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 HOME   Premature Exodus from Egypt, Shevet Ephraim
Premature Exodus from Egypt, Shevet Ephraim
Published by: mike 2009-01-08

  • I heard that this tribe (descendants of Joseph) left Egypt prematurely (30 years too early) ahead of the ordained time, based on wrong calculations - and as a result, most were massacred. What are the ancient sources for this information and what were the details of what happened to them when they left - as far as can be reliably determined; what was the source of their miscalculations?


  • How many were in this tribe when they left and approximately how many survived the early attempt to leave Egypt?


  • Dear Brooklynwriter, Let?s start with the Bible. In the Bible itself people from Shevet Ephraim are featured as part of the Israelites leaving Egypt. Numbers 1: "1:32 Among the sons of Joseph, for the descendants of Ephraim: According to the records of their paternal families, [this was] the number of names for males over 20 years old, all fit for service. 1:33 The tally for the tribe of Ephraim was 40,500." (SOURCE: Numbers 1, Navigating the Bible II, ). Numbers 26: "26:35 By their families, the descendants of Ephraim were the Shuthalchite family from Shuthelach, the Bakhrite family from Bekher, and the Tachanite family from Tachan. 26:36 The descendants of Shuthelach consisted of the Eranite family from Eran. 26:37 These are the families of Ephraim's descendants, their tally being 32,500. All these were the descendants of Joseph by their families." (See: Numbers 26, Navigating the Bible II, ). This means that Ephraim did not have considerably less members than other tribes (in fact, Manasseh and Benjamin had less in the first census; more than Simeon in the second). The Miscalculation in Rabbinical Literature and Esp. Exodus Rabbah (Shemos Rabbah) =================================================== However, the story you have mentioned has roots in the Rabbinical Literature. The source of this interpretation is from a single sentence on I Chronicles (7, 21): ?[?] it says of the patriarch Ephraim (who presumably would not have lived to see the Exodus): "And the sons of Ephraim: Shuthelah [skip the grandsons] and Ezer and Elead, whom the men of Gath that were born in the land slew, because they came down to take away their cattle. And Ephraim their father mourned many days, and his brethren came to comfort him." This little clip gave rise to an entire Midrashic tradition? (SOURCE: Uri Hurwit , ?[ANE] Philistines and Hyksos (was Egyptians in the Bible)? 14 Mar 2003, https://listhost.uchicago.edu/pipermail/ane/2003-March/007644.html). The Jewish Encyclopaedia summarises the sources and the claims for this story: "The tribe of Ephraim miscalculated the time of the deliverance of the children of Israel from Egypt, and left the country thirty years before the appointed time. They were met by a hostile host of Philistines, who offered them battle, in which the Ephraimites lost 300,000 men (according to Pesi?., 180,000; according to Pir?e R. El., 200,000). Their bones were strewn in heaps along the roads. According to the "Sefer ha-Yashar" (see Shemot), this event took place in the 180th year after the Israelites went to Egypt, when 30,000 infantry from the tribe of Ephraim left Egypt. The battle was waged near Gath. Because they rebelled against the word of God in leaving Egypt before the end of the captivity destined by God had arrived, all except ten were slain. The Philistines lost in the battle 20,000 men. The ten men who escaped from the battle returned to Egypt and related to their brethren what had happened to them. Ephraim, who was still alive, mourned over them many days. That the children of Israel might not see the bleached bones of the slain of Ephraim and return to Egypt, God led them to Canaan by circuitous ways (Ex. R. xx.). The slain Ephraimites were subsequently resuscitated by Ezekiel (Sanh. 92b). " (SOURCE: The Jewish Encyclopaedia, Ephraim,
    In and About Israel: November 2005::
    This tour called Biblical Wilderness Experience: "The Exodus and the . and go into Egypt for a "rest" leave once the Rafah border crossing is opened,
    http://inandaboutisrael.blogspot.com/2005_11_01_archive.html
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    | Marriage | Technology | tally - Analysis of ranked choice voting ::
    Premature Exodus from Egypt, Shevet Ephraim 1:33 The tally for the tribe of Ephraim was 40500. 26:37 These are the families of Ephraim's descendants,
    http://enart.szpn.com/rdkeywd/tally/
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    ). Here is the quote from Targum Yerushalmi: ? The Targum Yerushalmi, a 1200 year old translation of the Torah, renders these opening lines of our parasha: "lest the people regret when they see their brothers who died in war- two hundred thousand mighty soldiers from the tribe of Ephraim, armed with shields, spears and weapons of war, who went down to Gath to plunder the herds of the Philistines. Because they transgressed the divine decree and went out of Egypt thirty years before the end (of the exile) they were delivered into the hands of the Philistines, who slew them. Theirs were the dry bones that the Lord brought to life by the hand of Ezekiel the prophet?"? (SOURCE: Dr Harry Freedman, ?B'Shallach?, http://www.masorti.org.uk/10-02-01.htm; there are more interesting explanations there). Origin of the Miscalculation ================ The source of the miscalculation was counting the years of exile from the Abrahamic Covenant, and not from the birth of Isaac, 30 years later: ? Rashi explains that from the Covenant Between the Parts, when Avraham Avinu was 70 years old and he had a prophecy about the Egyptian exile, until the Exodus was 430 years. We find in the book of Divrei Hayamim (I 7:21) the story of some members of the tribe of Ephraim who were killed by the men of Gas, a Philistine city.The Sages explain that these were Jews who left Egypt 30 years before the Exodus, because they miscalculated the end of the 400 years of exile foretold to Avraham (Bereishis 15:13). They thought that these 400 years began at the time of that prophecy, but in reality they began 30 years later, at the birth of Yitzchak? (SOURCE: Jews Against Zionism, Parasha Pearls, Bo, http://www.jewsagainstzionism.com/parsha/docs/Vol2-5-020206.pdf - there is much more interpretation there). Here, for example, in a "Drasha" (homily), Rabbi Eli Teitelbaum says: " Any person that would present himself as the Jewish savior would immediately be put to the supreme test. He would have to come to the zekeinim and tell them the precise moment of the Geulah. If he would be off by as much as one single day or perhaps even by a minute then they knew he was nothing but a con artist. When Shevet Ephraim instituted a rebellion thirty years earlier, Klal Yisroel refused to go along with them. The zekeinim told them that the time of the geulah had still not arrived. They had reckoned the 400 years incorrectly. They had started counting from the time of the ?Bris bein hab?sorim.? They were not given any credence! The dates and times didn?t match the zekeinim?s carefully guarded mesorah." (SOURCE: Rabbi Eli Teitelbaum, "THE SPECIAL PASSWORD", Camp Sdei Chemed, http://www.campsci.com/hagadah/special_password.htm>
    Think-Israel::
    One can foresee an exodus, when terrorism becomes intolerable. Israel would become non-viable. former Mossad heads, Ephraim Halevy & Shabtai Shevet
    http://www.think-israel.org/jul05bloged.html
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    MATOS MASAI::
    File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLwould be subject to other exiles, since their Exodus from Egypt was mortal .. clothing, so that they would not pray for her son's premature death.
    http://www.parsha.net/pdf/Bamidbar/MatosMasei58.pdf
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    In other words, the source of the 30 years gap is in a revelation, that God would save the Israelites 400 after they have left Egypt (and the Ephraimites had counted since the Abrahamic Covenant). Also see: ?The A-lmighty purposely left the meaning of "four hundred years" open to interpretation depending on how deserving Am Yisrael were. The tribe of Ephraim in fact miscalculated the four hundred year exile believing that it began with the Brit Bein HaBetarim. As a result, they left Egypt thirty years too soon and were killed by the Plishtim, as we are told: "The sons of Ephraim ... the men of Gat, who were born in the Land, killed them because they had come down to take away their flocks" [15] (Divrei Hayamim I 7:21 - this is alluded to in Tehillim 78:9 as well). A further look at the pasuk shows us that this incident took place during Ephraim's lifetime, erasing any possibility of subscribing the event described here to a later war between the tribe of Ephraim and the Plishtim (see Sanhedrin 92b and Rashi Shmot 15:14). (For this reason when the Torah relates to us the actual exodus, we are told: "It happened when Pharaoh sent the people, that G-d did not lead them by way of the land of Plishtim ... for G-d said: 'perhaps the people will reconsider when they see a war, and they will return to Egypt'" [16] (Shmot 13:17). What war is this referring to? Chazal explain: "this is the war of the sons of Ephraim... that the Jewish people should not see the bones of their brethren in Plishtim and then elect to return" [17] (Yalkut Shimoni Bshalach Remez 227).? (SOURCE: Nativ Aryeh, Parashat Vayera, http://www.yna.edu/torah/wx-display.php?id=WILHPNAX&fn=p_ne63vera.html&search=). Another explanation to the miscalculation is brought by Rabbi Moshe Bogomilsky: ?Yaakov was only aware that nine of his children took part in the sale of Yosef, but he did not know of the Shechinah's part in the act. Therefore, Rashi says bakeish l'galot et ha'keitz. His purpose of gathering his children together was to tell them that at the conclusion of 189 years (9 x 21 = 189), on the keitz ? 190th year ? the Egyptian exile would come to an end. However, Yaakov miscalculated, because ? he did not know that the Shechinah had a part in the sale, and therefore they would have to be in Egypt a total of 210 years.? (SOURCE: Vedibarta Bam ? And You Shall Speak of Them, http://www.sichosinenglish.org/books/vedibarta-bam/012.htm). Practical Implications =========== There are two important, modern, political implications and usages of this story. The first refers to Zionism. As you might have noticed, one of my sources is an organisation called ?Jews against Zionism?. This organisation of Ultra-Orthodox Jews believes that Zionism is wrong, because only with the coming of the Messiah, there could be a real ?Jewish State?. The Zionists, in this parable, are acting like the Ephraimites. The less political implication deals with the whole issue of Geula (salvation/redemption) and Massiah. For example, were elements in Chabad right to announce that the Rebbe is a Massiah? Gil Student doesn?t think so and also gives the example of Rabbi Akiva and his announcement regarding Bar Kochva as another disastrous premonition: Bikoret HaGeula (Critique of the Redemption), p. 2 (HEBREW) I hope this answers your question. Please contact me if you need any clarification on this answer before you rate it.





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