This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar...
This week we read the Parsha of Shoftim, which charges us to "Appoint for
you judges and officers at all of your gates" (16:18). Rav Moshe Feinstein
points out that the word "lecha" (for you) seems superfluous. This
commandment could have simply stated, "appoint judges and officers", why
did the Torah add the word "lecha"? The question is even stronger if you
consider that the commandment is a society-based commandment, and the extra
word is singular. It seems almost contradictory to address an individual
while describing a community-based law.
Rav Moshe explains that the Torah is teaching us a very fundamental
concept. In addition to the need for society at large to have these judges
and officers, individuals must be both a judge and officer over themselves.
The Shlah extends this thought when he explains the continuation of the
Passuk (verse), explaining that a person has seven "gates": two eyes, two
ears, two nostrils and a mouth. The way that these gates are used will
either build or destroy the person, which means that one must control the
flow through these gates. But the Torah also tells us that to accomplish
our goal of controlling what comes out of our 'gates', we need both judges
AND officers. Judges make the rules, and officers enforce them. Not only do
we have to make an extra effort to know the rules by which to live, but we
also need to build safeguards to help us adhere to those rules. (I.e. if
the rule is not to speak negatively about others, maybe we should try not
to hang around people that do, etc.) If we study the Torah's guidelines,
we'll realize their value and appreciate our need to protect them.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough." -
Albert Einstein
This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar...
_______________________________________________
This week we read the Parsha of Shoftim, which charges us to "Appoint for
you judges and officers at all of your gates" (16:18). Rav Moshe Feinstein
points out that the word "lecha" (for you) seems superfluous. This
commandment could have simply stated, "appoint judges and officers", why
did the Torah add the word "lecha"? The question is even stronger if you
consider that the commandment is a society-based commandment, and the extra
word is singular. It seems almost contradictory to address an individual
while describing a community-based law.
Rav Moshe explains that the Torah is teaching us a very fundamental
concept. In addition to the need for society at large to have these judges
and officers, individuals must be both a judge and officer over themselves.
The Shlah extends this thought when he explains the continuation of the
Passuk (verse), explaining that a person has seven "gates": two eyes, two
ears, two nostrils and a mouth. The way that these gates are used will
either build or destroy the person, which means that one must control the
flow through these gates. But the Torah also tells us that to accomplish
our goal of controlling what comes out of our 'gates', we need both judges
AND officers. Judges make the rules, and officers enforce them. Not only do
we have to make an extra effort to know the rules by which to live, but we
also need to build safeguards to help us adhere to those rules. (I.e. if
the rule is not to speak negatively about others, maybe we should try not
to hang around people that do, etc.) If we study the Torah's guidelines,
we'll realize their value and appreciate our need to protect them.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough." -
Albert Einstein