SHOFTIM
by Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
Torah
Haftara: Isaiah 51:12-52:12.
The annual cycle of Torah readings
is so arranged that parshas SHOFTIM,
"Judges", is always read on the first Shabbos of the month of Elul, season
of compassion and repentance, when all hearts yearn to come back to the Source.
The opening words of the parshah -- "Appoint judges and police for
yourselves in all your gates" -- contain a personal message for all of us.
The key step in coming back to G-d is when we "appoint judges and
police" for OURSELVES -- in the gates of our own minds and souls. We must
examine our traits, activities and behavior and consider carefully whether they
accord with G-d's Torah and how they could be improved. Then we must find ways
to "police" ourselves so as to enforce our good resolutions and carry
them out, taking the next steps forward to greater holiness in all the
different areas of our lives.
Together with its
personal spiritual advice for each one of us, parshas
SHOFTIM contains the blueprint for a Torah state in
Next week's parshah, KI
TETZE, the third in this "trilogy", focuses more upon the
commandments that relate to the particulars of our daily lives in the world --
family, property, how we build our houses (with a parapet), our clothes (tzitzis), personal morality, who we admit into our
communities and many others. Thereafter, parshas KI
TAVO will complete the "repetition of the law", concluding with the
blessings and curses over which Moses struck the Covenant with the Children of
Israel in the Plains of Moab prior to their entry into the Land.
Our present parshah of
SHOFTIM, which is at the very center of this "trilogy" of parshahs containing Moses' "repetition of the
law", sets forth the necessary order of leadership and government through
which the Torah nation can thrive in the
* * *
JUDGES
AND POLICE
"Justice! You must pursue Justice -- in
order that you may live and inherit the Land." (Deut. 16:17). According to
the Midrash, "This teaches that the appointment of judges is to give life
to
According to the
blueprint, the true judges of
The entire judicial
system of the Torah nation is predicated upon universal study and knowledge of
the Torah, making regular working citizens capable of serving as members of a Beis Din -- a "house of law" ("court")
of three judges (for non-capital) or twenty-three (for capital) cases. A true
Torah
"If there are
police, there are judges; if there are no police, there are no judges" (Sifri). If there are no police to enforce the law, the
judges may judge all they like, but to no effect. In
addition to study, the effective rule of Torah law is also predicated upon
police who are subject to the authority of the Torah judges. Some may smile at
the above suggestion that the first resort for justice should be the local Beis Din of Torah scholars, wondering how many of today's yeshivah alumni would be capable of acting as judges, let
alone having police under them. It should be remembered that one of the reasons
why the study of Talmudic law often appears detached from life in the rough and
tumble of the actual world is because during most of the past two thousand
years, rabbinical courts everywhere have been stripped of all meaningful
sanctions with which to impose and enforce Torah law. The result is that the
Torah has authority only over those who give it authority in their lives. Indeed,
contemporary "political correctness" is appalled at the idea of
rabbis "interfering" in areas that are considered in the realm of
personal conscience, such as whether a person worships before a statue or image
or violates the Shabbat, or what he or she does with another consenting adult.
Yet under Torah law all of these may involve capital punishment, as we find in
the case of idolatry in our parshah (Deut. 17:5). Many other sins that the
wider society does not consider "criminal" can render a person liable
to 39 lashes, such as wearing a forbidden mixture of wool and linen or eating
meat cooked with milk.
The wider society
obviously has some way to go in order to accept the law of the Torah. Those who
yearn for the rule of Torah law and the blessing that it will bring can learn
from our present parshah of SHOFTIM that constant study of study of the law is
the foundation of the entire system.
While
every layman is expected to be versed in the law, the commandment to
"pursue Justice! Justice!" is interpreted to mean you should go to a
"beautiful" Beis Din and seek out the best
judges: the true sages and guardians of the Torah.
Our parshah instructs us
that "when a matter of law is to wondrous for
you. you shall rise up and go up to the place which
HaShem your G-d will choose." (Deut. 17:8). If the local scholars and maveens do not know the correct answer, we are instructed
to search out the wisest and most profoundly learned. It is evident from our
parshah that the spiritual source of the wisdom of the Torah lies
on
The teachings of the
sages of the Sanhedrin in
* * *
THE KING
For some people the very
word king is associated with images of contemporary "royalty" that
render it somewhat misleading as a translation of the Hebrew word MELECH. The
Hebrew word refers to the ruler who has power over a sovereign political
entity. Our parshah teaches that such a ruler is part of the Torah blueprint
for the successful state (Deut. 17:14-20). Yet the Torah conception of the
MELECH could not be further away from the kinds of rulers who have power in
states throughout the world today including those who still bear royal titles.
As exemplified by David
Melech Yisrael, the Torah MELECH is first and
foremost a saintly student and lover of the Torah. While every Israelite is
commanded to write his own Torah scroll, the king is commanded to copy another
scroll from the authoritative
The Talmud instructs us even
to go to see the kings of the nations -- in order to understand the difference
between them and the true kings of
This is the precise
opposite of MELECH YISRAEL, who is the uncompromising Defender and Champion of
the Torah of Truth. The true kings of
In the Torah state, the
king himself must subject himself to the authority of the Sanhedrin and the
prophets. While the king has responsibility for the internal and external
security of the state, he must submit weighty matters of state, such as whether
to go to war, to the sources of holy spirit: the
priests and the prophets. Thus parshas SHOFTIM
presents commandments relating to the status and privileges of the priests in
the Torah state, and to the qualifications of the prophet and how true prophecy
is to be distinguished from false prophesy and divination.
* * *
SECURITY
The greatest scourge of
contemporary society has become the cheapness of human blood, which is being
shed daily without scruples in the rampant criminality and terror that have
spread all over the world. The abhorrence of the Torah for bloodshed appears in
many places and is prominent in our parshah, which contains the laws of murder
and manslaughter and the cities of refuge for unintentional killers. We have
already encountered some of these laws in precious parshiyos
(MISHPATIM, Exodus ch. 21, MAS'EI, Numbers ch. 35, etc.)
Some are under the
impression that the Torah requirements for valid testimony to convict a killer
are so demanding that in practice it would be impossible to bring criminals to
justice. For example, in a Beis Din, the witnesses
must be Torah-observant, and their testimony must withstand rigorous
investigation, while circumstantial evidence is inadmissible. It is true that
the Torah requirements for valid testimony are very stringent, yet Torah law
also provides the MELECH with sanctions with which to make sure that Torah
leniency does not lead to social chaos. Thus the lawful MELECH of the Torah
state can impose prison sentences and even capital punishment where necessary
even in cases where a Beis Din could not impose such
sentences.
The laws of warfare
contained in parshas SHOFTIM show that from the Torah
standpoint, the critical factor in the wars we face are not our numbers, arms
and equipment as against those of our enemies. The critical factor is our faith
in HaShem and the courage with which we are ready and willing to fight for our
convictions. The "pep talk" to the troops is given by the priest. His
opening words are: "SHEMA YISRAEL" (Deut. 20:3) -- alluding to the
words with which we declare our faith twice daily.
The Torah commands us not
to loose our sensitivities even in time of war. Even when fighting our enemies,
we are not allowed to wantonly destroy property. It is in the context of the
laws of warfare that the Torah gives us the law of "BAL TASHCHIS"
("Do not wantonly destroy." Deut. 20:20). If this law applies to our
enemies' property even in time of war, how much more it applies to our own
property and to public property in time of peace. We are to value that which has value, and not to needlessly waste and
destroy. This applies to the natural wealth and resources of the earth, which
are being mindlessly exploited and destroyed for the sake of immediate gain
without a thought for the long-term.
The closing mitzvah of parshas SHOFTIM is that of the heiffer
whose neck is broken in a ceremony that comes to atone for an unsolved homicide
- a case in which a body is found in the open but the killer is unknown. It is
noteworthy that the judges of the town nearest to where the body is found
require atonement. It is their responsibility to see that their town is
properly organized to take care of visitors and the needy, so that no-one is
forced to take to the roads in search of hospitality, thereby exposing himself to the attendant dangers from roaming killers.
"Atone for Your
people
* * *
Shabbat Shalom!!! Chodesh Tov Umevorach!!!
Avraham Yehoshua Greenbaum
