Purpose of Shemittah/2

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Purpose of Shemittah

Exegetical Approaches

This topic is currently in progress

Recognition of God

The Shemittah year reminds the nation of God's sovereignty and providence, and makes them aware of their dependence upon Him.

"שַׁבָּת לַי"י" – This position draws on the verses in Vayikra which describe the year as a Shabbat for Hashem specifically.1
Comparison to Shabbat – Many of these commentators2 point to the abundant parallels between the description of the Shemittah year and Shabbat, concluding that both serve as a reminder that Hashem created the world and that He is sovereign over it3 and all mankind:
  • Name - Both Shabbat Bereshit and the Shemittah year are referred to as a  "Shabbat".4
  • Cycles of seven – Each of Shabbat and Semittah revolve around cycles of seven, in which 6 units of time are devoted to work and the seventh to abstaining therefrom.
  • Rest for all – By both commandments the verses emphasize the resting of the "slave and maidservant".
  • More food on the sixth – Just as the Israelites received a double portion of manna on the sixth day of the week in anticipation of Shabbat, so too Hashem promises that in the sixth year the land will produce enough to sustain the nation through the Shemittah year.5
  • Juxtaposition – In Shemot 23, the two commandments follow one another, reinforcing the connection between the two.
Break from work – All these sources suggest that with the act of refraining from tilling the land comes a recognition of Hashem.  They differ, though, in the details:
  • Time for Talmud Torah – Ibn Ezra and R. Yosef Bekhor Shor6 emphasize that the break from work serves a  practical function, giving people the time to delve into God's Torah and devote themselves to Him.
  • Dependence on Hashem – According to Akeidat Yitzchak, the lack of work teaches that it is not by man's strength alone that he succeeds, but rather due to God.  To abstain from sowing takes extraordinary trust in God, and instills in one a deep dependence upon Him.7
  • Land belongs to God –  R. Hirsch points out that in refraining from work, people in effect relinquish their ownership on the land, helping them to recognize that all along they are mere renters from their "landlord", Hashem.8 Abarbanel similarly suggests that in imitating Hashem's resting, we proclaim Him as Creator and owner of all.
  • Slaves to God not the land – Akeidat Yitzchak asserts that the sabbatical year is meant to prevent materialism and becoming enslaved to the land and work.  One should not spend one's life trying to enrich one's self but rather trying to perfect one's self according to the will of God.
Forsaking of produce – This position focuses less on this aspect of Shemittah, but could see in it many of the lessons mentioned above.  In leaving the produce for others to partake from, one remembers that it is God rather than man who owns everything.  By sharing with all, one is forced to suffice with a little and not fall prey to materialistic desires. Finally, in leaving one's food and being coupled with the poor, one recognizes that all are equally dependent on God for sustenance.
Context
Punishment of exile
Parallel Commandments

Social Justice

For the Land

Shemittah focuses on man's relationship to the land, rather than to God or the others around him.  It either serves a practical function in keeping the land healthy and able to bear fruit or highhlights the holiness of the land.