(16) On the third day, as morning dawned, there was thunder, and lightning, and a dense cloud upon the mountain, and a very loud blast of the horn; and all the people who were in the camp trembled. (17) Moses led the people out of the camp toward God, and they took their places at the foot of the mountain. (18) Now Mount Sinai was all in smoke, for the LORD had come down upon it in fire; the smoke rose like the smoke of a kiln, and the whole mountain trembled violently. (19) The blare of the horn grew louder and louder. As Moses spoke, God answered him in thunder.
(3) Moses went and repeated to the people all the commands of the LORD and all the rules; and all the people answered with one voice, saying, “All the things that the LORD has commanded we will do!” (4) Moses then wrote down all the commands of the LORD. Early in the morning, he set up an altar at the foot of the mountain, with twelve pillars for the twelve tribes of Israel. (5) He designated some young men among the Israelites, and they offered burnt offerings and sacrificed bulls as offerings of well-being to the LORD. (6) Moses took one part of the blood and put it in basins, and the other part of the blood he dashed against the altar. (7) Then he took the record of the covenant and read it aloud to the people. And they said, “All that the LORD has spoken we will faithfully do (we will do and we will hear/understand)!”
(ו) ד"א ויאמר ה' מסיני בא - כשנגלה המקום ליתן תורה לישראל לא על ישראל בלבד הוא נגלה, אלא על כל האומות: בתחילה הלך אצל בני עשו ואמר להם: מקבלים אתם את התורה? אמרו לו: מה כתוב בה? אמר להם לא תרצח. אמרו: רבש"ע, כל עצמו של אותו אביהם רוצח הוא, שנ' והידים ידי עשו, ועל כך הבטיחו אביו, שנאמר (בראשית כז) על חרבך תחיה. הלך לו אצל בני עמון ומואב ואמר להם: מקבלים אתם את התורה? אמרו לו מה כתוב בו? אמר להם לא תנאף. אמרו לפניו: רבש"ע, עצמה של ערוה להם היא, שנ' ותהרן שתי בנות לוט מאביהם. הלך ומצא בני ישמעאל, אמר להם: מקבלים אתם את התורה? אמרו לו מה כתוב בה? אמר להם לא תגנוב. אמרו לפניו: רבש"ע, כל עצמו אביהם לסטים היה, שנא' והוא יהיה פרא אדם, לא היתה אומה באומות שלא הלך ודבר, ודפק על פתחם מה ירצו ויקבלו את התורה, וכן הוא אומר (תהלים קכח) יודוך ה' כל מלכי ארץ כי שמעו אמרי פיך. יכול שמעו וקיבלו? ת"ל (יחזקאל לג) ואתם לא תעשו, ואומר (מיכה ה) ועשיתי באף ובחימה נקם את הגוי אשר לא שמעו, אלא אפילו שבע מצות שקיבלו עליהם בני נח לא יכלו לעמוד בהם, עד שפרקום ונתנום לישראל. משל לאחד ששילח את חמורו ואת כלבו לגורן, והטעינו לחמורו לתך ולכלבו ג' סאים, והיה החמור מהלך והכלב מלחית. פרק ממנו סאה ונתנו על החמור, וכן שני וכן שלישי. אף כן ישראל קבלו את התורה בפירושיה ובדקדוקיה, אף אותם ז' מצות שקיבלו עליהם בני נח לא יכלו לעמוד בהם, עד שפרקום ונתנום לישראל. לכך נאמר ויאמר ה' מסיני בא.
(6) Variantly: "And He said: The L-rd came from Sinai": When the L-rd appeared to give Torah to Israel, it is not to Israel alone that He appeared, but to all of the nations. First He went to the children of Esav, and He asked them: Will you accept the Torah? They asked: What is written in it? He answered: "You shall not kill" (Shemoth 20:13). They answered: The entire essence of our father is murder, as it is written (Bereshith 27:22) "And the hands are the hands of Esav." And it is with this that his father assured him (Ibid. 27:40) "And by your sword shall you live." He then went to the children of Ammon and Moav and asked them: Will you accept the Torah? They asked: What is written in it? He answered "You shall not commit adultery." They answered: L-rd of the Universe, ervah (illicit relations) is our entire essence, as it is written (Ibid. 19:36) "And the two daughters of Lot conceived by their father." He then went and found the children of Yishmael and asked them: Will you accept the Torah? They asked: What is written in it? He answered: "You shall not steal" (Shemoth, Ibid.) They answered: L-rd of the Universe, our father's entire essence is stealing, viz. (Bereshith 16:12) "And he (Yishmael) shall be a wild man, his hand against all." There was none among all of the nations to whom He did not go and speak and knock at their door, asking if they would accept the Torah, viz. (Psalms 138:4) "All the kings of the earth will acknowledge You, O L-rd, for they heard the words of Your mouth." I might think they heard and accepted; it is, therefore, written (Ezekiel 33:31) "And they did not do them (the mitzvoth)." And (Michah 5:14) "And with anger and wrath will I take revenge of the nations because they did not accept (the mitzvoth)." And even the seven mitzvoth that the sons of Noach took upon themselves they could not abide by, until they divested themselves of them and ceded them to Israel. An analogy: One sent his ass and his dog to the threshing floor, loading his ass with a lethech (a dry measure) and his dog with three sa’ah. The ass went and the dog buckled, whereupon he took a sa'ah from it and put it on the ass; and so with the second (sa’ah) and so with the third. Here, too, Israel accepted the Torah with all of its explanations and inferences; but the sons of Noach could not even abide by the seven mitzvoth that they did take upon themselves, until they divested themselves of them and ceded them to Israel, wherefore it is written "And he said: The L-rd came from Sinai, etc."
(שמות יט, יז) ויתיצבו בתחתית ההר א"ר אבדימי בר חמא בר חסא מלמד שכפה הקב"ה עליהם את ההר כגיגית ואמר להם אם אתם מקבלים התורה מוטב ואם לאו שם תהא קבורתכם
א"ר אחא בר יעקב מכאן מודעא רבה לאורייתא
אמר רבא אעפ"כ הדור קבלוה בימי אחשורוש דכתיב (אסתר ט, כז) קימו וקבלו היהודים קיימו מה שקיבלו כבר
אמר חזקיה מאי דכתיב (תהלים עו, ט) משמים השמעת דין ארץ יראה ושקטה אם יראה למה שקטה ואם שקטה למה יראה אלא בתחילה יראה ולבסוף שקטה ולמה יראה כדריש לקיש דאמר ריש לקיש מאי דכתיב (בראשית א, לא) ויהי ערב ויהי בקר יום הששי ה' יתירה למה לי מלמד שהתנה הקב"ה עם מעשה בראשית ואמר להם אם ישראל מקבלים התורה אתם מתקיימין ואם לאו אני מחזיר אתכם לתוהו ובוהו:
א"ר חמא ברבי חנינא מ"ד (שיר השירים ב, ג) כתפוח בעצי היער וגו' למה נמשלו ישראל לתפוח לומר לך מה תפוח זה פריו קודם לעליו אף ישראל הקדימו נעשה לנשמע ההוא צדוקי דחזייה לרבא דקא מעיין בשמעתא
The Gemara cites additional homiletic interpretations on the topic of the revelation at Sinai. The Torah says, “And Moses brought forth the people out of the camp to meet God; and they stood at the lowermost part of the mount” (Exodus 19:17). Rabbi Avdimi bar Ḥama bar Ḥasa said: the Jewish people actually stood beneath the mountain, and the verse teaches that the Holy One, Blessed be He, overturned the mountain above the Jews like a tub, and said to them: If you accept the Torah, excellent, and if not, there will be your burial.
Rav Aḥa bar Ya’akov said: From here there is a substantial caveat to the obligation to fulfill the Torah. The Jewish people can claim that they were coerced into accepting the Torah, and it is therefore not binding.
Rava said: Even so, they again accepted it willingly in the time of Ahasuerus, as it is written: “The Jews ordained, and took upon them, and upon their seed, and upon all such as joined themselves unto them” (Esther 9:27), and he taught: The Jews ordained what they had already taken upon themselves through coercion at Sinai.
Rabbi Ḥama, son of Rabbi Ḥanina, said: What is the meaning of that which is written: “As an apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my beloved among the sons. Under its shadow I delighted to sit and its fruit was sweet to my taste” (Song of Songs 2:3)? Why were the Jewish people likened to an apple tree? It is to tell you that just as this apple tree, its fruit grows before its leaves, so too, the Jewish people accorded precedence to “We will do” over “We will hear.”
Yerushalmi Shelamim 6:1, 49d
R. Simeon ben Lakish said: The Torah given to Moses was written with black fire upon white fire, sealed with fire, and swathed with bands of fire.
(יד) אש דת למו - מגיד הכתוב שדברי תורה נמשלו באש, מה אש נתנה מן השמים כך דברי תורה נתנו מן השמים, שנאמר (שמות כ') אתם ראיתם כי מן השמים דברתי עמכם. מה אש חיים לעולם, אף דברי תורה חיים לעולם. מה אש קרוב לה נכוה, רחוק ממנה צונן (כך דברי תורה כל זמן שאדם עמל בהם חיים הם לו, ליפרש מהם ממיתים אותו) [ואין לאדם להתחמם ממנה, כך ד"ת נשתמש ממנה נאבד מעה"ז, פירש ממנה מת, עמל בה הרי היא לו חיים]. ומה אש משתמשין בה בעוה"ז ובעה"ב, כך דברי תורה משתמשין בהם בעוה"ז ובעה"ב. ומה אש כל המשתמש בו עושה בגופו רושם, אף (בני אדם) [תלמידי חכמים] שעמלים בו ניכרים הם [בעיני ונכרים] בין הבריות (כך תלמידי חכמים ניכרים) בהילוכם ובדיבורם ובעטיפתם בשוק.
(14) (Ibid. 33:3) "the Law of fire to them": Scripture (hereby) tells us that words of Torah are compared to fire. Just as fire descends from heaven, so words of Torah were given from heaven, viz. (Shemoth 6:22) "You have seen that from the heavens I spoke to you." Just as fire "lives" forever, so words of Torah live forever. Just as fire — one who is close to it is burnt; one who is distant from it is cold and it does not afford heat, so words of Torah — if one "handles" them (for profane purposes) he goes lost; if he separates himself from them, he dies; if he toils in them, they give him life. And just as fire is utilized in this world and in the world to come, so, words of Torah. And just as fire leaves an "impression" on one's body, so Torah scholars, who toil in words of Torah are "recognized" by men in their walking, in their speaking, and in their deportment in the marketplace.
Rabbi Michael Strassfeld "The Challenge of Modernity"
There is a statement in the Talmud Yerushalmi that describes the Torah as being black fire written on white fire. Over the centuries this phrase has been explained in a variety of ways. They all begin with an image of the fire you can see (the black fire) and the fire you can't see (the white fire). One interpretation is that the black fire is the letters of the written Torah and the white is the Oral Torah. For Jewish mystics, the white fire is the hidden meanings of the Torah that lie beneath the written text.
I want to suggest a new interpretation for our time. The white fire is the larger world around us. Without the white spaces the Torah can not be read. Without the white fire the Torah would be lacking a larger context.
. . .
I want to suggest that modernity is the opportunity and the challenge to be touched by both the black fire and the white fire. It is also to understand that the real truth is we always have read the white letters. We always interacted with the world around us even when hindered by the walls of the ghetto. Now the walls are down. We are free of the limitations of so many centuries. Reading only the black letters is an inadequate response to the world we live in.
. . .
It will not be easy but without reading both the black fire and the white fire we are misunderstanding the nature of Torah. The Midrash says that God looked into the Torah and created the world. It doesn't say God looked into the Torah and created the Jewish people or just the land of Israel. The whole world is Torah's context. After all, the Torah begins not with the Exodus or even with Abraham and Sarah. It begins with creation and Adam and Eve.
.
. . . at least in America, we have the possibility of exploring Torah as it was meant to be-in the fullness of God's intention---black fire on white fire.