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In the Hebrew Bible the golden calf was an idol made by Aaron for the Israelites during Moses's unexpectedly long absence. It is first mentioned in Exodus 32:4.
When Moses went up onto Mount Sinai to receive the Ten Commandments (Exodus 19:20), he left the Israelites for forty days and forty nights (Exodus 24:18). The Israelites feared that he would not return, and asked Aaron to make gods for them (Exodus 32:1). The Bible does not note Aaron's opinion of this request, merely that he complied, and gathered up the Israelites' golden earrings. He melted them and constructed the golden calf.
Aaron also built an altar before the calf, and the next day, the Israelites made offerings and celebrated.
The Lord told Moses that his people had corrupted themselves, and that he planned to eliminate them, but Moses argued and pleaded that they should be spared (Exodus 32:11); the Lord relented. Moses went down from the mountain, but upon seeing the calf, he too became angry. He threw down the tablets upon which God's law had been written, and broke them. He ground up the golden calf, mixed its powder with water, and forced the Israelites to drink it. Then he gathered the sons of Levi, and set them to slaying a large fraction of adult males. Nevertheless the Lord stated that he would one day visit the Israelites' sin upon them.
Since Moses had broken the tablets, the Lord instructed him to return to Mount Sinai yet again (Exodus 34:2) to receive a replacement.
The second set of commandments is listed in Exodus 34:12-26, but differs from those listed in Exodus 20:2-17. It is the first set (from the broken tablets) that is cited by modern Christians and Jews.
Among the Hebrews' neighbors in the Ancient Near East and the Aegean, the AurochsThe aurochs Bos taurus is an extinct European mammal of the Bovidae family. The word aurochs is both singular and plural; alternative plural forms are aurochsen or urus''. The animal's original scientific name, Bos primigenius translated the German term A, the wild bull, was widely worshipped, often as the Lunar BullThe worship of the Sacred Bull throughout the ancient world is most familiar in the episode of the idol of the Golden Calf made by Aaron and worshipped by the Hebrews in the wilderness of Sinai Exodus . But far to the east, Shiva's holy mount (called vaha. Its Minoan manifestation survived as the Cretan BullIn Greek mythology, the Cretan Bull was either the bull that carried away Europa or the bull Pasiphae fell in love with. Heracles had to capture it. The King of Crete, Minos, gave Heracles permission to take the bull away. It had been wrecking havoc on Cr of Greek myth.
The story of the Golden Calf is retold in the Qur'anThe Qur'an ( Arabic al-qurn also transliterated as Quran Koran and less commonly Alcoran is the holy book of Islam. Muslims believe that the Qur'an is the literal word of God and culmination of God's revelation to mankind, revealed to the Prophet Muhammad (see Musa); it is the "cow" after which suraSee also: Sura (disambiguation). Sura is the Arabic term for "chapter of the Qur'an". These are traditionally ordered in roughly reverse chronological order, with Madinan suras coming first and Makkan ones last for the most part. Each sura is divided intot al-BaqaraSurat al-Baqarah ("the Cow") is the 2nd and longest sura of the Qur'an, with 286 ayat. It receives its name from the story of the Golden Calf, which it retells. It is a Madinan sura; most of it was revealed during the first two years after the Hijra, but is named.
The Golden calf (Gouden kalf) is also the Dutch version of the Oscar.
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