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Parshas Behar 5771: Making Space
By Rabbi Joshua (communally known as The Hoffer) Hoffman
Parshas Behar begins with the laws of Shmittah, the sabbatical year, when we
are commanded not to work our fields in Eretz Yisroel, and to declare their
produce ownerless, in recognition that it belongs to God. The Torah tells us
that God told these laws to Moshe at Mt. Sinai. Rashi cites the midrash which
asks, why are the laws of Shmittah, specifically, connected to Mt. Sinai? The
midrash answers that this connection was made in order to teach us that just as
the laws of Shmittah were in all their details were given at Sinai, so, too,
were all the laws of the Torah given, with all their details, at Sinai. We need
to understand, however, why Shmittah is used as the prototype for the rest of
the Torah, rather than any other mitzvah. Rav Shimon Schwabb, in his Mayan Beis
HaShoeivah, explains that the mitzvah of Shmittah testifies to God's authorship
of the Torah, because who else would be able to command an entire nation to
leave its land fallow for an entire year, and assure the people that they will
not go hungry by doing so? From this mitzvah, we can extrapolate to the rest
of the mitzvos of the Torah, that they were all given by God.
Rav Chaim Shmulevits, in his Sichos Mussar to parshas Behar, cites a midrash
which says that the verse in Tehillim (103:20) that calls on the mighty of
strength, the angels of God who fulfill His word and hear his word, as
referring to those people who fulfill the laws of Shmittah. It requires a great
deal of heroism and, indeed, a supernatural motivation, says the midrash,
to stand by for an entire year and watch one's field remain barren, and his
vineyard unproductive, and do nothing about it. Rav Shmulevits then cites the
gemara in Shabbos (88a) which brings the same verse in Tehillim, and says that
it refers to the response of the entire nation to God's giving of the Torah at
Mt. Sinai, saying, "we will do and we will hear." When God heard
that response, says the gemara, He asked, who revealed this secret to my
people, the secret that the heavenly angels employ. Here, too, says Rav
Shmulevits, to agree to do God's bidding without first hearing all that it
entails an approach to these commands that transcends the natural order of
human response, and merited for the people to be referred to as the mighty of
spirit and the angels of God. Thus, according to Rav Shmulevitz's
juxtaposition of these two midrashim, the willingness of the Jewish nation to
observe the Shmittah laws reflects their response at Mt. Sinai, and
demonstrates their supernatural reliance on God in accepting upon themselves to
observe all of the mitzvos of the Torah. This juxtaposition would then provide
us worth another explanation of why it is specifically Shmittah that was chosen
as a prototype for all of the mitzvos of the Torah.
Interestingly, there is a Chassidic interpretation of the gemara in
Shabbos which explains the practice of the angels as a reference to the
fact that the people answered in the plural, "we will do." The
secret of the angels is that when they praise God, they give each other the
opportunity to express His praise in his own way. This is referred to each day
in the kedusha, when we say, "and one (angel) will call to the other and
say, 'Holy, holy, holy'." The Decalogue begins with the verse, "I am
the Lord you God." The Chizkuni points out that the word for 'your
God' - Elokecha - is written in the singular, because it was addressed to each
person according to his level. When the nation said "we will do" in
the plural, they were, in effect, saying that they recognized that each of them
is at a different station in life and has his own relationship with God. Within
that recognition, and providing space for each other to relate to God in his
own way, they collectively accepted upon themselves the observance of all the
mitzvos that He was about to present them with. On another level, we may add
that by responding in the plural, the nation as a whole was accepting the
commandments of the Torah, beyond the acceptance of each person as an
individual. This national acceptance is reflected in the laws of Shmittah,
which entail making the produce of the fields that are left unattended
available to all including the poor, and, in addition, the canceling of
debts on the seventh year. The consideration thus demonstrated for the other
person reflects the consideration shown at Mt. Sinai, when the people responded
in the plural, implying that they committed themselves to observe the mitzvos
on a collective level as well as on an individual level.
The Seder Hachinuch (mitzvah 84) mentions several principles lying behind
the mitzvah of Shmittah. First, it acknowledges that God created the universe
in six days and rested on the seventh, and therefore, the land belongs to Him,
and He can decree what to do with it. That which observance of Shabbos
testifies to in terms of the days of the week, observance of Shmittah testifies
to in terms of the years of the Shmittah cycle. Secondly, observance of Shmittah
inculcates within its observers a spirit of generosity, and also of reliance
and trust in God. As we have seen, the laws of Shmittah, on the one hand,
require a supernatural commitment to God's laws, as well as a commitment to
help one's fellow Jew. Seeing Shmittah as an acknowledgment of God's creation
of the world, we can understand why there is such an emphasis on mutual aid
during that year, since, as we are told in Tehillim (89:3), the world is built
on chesed, or kindness.
Rabbi Meir Juzint, zt'l, who served for many years as assistant dean of
students at the Hebrew Theological College in Chicago, said, homiletically,
that the reason for mentioning Mt. Sinai in connection with the Shmittah laws
is to advise us that the extra time that we have during the Shmittah year
should be spent at Mt. Sinai, by being engaged in Torah learning. We may add
to his observation that the gemara in Sotah (14 a) notes that the Torah begins
with chesed, with God making clothing for Adam and Eve, and ends with
chesed, with God Himself burying Moshe. Thus, by studying Torah in an intense
way while observing the laws of Shmittah, we combine an acknowledge God’s
creation of the universe along with committing ourselves to infuse that world,
as God did in creating it, with the practice of chesed, recommitting ourselves
to helping out our fellow Jews.
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