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SBL e-journal

David Frankel

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2014

)

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The Golden Calf: Comparing the Two Versions

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TheTorah.com

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https://thetorah.com/article/the-golden-calf-comparing-the-two-versions

APA e-journal

David Frankel

,

,

,

"

The Golden Calf: Comparing the Two Versions

"

TheTorah.com

(

2014

)

.

https://thetorah.com/article/the-golden-calf-comparing-the-two-versions

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The Golden Calf: Comparing the Two Versions

Exodus versus Deuteronomy

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The Golden Calf: Comparing the Two Versions

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The Traditional Significance of the Golden Calf Story

The Talmud Yerushalmi (Ta’anit 4:5) states:

ר' יודן בשם ר' יסא: ”אין כל דור ודור שאין בו אונקי אחת מחטא של עגל…“
Rabbi Yudin said in the name of Rabbi Yossa: “There is no generation that doesn’t have at a least a particle of the sin of the golden calf.”[1]

Similarly, the Talmud Bavli (Sanhedrin 102a) states:

אמר ר' יצחק: ”אין לך כל פורענות ופורענות שבאה לעולם שאין בה אחד מעשרים וארבעה בהכרע ליטרא של עגל הראשון.“
R. Isaac said: “No retribution whatsoever comes upon the world which does not contain a slight fraction (a twenty-fourth) of the [retribution for] first calf (i.e., the golden calf in the wilderness).”

These statements point to the centrality of this story in Jewish cultural memory.

This centrality is further evident from the amount of times a part of this story appears as one of the official Torah readings for holidays, making it the most frequent story read in synagogue in the course of the year. In addition to the two Shabbats the story is read as part of the standard liturgical cycle, sections of it are read on the four “minor” fast days both in the shacharit and mincha services and on Tisha Be’av during the mincha service. Additionally, the ending of the story is read on Shabbat Sukkot and Pesach. All in all, parts of the story are read thirteen times throughout the year.

The significance of the story is also reflected in its association with Yom Kippur. Rashi, quoting the Seder Olam in Deuteronomy 9:18, states:

בו ביום נתרצה הקדוש ברוך הוא לישראל ואמר לו למשה (דברים י:א) פסל לך שני לוחות, עשה עוד ארבעים יום, נמצאו כלים ביום הכפורים. בו ביום נתרצה הקב”ה לישראל בשמחה ואמר לו למשה (במדבר יד:כ) סלחתי כדברך. לכך הוקבע למחילה ולסליחה.
On the same day, God was reconciled with Israel and He said to Moses, “Hew for yourself two tablets” (Exod 34:1). He [Moses] remained there another forty days; consequently, these ended on Yom Kippur [the tenth of Tishri]. On that very day, the Holy One, blessed is He, was joyfully reconciled with Israel, and He said to Moses, “I have forgiven according to your words” (Num 14:20). Therefore [Yom Kippur] was designated [as a day] for pardon and forgiveness.

The story of the golden calf is told twice in the Torah: Exodus 32, told through the voice of the omniscient narrator, is the version that is read in synagogue in the aforementioned days; it is repeated in Deuteronomy 9 in the voice of Moses, who reminds the Israelites at the Plains of Moab of their earlier sin. Below, I will highlight some of the more striking differences (but to fully appreciate these, you may want to read the two passages first yourselves).

Details Missing from Deuteronomy

Moses’ Tarrying on the Mountain

There is no mention in Deuteronomy that the incident was precipitated by Moses’ delayed arrival from the mountaintop. According to Exodus 32:1, 23, however, this was the precipitant cause. The people did not understand what had happened to Moses and why he tarried so long. In their anxiety, they sought to replace him by making a deity that could go before them in his stead. All of these details are lacking in Deuteronomy.

Aaron’s Role

Deuteronomy hardly mentions of Aaron’s role in the sin. According to Exodus 32, Aaron took the golden earrings that he told the people to bring to him, and formed from them a molten calf (verses 2–3). He also built an altar before the calf (also not mentioned in Deuteronomy) and proclaimed a festival for YHWH. When later confronted by Moses, Aaron lies to him and claims that he simply threw the people’s gold into a fire and the golden calf magically emerged (verse 24). The special guilt of Aaron is emphasized in verses 21 (“you have brought such great sin upon them”), 25 (since Aaron had let them get out of control) and 35 (“for what they did with the calf that Aaron made”).

The only reference to Aaron’s role in Deuteronomy 9 is in verse 20:

דברים ט:כ וּבְאַהֲרֹן הִתְאַנַּף יְ־הוָה מְאֹד לְהַשְׁמִידוֹ וָאֶתְפַּלֵּל גַּם בְּעַד אַהֲרֹן בָּעֵת הַהִוא.
Deut 9:20 And YHWH was very incensed at Aaron to destroy him; so I interceded for Aaron as well at that time.

This has the clear appearance of an afterthought; Aaron is mentioned only in the context of Moses’ intercession for the people and it is not even clear from the verse what his precise role in the sin was. (This verse does, however, along with other verses suggest that the author of Deuteronomy here, as elsewhere, was familiar with the earlier story [in Exodus] and is reworking it.)

“This is your god”

In Exodus (v. 4), after Aaron forms the calf, it is announced with

שמות לב:ד ...וַיֹּאמְרוּ [תה"ש: וַיֹּאמֶר] אֵלֶּה אֱלֹהֶיךָ יִשְׂרָאֵל אֲשֶׁר הֶעֱלוּךָ מֵאֶרֶץ מִצְרָיִם.
Exod 32:4 ...And they [LXX: he] said: “This is your god, O Israel, who brought you out of the land of Egypt.”

While the MT and SP versions have the people making this announcement, given that Aaron just made the calf, and he is introducing it to the people, the LXX version is likely the original, and the revision is one of many examples in Exodus and Deuteronomy of attempting to clear Aaron as much as possible.

The announcement implies an identification of the calf with YHWH. The odd grammatical plural describing the gods is likely meant to connect the story to the account of King Jeroboam introducing the golden calves of Dan and Bethel (1 Kgs 12:28), which is another reason the that speaker here is likely Aaron. This plural was sufficient troublesome that in the late retelling of the story in Nehemiah it is changed to the singular,

נחמיה ט:יח ...זֶה אֱלֹהֶיךָ אֲשֶׁר הֶעֶלְךָ מִמִּצְרָיִם...
Neh 9:18 ...this is your god who took you out of Egypt...

Deuteronomy lacks this famous declaration.

Worshiping the Calf

In the Exodus account, the sin of the people chiefly consists in the prostration to the calf and the offering of sacrifices on Aaron’s altar (see verses 6, 8), whereas guilt for the sin of the making of the calf falls mostly on Aaron (though, since Aaron was commissioned by the people to make the calf, they too are guilty of this; cf. verses 8, 31). This worship of the calf may also be referenced in the enigmatic final verse of the chapter which states (in literal translation):

שמות לב:לה וַיִּגֹּף יְ־הוָה אֶת הָעָם עַל אֲשֶׁר עָשׂוּ אֶת הָעֵגֶל אֲשֶׁר עָשָׂה אַהֲרֹן.
Exod 32:35 YHWH sent a plague upon the people, for they made the calf that Aaron made.

Clearly, the text makes little sense as is. Did the people fashion the calf or Aaron? Apparently, the text is corrupt here, and the original may have been preserved in the Syriac translation which reads פלחו (ܦܠܚܘ) “they served” in place of עשו “they made,” implying a Vorlage that read: עַל אֲשֶׁר עָבְדוּ אֶת הָעֵגֶל אֲשֶׁר עָשָׂה אַהֲרֹן “because they worshiped the calf that Aaron made.”[2]

By contrast, Deuteronomy speaks only of the national sin of fashioning the calf alone. Note that in Deuteronomy 9:16, that which Moses sees and which precipitates his smashing of the tablets is simply the calf, not the wild dancing and singing (cf. Exodus 32:17–19). No building of an altar, offering of sacrifices, or prostration is ever mentioned. Perhaps Deuteronomy’s concern to refrain from depicting Aaron sinning made it unnecessary to speak of any sin beyond the simple fashioning of the calf, which could be fully attributed to the people.

Joshua

The interchange between Moses and Joshua at the foot of the mountain, where Joshua tells Moses that he hears the sound of war in the camp, and Moses disabuses him of that notion, is not mentioned (Exodus 32:17–18).

Gold

Exodus describes the people giving their jewelry to Aaron and his forming the calf from their gold (32:2-4). The calf is then described as a molten calf. In Deuteronomy, however, there is no such description, and the calf is simply called “the molten calf” (v. 16). In other words, if we only had the book of Deuteronomy, the story would be known as the Molten Calf story, not the Golden Calf story, since we would not have any reason to think it was made out of gold; it could have been brass or silver. It is worth adding that nowhere does the Torah use the phrase “golden calf.”

The Levite Executions

No mention is made of the intervention of the sons of Levi who responded to Moses’ call and killed about three thousand people, including brothers, friends and relatives (Exodus 32:26–29).[3] In Deuteronomy 10:8–9 we are told that the tribe of Levi was appointed “at that time” to serve as God’s priests. This corresponds to Exodus 32:29 which implies that the sons of Levi were appointed for sacred duty in reward for their zealousness for God (cf. Numbers 25:10–13), but no mention is made in Deuteronomy of the reason for the new appointment.

Plague

According to Exodus 32:35, God sent a plague of some sort to punish the people for their sin. No mention of any punishment is found in Deuteronomy.[4]

Drinking the Calf

According to Exodus 32:20, Moses burnt and ground the calf, spread it over the water and gave it to the Israelites to drink. According to the (plausible) suggestion of the Rabbis, this was to test the people in a fashion analogous to the waters of the Sotah.

In Deuteronomy 9:21 Moses simply throws the dust of the calf into the water (identified as the otherwise unknown “river descending from the mountain”), apparently so that the remains of the calf can be carried away.

Details Missing from Exodus

There are also a few details found in Deuteronomy 9 that are lacking in Exodus 32.

Fasting

According to Deut 9:18–19, Moses prayed on behalf of the people and fasted for forty days and forty nights, taking neither food nor drink, because he feared God’s wrath. The intercessions on behalf of the people in Exodus 32 (verses 7–14; 31–32) make no mention of this. In Exodus 34:28 Moses alone refrains from food and drink for forty days and nights, but this takes place after the covenant has already been renewed, and is unrelated to fasting for forgiveness (cf., similarly, Deut 9:9).

Special Prayer for Aaron

The reference in Deut 9:20 to Moses’ prayer on behalf of Aaron has no parallel in Exodus 32.

The Wooden Chest

According to Deuteronomy 10:1-5, following God’s instructions, Moses built a wooden chest before he went up the mountain with the unmarked, second tablets that he prepared. After he came down with them, newly inscribed by God, he put them in the chest that God told him to make. This parallels, and is likely based on, Exodus 34:1–4, where God tells Moses to prepare the second tablets, but makes no mention of the building of a wooden chest for them. Nor is there mention of Moses putting the second tablets in a chest in Exodus 34:29.

Elsewhere, in the Priestly source, the book of Exodus speaks of the ’aron, the chest, or ark, that holds the “tablets of testimony” (Exodus 25:16, 21; 31:18; 32:15; 40:20). This, however, is no mere wooden chest; it is covered in gold and has the golden cherubim covering it and is part of an entire complex of holy vessels that make up the tabernacle, or משכן. Deuteronomy, however, makes no mention of the gold coating, the cherubim covering, or the entire structure of the tabernacle!

Two Perspectives on the Wilderness Experience

There are many academic approaches that explain in detail the specific differences and the relationship of the two versions of the golden calf story to each other. For now, we would only observe that the version in Deuteronomy presents the Israelites as the sole offenders and offers them no mitigating circumstances: Moses did not tarry overly long; Aaron did not lead the people astray; the Levites didn’t act any differently.

At the same time, Deuteronomy has Moses present his own behavior as above and beyond: He fasts and intercedes for the people, and even for Aaron, forty days and forty nights. The retelling also leaves out the bloody scene in which Moses and the Levites slaughter 3,000 Israelites, which is discordant with the image of Moses’ actions favored in Deuteronomy here.[5]

The differences noted above appear too significant to assume that they reflect Moses’ retelling of events that transpired almost forty years earlier, and are recorded in Exodus. Rather, Exodus and Deuteronomy here, as in other stories, reflect two different understandings, by different authors, of the wilderness experience.

Moreover, the differences are not haphazard, but reflect two internally consistent stories, each told from a particular perspective. Seeing these as two different stories allows these different perspectives to come through clearly.

Published

August 14, 2014

|

Last Updated

April 7, 2024

Footnotes

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Prof. Rabbi David Frankel is Associate Professor of Bible at the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem, where he teaches M.A. and rabbinical students. He did his Ph.D. at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem under the direction of Prof. Moshe Weinfeld, and is the author or The Murmuring Stories of the Priestly School (VTSupp 89) and The Land of Canaan and the Destiny of Israel (Eisenbrauns).