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 |  | The weekly Sfas Emes is now available in a  Sefer. The Seferis called Emes Ve'emunah : A Sfas Emes Companion. This  Sefer contains all of the materials in the weekly emails, plus new  insights. The Sefer also contains the text in lashon hakodesh on which  the Sfas Emes worked to produce his ma'amar. Accessing the  the Sfas  Emes via the Sefer offers advantages. You have the week's Torah without  having to print the email. You have the Sfas Emes' text--which could not  be sent by email. Also many people who would enjoy the Sfas Emes do not  have internet.  You can purchase  this Sefer at your favorite bokstore, or online, at  the Targum or Feldheim websites. Emes Ve'Emunah will also be available  for purchase or perusal at the SOY Seform Sale, January 15-January 24. 
 |  |  |               |  |               |  |                Parshas Mishpatim      
          Part I  
 | Sfas Emes, Zechuso Tagein Aleinu, Mishpatim, 5631 (I) 
 The Sfas Emes starts with a very brief allusion to the Parsha's  first Rashi. Echoing Chazal in Medrash Rabba, Rashi tells us that when  the Torah begins a paragraph with the word "Ve'eileh" ("And these ...  "), the Torah is saying, in effect, "Continuing with what I was saying  earlier ..."
 
 This perspective on the text raises some questions. First, how can  we view Parshas Mishpatim , with its presentation of apparently mundane  statutes -- as the continuation of the previous Parsha, Yisro -- with  its narrative of our encounter with HaShem at Sinai? Another question:  why do Rashi and Chazal consider a tight link between these two parshios  so important that they immediately draw our attention to it?
 
 The Sfas Emes also repeats a question of his grandfather, the  Chiddushei HaRim.. Rashi (on Shemos 21:1) says that HaShem told Moshe to  include in his teaching Torah to Bnei Yisroel an explanation of the  reasons for the mitzvos. On this statement, the Chiddushei HaRim asked:  Why did HaShem tell Moshe to include an explanation of the reasons for  the mitzvos particularly in the context of the mishpatim, the statutes?
 
 As you just saw, the word "mishpatim" is usually translated as  "statutes." This word denotes laws that apply to people's social or  economic activities -- in apparent contrast with "religious" activities  (i.e., behavior connected to our relationship with HaShem). Further,  mishpatim are laws that are eminently rational. That is, these are laws  which, if not set forth in the Torah, would in any event, have been  devised by rational human beings.
 
 As you see, mishpatim are in sharp contrast to "chukim" (decrees).  The prototype of a chok is the law of pahra aduma (the ritual of  purification using the ashes of the red heifer). Chukim are laws which  -- a person might think -- differ from mishpatim in two ways. First, in  apparent contrast to mishpatim, chukim seem to apply only to "religious"  activity. - - not to laws that govern our social and economic  activities. (I say "in apparent contrast" because in reality, observing  the Torah's laws that adjudicate our social and economic behavior is  also a religious act.) Further, chukim are laws whose meaning and  content are difficult -- perhaps impossible -- to understand. Chukim are  so distant from human rationality that we would never have devised them  on our own.
 
 Let us see how the Sfas Emes addresses these questions.
 
 First, why "Ve'eileh"? That is, why does the Torah emphasize the  continuity of this parsha with the previous one? The Sfas Emes explains  that recognizing the continuity of Mishpatim with Yisro is crucial. Why?  To emphasize the fact that, just as the Aseres Hadibros (the Ten  Commandments) come to us by Divine revelation at Sinai, so, too, all the  statutes come to us by divine revelation at Sinai. Accordingly, the  validity and the binding nature of the mishpatim are not based on our  rationality, but rather on our bris (covenant) with HaShem at Sinai.
 
 The Sfas Emes continues his analysis. The fact that (some) of the  Torah's statutes statutes appear to (some of) us as rational is also  only because HaShem wants it that way. That is, we can generally  perceive seichel (rationality) in the Torah's statutes. But we should be  aware that the intelligence that enables us to see that rationality is  not an inherent feature of human nature. Similarly, the rationality  present in the Torah's statutes is not an intrinsic quality of those  laws. Both our seichel and the seichel present in the mishpatim are  there only because that is retzon HaShem, HaShem's will.
 
 An analogy may help clarify these ideas. The analogy focuses on the  laws of nature that HaShem incorporated into the world when He created  it. HaShem could have created a world that functioned purely on random  happenings. Instead, He fashioned a cosmos that operates with empirical  regularities (the "laws of nature"). Life in a world of random  happenings would be very disconcerting and unpleasant. So we can thank  HaShem for having made the world the way He did. HaShem accorded us an  additional kindness when He formulated the empirical regularities in a  manner that can often be expressed in the language of mathematics.  Finally, note that HaShem endowed human beings with the seichel needed  to discern the "laws of nature."
 
 We see the parallel with the mishpatim. HaShem created us with  intelligence needed to perceive the logic behind many of the statutes.  The Sfas Emes is telling us not take for granted the form with which the  mishpatim are fashioned. It is only because HaShem wanted to do it that  way that the statutes come to us in the sensible and intelligible form  that HaShem gave them.
 
 The Sfas Emes moves on now to another line of thought. We know about  our people's willingness to accept HaShem's commandments sight  unseen:the famous "Na'ah'seh Ve'nishma" (Shemos, 24:7). In our  willingness to do retzon HaShem even before we know what He will ordain,  Chazal (Shabbos 88a) liken us to HaShem's mal'achim (angels,  emissaries). For just as we put asiya (action) before shemiya (receiving  information), so too the malachim are described (Tehillim, 103:21) as  "Giborei ko'ach, osei devaro, lishmo'a bekol devaro ... " (That is,  Heroes, who do His word" . Only later in the posuk are we told:  "receiving information about what He wants us to do.")
 
 The fact that Chazal liken us to the mal'achim, who are " osei  devaro" leads the Sfas Emes to a mind-streching non-pshat. The literal  meaning of the phrase "osei devaro" is: "they who do His word." However,  the Sfas Emes reads "osei devaro" as: "By means of our actions, we form  the words of HaShem." That is, if we strive in our Avoda -- our asiya  -- to express the words of our davening and Learning -- with our inner  will and strength, we can make the letters of the Torah take on new  life. In turn, the words that we have renewed give chiyus to the people  who struggle with them.
 
 Continuing with this thought, the Sfas Emes quotes a posuk in  Tehillim (147:19): "Maggid devaro leYa'akov, chukav u'mishpatav  leYisrael" (ArtScroll: "He relates His word to Jacob, His statutes ...  to Israel"). The Sfas Emes construes "Maggid devaro leYa'akov" as:  HaShem gives Klal Yisroel the power to draw on the internal vitality of  His words. Depending on a person's ratzon -- his volition -- he/she can  have access to the internal vibrancy of HaShem's words. A person can  constantly hear new meaning in the very same words. The new meanings, in  turn, can enable a person attain that rare, desired state: constant  self-renewal and growth.
 
 I am not clear whether to take this promise as wildly encouraging or  wildly discouraging. It certainly puts heavy responsibility on our  ratzon (volition).
 
 Part II
 
 Sfas Emes, Zechuso Tagein Aleinu, Mishpatim 5631 (II)
 
 The Sfas Emes is working here with the following text (Shemos  (23:20- 21): "Hi'nei ano'chi sholei'ach mal'ach le'faneh'cha lish'morcha  ... hi'sha'mer mi'pahnav, al tah'mehr bo ... " (ArtScroll: "Behold! I  send an angel before you to protect you ... do not rebel against him ...  ")
 
 This ma'amar is basically the Sfas Emes's analysis of that pasuk.  His analysis focuses on the links and allusions that, to his fertile  mind, connect two words. One word is mal'ach" (ArtScroll: "angel"; more  generally, a messenger), i.e., an agent who is acting totally on behalf  of the one who charges him/her with his/her task. The other word is:  "mela'cha", -- mission or task. The context in which the word me'la'cha  often appears is the laws of Shabbos. On Shabbos,we may not do mela'chos  -- activities in which a person may engage during "yemei ha'ma'aseh" --  the weekdays.
 
 The Sfas Emes hastens to tell us that on those days, when we are  engaged in mela'chos, also contain kedusha (sanctity). The kedusha is  hidden in the very activities that we do during those six days of  "asiya"(activity). Thus, we should be aware that our doing melacha also  enables us to be in contact with HaShem. For, just as the mala'chim are  sent to this world to perform missions for HaShem, so too HaShem sent  those activities to the world to enable us to fulfill His will. We know  that HaShem's Presence permeates the world. The Sfas Emes explains that  to match His Omnipresence, HaShem has given us mitzvos in all areas of  human activity. Thus, when we are engaged in our weekday activities, we  can still connect with HaShem's Presence.
 
 Because the material components of this world are a garment in which  HaShem has cloaked His will, the posuk cited above advises us to be  especially careful in our weekday activities. During the week, we can  relate to HaShem only via the mela'chos that we do with our asiya. By  contrast, the Sfas Emes points out, on Shabbos, we can interact with  HaShem directly. On Shabbos, HaShem's Presence is not cloaked with the  activities of ma'aseh. Accordingly, the Torah proceeds from our  interaction with the mal'ach (posuk 20, as quoted above) to our Avoda,  pasuk 25: 'Ve'avadetem es HaShem" ("And you shall serve Ha Shem").
 
 The Sfas Emes applies this framework to explain a key feature of our  davening on Shabbos. During the week, a major portion of our prayer  consists of petitions for Divine help. The Sfas Emes notes that our  tefilos on Shabbos do not include such requests. Why so? The Sfas Emes  explains that our more intimate relationship with HaShem on Shabbos  obviates the need to petition Him then.
 
 A final question. Why does our prayer on the weekdays spend so much  time asking HaShemto fulfill our requests? Clearly, the reason is not to  inform HaShem of our needs. He knows our needs better than we do.  Rather the purpose of our petitioning HaShem is to remind ourselves of  our utter dependence on Him. On Shabbos we can be mindful of our  relationship with HaShem even without our petitions.
 
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