halo which surrounds the head and thus forms a crown. For the nature of the \u05db\u05d1\u05d5\u05d3 and its Akkadian and Egyptian equivalent <em>melammu<\/em> and <em>nsrt<\/em>, cf. my forthcoming article in <em>Eretz Israel<\/em> vol. 13 (H.I. Ginsberg Festschrift).<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_31').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_31', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> which were put on the head of the Israelites when they proclaimed \u2018we will do and obey\u2019 (\u05e0\u05e2\u05e9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05e0\u05e9\u05de\u05e2) at Sinai (B. Sabbath 88a).<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_32');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_32');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_32\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">32<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_32\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">According to the earlier tradition God himself tied the diadems upon their heads while the later tradition has it that the angels did it, see E.E. Urbach, The Sages I, pp. 148-149.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_32').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_32', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<h2>THE SPEAKING WITH TONGUES<\/h2>\n<p>Following the revelation to the Christian congregation &#8211; we are told by Luke &#8211; the members of the congregation started to talk in different languages. Scholars do not know how to explain \u2018the talking in tongues\u2019 here. In their opinion it means \u2018ecstatic babbling\u2019, and according to E. Meyer, it reminds us of the activies of the bands of the popular prophets in ancient Israel.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_33');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_33');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_33\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">33<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_33\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. e.g. E. Meyer, <em>Ursprung und Anf\u00e4nge des Christentums<\/em> III, 1923, pp. 142 f., 221 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_33').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_33', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> Though one cannot deny the central place of the \u03c0\u03bd\u03b5\u1f7b\u03bc\u03b1\u00a0in this tradition (see below) there is no justification for understanding \u2018the speaking with foreign tongues\u2019 as ecstatic babbling. Luke in Acts 2 just wants to inform us that the revelation was destined not only for the Galileans who constituted the main bulk of the population present there (2:7) but for all the nations and \u2018tongues\u2019 of the world. Behind the story lies the Jewish tradition that the Torah was given in seventy languages, i.e. in the languages of all the nations in the world<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_34');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_34');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_34\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">34<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_34\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. Tosefta Sotah 8:7.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_34').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_34', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script>\u00a0and it is no mere coincidence that Rabbi Yishmael who expounded the verse about the fiery word of God dividing itself into seventy tongues, was also the author of the dictum that the Torah was written on the stones of Mount Ebal in seventy languages.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_35');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_35');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_35\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">35<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_35\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. the Mechilta on Deut, discovered by Schechter, <em>J. Lewy Festschrift<\/em>, p. 189.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_35').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_35', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<p>Another Midrash speaks about God revealing himself at Sinai in four tongues (Sifr to Deut. 33:2):<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>When the Holy &#8230; revealed himself to give the Torah to Israel, he talked to them not in one languague but in four:<br \/>\n1) \u2018God came from Sinai,\u2019 this is, in Hebrew.<br \/>\n2) \u2018He shone forth from Se\u2019ir,\u2019 that is, in Roman.<br \/>\n3) \u2018He appeared from the Mount Paran,\u2019 that is, in Arabic.<br \/>\n4) \u2018And came (<em>\u05e8\u05d0\u05ea\u05d4<\/em>) from <em>\u05e8\u05d1\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05e7\u05d3\u05e9<\/em> that is, in Aramaic.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_36');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_36');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_36\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">36<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_36\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">For other parallels cf. Potin, <em>La F\u00eate Juive<\/em>, pp. 258 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_36').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_36', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<h2>SPEAKING TONGUES AS A SPIRITUAL GIFT<\/h2>\n<p>The \u2018fiery tongues\u2019 have their origin &#8211; as shown &#8211; in the Jewish Midrashic traditions about God\u2019s revealing the Torah in seventy languages. The \u2018speaking in tongues\u2019 by the members of the holy congregation<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_37');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_37');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_37\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">37<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_37\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">It is not clear altogether whether Acts 2:4 refers to the 120 men mentioned in 1:15 or to the 12 Apostles. At any rate the writer has in mind here the holy body constituting the fountain of the Christian community.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_37').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_37', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> belongs however to another tradition and viz. the tradition about \u2018charismata\u2019 or the spiritual gifts bestowed upon the ones overtaken by the holy spirit (cf. I Cor. 12:10,28, Acts 10:44-45)<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_38');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_38');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_38\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">38<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_38\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. Beare, <em>JBL<\/em> 83 (1964), see also Martin <em>JBL<\/em> 63 (1944).<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_38').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_38', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script>\u00a0This tradition has its roots according to our view, in the story of Num. 11 about the spirit of God descending upon the seventy elders (v. 25) who were to adjudicate the tribes of Israel. As is well known this story served as the prototype for the seventy members of the Sanhedrin in the second temple period and regarding them we are told that they should know and speak<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_39');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_39');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_39\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">39<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_39\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Every member must understand the languages and should be able to speak at least two of them. The ability to speak the languages does not mean controlling them perfectly, cf. S. Lieberman, <em>Greek in Jewish Palestine<\/em>, New York, 1942, pp. 15-16.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_39').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_39', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> seventy languages (Tos.Sanh.8:l, Jerus. Shekalim 5:l,48d, B. Sanh. 17a, Menah. 65a). The people of the elected body of the nation upon whom the spirit of God rested were thus endowed with the gift of tongues and this is exactly what we find in the miracle story of the Pentecost.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_40');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_40');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_40\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">40<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_40\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">It seems to us that the story in the Letter of Aristeas about the seventy-two elders who translated the Torah through divine inspiration, belongs to the same category. For the story in the letter of Aristeas and its connection with the account of the revelation at Sinai, cf. most recently H.M. Orlinsky, <em>HUCA<\/em> 46 (1975), pp. 94 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_40').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_40', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> If it is true &#8211; as some argue &#8211; that it is only the Apostles who received the spirit in the upper room, then the analogy with Num. 11 is even stronger. Like the elders and the Sanhedrin, the Apostles too were in charge of judging Israel (Mat. 19:28, Luke 22:29) and therefore were in need of the divine spirit.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_41');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_41');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_41\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">41<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_41\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. E. Stauffer, ThLZ 77 (1953), p. 202, who compares the 120 to the 120 members of the \u2018Knesset haggedolah.\u2019<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_41').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_41', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> On the other hand it is possible that the whole community was considered as a council similar to that of the \u2018seventy\u2019 and therefore all its members received the holy spirit.<\/p>\n<p>\u2018Speaking in tongues\u2019 is a divine gift as is every propensity and talent but it is no more than a medium of communication. It was especially important for the Christian congregation which was comprised of people from different nations. \u2018Speaking in tongues\u2019 was needed not only for the translation of the message but also for understanding prayer, and this is what stands behind I Cor. 14. In this chapter we find the legitimation for praying in foreign languages.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_42');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_42');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_42\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">42<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_42\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. Mishnah Sotah 7:1.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_42').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_42', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> \u2018Amen\u2019 can only be said when the prayer is understood:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>I will pray with my spirit but I will also pray with my understanding. I will sing<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_43');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_43');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_43\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">43<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_43\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">\u2018Sing\u2019 here is associated with liturgy, compare IQS X9: \u05d0\u05d6\u05de\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d3\u05e2\u05ea which comes before \u05d5\u05e2\u05dd \u05de\u05d5\u05e6\u05d0 \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1 \u05d5\u05d1\u05d5\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05d7\u05d5\u05e7\u05d9\u05d5 \u05e2\u05dd \u05de\u05d1\u05d5\u05d0 \u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d0\u05d1\u05e8\u05d0\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea \u05d0\u05dc which points toward the recital of the Shema in the morning and evening, cf. M. Weinfeld, <em>Shnaton, An Annual for Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies<\/em>, Vol. 1, 1976, p. 77, n. 245, idem. Tarbiz 45 (1976), p. 20. Cf. also H. Conzelmann, Der erste Brief an die Korinther, 1969, ad loc.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_43').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_43', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> with my spirit but I will sing also with my understanding. If you utter your praises in the spirit how is the person in a layman\u2019s position to say Amen to your prayer? For of course he does not know what you are saying (vv. 15 ff.).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>\u2018Speaking in tongues\u2019 is &#8211;\u00a0as Beare summarized in his study &#8211;\u00a0\u2018one among many gifts, amid a great diversity and is less highly valued than the gift of prophecy or prayer and \u201cpraise with the mind\u201d.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_44');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_44');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_44\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">44<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_44\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><em>JBL<\/em> 83 (1964), p. 246.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_44').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_44', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> It is a medium for disseminating the divine message and for understanding the prayer and is not an aim in itself.<\/p>\n<p>Coming back to our main subject we may sum up in saying that the revelation as described in Acts 2 is patterned after the revelation at Sinai and the pouring of the spirit on the elders in the Sinai desert. Just as the revelation at Sinai occurred on the day of the Pentecost so the revelation to the first Christian community happened on this very day.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_45');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_45');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_45\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">45<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_45\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">E. Haenchen (The Acts of the Apostles, Commentary 1971) who goes along with others in stating that evidence for the Jewish Pentecost tradition (associated with Sinai) has not been found earlier than the middle of the second century, nevertheless admits that Luke\u2019s story is influenced by the story of Sinai and that the tongues of fire which had become tongues of speech at Sinai (relying solely on Philo) influenced the story of Acts 2 (p. 174).<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_45').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_45', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script> The date of the first revelation at Sinai, viz. the holiday of Pentecost served as a point of departure for other mystic experiences. Two episodes of later Jewish tradition are instructive in this respect.<\/p>\n<p>The first episode pertains to the story about the mystic experience of Joseph Caro (1488-1575). During the vigil of the Pentecost night (<em>Order of the Night of Shavuot<\/em>), a voice came out suddenly of the mouth of Caro. The people around him heard the voice, fell on their faces and everybody fainted.<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_46');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_46');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_46\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">46<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_46\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. R.J.Z. Werblowsky, <em>Joseph Karo<\/em>, 1962, pp. 19-21.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_46').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_46', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<p>The second episode relates to the proclamation of Shabbetai Zevi (1626-1676) as Messiah. During the vigil of the night of <em>Shavuot<\/em> the divine spirit rested upon Nathan of Gaza, and he fell into a trance and announced: \u2018Shabbetai Zevi is worthy to be King of Israel.\u2019<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_47');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_47');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_47\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">47<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_47\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. G. Scholem, <em>Shabbatai \u1e62evi<\/em>, Princeton, 1975, pp. 217 ff.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_47').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_47', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<p>It is also possible that Josephus\u2019 story in War VI, 299 f. belongs to the same category. We are told there that at Pentecost night before the war, the priests heard a noise and then a divine voice: \u2018We are departing hence.\u2019<span class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_48');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_48_1('footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_48');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_48\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">48<\/sup><\/a><span id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_48\" class=\"footnote_tooltip\">Cf. Tacitus, Hist. V, 13.<\/span><\/span><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_48').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_48_1_48', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top right', relative: true, offset: [10, 10], });<\/script><\/p>\n<h2>THE SINAITIC PROTOTYPE OF THE REVELATION TO JESUS<\/h2>\n<p>Just as the revelation to the first Christian community was patterned after the revelation to the Israelites at Sinai so the revelation to Jesus was patterned after the revelation to Moses. In the Sinai stories we are told that Moses ascended the Mount together with Aaron, Nadab and Abihu (Ex. 24:9) and after six days of waiting God called from the cloud (Ex. 24:16) and Moses entered the cloud. Following the contact of Moses with the Lord his face changed (Ex. 34:28 f.). Afterwards the tabernacle was built, when it was finished it was covered with a cloud (Ex. 40.34) out of which the Lord called unto Moses and commanded him (Lev. 1:1, cf. Deut. 31:14-15).<\/p>\n<p>The story of the transfiguration has been similarly structured. Jesus ascended the Mount after six days (Mark 9:2, Mat. 17:1) together with his three followers: Peter, James and John. He was transfigured before them, following which booths were made for him and for Moses and Elijah who were with him there. After that a cloud overshadowed the booths and out of the cloud a voice was heard, proclaiming the election of Jesus.<\/p>\n<p>The story of the transfiguration shows a perfect analogy with the stories about Moses at Sinai and there is no doubt therefore that the stories of the Gospels come to tell us that by ascending the Mount and speaking with Moses and Elijah Jesus became like them. As is well known, Moses and Elijah had revelations at Sinai and both of them together represent the supreme divine will as expressed in the Law and the Prophets, cf. Mal. 3:22-24, the concluding verses of the Torah and the Prophets.<\/p>\n<p>It seems then that the revelation to Jesus as well as the revelation to the first Christian community were structured according to the Sinaitic narrative. The result achieved was that Jesus fulfills the role of Moses while the Christian congregation takes the place of the Israelite congregation at Sinai. The Jewish tradition about the Torah revealed by God through Moses from which Judaism drew its main inspiration was replaced in the Christian community by the revelation to Jesus on the Mount on the one hand and by the revelation to the first Christian community on Pentecost on the other.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><em>Prof. Moshe Weinfeld is Professor of Bible at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.<\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: right;\"><span style=\"color: #ff0000;\">This article was published in<\/span> <a title=\"ImmanuEL\" href=\"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/?page_id=2\">Immanuel<\/a> <a title=\"Immanuel 8\" href=\"http:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/immanuel\/issue.php?i=8\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">8, spring 1978<\/a>, <a title=\"scanned article, jpg-files\" href=\"http:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/immanuel\/article.php?i=8&amp;p=7\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">p. 7-18<\/a><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #ff0000;\">See also:<\/span>\u00a0<a title=\"pdf-file, searchable\" href=\"http:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/pdf\/Immanuel_08_007.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">www.etrfi.info\/pdf\/Immanuel_08_007.pdf<\/a><\/p>\n<div class=\"speaker-mute footnotes_reference_container\"> <div class=\"footnote_container_prepare\"><p><span role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_reference_container_label pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_expand_collapse_reference_container_48_1();\">Notes<\/span><span role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_reference_container_collapse_button\" style=\"\" onclick=\"footnote_expand_collapse_reference_container_48_1();\">[<a id=\"footnote_reference_container_collapse_button_48_1\">+<\/a>]<\/span><\/p><\/div> <div id=\"footnote_references_container_48_1\" style=\"display: none;\"><table class=\"footnotes_table footnote-reference-container\"><caption class=\"accessibility\">Notes<\/caption> <tbody> \r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_1\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_1');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>1<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. Amidah liturgy of <em>Shavuot<\/em>. See J. Elbogen, Der J\u00fcdische Gottesdienst in seiner geschichtlichen Entwicklung<sup>3<\/sup>, 1931, p. 138.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_2\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_2');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>2<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>Theologisches Worterbuch zum NT<\/em>, Band VI, 1959, s.v. (English translation in <em>Theological Dict. of NT<\/em>, vol. VI, 1968).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_3\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_3');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>3<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Compare also \u2018Shavuot,\u2019 <em>Encyc. Judaica<\/em>, vol. 14, col. 1320: \u2018In rabbinic times a remarkable transformation took place &#8230; the festival became the anniversary of the giving of the Torah.\u2019 Cf. also J. Howard Marshall, \u2018The Significance of Pentecost,\u2019 <em>Scottish Journal of Theology<\/em>, 30 (1977), p. 349.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_4\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_4');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>4<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">I am grateful to Prof. R.J. Tournay O.P. for drawing my attention to this study.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_5\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_5');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>5<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Compare also R. Le D\u00e9aut, \u2018Pentecote et tradition juive,\u2019 <em>Assemblers du Seigneur<\/em> 51 (1963), pp. 22-38; M. Delcor, \u2018Pent\u00e9c\u00f4te\u2019 in <em>Diction de la Bible<\/em>, Suppl. VII 1966, 858-879, idem, <em>Rev. Bibl.<\/em> 79 (1972), pp. 610-614.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_6\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_6');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>6<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. H. Albeck, <em>Das B\u00fcch der Jubil\u00e4en und die Halacha<\/em>, pp. 15-16, J. Heinemann, <em>Philons Griechische und J\u00fcdische Bildung<\/em>, p. 128.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_7\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_7');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>7<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. my article in <em>Eretz Israel<\/em> vol. 14 (H.L. Ginsberg Festschrift), (forthcoming).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_8\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_8');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>8<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">T. Veijola, <em>Ugarit Forschungen<\/em> 8 (1976), pp. 343 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_9\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_9');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>9<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">B. Couroyer, <em>Revue Biblique<\/em> 82 (1975), pp. 206 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_10\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_10');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>10<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">See J.L. Seeligmann, <em>Hebr\u00e4ische Wortforschung<\/em>, W. Baumgartner Festschrift (SVT 16), pp. 265 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_11\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_11');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>11<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">S. Mowinckel, <em>Le d\u00e9calogue<\/em>, 1927, p. 129 f. Cf. also G. von Rad, <em>Gesam. Studien zum A.T.<\/em>, 1961, pp. 28 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_12\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_12');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>12<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. B. Rosh Hashanah 8a, b.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_13\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_13');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>13<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">The Targum adds in v. 11 here \u05d1\u05d7\u05d2\u05d0 \u05d3\u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e2\u05d9\u05d0, see A. Sperber, <em>The Bible in Aramaic<\/em> IVa, p. 45.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_14\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_14');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>14<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">For \u2018oath and covenant\u2019 as hendiadys cf. my article \u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea in <em>Theol. Worterbuch zum AT<\/em>, 1,1973.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_15\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_15');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>15<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">II Chr. 15:15 recounts that the people \u2018rejoiced at the oath because they had bound themselves with all their heart and had sought him with all their will\u2019 (\u05d1\u05db\u05dc \u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05e0\u05dd) . The \u2018joy\u2019 (\u05e9\u05de\u05d7\u05d4) coupled with \u2018willingness\u2019 (\u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05df) found here, express the legal idea of free and uncoerced will of the one who takes upon himself the obligation, cf. V. Muffs, \u2018Joy and Love as metaphorical expressions of willingness and spontaneity in cuneiform, ancient Hebrew and related literatures,\u2019 <em>Morton Smith Festschrift<\/em>, vol. Ill, 1975, pp. 1 ff. Compare also the evening liturgy of the Shema Benediction: \u05d5\u05de\u05dc\u05db\u05d5\u05ea\u05d5 \u05d1\u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05df \u05e7\u05d1\u05dc\u05d5 \u05e2\u05dc\u05d9\u05d4\u05dd&#8230; \u05d1\u05e9\u05de\u05d7\u05d4 \u05e8\u05d1\u05d4 \u2018they took upon themselves his kingdom, willingly &#8230; with great joy.\u2019 For \u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05df and \u05e9\u05de\u05d7\u05d4 and its legal connotation cf. the discussion of Muffs, op. cit., pp. 21 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_16\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_16');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>16<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">On the tendency for \u2018double meanings\u2019 in the Book of Chronicles, cf. Y. Zakowitch, \u05db\u05e4\u05dc \u05de\u05d3\u05e8\u05e9\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dd, MA thesis, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1971, pp. 166 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_17\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_17');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>17<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. R.H. Charles, <em>The Book of Jubilees<\/em>, 1902 ad loc. Charles comments: \u2018why this festival should be said to be \u2018of a double nature\u2019 I do not see.\u2019 (p. 53, n. 21). According to our view the double nature of the festival lies the double meaning of the root \u05e9\u05d1\u05e2 ,which underlies \u05d7\u05d2 \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea. It should be added however, that Pentecost in the Book of Jubilees is of a double nature: it is associated with the pledge of the Lord to the Patriarchs on the one hand and with the pledge of the Israelites to the Lord on the other.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_18\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_18');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>18<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. A. Ehrlich, \u05de\u05e7\u05e8\u05d0 \u05db\u05e4\u05e9\u05d5\u05d8\u05d5 , ad loc.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_19\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_19');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>19<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">For blowing the horn in the oath ritual cf. <em>Aruch Completum<\/em> s.v. \u05d4\u05e1\u05ea (p. 229): \u05d5\u05ea\u05d5\u05e7\u05e2\u05d9\u05df \u05d1\u05e9\u05d5\u05e4\u05e8 \u05e2\u05dd \u05d4\u05d0\u05dc\u05d4<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_20\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_20');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>20<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">See Charles, op. cit. p. 52 to w. 17-18.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_21\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_21');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>21<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. \u05e9. \u05d8\u05dc\u05de\u05d5\u05df, \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05de\u05d2\u05d9\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05d2\u05e0\u05d5\u05d6\u05d5\u05ea, \u05e1\u05e4\u05e8 \u05d6\u05db\u05e8\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05d0.\u05dc. \u05e1\u05d5\u05e7\u05e0\u05d9\u05e7, \u05ea\u05e9\u05d9\u05f4\u05d6, \u05e2\u05de. 77 \u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05dc\u05e8<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_22\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_22');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>22<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. J.T. Milik, <em>Ten Years of Discovery in the Wilderness of Judaea<\/em>, 1959, pp. 113 ff.; for additional possible evidence cf. M. Delcor, \u2018Pent\u00e9c\u00f4te\u2019, <em>Dict. Bibl. Suppl.<\/em>\u00a0870-871.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_23\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_23');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>23<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Onkelos and Targum Jonathan Num. 28:26, Neofiti I (facsimile, Jerusalem 1970) Deut. 16:10 \u05d7\u05d2\u05d4 \u05d3\u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05e2\u05e6\u05e8\u05ea\u05d4<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_24\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_24');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>24<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">24 D.Z. Hoffmann, <em>Das Buch Leviticus<\/em>, 1905-1906, II. pp. 228f. Mark that Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and Neofiti translate \u05d1\u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05db\u05d2\u05d9\u05e9\u05ea \u05e7\u05d4\u05dc\u05d0: \u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05d4\u05e7\u05d4\u05dc and in Deut 18:16: \u05d1\u05d9\u05d5\u05de\u05d0 \u05d3\u05d0\u05ea\u05db\u05e0\u05e9\u05d5 \u05e9\u05d1\u05d8\u05d9\u05d0 \u05dc\u05de\u05e7\u05d1\u05dc\u05d0 \u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea\u05d0<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_25\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_25');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>25<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Translation according to Thackerey, Loeb Classical Library.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_26\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_26');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>26<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">For a thorough analysis of this catalogue cf. J. Kremer, <em>Pfingstbericht<\/em> etc., pp. 145 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_27\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_27');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>27<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">For the variants in the Targums see J. Potin, <em>La F\u00eate Juive<\/em> etc. Tome II, pp. 37 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_28\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_28');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>28<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. the seventy nations in Gen. 10 and see my short commentary on Genesis, Masada, 1975, ad loc.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_29\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_29');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>29<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. Midrash Tehilim (ed. Buber) 92:3.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_30\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_30');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>30<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Amongst the various Rabbinic parallels which were adduced by Strack-Billerbeck to the episode in Acts 2, this dictum was also quoted but without noting its importance for understanding of the motif.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_31\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_31');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>31<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">The divine glory \u05d4\u05d3\u05e8\/\u05d6\u05d9\u05d5\/\u05db\u05d1\u05d5\u05d3 constitutes the fiery halo which surrounds the head and thus forms a crown. For the nature of the \u05db\u05d1\u05d5\u05d3 and its Akkadian and Egyptian equivalent <em>melammu<\/em> and <em>nsrt<\/em>, cf. my forthcoming article in <em>Eretz Israel<\/em> vol. 13 (H.I. Ginsberg Festschrift).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_32\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_32');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>32<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">According to the earlier tradition God himself tied the diadems upon their heads while the later tradition has it that the angels did it, see E.E. Urbach, The Sages I, pp. 148-149.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_33\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_33');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>33<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. e.g. E. Meyer, <em>Ursprung und Anf\u00e4nge des Christentums<\/em> III, 1923, pp. 142 f., 221 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_34\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_34');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>34<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. Tosefta Sotah 8:7.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_35\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_35');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>35<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. the Mechilta on Deut, discovered by Schechter, <em>J. Lewy Festschrift<\/em>, p. 189.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_36\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_36');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>36<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">For other parallels cf. Potin, <em>La F\u00eate Juive<\/em>, pp. 258 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_37\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_37');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>37<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">It is not clear altogether whether Acts 2:4 refers to the 120 men mentioned in 1:15 or to the 12 Apostles. At any rate the writer has in mind here the holy body constituting the fountain of the Christian community.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_38\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_38');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>38<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. Beare, <em>JBL<\/em> 83 (1964), see also Martin <em>JBL<\/em> 63 (1944).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_39\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_39');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>39<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Every member must understand the languages and should be able to speak at least two of them. The ability to speak the languages does not mean controlling them perfectly, cf. S. Lieberman, <em>Greek in Jewish Palestine<\/em>, New York, 1942, pp. 15-16.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_40\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_40');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>40<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">It seems to us that the story in the Letter of Aristeas about the seventy-two elders who translated the Torah through divine inspiration, belongs to the same category. For the story in the letter of Aristeas and its connection with the account of the revelation at Sinai, cf. most recently H.M. Orlinsky, <em>HUCA<\/em> 46 (1975), pp. 94 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_41\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_41');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>41<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. E. Stauffer, ThLZ 77 (1953), p. 202, who compares the 120 to the 120 members of the \u2018Knesset haggedolah.\u2019<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_42\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_42');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>42<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. Mishnah Sotah 7:1.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_43\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_43');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>43<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">\u2018Sing\u2019 here is associated with liturgy, compare IQS X9: \u05d0\u05d6\u05de\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d3\u05e2\u05ea which comes before \u05d5\u05e2\u05dd \u05de\u05d5\u05e6\u05d0 \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1 \u05d5\u05d1\u05d5\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05d7\u05d5\u05e7\u05d9\u05d5 \u05e2\u05dd \u05de\u05d1\u05d5\u05d0 \u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d0\u05d1\u05e8\u05d0\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea \u05d0\u05dc which points toward the recital of the Shema in the morning and evening, cf. M. Weinfeld, <em>Shnaton, An Annual for Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies<\/em>, Vol. 1, 1976, p. 77, n. 245, idem. Tarbiz 45 (1976), p. 20. Cf. also H. Conzelmann, Der erste Brief an die Korinther, 1969, ad loc.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_44\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_44');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>44<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>JBL<\/em> 83 (1964), p. 246.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_45\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_45');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>45<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">E. Haenchen (The Acts of the Apostles, Commentary 1971) who goes along with others in stating that evidence for the Jewish Pentecost tradition (associated with Sinai) has not been found earlier than the middle of the second century, nevertheless admits that Luke\u2019s story is influenced by the story of Sinai and that the tongues of fire which had become tongues of speech at Sinai (relying solely on Philo) influenced the story of Acts 2 (p. 174).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_46\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_46');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>46<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. R.J.Z. Werblowsky, <em>Joseph Karo<\/em>, 1962, pp. 19-21.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_47\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_47');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>47<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. G. Scholem, <em>Shabbatai \u1e62evi<\/em>, Princeton, 1975, pp. 217 ff.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_48_1_48\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_48_1_48');\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_plugin_link\" ><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>48<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">Cf. Tacitus, Hist. V, 13.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n <\/tbody> <\/table> <\/div><\/div><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> function footnote_expand_reference_container_48_1() { jQuery('#footnote_references_container_48_1').show(); jQuery('#footnote_reference_container_collapse_button_48_1').text('\u2212'); } function footnote_collapse_reference_container_48_1() { jQuery('#footnote_references_container_48_1').hide(); jQuery('#footnote_reference_container_collapse_button_48_1').text('+'); } function footnote_expand_collapse_reference_container_48_1() { if (jQuery('#footnote_references_container_48_1').is(':hidden')) { footnote_expand_reference_container_48_1(); } else { footnote_collapse_reference_container_48_1(); } } function footnote_moveToReference_48_1(p_str_TargetID) { footnote_expand_reference_container_48_1(); var l_obj_Target = jQuery('#' + p_str_TargetID); if (l_obj_Target.length) { jQuery( 'html, body' ).delay( 0 ); jQuery('html, body').animate({ scrollTop: l_obj_Target.offset().top - window.innerHeight * 0.2 }, 380); } } function footnote_moveToAnchor_48_1(p_str_TargetID) { footnote_expand_reference_container_48_1(); var l_obj_Target = jQuery('#' + p_str_TargetID); if (l_obj_Target.length) { jQuery( 'html, body' ).delay( 0 ); jQuery('html, body').animate({ scrollTop: l_obj_Target.offset().top - window.innerHeight * 0.2 }, 380); } }<\/script>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>It is still a prevalent view that Pentecost as a festival commemorating the revelation at Sinai and giving of the law (\u05d6\u05de\u05df \u05de\u05ea\u05df [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[15,17,16],"tags":[20,21,18,19],"class_list":["post-48","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-by-moshe-weinfeld","category-hebrew-bible","category-immanuel-08","tag-giving-of-the-law","tag-moshe-weinfeld","tag-pentacost","tag-shavuot"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/48"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=48"}],"version-history":[{"count":49,"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/48\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":523,"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/48\/revisions\/523"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=48"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=48"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.etrfi.info\/articles\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=48"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}