The Lesson of The He-Goat
The Lesson of The He-Goat
The Lesson of The He-Goat
Iyar 13 5774
May 2, 2015
Vol. 24 No. 29
Repetition or Not?
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per the Seder Olam calculation, 313 BCE (the effective Year Zero) is
found to be exactly 1,000 years after Yetziat Mitzrayim (2448)!
Because of Seder Olam, the Seleucid year was effectively sanctified. A
document dated with this count to the 45th year, for example,
suddenly became synonymous with 1,045 years since Yetziat
Mitzrayim. Support for this can be found in the line at the end of Seder
Olam, UVeGolah Kotevin BiShtarot LeMinyan Yevanim Alfa, And in
the exile they write on Shetarot of the Greek count (Minyan Shetarot)
One Thousand.
One may notice that even so, a slight gap exists in Seder Olams
chronology. The Macedonian conquest is calculated to have occurred
in 34421, yet Minyan Shetarot begins in year 3448!
This can be explained by a Gemara in Mesechet Avodah Zarah
(10a), discussing Minyan Shetarot and its inherent connection to
Yetziat Mitzrayim:
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There was [produced in court] a document which was dated six
years ahead. The Rabbis who were sitting before Rava were of
opinion that it should be pronounced a post-dated document,
which is to be deferred and not executed until the date which it
bears. Whereupon Rav Nachman said: This document must have
been written by a scribe who was very particular and took into
account the six years of the Greek Reign in Eilam which we do
not reckon. The dating is therefore correct, for we have learnt:
Rabi Yosi said, Six years did the Greeks reign in Eilam and
thereafter their dominion extended universally.
Rav Acha b. Yaakov then put this question: How do we know
that our Era [of Documents] is connected with the Kingdom of
Greece at all? Why not say that it is reckoned from the Exodus
from Egypt, omitting the first thousand years and giving the
years of the next thousand? In that case, the document is really
post-dated! Said Rabi Nachman: In the Diaspora the Greek
Era alone is used.2
Seder Olam mentions that Alexander ruled for 12 years. However,
it is unclear if this refers to his complete rule or only to his rule over
the former-Persian Empire. Though historically inaccurate, this
Gemara implies that those 12 years are his total reign, of which six
were only in Greece and six were following the conquest of Persia.
These six years are from 3442 to 3448 of Seder Olam, achieving the
desired goal of 1000 years after Yetziat Mitzrayim.
Translation by Soncino.
So how did Seder Olam achieve this desired date? Seder Olams
biggest jump is the Darius skip, which we have demonstrated is
achieved by equating Daryavesh with Artachshasta, and by skipping
from Darius I to Darius III. This jump accounts for the vast majority
of the missing years. It was well known that Alexander the Great
came to power by killing a Persian ruler named Darius. This fact,
coupled with the motivation of giving significance to the date of
Minyan Shetarot, was good reason to make this skip and shorten an
the earlier Nevuot of Yeshayahu, and the book certainly should be read as
a single, unified work. Though the majority of Yeshayahus prophecies
discuss Puranut, suffering and destruction, the general structure of the
book reveals that this suffering will always be followed by Nechamah,
comfort and reconstruction of Bnei Yisraels relationship with Hashem. In
this vein, Deutero-Isaiah could not be a more appropriate conclusion to
Yeshayahu, his Nevuot discussing the Nechamah that was so long waited
for after the destruction of the Beit HaMikdash.
return to Israel. Even his name is derived from the Persian deity
Birth of Yitzchak
100
2048
Yetziat Mitzrayim
400
*2448
480
2928
410
3338
70
3408
Macedonian
Conquest
Begin Minyan
Shetarot
Churban Bayit Sheini
34
3442
*3448
380
3828
Present Day
1947
5775
Marduk!
For the same reasons why Chazal hid Deutero-Isaiah, Chazal
adjusted the years of Achashveiroshs reign. By moving
Achashveirosh from after Daryavesh to before Daryavesh (see
previous installments to understand how this was possible), the
years of Jewish history when the Jews failed to return to Israel were
effectively erased from the count.
Even well after the Mikdash was built, though, Jewish history
failed to significantly progress toward the Divine goal. The Mikdash
is completed in Year 6 of Daryavesh (Ezra 6:15), after which Jewish
life was weak and leaderless for several decades until Ezras ascent
in Year 7 of Artachshasta (Ezra 7:7). For thematic reasons, the book
of Ezra closes the gap on these years in which there was no progress.
Seder Olam takes the next step and makes it that these years never
existed. Seder Olam puts these two dates immediately next to each
other, thus skipping nearly 60 years of history. Again, the purpose of
this skip was to demonstrate that years in which Jewish history
stalemated are not worthy to have existed. According to Seder Olam,
they effectively did not.6
1
VI. Conclusion
Seder Olams goal may not be primarily to give a comprehensive
and precise history of all time, but rather to use history as a tool for
teaching. The book assumes that its readers were aware of history.
Likely, they knew when exactly the Purim story happened. Given
this, it does not need to match up with secular dating. On the
contrary, its adjusting of chronology not only remains loyal to the
literal sense of the canonized texts, it also yields two tremendous
benefits making Yetziat Mitzrayim be the point of reference for all
Jewish dating, and (on a more subtle level) teaching an important
lesson about Geulah and the goals of the Jewish future, what needs
to happen next.
Appendix
Time Elapsed
Total Years
Birth of Adam
Birth of Avraham
1948
1948
Much more can be said about the ironic undercurrent of Megilat Esther,
as a harsh criticism to the Jews who stayed in Bavel at the time.
6 It is worth mentioning Mitchell Firsts Jewish History in Conflict: A
Study of the Major Discrepancy between Rabbinic and Conventional
Chronology (1st ed.; New Jersey: Jason Aronson, Inc., 1997). The bulk of
the work presents several lists of Jewish figures and how they addressed
the discrepancy in calendars. His lists begin chronologically with Azariah
de Rossi who, in 1574, accepted conventional history both because of the
many testimonies from different historians, as well because of
inconsistencies between Tanach and Seder Olam. For example, he points
to Nechemyah 12:10-11, a list of succession of high priests that spans
many more years than prescribed by Seder Olams chronology. Firsts
research is full and informative and can serve as useful further reading
for those who want to continue learning about the topic of our essay and
how it was addressed over the years.
5
Event
Regnal Year
Nevuchadnetzars 4 Yehoyakim
conquest of
Middle East
Galut Yehoyachin 11 Yehoyakim
18
70
Cyrus
1 Koresh
Proclamation
Achashveiroshs
3
Party (Esther
Achashveirosh
Perek 1)
Miracle of Purim
12
Achashveirosh
Binyan Bayit
2 Daryavesh
Sheini
Aliyat Ezra
7 Artachshasta
Aliyat
20-36
Nechemyah
Artachshasta
Closing of Tanach 1 Alexander the
Great
Year of Persia
1
6
15
18
23
36-52
52