Parashat Shoftim
Interpretive
Independence
The Torah expects
us to be our own autonomous interpreters of divine will, turning to Jewish
legal experts only when we reach our limits of understanding.
By Rabbi Shimon Felix
The following article is reprinted with permission from The Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
This week's parasha contains a lot of material concerning
the government of the original State of Israel; how the king must behave, how
to set up a court system, how to run an army, how to set up a legislative
system, and more. One of the verses that has always interested me goes like
this:
"If there should arise a matter too hard for you in
judgment, between blood and blood, between plea and plea, between disease and
disease, in matters of quarrels within your gates, you are to arise and go up
to the place that the Lord your God chooses, you are to come to the Priests,
the Levites, and to the judge that there will be in those days, and you shall
inquire and they will tell you the word of judgment."
There is a question as to who is being addressed in this
verse. One school of thought, expressed by the Ibn Ezra (12th century Spain)
and the Chizkuni (Chizkiya ben Manoach, 13th century), believes that the verse
is addressed to local Rabbis and judges, and is telling them that if they fail
to come to a decision about a case that has come before them, they should take
it to the "Supreme Court"--the Sanhedrin in Jerusalem, which
will make the final decision.
Another possible reading is that the verse is addressed to
the individual Jew, the layperson, rather than to the Rabbis and judges of the
lower courts. It is this pshat (reading) that I would like to talk
about.
According to this pshat, we are all instructed to turn to
the Sanhedrin, the highest legal authority in the nation, ONLY "if there
should arise a matter too hard for you in judgment." In other words, the
first response that the layperson is meant to have to a Halakhic (Jewish
legal) question is to see if he or she can answer it by him or herself. Only
when failing to do so is the layperson commanded to take the question to
Jerusalem and there seek, and accept, the authority of the high court.
I have always felt that this approach is tremendously
empowering, and tremendously demanding. The halakhic system, rather than simply
subjecting us all to the will of the legal scholars of the Sanhedrin whenever
there is a halakhic question to be resolved, demands of each one of us to
become a scholar in his own right. The high court is only there if needed; if
we fail to work out, on our own, the Torah's will in a given situation or
conflict. Only then are we commanded to make the trip to Jerusalem and subject
ourselves to the will of the experts.
With this verse, the Torah puts before each and every one of
us a challenge--the challenge to be our own authority, our own expert, our own
leader. The Sanhedrin's intervention in the Halakhic process is only called for
when we as individuals reach our limits, and need their help. Until then, we
are called upon to act as independent, autonomous individuals, struggling on
our own to wrest God's will from His holy texts.
Rabbi Shimon
Felix is the Israel Director of the Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel.
He lives with his family in Jerusalem, and has taught in a wide variety of educational
frameworks in Israel and abroad.