Shabbat Table Topics – Parashat Behar/0/en
Shabbat Table Topics – Parashat Behar
Shemittah: Religious, Social, or Agrarian Focus?
What is the purpose of the Shemittah year? While Ramban focuses on how Shemittah facilitates spiritual growth and recognition of Hashem, Shadal emphasizes how it inculcates social equality and concern for the less fortunate. Rambam offers a third option, suggesting that Shemittah serves a practical function in maintaining the fertility of the land.
- Is it possible that certain commandments were ordained purely for utilitarian purposes? What other mitzvot might be understood in a similar fashion? For one example, see Ralbag on Tzara'at.
- Does the Torah promote a world outlook closer to capitalism or socialism? What do the laws of Shemittah suggest?1
- How are Shemittah and Shabbat similar? What benefits are engendered by an enforced resting and refraining from work? For more, see Purpose of Shemittah.
A Test of Faith?
In an agrarian society, Shemittah is an extremely daunting commandment to keep, requiring tremendous trust in Hashem. In fact, in the curses of Vayikra 26, non-observance of Shemittah is singled out as the the root cause of the nation's ultimate exile.2
Cognizant of the difficulties that the mitzvah entails, Hashem reassures the nation that the crops of the sixth year will sustain them for three years. However, if the people received a three-fold blessing of grain even before the seventh year began, why did the mitzvah prove so hard to fulfill that exile ensued as punishment? How was it a test of faith at all? See Nature of the Pre-Shemittah Blessing of the Produce.
Does Tishrei Mark the New Year?
To facilitate the observance of Shemittah, Hashem promises a three year blessing of the produce. However, if farming is prohibited for only one year, should not a two year blessing have sufficed?
- Some Karaites answer that the year (and hence, the laws of Shemittah) do not start in Tishrei, but rather in Nisan, at the time of the harvest. As such, any crops planted in the sixth year cannot be harvested in the seventh year. Since nothing is sown in the rest of the year as well, there are two consecutive harvest-free years, requiring a three year blessing.
- Does the rest of Torah support or negate the Karaite claim that Nisan, rather than Tishrei, marks the start of the year? Perhaps surprisingly, no where does Torah actually designate the first of Tishrei as Rosh HaShanah! If so, where does that designation come from? What evidence can be brought to counter the Karaite claims and support the position that Shemittah starts in the fall?
- Finally, how else might one explain why a three year blessing was necessary? See Duration of the Pre-Shemittah Blessing of the Produce.