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DEUTERONOMY — 25:12 genitals

DEUT1448 Sexual abuse is also the source of much embarrassment. The Torah makes this exceedingly clear (this and next verses). Fight the special justification the woman had for shaming her husband's assailant, the Torah demands drastic steps in retribution for the degradation she caused--although the Rabbis transformed this to a monetary payment that she had to pay. (Sifre on Deuteronomy 25:12; compare M. Bava Kamma 8:1 and B. Bava Kamma 83a, 86a-b, 28a, etc.). (Incidentally, note that, as the Torah recognized, feelings of shame and embarrassment are experienced by men who are sexually abused just as much as they are by women.) The Talmud, when determining the payment to be exact it for the shame involved whenever one person assaults another, uses this case as the paradigm for what embarrassment means. We are humiliated when we are sexually abused – even just touched in our private parts against our will--four we feel that our sense of self has been invaded, that our honor has been compromised in the most fundamental way possible.

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DEUTERONOMY — 25:12 rescue

DEUT1449 Rescue the pursued. If a Jew is chasing his fellow with intent to kill him, we are commanded to rescue the pursued from his assailant’s hand. If no other recourse exists, we must even kill the assailant. Key concept: The Creator wants His world to be settled and civilized. Social order requires that the weak be rescued from the hands of those who would harm them. Another reason for this commandment is that when someone is pursued and his life is threatened, his eyes turned to Hashem for salvation. Therefore, Hashem commands us to intervene and do everything at our disposal to rescue him.

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DEUTERONOMY — 25:13 alternate

DEUT1451 More specifically to our interest in business ethics, the Torah is aware that commerce can provide special temptations to cheat, and so we are warned: (Deuteronomy 25:13-15]. These verses from the Torah teach that it is not acceptable to cheat. If you are selling a pound of olives, you are obligated to deliver a full pound of olives. Obviously, this concept extends to other forms of business cheating and shortcuts. You are obligated to deliver "the full measure" of what the client buys. This is readily understood to include quality as well as quantity: a discussion in the Talmud shows that when people pay for a specific product--vinegar, medium-quality wine, or select wine--they are entitled to receive what they purchased (B. Bava Metzia 73a). The concept of "do not steal" is extended beyond the theft of physical objects to include intangibles. We are forbidden to engage in geneivat da'at--deception, literally "stealing the mind," creating a false impression, or misleading people. The Talmud explicitly states that such deception is forbidden, and it specifies that one may not deceive "idol worshipers," which is to say not only gentiles, who are also ethical monotheists, but anyone at all. (B. Hillin 94b) (By Barry J. Leff, "Jewish Business Ethics")

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DEUTERONOMY — 25:13 not with us

DEUT1453 God's role as covenant partner and as Israel's Lover probably has the greatest effect on creating moral character within us. We should abide by God's commandments, in part, because we were at Sinai, we promised to obey them there, and we should keep our promises. Thus, as the Haggadah of Passover reminds us, "In each and every generation a person is obliged to view himself as if he himself went out of Egypt" on the trek to Sinai, where God made the covenant with all generations to come: "It is not with you alone that I created this Covenant and this oath [of obedience], but with those who are standing with us this day before the Lord, our God, and with those who are not with us today.… Secret things belong to the Lord, our God, but that which has been revealed is for us and our children forever to carry out the words of this Torah." (This verse, Deuteronomy 29:28). Ultimately, though, God serves to shape moral character by entering into a loving relationship with us. That is, not only is the covenant a legal document, with provisions for those who abide by it and those who do not, but also the covenant announces formal recognition of a relationship that has existed for a long while and that is intended to last, much as a covenant of marriage does. Relationships, especially intense ones like marriage, create mutual obligations that are fulfilled by the partners sometimes grudgingly but often lovingly, with no thought of a quid pro quo return. For God, as for a human marital partner (God is depicted as Israel's marital partner a number of times in the Bible, whether fondly, as in Jeremiah 2:2, or angrily when Israel proves to be an unfaithful lover, as in Hosea 2), we should do what the norms of morality require, and then we should go beyond the letter of the law (lifnim m'shurat ha-din) to do favors for our beloved. In moral terms, we then become the kind of people who seek to do both the right and the good, not out of hope for award but simply because that is the kind of people we are and the kind of relationships we have.

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DEUTERONOMY — 25:13 weights

DEUT1454 Unlike other forms of theft, errors made with weights and measures have no minimal level, nor a “statute of limitations” restricting the time period within which redress can be sought. Claims which are of insignificant value are usually considered by the rabbis to be waived in the usual course of business; This is not so, however, in the case of weights and measures errors, since they involve a moral and religious infringement, which the parties to the transaction do not have the power to overlook, even if they so desire. Indeed, the above-mentioned portion of Deuteronomy instructs (25:13-15): “You shall not keep in your pocket [both] a large weight and a small one; neither shall you keep in your house [both] a small measure and a small one, [but rather,] one perfect and just weight shall you have; one perfect and just measure shall you have”-- the emphasis here being on the crime of even possessing such faulty measures, let alone using them.

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DEUTERONOMY — 25:14 alternate

DEUT1456 We must guard ourselves against our weaknesses. The Rabbis advise us to "make a fence around the Torah" (The Ethics of the Fathers 1:1). A fence protects a garden from being violated. This admonition is often applied to matters of Jewish ritual law. Thus, because the Torah forbids lighting a fire on the Sabbath, later Jewish law also forbids even holding a match on Shabbat, since doing so increases the chance that we will use it and violate the holy day of rest. Once we have identified our weaknesses, we should refrain not only from the forbidden activity itself, but also from any behavior that may cause us to engage in it. For example, a married man attracted to a woman other than his wife should not allow himself to be alone in a closed room with her. [According to traditional Jewish law, halacha, a man should not be alone in a closed room with a woman with whom he is forbidden to have relations (unless it is an immediate relative)]. Had this advice been followed some years ago by an American president who had a proclivity for inappropriate extramarital behavior, it would have saved him from behavior that humiliated him and his family, and almost cost him the presidency. Regarding the temptation to deceive, the Torah not only prohibits using false weights and measures, but outlaws having them in our possession. The assumption is that their presence will tempt us to use them (just as having a marked deck of cards can tempt a gambler). Therefore we must destroy them "so that they do not become a snare" (Sefer Charedim, number 97; this and previous verse]. What fences do you need to erect?

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