This weeks parsha,
Mishpatim, is replete with different laws. The Ramban (21:1) explains that
the laws mentioned after the Aseres Hadivros, the Ten Commandments, are, in
fact, elucidations of those commandments. Our parsha, in delineating many
of the monetary laws, is expounding on the last commandment, do not desire
other’s belongings.
“Ki sikneh eved
ivri”(21:2), when one acquires a Jewish slave. Many ask why ‘eved ivri’,
Jewish slaves, were chosen to begin this parsha of our laws? The Ramban
(21:2) asserts that this mitzvah relates to many fundamental concepts in
Judaism. As we were enslaved in Mitzraim and were then released, we, in
turn, are commanded to free our slaves after six years. There is,
therefore, an allusion to yetzias Mitzraim. Additionally, the six years of
work, followed by the seventh whereupon we don’t work, is in accordance
with the cycles of shabbos, shmitah and yovel.
Rav Simcha Zissel
zt”l from Kelm also deals with this same question. Let me preface his words
with something that happened last night. I was discussing a certain
potential student with the menahel of a seminary in Yerushalayim. He wasn’t
sure if he’d accept her because he saw her as being quite a challenge. When
I mentioned some present students there, who, I felt, were similar in
nature to this girl, he told me that they too are big challenges, the likes
of which he’d want to avoid next year. My response was that challenges are
why we’re in this ‘business’!
Imagine a father who
has a number of children who are fine and one who’s a thief. The father’s
main concern is to straighten out that child. When discussing his children
with advisors and professionals, the first issue he’ll deal with is that
child and his problem. His major efforts and involvements will be focused
on helping that child and those who help that child.
Rav Simcha Zissel
explains that the pasuk states (Devarim 14:1) “You are sons of Hashem!”. Of
course, the parsha should begin with ‘eved ivri’, the proper dealing with
that errant son! The father will give the greatest help to those who work
with that son. Hashem sends along the greatest siyyata dishmaya with those
‘challenges’! That’s why we’re in this ‘business’, and that’s the way to
succeed in this ‘business’!
Rav Simcha then
compares the Torah’s way of dealing with a thief to the secular legal
system. In our society, a person who’s caught stealing is thrown into
prison. There, with the fine, upstanding role models he finds himself
surrounded with, he learns to improve his ‘skills’, so as to not get caught
a second time. He is supplied with state of the art weight rooms where he
hones his body – elderly women with pocketbooks, please beware! Society has
temporarily ridded itself of a hazard, but the thief himself has not been
improved by the process. Besides serving as a deterrent, he has not gained
anything from his prison time.
According to Torah
law, a thief who can’t pay back that which he stole, is sold as a slave.
The money for the sale goes directly to those he stole from, teaching
responsibility for his actions. He is sold to a family who will serve as
proper role models as to how a person should act. He sees a father earning
an honest living and providing for his family in a respectable fashion.
These are values he will incorporate into his own life at the end of his
servitude.
The family of a
person sent to prison suffer many hardships. In punishing the thief, they
are also punished, bereft of someone to provide for them. This often leads
to other family members, out of desperation, following in the footsteps of
the father.
The pasuk states
that, “if he is married, then after six years his wife will go out with
him”. Being that she has not been enslaved, what is meant by her ‘going
out’!? Rashi explains that this pasuk teaches us that the master must supply
food for the slave’s wife and children during the duration of his slavery.
The wife ‘going out’ means the ending of the masters obligation to her. The
Torah provides for the needs of the wife and family.
Upon release from
prison, a person usually finds himself in the same situation which led to
his stealing in the first place. Even with good intentions, it’s hard to
stay straight with empty pockets.
The Torah deals with
eved ivri again in Sefer Devarim (15:14), introducing the concept of
“ha’anakah”, gifts. The master is commanded to supply the slave with gifts
when his time of servitude has been completed. The three opinions mentioned
in gemara Kidushin in regard to the value of this grant are fifteen sela,
thirty sela and fifty sela. To get some sort of a bearing how much this is
worth, the Kesuvah of a woman is two hundred zuz, equaling fifty sela! The
Torah thus guarantees that this eved will have the means for a fresh start
toward a different type of life.
The Ohr HaChaim
(21:4) shows how this parsha is also dealing with a totally different
realm. We know that man is a dual being. We are essentially a spiritual
being, a part of Hashem Himself, joined together with a physical body, a
‘guf’. The purpose of the ‘guf’ is to serve the neshama, because only
through the ‘guf’ can the neshama perform various mitzvos.
“Ki sikneh eved
ivri…”. When you, the neshama, a part of the true Master, acquire a servant
that is ‘ivri’. The word, ‘ivri’, is from the root ‘ovar’, meaning
transient. The neshama acquires a ‘guf’ for its stint in olam hazah. There
is a set, predestined time, ordained for this ‘servitude’, after which
there is a ‘release’.
“If he is the husband
of a wife, the wife will go out with him (21:3).” The ‘husband of a wife’,
refers to the way that the ‘guf’ (husband) serves the wife (neshama). If
the guf is totally devoted, that all of it’s dealings and interests in this
world, are completely dedicated to the advancement of the neshama, as a
husband is to his wife, (all chossonim and husbands please note!), then
“the wife will go out, but, with him”. Meaning, that even when the neshama
leaves, the ‘guf’ will have been purified to the degree that this union of
the physical and spiritual will not be contradictory. The two remain
bonded, even after the transition to the next world. Tzadikim, even in
their death, are considered alive.
“If the ‘eved’
proclaims his love for his master, wife, and children, refusing to go free…
he will serve him forever (until yovel).” If the person has such a strong
desire to serve Hashem (his master), to extend and expand his spirituality
(his wife), to devote himself to mitzvos (his children, the progeny of this
union), that he has no desire to leave this world, then “he will serve Him
forever”. Hashem will choose him to be one of those who have the closest
bond to Him for all eternity. Not in this limited finite world as he had
blindly desired, but rather in the infinite spiritual palace of the world
to come!
May we merit to delve
into the multidimensional levels of the Torah and ourselves, dedicating our
abilities and our lives to the true Master.
Good shabbos.
Yisroel Ciner
Copyright © 1997 by Rabbi Yisroel Ciner and Project Genesis,
Inc.
The author teaches at
Neveh Zion in Telzstone (near
Yerushalayim).
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