Pisqa’ 1601
1
“Now, when he occupies the throne of his kingdom” (Dt.17:18).
That is:
If he behaves according to all the stipulations in this matter,
then he will be privileged to occupy the throne of his kingdom.2
“Then, he shall inscribe for himself” (Dt.17:17)—
for his personal use,
lest he benefit from the copies made by his ancestors.3
“A copy”4 (Dt.17:17)—
do I infer from this that he must copy
only the Restatement of the Torah (mishneh hatorah)?5
On what basis do I know that
[he copies] the rest of the words of the Torah?6
The Teaching states:
“To preserve all the words of this Torah, and these statutes, and to perform them ” (Dt.17:19).
If so, why is it stated:
“A copy of this Torah” (Dt.17:17)?
[This refers to a copy in the original script,] 7
for the script was eventually replaced.8
Others say:
on the Day of Assembly (Dt.31:10-13),9
they recite only from
[a copy of] the Restatement of the Torah.
2
Inscribed “on a document”10 (Dt.17:18)—
but not on a tablet;
“On a document” (Dt.17:18)—
but not on papyrus.
Rather, it must be inscribed on a scroll,
for it is said:
“On a document” (Dt.17:18).11
“Before the levitical Priests” (Dt.17:18)—
the text should be corrected under
[the supervision of] the levitical Priests].12
“On a document” (Dt.17:18)—
on the skin of a clean animal.
And they correct it against Ezra’s scroll,
supervised by the Court of Seventy One
[which met in the Chamber of Carved Stone].13
“Before the levitical Priests” (Dt.17:18)—
on this basis, R. Elazar b. Arakh expounded:
[But for their intervention,] the Torah would have been forgotten!14
- H: 193- 194; JN2:29-30.
- Cf. Pisqa’ot 156.1, 162.1, 170.1, 174.1, 297.1, etc..
- //T. San. 4:7
- Heb:mishneh.
- I.e., the Book of Deuteronomy.
- I. e.,Genesis-Numbers.
- =T.San.4:7. The Toseftan text continues: “Why was it called ‘Assyrian?” Because it ascended with them after the Assyrian conquest. Rabbi says: The Torah was given to them at the outset in the Assyrian script. But when they sinned, it was exchanged for Samaritan script (ro`atz). And when they were deserving in the days of Ezra, it was changed back to Assyrian . . . “
- Heb: lehishtanot; literally, “changed. The assonance with mishneh, both words sharing an identical root (sh-n-h), supports the verbal play.
- See Pisqa’ 157.4.
- Heb: `al sefer, literally, “in a book.”
- //Sifre Num, 16, s.v., basefer umakhah. See Pisqa’ 269 and161.4 Official proclamations were written on scrolls. So, too, the Torah—as befitting its status—should be written on a scroll.
- Cf. T. San.4:7.
- Cf. T. San.4:7.
- Cf. T. Edu.1:1 and Pisqa’ 157.4.