Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider
forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy...
If a fellow Jew becomes desperate enough to become a slave, we are
commanded not to work him with slave labor (25:39). If having a Jewish
slave does not allow us to treat them as slaves, why does the option even
exist? Also, as a nation that knows first hand the horrors of slavery, why
does the concept of slavery even exist in Judaism?
The Rambam explains (Guide To The Perplexed) that all processes in nature
are gradual and that it would be impossible to suddenly discontinue things
that the world was accustomed to. Instead, G-d limited and humanized the
practice until humankind would decide to abolish slavery of their own
choice. Rabbi Jonathan Sacks submits that this was done by changing slavery
from a condition to a circumstance, from what I am to a situation in which
I find myself now, but not forever. If someone was reduced to slavery, it
was a temporary situation, not an identity. We work to enjoy and appreciate
our freedom, and the depth of our history gives us the perspective to
acknowledge and value the freedoms we have today.
Quotation of the week:
"Doing what you love is freedom. Loving what you do is happiness."
Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider
forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy...
_______________________________________________
If a fellow Jew becomes desperate enough to become a slave, we are
commanded not to work him with slave labor (25:39). If having a Jewish
slave does not allow us to treat them as slaves, why does the option even
exist? Also, as a nation that knows first hand the horrors of slavery, why
does the concept of slavery even exist in Judaism?
The Rambam explains (Guide To The Perplexed) that all processes in nature
are gradual and that it would be impossible to suddenly discontinue things
that the world was accustomed to. Instead, G-d limited and humanized the
practice until humankind would decide to abolish slavery of their own
choice. Rabbi Jonathan Sacks submits that this was done by changing slavery
from a condition to a circumstance, from what I am to a situation in which
I find myself now, but not forever. If someone was reduced to slavery, it
was a temporary situation, not an identity. We work to enjoy and appreciate
our freedom, and the depth of our history gives us the perspective to
acknowledge and value the freedoms we have today.
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
"Doing what you love is freedom. Loving what you do is happiness."