Difference between revisions of "Shabbat Table Topics – Parashat Behar/0/en"
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+ | <li>In an almost completely agrarian based society, it would seem that Shemittah, which prohibits sowing or harvesting fields for an entire year, would be an extremely daunting commandment to keep. Cognizant of this fact, 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 it is singled out as the root cause of the ultimate exile?2 See Nature of the Pre-Shemittah Blessing of the Produce.</li> | ||
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Version as of 05:47, 16 May 2017
Shabbat Table Topics – Parashat Behar
Shemittah: Between Man and God or Man and Man?
What is the Purpose of Shemittah? While Ramban focuses on how the year helps an individual's spiritual growth and increases their recognition of Hashem, Shadal emphasizes how the year inculcates social equality and concern for the less fortunate. Rambam, in contrast, suggests that Shemittah serves a practical function in keeping the land healthy and capable of bearing fruit.
- Is it possible that certain commandments were instituted only for utilitarian purposes? What other mitzvot be understood in similar fashion? For one example, see Ralbag on Tzara'at.
- Does the Torah promote capitalism or socialism? What do the laws of Shemittah suggest?1
- How are Shemittah and Shabbat similar? What benefits are gained from an enforced resting and refraining from work?
The Most Difficult Mitzvah?
Is Shemittah really one of the most difficult commandments to observe?
- In an almost completely agrarian based society, it would seem that Shemittah, which prohibits sowing or harvesting fields for an entire year, would be an extremely daunting commandment to keep. Cognizant of this fact, 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 it is singled out as the root cause of the ultimate exile?2 See Nature of the Pre-Shemittah Blessing of the Produce.