[Par-lite] For Parshat Behar - additional shiur
Menachem Leibtag
tsc at bezeqint.net
Wed May 1 04:37:59 EDT 2013
This week's TSC shiurim are dedicated by Alan
Ashkenazie and family -
in memory of our dear father Sam H
Ashkenazie -shmeul ben lulu.
haish hakasher ,ve hayashar be"enav, rav
pealim, gomel chasidim.
niftar 24 iyar
*********************************************
****************
THE TANACH STUDY CENTER
[http://www.tanach.org]
In Memory of Rabbi Abraham Leibtag
Shiurim in Chumash & Navi by Menachem
Leibtag
*********************************************
****************
PARSHAT BEHAR - SIGNIFICANT SUMMARIES
In Parshat Behar we find three 'summary
psukim' that may
appear to be superfluous. In the following
'mini-shiur' we
attempt to explain their importance.
AN OVERVIEW OF PARSHAT BEHAR
Let's begin with short outline of
Parshat Behar, in order
to identify where these three summary psukim
are located, and
their significance.
I. The LAWS SHMITA & YOVEL
A. The "shmita" cycle (25:1-7)
B. The "yovel" cycle & guidelines
(25:8-22)
* SUMMARY PASUK - reason for shmita &
yovel (25:23-24)
II. LAWS RELATING TO THE YOVEL CYCLE
A. Helping your neighbor who had to sell
his field
1. one who sold his field to a jew
(25:25-28)
2. one who sold his house
(25:29-34)
3. one who sold his field to a
non-jew (25:35-38)
*SUMMARY PASUK - the reason (25:39)
B. Helping our neighbor who had to sell
himself
1. as an "eved" [servant] to a jew
(25:39-46)
2. as an "eved" [servant] to a
non-jew (25:47-54)
*SUMMARY PASUK - the reason (25:55)
This outline clarifies the progression
of topics in the
entire Parsha, showing how the laws of shmita
& yovel are
followed by several applications of these
laws. Even though
the economic system created by the laws of
"yove" is designed
to protect the poor (from the rich), the
Torah also commands
that society must provide additional
financial assistance for
a neighbor in distress.
Pay attention as well to summary psukim
that delimit each
unit. In our shiur, we will discuss their
significance.
THIS LAND IS 'HIS' LAND
Let's begin with the first summary
pausk, which concludes
the laws of yovel and explains their
underlying reason:
"And the land shall not be sold [to anyone]
forever, for
the Land is Mine, for you are like GEYRIM
v'TOSHAVIM
[strangers and residents] with Me.
Throughout - ERETZ
ACHUZATCHEM - the land or your inheritance,
you shall give
the land redemption" (25:23-24)
Even though God has 'given' the land to
Bnei Yisrael for
their inheritance, this statement highlights
how the true
ownership remains His. In other words, God
remains sovereign,
while He allows Bnei Yisrael the right to
work the land as
though it was theirs. To emphasize this
'arrangement', once
every fifty years the land must return to
God. [Sort of like
a 'fifty year lease'.]
To appreciate the wording of this pasuk,
let's compare it
to a similar statement made by Avraham Avinu
when he
approached Bnei Chet to buy a burial plot.
Note the textual
parallels:
"And he spoke ot Bnei Chet saying, I am a
GEYR v'TOSHAV
among you, please allow me to buy an
ACHUZAT KEVER [burial
plot] from you" (Breishit 23:3-4)
Even though Avraham was a resident in
the land, he was
not the sovereign power; rather Bnei Chet
were. As the land
was not yet his, Avraham must purchase from
them an ACHUZAH
(note again parallel with "eretz achuzatchem"
in 25:24), a
'hold' in the land, even though Bnei Chet
control it.
Therefore, when Bnei Yisrael receive the
Torah at Har
Sinai, as they prepare to conquer "eretz
canaan", these laws
of "yovel" will help them appreciate the
dialectic nature of
their forthcoming sovereignty over the land.
In relation to
the surrounding nations, once Bnei Yisrael
achieve conquest -
they will become the sovereign power.
However, in relation to
God, they must constantly remember that the
land still belongs
to God. He has granted to them only towards
the purpose that
they become His nation. The laws of "yovel",
which affect the
very nature of property transactions during
the entire fifty
year shemita and yovel cycle, will serve as a
constant
reminder that God has given them this land
for a reason (and
purpose).
This background can also help us
understand what may be
the underlying reason for the laws of
"Terumah" - the small
tithe that must be taken from the produce of
land, and given
to the "kohen".
Just as the resident of any land must pay a
property tax to
the country's sovereign power, so too Bnei
Yisrael must pay a
'tax' - i.e. TERUMAH - to God, in recognition
of His
sovereignty over the land. Ultimately God
gives this TERUMAH
to the kohanim (His servants), but note how
the Torah
emphasizes how there are two stages in this
process. First,
the "terumah" is given to God:
"And when you eat from the bread of the
land, you shall
lift up a TERUMAH for GOD..."(see Bamidbar
15:17-21)
Then (and only afterward) God awards this
"teruma" to the
"kohanim":
"And God told Aharon, behold I am giving
you My TERUMAH
that I am keeping that Bnei Yisrael have
set aside..."
(see Bamidbar 18:8)
[This also explains why terumah must be
eaten "b'tahara",
for the kohen is eating food given to him
by God. In
contrast, "maser rishon" the ten percent
tithe given by the
Yisrael to the Levite has not "kedusha" -
for it serves as
a direct payment for the services that
shevet Levi renders
to the nation.]
RELATED LAWS
After explaining the reason for yovel,
the Torah
continues with several related laws. As we
noted in our
outline, these laws divide into two distinct
sections, each
containing examples of when one is forced to
sell either:
1) His field, or
2) Himself.
Each set of examples focuses on the need
to lend
assistance for those in financial distress,
and is concluded
with a special summary pasuk.
Let's see how each pasuk is special.
ERETZ CANAAN IS NOT FOR SALE
After the laws relating to how we must
help someone who
was forced to sell his own field, the Torah
reminds us:
"I am the Lord your God who took you out of
the land of
Egypt to give you the LAND OF CANAAN,
L'HIYOT LACHEM
L'ELOKIM - to be your God" (see 25:38)
To appreciate this pasuk, we must return
to our study of
"brit Milah" (see Breishit 17:7-8), and the
key phrase of that
covenant: L'HIYOT LACHEM L'ELOKIM (see 17:7
& 17:8).
Furthermore, it was specifically in that
covenant that God
promised ERETZ CANAAN to Avraham Avinu, and
in that very same
pasuk, the Torah refers to the land as an
ACHUZA (see 17:8).
Based on these parallels (compare them
once again to
Vayikra 25:38 & the word "achuza" in 25:25),
we can conclude
that this summary pasuk relates to "brit
milah". Let's explain
why.
Recall how "brit milah" focused on the
special close
relationship between God and His nation, and
how Eretz Canaan
was to become the land where that
relationship would achieve
its highest potential. [The mitzvah of "brit
milah" serves as
an "ot" [a sign] to remind us of this
covenant.]
As Eretz Canaan serves as a vehicle
through which Bnei
Yisrael can better develop this relationship,
it is important
that each person receives his 'fare share' of
this land.
Certainly, we would not want the ownership of
the land to fall
into the hands of a wealthy elite. The laws
of "yovel" in
chapter 25 help assure that every individual
keeps his share
of the land.
It also becomes everyone's
responsibility to make sure
that anyone who becomes less fortunate
remains able to keep
his portion in Eretz Canaan.
This explains the cases where one was
forced to sell his
land, and its summary pasuk. Now we must
proceed to the next
section, which discusses cases where one was
forced to sell
himself.
WE ARE SERVANTS OF GOD, NOT MAN
Bamidbar 25:39-54 describes cases when
someone becomes so
poor that he must sell himself (not just his
land) to his
creditor; and how we are obligated to help
him buy back his
freedom. These psukim conclude with the
following pasuk:
"For Bnei Yisrael are servants to Me, they
are My servants
whom I have taken them out of the land of
Egypt, I am the
Lord your God." (25:55)
Now, it becomes obvious why this summary
pasuk focuses on
servitude, rather than land. Servitude to a
fellow man would
take away from man's ability to be a servant
of God.
Therefore, the summary pasuk of this section
relates directly
back to the events of Yetziat Mitzraim.
[From a this
perspective, this summary pasuk can be
understood as a
'flashback' to "brit bein ha'btarim", for in
that covenant,
God had already foreseen the events of
Yetziat Mitzraim (see
Breishit 15:13-18).]
Even though man is free and enjoys the
right to own land
and determine his own destiny; he must
remember that his
freedom is a gift from God, and hence it
should be utilized to
serve Him. But even those who have achieved
freedom share the
responsibility to assist those in financial
crisis, in order
they too can remain 'free' to serve God.
shabbat shalom
menachem
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mail.atlchai.org/pipermail/par-lite/attachments/20130501/b50f64ae/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: bhar2.pdf
Type: application/pdf
Size: 23821 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://mail.atlchai.org/pipermail/par-lite/attachments/20130501/b50f64ae/attachment-0001.pdf>
More information about the Par-lite
mailing list