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NUMBERS — 14:37 plague

NUM150 Someone who slanders his fellow man commits a crime more severe than that of the spies. The Talmud says that we learn the severity of speaking loshon hora from the punishment of the spies who were sent to reconnoiter the land of Canaan. If those who spoke against wood and stones received harsh retribution, how much more severe a punishment is deserved by someone who slanders his fellow man! (Eruchin 15a)

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NUMBERS — 15:2 speak

NUM152 While family, community, authority figures, and even God are used by other societies to create moral character, albeit in different ways and degrees than Judaism uses those elements, study is one Jewish method for creating moral people that few other societies use. Moreover, this is an ancient Jewish method, stemming from the Torah itself. The Torah was not given to a group of elders who alone would know it; it was rather given to the entire People Israel assembled at Mount Sinai. In keeping with the public nature of revelation in Judaism, God tells Moses a number of times, "Speak to the people Israel and say to them (or command them)." (For example, [this verse], Numbers 15:17-18, 37-38; 19:1-2; 28:1-2; 34:1-2; 35:1-2, 9-10. Moreover, every Jew is responsible to know God's commands (Deuteronomy 5:1) and to teach them to their children (Deuteronomy 6:7, 11;19). (By Elliot N. Dorff and Jonathan K. Crane)

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NUMBERS — 15:15 one

NUM153 … all three biblical names for the term Jew [Hebrew, Israelite, Jew] describe, in some fashion, the characteristic of individuality. With all the sources pointing to the importance of individuality in Judaism, the Torah itself seems to take an opposite viewpoint. In outlining the importance of adhering to Jewish law, the Torah [this and following verses] states the concept of "one statute for all," "one law," and "one ordinance." The Jewish people are thus admonished to conform. The Torah's logic in taking this view is easy to understand. It cannot be left to the individual to decide on which day of the week to keep Shabbat, just as the individual rituals of the Shabbat or any Jewish holiday cannot be arbitrarily decided by each Jewish man or woman. Failure of Jews to conform to basic principles and actions would inhibit or obstruct any sense of Jewish community or unified religion.

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NUMBERS — 15:15 one

NUM155 The principle philosophical and legal differences between American democracy and Judaism are thus viewing one's fundamental identity as an independent individual against being an organic part of a group, the idea of voluntary association and disassociation with any group versus integral membership within an organic community with no possibility of leaving, and the resulted status of one's duty to care for others in the group. These differences make it difficult for American Jews to integrate the two parts of their identity. As I discuss in the chapters that follow, the tensions American Jews feel often manifest themselves in many issues in social ethics, with American ideology pulling in one direction and Judaism pulling in another. The opposition, though, should not be exaggerated. In a number of ways, American Jews’ Jewish and American identities converge and reinforce each other. These factors explain the high degree of comfort Jews feel in America. On a practical level, Jews have fared much better politically and economically under American democracy than they have under the stratified societies of the Middle Ages and under most of the dictatorships of past or present. Jews in America have been legally protected from infringement in the free exercise of their religion, and they have enjoyed unprecedented political, cultural, and economic opportunities. The open, pluralistic view of community inherent in American ideology, while markedly different from most other societies’ view of community and, indeed, from Judaism’s own view, has provided a welcoming and nurturing context for Jews. Assimilation and intermarriage are real contemporary concerns for American Jews, but they are further proof of America's sincerity in creating an open society free from religious discrimination. Theoretical affinities also link the Jewish and American visions of community. Although Judaism places strong emphasis on the solidarity of the community, it has gone a long way to protect individuals and minorities. Rabbinic Judaism respects the rights of non-Jews to live as such, as long as they obey the seven laws given, according to tradition, to the descendants of Noah. (Compare T. Avodah Zarah 8:4, B. Sanhedrin 56a, Seder Olam chap. 5, Genesis Rabbah 16:6, 34:8, Canticles Rabbah 1:16, and M.T. Laws of Kings 9:1 For a throughout description and discussion of this doctrine, see Novak (1983) The Image of the Non-Jew in Judaism: An Historical and Constructive Study of the Noahide Laws. New York: Edward Mellon Press). In many passages, the Bible boldly proclaims equality in law between Jew and alien; For instance, “There shall be one law for you and for the resident stranger; it shall be a law for all time throughout the ages. You and the stranger shall be alike before the Lord; the same ritual and the same rule shall apply to you and to the stranger who resides among you.” (Numbers 15:15-16) Although the attitude of Jews toward non-Jews varied according to the specific conditions of their interaction, and although there were exceptions to the general principle of equal treatment, the Rabbis applied the principle not only in the ritual context in which it appears most often in the Bible but to broad areas of civil legislation as well. (B. Gittin 5:8-9, 61a; B. Bava Metzi’a 70b; B. Bava Batra 113a). Furthermore, Judaism does not missionize, except by example. (B. Yevamot 47a-b; J. Kiddushin 4:1 (65b); M.T. Laws of Forbidden Intercourse 13:14-145; S. A. Yoreh De’ah 268:2. Compare Encyclopedia Judaica, s.v. “proselytes.” That Jews were to be an example to other nations, see, for example, Isaiah 2:2-4, 11:10, 42:1-4; 49:6; Genesis Rabbah 43:7; and Leviticus Rabbah 6:5.) It even reserves a place for righteous gentiles in the World to Come. T. Sanhedrin 13:2, B. Bava Batra 10b, and M.T. Laws of Repentance 3:5. According to Samuel, on the Day of Judgment there is no distinction between Jew and Gentile; J. Rosh Hashanah 1:3 (57a). In all these ways, Jewish law and theology protect the rights of individuals and minorities and parallel in many ways the protections offered by American law and ideology. Jewish law also protects the rights of individual Jews and of minorities within the Jewish community. As I will discuss in some detail in Chapter Six, treatment of the poor in Jewish law and in actual practice has historically been truly remarkable in its level of service and humanity, and that continues to our own day. (See, for example, Deuteronomy 24:10-22; Compare also Exodus 22:21-26; 23:6, Leviticus 25:25-55; and Deuteronomy 15:7-11.) Jews are enjoined from tormenting the handicapped by, for example, insulting the death or placing a stumbling block in front of the blind, and, with the exception of a few functions that specific handicaps make it impossible to perform, the handicapped are treated in Jewish law like everyone else. (Leviticus 19:14)

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NUMBERS — 15:20 challah

NUM159 Separate challah from dough. Man cannot survive without food, and for the majority of the world the staple food is bread. Accordingly, Hashem gives us a mitzvah to perform with bread dough, so that the bread is blessed and our souls gain merit. He gives us the opportunity to fulfill this mitzvah every time that we bake [in sufficient quantity], and through the mitzvah, our bread is nourishment for both the body and the soul. An additional reason for the mitzvah: so that the Kohanim, who are constantly occupied in serving Hashem performing the avodah in the Beis HaMikdash, shall live and have nourishment without effort, from our gifts of dough to them.

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