Welcome to another short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please forward
this forward...
This week’s Parsha, Mishpatim, details many of the laws that the Jews are
to follow. This is followed by the famous declaration by the people that
they will “do and listen” (24:7) to all these laws. What’s less well-known
is the fact that they had already accepted to follow these laws twice
before and in this very Parsha. The differences between the first
declarations and this third famous one are that 1) the people in unison
declared the first two. In contrast, the third was not, and 2) the first
two declarations only involved following the laws and not hearing them.
What is the reason for these differences?
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks offers a beautiful explanation. While the first two
declarations involved strict adherence to a unified code of conduct and
behavior, there was no room for individuality or divergence. That’s why the
Jews’ confirmation was in unison. However, understanding of those edicts is
very personal and varied, as everyone connects, appreciates, and
understands them at their level. While everyone affirmed that they would
listen to the laws, they did so at their level because Judaism leaves room
for such individuality, and that is what makes us unique, as people and as
a nation. While our actions unite us, embracing our uniqueness makes us
stronger.
Quotation of the week:
"We rise by lifting others."
Welcome to another short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please forward
this forward...
_______________________________________________
This week’s Parsha, Mishpatim, details many of the laws that the Jews are
to follow. This is followed by the famous declaration by the people that
they will “do and listen” (24:7) to all these laws. What’s less well-known
is the fact that they had already accepted to follow these laws twice
before and in this very Parsha. The differences between the first
declarations and this third famous one are that 1) the people in unison
declared the first two. In contrast, the third was not, and 2) the first
two declarations only involved following the laws and not hearing them.
What is the reason for these differences?
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks offers a beautiful explanation. While the first two
declarations involved strict adherence to a unified code of conduct and
behavior, there was no room for individuality or divergence. That’s why the
Jews’ confirmation was in unison. However, understanding of those edicts is
very personal and varied, as everyone connects, appreciates, and
understands them at their level. While everyone affirmed that they would
listen to the laws, they did so at their level because Judaism leaves room
for such individuality, and that is what makes us unique, as people and as
a nation. While our actions unite us, embracing our uniqueness makes us
stronger.
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
"We rise by lifting others."