http://www.jewishamerica.com/ja/features/Thunder.cfmWHAT DID MOSHE DO ON SINAI FOR 40 DAYS AND NIGHTS ? ? ?He received the Torah on Sinai. Now this can’t be the Written Torah, as we know it as the Five Books of Moses, since we know that some mitzvos, like Shabbos, were given prior to Sinai, and most were recorded after the event at Sinai. There is a debate in the Talmud as to whether the Torah was written all at one time by Moshe, or section by section throughout the 40 year trek through the desert.
But one thing is certain that the text of the Written Law was not given on Sinai, with the exception of the Ten Commandments, which were oral and which were then given to Moshe engraved by Hashem in stone. So, the question: What was given to Moshe on Sinai during those 40 days?
Moshe received the Oral Law on Sinai. The Oral Law is the basis for the Written Law. Without the Oral Law, the Written Law, that what we all see in the Hold Ark in the synagogue, is meaningless. The Written Law is merely a set of cryptic notes, symbols, shorthand abreviations for a more expansive, fundamental and complete sytem of a blueprint for the world and life.
Let me illustrate. The basis for our liberty in these United States is the Constitution. Can a short concise document like the Constitution contain all the laws that cover every facet of a nation’s life? It is absurd to think so. It is a compendium of all the values upon which our freedoms and rights are built. It abstracts the values of the Torah, the Magna Carta, and the vision of our founding Fathers. It is a blueprint which guides the designers and the builders of the nation in each generation.
In effect, then, the Written Torah is an abstract of a fuller expanded gift that Hashem gave Israel, the Torah sh’b’al Peh, the Oral Law. The Oral Law is the underpinnings of the Written Law and by its very nature of being a Weltanschaung, it could not be frozen in stone or parchment.
The Written Law can understood ONLY in conjunction with the Oral Law.
The Torah says:
‘V’za-vach-ta ka-ahser tsee-vee-see-cha’
‘You shall slaughter <the animal> as I commanded you’.
Nowhere in the Torah do we find G-d commanding Moshe about the laws of Schita (slaughter).
The Torah says:
‘Hachodesh Ha-zeh La-chem rosh cha-da-shim’
‘This month (Nissan) is the head of all the months’
When G-d uses the term ‘zeh’, this....which is a demonstrative word, what does he refer to? How did Moshe know the basis for the calculation of the month? What determined it? It is nowhere written in the Torah.
The Torah says:
‘Ayin ta-chas ayin. Shayne ta-chas shayne’
‘An eye for an eye. a tooth for a tooth’
Torah Law at ALL TIMES meant that as monetary compensation; _never_ literally. Where can see find that in the written Torah? It’s not there.
The Torah says:
‘Seven days shall you dwell in a succah’
Where is the source of how to build the succah, it’s height, its size, the acceptable materials that may be used and the definition of the essential parts of the succah? The Written Torah is silent on all this, and yet every Jew knows what a succah should look like.
The Torah says:
‘And you shall take for yourselves the fruit of a beautiful tree"
What fruit does the Torah mean? Where is there any reference in the Torah to the citron, the Esrog? There is none, and yet Jews the world over know what an esrog is!
It is the Torah sh’b’al Peh, the Oral Torah that supplies the details. These are but a few examples of why, without the Oral Law, the Written Torah has no meaning.
Moshe spent those 40 days and nights receiving the Oral Law, in its entirety, with all the details and nuances, so that in future generations, should there be an outstanding scholar who might extrapolate and infer from what he has received by the Messorah, (the transmission of the Torah), .....that, too, was what Moshe learned on Sinai from G-d.