Parashat Mishpatim

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==Teaching the Laws==
 
==Teaching the Laws==
Moshe is commanded to give over laws and explain all their mystical reasoning<ref name="Shover Zadim Mishpatim">Shover Zadim Mishpatim</ref> and explanations to the Jewish Nation in an organized fashion.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/1">Rashi Shemos 21/1</ref> It is not enough for him to give them over 2-3 times until they know it well but not give over the reasons for each teaching and their explanations. Rather Moshe is to set the teachings clearly before them them like a table set with food that is ready to eat from.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/1"/>
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Moshe is commanded to give over laws and explain all their mystical reasoning<ref name="Shover Zadim Shemos">Shover Zadim Shemos</ref> and explanations to the Jewish Nation in an organized fashion.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/1">Rashi Shemos 21/1</ref> It is not enough for him to give them over 2-3 times until they know it well but not give over the reasons for each teaching and their explanations. Rather Moshe is to set the teachings clearly before them them like a table set with food that is ready to eat from.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/1"/>
  
 
All the laws listed in Parshat Mishpatim were given to Moshe on Mount Sinai during the Receiving of the Torah<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/1"/> as opposed to all the remaining commandments that were given to Moshe during his forty day stay in heaven.<ref>Ikar Sefsi Chachamim</ref> Warning is given to always seek out a Jewish court for judgment, even if on that particular ruling the Gentile courts are in agreement with Torah law. For one who brings Jewish lawsuits before gentiles profanes the Divine Name and honors the name of idols, giving testimony to the esteem of their deity.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/1"/>  Not only is he granting them the importance and authority over the Jewish court, he is also creating a tremendous flaw by comparing the conclusion they determined through basic human logic to the same exact conclusion of Torah law that is based on very deep mysteries and calculations.<ref name="Mi Hashiloach Part 1 Parashat Mishpatim"/>
 
All the laws listed in Parshat Mishpatim were given to Moshe on Mount Sinai during the Receiving of the Torah<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/1"/> as opposed to all the remaining commandments that were given to Moshe during his forty day stay in heaven.<ref>Ikar Sefsi Chachamim</ref> Warning is given to always seek out a Jewish court for judgment, even if on that particular ruling the Gentile courts are in agreement with Torah law. For one who brings Jewish lawsuits before gentiles profanes the Divine Name and honors the name of idols, giving testimony to the esteem of their deity.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/1"/>  Not only is he granting them the importance and authority over the Jewish court, he is also creating a tremendous flaw by comparing the conclusion they determined through basic human logic to the same exact conclusion of Torah law that is based on very deep mysteries and calculations.<ref name="Mi Hashiloach Part 1 Parashat Mishpatim"/>
  
Although the laws of Jewish Slaves and a number of others did not even apply in the desert, they were given right away to show that one could receive reward just for the study of their laws and inner secrets.<ref name="Teferet Yonaton Parashat Mishpatim">Teferet Yonaton Parashat Mishpatim</ref>
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Although the laws of Jewish Slaves and a number of other ones did not even apply in the desert, they were given right away to show that one could receive reward just for the study of their laws and inner secrets.<ref name="Teferet Yonaton Parashat Mishpatim">Teferet Yonaton Parashat Mishpatim</ref>
  
 
==Laws of Jewish Slaves==
 
==Laws of Jewish Slaves==
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Sometimes a Jewish slave prefers remaining in his situation of servitude for either financial reasons or in order to remain with his gentile maidservant wife and children, refusing to be set free after six years of labor.  In cases where the slave originally entered his servitude through a sale by Beit Din to repay a stolen debt, the owner brings the slave to Beit Din where he has his right ear pierced<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/6"/> on an upright standing door<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/6">Rashi Shemos 21/6</ref> that is attached to a door post.<ref>Rashi Kipsuto</ref>  In cases where the slave entered servitude on his own due to poverty, the piercing can take place anywhere and does not have to be in front of Beis Din.<ref>Rashi Kipsuto</ref>  
 
Sometimes a Jewish slave prefers remaining in his situation of servitude for either financial reasons or in order to remain with his gentile maidservant wife and children, refusing to be set free after six years of labor.  In cases where the slave originally entered his servitude through a sale by Beit Din to repay a stolen debt, the owner brings the slave to Beit Din where he has his right ear pierced<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/6"/> on an upright standing door<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/6">Rashi Shemos 21/6</ref> that is attached to a door post.<ref>Rashi Kipsuto</ref>  In cases where the slave entered servitude on his own due to poverty, the piercing can take place anywhere and does not have to be in front of Beis Din.<ref>Rashi Kipsuto</ref>  
  
Seeking extended servitude is considered a very spiritual demeaning action since it is much harder to serve Hashem when one has to answer up to and serve another man.<ref name="Shover Zadim Mishpatim"/> If a person comes to reject Hashem’s ownership and accept the yoke of another human, let him first face a piercing by the door and doorpost who witnessed Hashem’s  acquisition of the Jews as slaves to Himself at the same time He jumped over these objects in Egypt sparing the Jewish homes.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/6"/>  Specifically the ear is chosen as the body part to be pierced since this man chose to ignore the commandment he heard by Mount Sinai “Do not steal” or if he sold himself; the statement of “to Me the Jews are slaves”.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/6"/>
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Seeking extended servitude is considered a very spiritual demeaning action since it is much harder to serve Hashem when one has to answer up to and serve another man.<ref name="Shover Zadim Shemos"/> If a person comes to reject Hashem’s ownership and accept the yoke of another human, let him first face a piercing by the door and doorpost who witnessed Hashem’s  acquisition of the Jews as slaves to Himself at the same time He jumped over these objects in Egypt sparing the Jewish homes.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/6"/>  Specifically the ear is chosen as the body part to be pierced since this man chose to ignore the commandment he heard by Mount Sinai “Do not steal” or if he sold himself; the statement of “to Me the Jews are slaves”.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/6"/>
  
Once this procedure is done, the Jewish slave can retain his status until the following Yovel where he is forced to go free.  This sets the maximum possible servitude at 49 years and the maximum servitude extension at 43 years. In many cases where the Yovel is not so far down the line, it is much less years.<ref name="Shover Zadim Mishpatim"/>
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Once this procedure is done, the Jewish slave can retain his status until the following Yovel where he is forced to go free.  This sets the maximum possible servitude at 49 years and the maximum servitude extension at 43 years. In many cases where the Yovel is not so far down the line, it is much less years.<ref name="Shover Zadim Shemos"/>
  
 
====HaElohim====
 
====HaElohim====
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Everything in the world, even mundane transactions contain G-dly life force which allows them to exist. For most people this is not evident until the transactions are brought before a Beis Din and are analyzed according to the Torah laws, displaying the concealed elements of G-dliness that they contained all along. Therefore the judges are called 'Elohim' since they make the G-dliness and Torah recognizable in all the mundane transactions that are brought to them (Even in items like crimes, oxan, donkeys, sheep, garments and lost objects).<ref>Likutay Halachos, Choshen Mishpat, Hilchos Dayanim 4/3</ref>
 
Everything in the world, even mundane transactions contain G-dly life force which allows them to exist. For most people this is not evident until the transactions are brought before a Beis Din and are analyzed according to the Torah laws, displaying the concealed elements of G-dliness that they contained all along. Therefore the judges are called 'Elohim' since they make the G-dliness and Torah recognizable in all the mundane transactions that are brought to them (Even in items like crimes, oxan, donkeys, sheep, garments and lost objects).<ref>Likutay Halachos, Choshen Mishpat, Hilchos Dayanim 4/3</ref>
 
====Eved Ivri====
 
It only became possible for Jews, slaves of Hashem, to become slaves to another human due to their breach in this relationship by seeking other masters through the worship of Avoda Zara. Idolatry among the Jewish Nation is a direct result of the Idolatrous worship of our forefathers, Terach and his fathers, who dwelled on the other side of the river, giving forth the name Ivrim. Therefore a Jewish slave is called an Eved Ivri and not an Eved Yisroeli (Yehudi is not a term used in time of Torah).<ref name="Teferet Yonaton Parashat Mishpatim"/>
 
  
 
==Laws of Jewish Maidservants==
 
==Laws of Jewish Maidservants==
A father is allowed to sell his minor (Kitana) daughter as a Jewish maidservant before the age of 12<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/7"/> or until she displays signs of adulthood. From the age of 12 to 12 and a half (Naarah / נַעִרָה), although a girl is still considered to be under her fathers jurisdiction, he is not allowed to sell her and certainly not once she becomes an adult<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/7"/> (Bogeret / בּוֹגֶרֶת). This is generally done in cases of severe poverty where the family cannot afford to maintain the child. Selling her to a wealthy family will ensure that she is properly fed and clothed and even opens the possibility of her master or one of his sons marrying her.<ref name="Shover Zadim Mishpatim"/>
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A father is allowed to sell his minor (Kitana) daughter as a Jewish maidservant before the age of 12<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/7"/> or until she displays signs of adulthood. From the age of 12 to 12 and a half (Naarah / נַעִרָה), although a girl is still considered to be under her fathers jurisdiction, he is not allowed to sell her and certainly not once she becomes an adult<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/7"/> (Bogeret / בּוֹגֶרֶת). This is generally done in cases of severe poverty where the family cannot afford to maintain the child. Selling her to a wealthy family will ensure that she is properly fed and clothed and even opens the possibility of her master or one of his sons marrying her.<ref name="Shover Zadim Shemos"/>
  
 
===Emancipation===
 
===Emancipation===
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===Yiud===
 
===Yiud===
It is recommended that the owner or his sons marry this maidservant and it is considered a Mitzvah.<ref>Rashi Kipsuto</ref>  This process is called Yiud and the initial payment to the girl’s father retroactively serves as the Kidushin money.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/9">Rashi Shemos 21/9</ref> Buying a girl in her early years allows the family to shape and conform her to their peculiarities, thus creating a great match for one of their sons. It is also creates an opportunity to marry off a problematic son.<ref name="Shover Zadim Mishpatim"/>
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It is recommended that the owner or his sons marry this maidservant and it is considered a Mitzvah.<ref>Rashi Kipsuto</ref>  This process is called Yiud and the initial payment to the girl’s father retroactively serves as the Kidushin money.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/9">Rashi Shemos 21/9</ref> Buying a girl in her early years allows the family to shape and conform her to their peculiarities, thus creating a great match for one of their sons. It is also creates an opportunity to marry off a problematic son.<ref name="Shover Zadim Shemos"/>
  
If one of them does marry her, all he has to say is “you are engaged to me with the initial purchase money paid to your father”.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/9"/>  If he later marries a second wife, he cannot hold back his obligations of food, clothing and relationships to her. Although this is true for all wives, there is extra fear that a former maidservant will be abused.<ref name="Shover Zadim Mishpatim"/> Once married, the girl is like a regular wife does not go free after growing signs of adulthood.
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If one of them does marry her, all he has to say is “you are engaged to me with the initial purchase money paid to your father”.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/9"/>  If he later marries a second wife, he cannot hold back his obligations of food, clothing and relationships to her. Although this is true for all wives, there is extra fear that a former maidservant will be abused.<ref name="Shover Zadim Shemos"/> Once married, the girl is like a regular wife does not go free after growing signs of adulthood.
  
 
If she does not please them to the extent that one of them would want to marry her,<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/8"/> they should help her be redeemed by an external party, willingly agreeing to deduct the percentage of the six years served off the refunded payment amount.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/8"/>  If she is not redeemed, neither her master or her father are permitted to sell her to someone else, after betraying her; the master by not marrying her and the father by selling her to this master.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/8"/> She eventually goes free with one of the three release methods of a Jewish maidservant.
 
If she does not please them to the extent that one of them would want to marry her,<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/8"/> they should help her be redeemed by an external party, willingly agreeing to deduct the percentage of the six years served off the refunded payment amount.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/8"/>  If she is not redeemed, neither her master or her father are permitted to sell her to someone else, after betraying her; the master by not marrying her and the father by selling her to this master.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/8"/> She eventually goes free with one of the three release methods of a Jewish maidservant.
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===Eye for an Eye===
 
===Eye for an Eye===
Members of the Tzidukim sect who did not follow the teachings of the Sages and the Oral Law were known to poke out an offenders eye or chop off his hands and feet in retribution for having done the same to another person. Obviously the Tzidukim's claim to strictly follow the Written Torah was just a cover up, allowing them to live lives of unrestricted lust and therefore such punishments were often biased and influenced by bribery and corruption.<ref name="Shover Zadim Mishpatim"/>
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Members of the Tzidukim sect who did not follow the teachings of the Sages and the Oral Law were known to poke out an offenders eye or chop off his hands and feet in retribution for having done the same to another person. Obviously the Tzidukim's claim to strictly follow the Written Torah was just a cover up, allowing them to live lives of unrestricted lust and therefore such punishments were often biased and influenced by bribery and corruption.<ref name="Shover Zadim Shemos"/>
  
 
==Laws of Wounding a Slave==
 
==Laws of Wounding a Slave==
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===Laws of a Habitual Gorer===
 
===Laws of a Habitual Gorer===
If a killer bull escapes death after three killings,<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/29"/> he now is no longer considered tame but rather a habitual gorer (מוּעָד). If its owner has been warned in front of witnesses<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/29">Rashi Shemos 21/29</ref> but does not watch it properly and the bull then kills a fourth time, his owner is also held responsible. Aside from the stoning of the bull, the owner is punishable by death through Heaven,<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/29"/> unless he redeems himself by paying the levied fine.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/28"/> He shall give the ransom fine when it is levied upon him by Beis Din,<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/30">Rashi Shemos 21/30</ref> as redemption for his soul. The amount of this fine is calculated based on the value of the victim<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/30"/> and<ref name="Shover Zadim Mishpatim"/> the worth of value of the owner of the bull.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/30"/> All of the above applies regardless if the bull killed an adult or a minor<ref>Rashi Shemos 21/31</ref> boy or girl.
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If a killer bull escapes death after three killings, he now is no longer considered tame but rather a habitual gorer (מוּעָד). If its owner has been warned in front of witnesses<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/29">Rashi Shemos 21/29</ref> but does not watch it properly and the bull then kills a fourth time, his owner is also held responsible. Aside from the stoning of the bull, the owner is punishable by death through Heaven, unless he redeems himself by paying the levied fine.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/28"/>
  
 
===Laws of Slave Goring Bull===
 
===Laws of Slave Goring Bull===
If the bull kills a gentile<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/32">Rashi Shemos 21/32</ref> slave or maidservant, its owner must pay the slave owner a fine of thirty shekel regardless of the slave's value whether he is worth 1000 Zuz or a single Dinur.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/32"/> The bull itself is stoned to death. The weight of the shekel is four gold Zehuvim coins, which equal half an ounce according to the official weight of Cologne.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/32"/>
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If the bull kills a slave, its owner must pay the slave owner a fine of thirty shekel regardless of the slave's value.
  
 
====Responsibility for Animals====
 
====Responsibility for Animals====
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==Laws of Damage Caused by a Pit==
 
==Laws of Damage Caused by a Pit==
A person who uncovers a pit that was previously covered<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/33">Rashi Shemos 21/33</ref> or digs a pit in the public domain,<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/33"/> and an ox, donkey or any other domesticated animal or beast<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/33"/> falls in, this person is liable for the death of the animal but not for the vessels that were upon it.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/33"/> This is true even if he only deepened an existing open pit that was not previously deep enough to kill the animal.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/33"/> If he does cover the pit then he is no longer liable.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/33"/> If a human falls in the pit he also not held liable.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/33"/>
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A person is liable for the death of an animal that was caused through its falling into his pit. He must reimburse the owner of the animal for its full value and he gets to keep the carcass of the dead animal.
 
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The creator of the pit,<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/34"/> even though it is in the public domain and he does not own it,<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/34">Rashi Shemos 21/34</ref> is treated as its owner<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/34"/> and is liable for its damages. He must reimburse the owner of the animal for its full value minus the value of the carcass of the dead animal which is assessed and is kept by its original owner.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/34"/> If he wishes he can pay off this debt with anything that has monetary value, even bran.<ref name="Rashi Shemos 21/34"/>
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==Laws of Bull Goring Bull==
 
==Laws of Bull Goring Bull==
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Moshe comes down and warns  the Nation regarding  refraining from approaching the mountain and purification. He then review with them the laws previously given to them in Mara and the seven commandments of the sons of Noach, to which the Jews commit to keep. Moshe then writes the Torah, starting from Berashis until Motan Torah. On the 5th of Sivan he performs the convent with them. In between the splashing of the blood on the alter and the splashing on the Nation, he reads what he wrote and the Jews accept it saying “we will do and we will hear”. While on the mountain Nadav , Avihu and the Seventy Elders gaze at the Shichina while eating and drinking, out of over excitement for Hashem<ref>Likutay Halachos, Hilchos Trumos Umasros 3/2</ref> and are sentenced to death.  After the Torah is given Moshe is called to ascend the mountain for forty days.
 
Moshe comes down and warns  the Nation regarding  refraining from approaching the mountain and purification. He then review with them the laws previously given to them in Mara and the seven commandments of the sons of Noach, to which the Jews commit to keep. Moshe then writes the Torah, starting from Berashis until Motan Torah. On the 5th of Sivan he performs the convent with them. In between the splashing of the blood on the alter and the splashing on the Nation, he reads what he wrote and the Jews accept it saying “we will do and we will hear”. While on the mountain Nadav , Avihu and the Seventy Elders gaze at the Shichina while eating and drinking, out of over excitement for Hashem<ref>Likutay Halachos, Hilchos Trumos Umasros 3/2</ref> and are sentenced to death.  After the Torah is given Moshe is called to ascend the mountain for forty days.
 
===Eating and Drinking===
 
Nadav, Avihu and the Seventy Elders were on the level of eating solely for the purpose of raising the holy sparks from the food through meditation on Divine Names and Yichudim, using this to attain lofty holiness by rectifying the sparks.<ref>Mivaser Tzedek Parashat Mishpatim</ref>
 
  
 
===Will Do Then Hear===
 
===Will Do Then Hear===

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