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DEUTERONOMY — 23:24 fulfill

DEUT1299 "O Lord, who shall sojourn in Thy tent?… He who… swears to his own hurt and changeth not" (Psalm 51:1,4). ... Obviously, a pledge implies that it will be honored even when it may involve considerable loss or discomfort, even when it can be violated with impunity. The Psalmist does not praise the man who merely fulfills a pledge. He praises one who does so when it is to his hurt, and when presumably he could have avoided fulfilling it. Such an act belongs in our category of the moral.

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DEUTERONOMY — 23:24 fulfill

DEUT1302 What one says represents the commitments one makes. What one does either validates or denies those spoken commitments. How one's deeds relate to one's speech indicate whether one is honest or counterfeit, a person of integrity or a hypocrite. As the seventeenth-century Italian rabbi, Leone da Modena, put it, "Words are the guide to acts; the mouth makes the first move." [Source not cited.] Already in Scripture, the requirement to correlate word and deed is stated: "That which has gone out of your lips you shall observe and you shall do" (this verse, see also Numbers 30:3.) According to the Talmud, "Pleasant are the words of one who practices well one speaks." Tosefta Yebamot 8:7, Genesis Rabbah 34:14.

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DEUTERONOMY — 23:24 fulfill

DEUT1300 As Maimonides explains, "By this injunction, we are commanded to fulfill every obligation that we have taken upon ourselves by word of mouth" (Book of the Commandments, Positive Commandment #94). Although this verse seems to be speaking of someone who has made a formal vow to do something, subsequent Jewish law regards it as obligatory to fulfill whatever you have said you were going to do. Therefore, keep your word, particularly if someone is relying on it, and evening when it is inconvenient to do so. Not infrequently, we offer to do someone a favor. At the time we commit ourselves, we really intend to do it. Later, however, we realize that the favor is more inconvenient or time-consuming than we originally thought, and we are tempted not to follow through. Nonetheless, we remain obligated to carry out our word (see Rabbi Jonah Gerondi, The Gates of Repentance 3:183). Rabbi Avrohom Ehrman notes that the responsibility to keep our word increases in proportion to the degree upon which it is relied. Thus he rules that if we tell someone, "I will take you to the airport" (a long drive), and a difficulty arises, "The speaker may back down from his word. However, if the passenger says, for example, 'I'm relying on you,' and the speaker responds, 'Yes, you can rely on me,' that is considered a promise, because the passenger [fully] expects the speaker to keep his word." (Ehrman, Journey to Virtue, 93). One advantage of this is that you will be more cautious before promising to do something. Some people casually offer to do favors in order to be well thought of, but don't follow through, and incur far greater animosity than they would have done if they had not made the offer in the first place. Rabbi Aaron Levine summarizes this aspect of the Jewish tradition on truthtelling: "One should never make a commitment unless one fully intends to carry it out." (Levine, Case Studies in Jewish Business Ethics, 27).

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DEUTERONOMY — 23:24 lips

DEUT1303 (Continued from [[LEV520]] Leviticus 19:16 talebearer BLOCH 76) Modern law recognizes the principle of confidentiality in relationships between clergymen and parishioners and attorneys and their clients. The law occasionally imposes secrecy and individuals who have access too sensitive information. Secrecy may also be self-imposed by contractual commitment. However, in most instances a breach of confidence constitutes an ethical rather than a legal violation. Judaism condemns breaches of confidence on several grounds. A person who agrees to a request for secrecy but never intends to honor his agreement brands himself a liar as soon as he proceeds to make a disclosure. According to the Bible: "Lying lips are an abomination of the Lord" (Proverbs 12:22). A person who was originally sincere in his acceptance of a pledge of secrecy but later changes his mind may not be a liar in the strict sense of the word, but he is guilty of unethical conduct. A breach of promise is a violation of the spirit of the biblical injunction: "That which is gone out of thy lips thou shalt observe and do" [this verse]. The Talmud holds that a breach of promise is as serious an offense as idolatry (Sanhedrin 92a).

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DEUTERONOMY — 23:25 eat

DEUT1311 The Torah shows compassion for animals in a manner similar to the compassion it shows for human beings. As a matter of fact, there are a number of mitzvot that seem to apply equally to animals and to man. For example, a worker who works in the field collecting food may not be deprived of food as he or she works and may eat (as long as he or she does not put away any to eat later). The Torah understood that a person cannot be asked to be around food all day and then deprive him or her from partaking of that food. (Continued at [[DEUT1429]] Deuteronomy 25:4 muzzle AMEMEI 9].

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