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Dvar for Yitro (Exodus 18:1-20:23)

SP
Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar
Thu, Jan 20, 2022 6:55 PM

Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider
forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy...


Moshe accepts Yitro's suggestions for a scalable judicial system and
chooses leaders to serve as judges. Those appointed would judge all cases
and bring only the complex cases to Moshe to handle. The Torah describes
the minor authority adjudicating with the word ישפוטו, rather than its
proper spelling,יִשְׁפּט֥וּ. What is the significance of the extra vav?

Rav S. R. Hirsch proposes that, in this case, ישפוטו, meaning "to judge,"
is actually a composite of two words: ישפוט meaning "and he will judge,"
and ישפטו meaning "and they will judge." While the judges were to
adjudicate based on the laws they were supposed to uphold, what they would
have decided on their own should be the same. In other words, the judges
should not uphold the law just because they are charged with upholding it,
but they should believe in those laws even without being mandated. This
assertion was true of the nascent stages of our peoplehood and speaks to a
broader attitude toward all we do; to truly achieve sustained growth and
happiness, our actions and convictions must be synchronized.


Quotation of the week:
"Make someone smile every day, but never forget that you're someone too."

Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy... _______________________________________________ Moshe accepts Yitro's suggestions for a scalable judicial system and chooses leaders to serve as judges. Those appointed would judge all cases and bring only the complex cases to Moshe to handle. The Torah describes the minor authority adjudicating with the word ישפוטו, rather than its proper spelling,יִשְׁפּט֥וּ. What is the significance of the extra vav? Rav S. R. Hirsch proposes that, in this case, ישפוטו, meaning "to judge," is actually a composite of two words: ישפוט meaning "and he will judge," and ישפטו meaning "and they will judge." While the judges were to adjudicate based on the laws they were supposed to uphold, what they would have decided on their own should be the same. In other words, the judges should not uphold the law just because they are charged with upholding it, but they should believe in those laws even without being mandated. This assertion was true of the nascent stages of our peoplehood and speaks to a broader attitude toward all we do; to truly achieve sustained growth and happiness, our actions and convictions must be synchronized. _______________________________________________ Quotation of the week: "Make someone smile every day, but never forget that you're someone too."