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Following the question on the order of Moses' teaching Torah to Israel, I noticed that the procedure does mention Aharon, Aharon's sons, the elders, and the people, but not Yehoshuah as Moses's successor in the transmission of the Torah.

Was Yehoshua left out purposefully? Was Yehoshua's way of study with Moses different?


The source (Eruvin.54b):

The Sages taught the baraita: What was the order of teaching the Oral Law? Moses learned directly from the mouth of the Almighty. Aaron entered and sat before him, and Moses taught him his lesson as he had learned it from God... Aaron’s sons entered, and Moses taught them their lesson while Aaron listened... The elders entered and Moses taught them their lesson.
Moses then departed to his tent, and Aaron taught the others his lesson as he had learned it from Moses. Aaron then departed and his sons taught the others their lesson. His sons then departed and the elders taught the rest of the people their lesson. Hence everyone, Aaron, his sons, the elders and all the people, heard the lesson taught by God four times.

Harel13
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Al Berko
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  • Didn't he teach Yehoshua as well? https://www.sefaria.org/Pirkei_Avot.1.1 – Kazi bácsi Aug 16 '21 at 19:37
  • @Kazibácsi The Mishnah says "he passed it on", but it does not say Moses taught Yehoshua. Passing is actually a very vague thing, that does not necessitate prolonged study, it's more like the "spirit" that Moses passed on him. – Al Berko Aug 16 '21 at 19:49
  • @kazibacsi The order of the teaching was based on honor being accorded. Since Yehoshua wasn't in a position of authority at the time then there was no reason to accord him honor. When Moshe put his hands on him he "gave" him all his knowledge and Yehoshua in turn passed it on to the Elders. This was different than teaching since the Elders learned from Moshe but still had to "receive"from Yehoshua – Chatzkel Aug 16 '21 at 21:42
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    As of late, I have heard two unrelated "Mechakri" (מחקרי with a מלעיל) explanations for these two traditions which, when put together, can explain the apparent contradiction. I myself dislike both so I'm leaving them as a comment: 1. The Eruvin tradition is actually using an anachronistic "code" to describe the manner in which Torah was studied in Yavneh. Moshe here, for example, represents the Nasi, Rabban Gamliel. I don't remember who wrote this, but I can try to find it if you like. – Harel13 Jan 27 '22 at 18:16
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  • The Avot tradition purposefully leaves out the priests because it's an anti-priestly polemic, created at a time in which many priests were corrupt (the last few decades of the Second Temple). This was apparently first thought up by Moshe David Her in this essay.
  • – Harel13 Jan 27 '22 at 18:16
  • @Chatzkel Wrong assumption, Joshuah was the Chief of Staff, and that's a serious authority. 2. Let's not be mystical (put his hands and passed all knowledge) – Al Berko Jan 28 '22 at 08:14
  • @al berko who told you that he was there chief of staff and what authority he had? Is it mentioned anywhere? – Chatzkel Jan 28 '22 at 13:40
  • @Chatzkel https://www.sefaria.org.il/Exodus.17.9?vhe=Tanach_with_Ta%27amei_Hamikra&lang=en&aliyot=0 Moses chose Joshua to lead the army against Amolek, and that was before Matan Torah, IIRC. – Al Berko Jan 29 '22 at 17:00
  • Why assume Yehoshua wasn't among the elders? – user6591 Feb 15 '24 at 00:34