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NUMBERS — 35:34 defile

NUM431 Judaism's discomfort with its own capital punishment laws is well-known. In the modern State of Israel, the death penalty may be invoked for only two crimes: genocide and treason during times of war. Moreover, the Torah itself, and the Rabbis to a great extent, adopted procedural rules designed to make the death penalty a rarity. Two witnesses to the crime are required (Numbers 35:30-34; Deuteronomy 17:5; 19:15). They may not be related to each other or to the defendant. M. Sanhedrin 3:4. No circumstantial evidence is permitted. M. Sanhedrin 4:5. A person may not be executed unless he has been warned by two witnesses before committing the offense. Deuteronomy 19:15. A person may not be executed as a result of the testimony of an informant (Haim H. Cohn, "Informer" in The Principles of Jewish Law, Menachem Elon, ed. (Jerusalem; Encyclopedia Judaica, 1975), pp. 507-8) or a confession. (Ein adam masim atzmo rasha ("A person may not make himself a criminal"), says the Talmud at B. Yevamot 25b, B. Ketubbot 18b, and B. Sanhedrin 9b and 25a. Confessions in civil matters, however, were legally determinative: hoda'ah k'me'ah edim dami ("Confession is like a hundred witnesses"); See B. Gittin 40b and 64a, B. Kiddushin 65b, and B. Bava Metzia 3b). A person may not be executed unless deliberations are conducted in a manner designed to find the redeeming value in a human being, including the requirement that the accused be set free if the vote to convict is unanimous, because the accused is entitled to at least one advocate among the panel of judges. B. Sanhedrin 17a. As the Mishnah records, a court that executes a person once in seven years is said he "a bloody court"; Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah would make that once in seventy years; and Rabbis Tarfon and Akiba say they would never impose the death penalty. M. Makkot 1:10. Viewed in this context, Judaism's designation of certain crimes as capital offenses represents not law in practice but rather an ethical ranking of violations. Some offenses pose a greater danger to individuals and societies than do others. The Jewish people reserve the right to protect themselves, but that protection must be both just and compassionate. The debate in Jewish sources and in modern times about capital punishment indicates that its use maybe too high a price to pay for protecting us, even from serious harm, because it asks us as a society to engage in behavior that we otherwise condemn. Society wants to hold individuals responsible for their actions, but it too must be held responsible for its judgments. Discriminatory enforcement and errors in imposing the death penalty are too costly to measure or tolerate. (By Laurie L. Levenson, "Judaism and CriminalJustice"

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DEUTERONOMY — 1:4 after

DEUT2 Rebuke is most effective when it can be received as being sincere. The Torah emphasizes that Moshe rebuked the Jewish people after he had smitten Sichon and Og. Moses reasoned, "If I rebuke them before they enter at least part of the land, they will say, 'What does this man have against us? What good did he do for us? He has only come to vex us to find a pretext since he doesn't have the power to bring us into land." Therefore, Moshe waited until he had conquered Sichon and Og, and then rebuked the people. (Sifre, cited by Rashi). Had the people felt that Moshe's rebuke was insincere and that he had ulterior motives, his words would have been ineffective. A person will only accept review if he feels that the rebuker has his best interest in mind. We also see from here that timing is a major factor in rebuke. In many instances by waiting for an opportune time to deliver admonition a person will be more successful than he would have been had he admonished earlier.

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DEUTERONOMY — 1:11 bless

DEUT3 In his last address to Israel, Moses refers to the fulfillment of the blessing which has multiplied Israel like the stars of the heaven, to which the lawgiver adds his own benediction: "May the Lord, the God of your fathers, increase your numbers a thousandfold, and bless you as He promised you" [this verse]. The reward of obedience to the commandments of God would be prevention of miscarriage (Exodus 23:26). God will multiply Israel, so that there will be no barren one among them, neither male nor female (Deuteronomy 7:13-14; 28:4; Cf. Lev. 26:9) The reverse will happen if God's commandments will be disregarded: "You shall be left few in number, after having been as numerous as the stars in heaven." (Deut. 28:62; Cf. Lev 26:22). The great blessing, then, for the human species is fertility--not because more hands were needed to operate farms or to engage in defense. That the blessing of fertility included all animate beings (particularly those whose usefulness to man is less obvious) precludes its having a utilitarian purpose. The first chapter of Genesis does not conceive of the blessing of fertility as associated with labor, aggression, or defense. In this Chapter, God has designated grass and fruit-trees to serve as food for both men and animals. The hard labor to which man was subjected and the need for many hands to assist him in his back-breaking work was not contemplated in the original plan of creation. Genesis pictures a pacific world in which there is no conflict between man and man or between man and other creatures. Neither does it envision Internecine warfare within the animal kingdom (Cf. Nachmanides, Gen. 1:29; Bahya, ibid.; Cf. also Nachmanides to Lev. 26:4.) The blessing of fertility would appear to have emanated from the great delight experienced by God in creating the world and its inhabitants. "May the glory of Lord endure forever; let the Lord rejoice in His works." (Ps. 104:31).

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DEUTERONOMY — 1:13 leaders

DEUT5 [A position of] authority is nothing less than a great burden mounted on the shoulders of the one who is carrying it. As long as one is [merely] an individual living among his people and mingling with [other] individuals, he is only responsible for himself [his own deeds]. Yet once he is raised to [a position of] authority and power, he becomes responsible for everyone who is under his rule and dominion, because it is his duty to oversee all of them – to guide them toward knowledge and understanding and to steer their deeds [along the] right [path]. But if [that ideal is] not [achieved], the Sages apply the words ואשמם בראשיכם -- "And their guilt is on your heads" (Devarim Rabbah 1:10). [This phrase derives from [this verse], ואשימם בראשיכם - "And [I] appointed them [as] your leaders over you." As for honor, it is no more than the greatest of vanities, leading a person away from himself and from his Master and causing him to totally disregard his duty. One who is cognizant of this will surely spurn and despise it. And the praises that people give him will weigh heavily upon him, for when he sees how they amplify their praises for what in reality he does not possess, he will feel only shame and will sigh over the fact that he not only has to contend with his own misfortune (his lack of these virtues) but also with the false praise that people heap upon him, which further adds to his shame.

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DEUTERONOMY — 1:13 pick

DEUT6 In Exodus 18 and Deuteronomy 1:12-17, Moses establishes judges on his own authority; in Deuteronomy 16:18-20 he asserts the duty to establish courts in each jurisdiction for the generations to come; and in Deuteronomy 17:8-13 the judges are given ultimate authority to determine matters of law, not just matters of fact. (By Laurie L. Levenson, "Judaism and CriminalJustice"

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DEUTERONOMY — 1:16 fairly

DEUT9 At beginning of Deuteronomy, Moses reviews the history of the Israelites' experience in the wilderness, beginning with the appointment of leaders throughout the people, heads of thousands, hundreds, fifties, and tens. He continues: [this and following verse]. Thus at the outset of the book in which he summarized the entire history of Israel and its destiny as a holy people, he already gave priority to the administration of justice, something he would memorably summarize in a later chapter (Deuteronomy 16:20) with the words, "Justice, justice, shall you pursue." The words for justice, tzedek and mishpat, are recurring themes of the book. The root TZ-D-K appears eighteen times in Deuteronomy; the root SH-F-T forty-eight times. Justice has seemed, throughout the generations, to lie at the beating heart of the Jewish faith. ... Three features mark Judaism as a distinctive faith. First is the radical idea that when God reveals Himself to humans He does so in the form of law. In the ancient world, God was power. In Judaism, God is order, and order presupposes law. In the natural world of cause-and-effect, order takes the form of scientific law. But in the human world, where we have free will, order takes the form of moral law.… Second, we are charged with being interpreters of the law. That is our responsibility as heirs and guardians of the Torah Shebe'al Peh, the Oral Tradition.… Third, fundamental to Judaism is education, and fundamental to education is instruction in Torah, that is, the law. ... To be a Jewish child is to be, in the British phrase, "learned in the law." We are a nation of constitutional lawyers. Why? Because Judaism is not just about spirituality. It is not simply a code for the salvation of the soul. It is a set of instructions for the creation of what the late Rabbi Aharon Liechtenstein called "societal beatitude." It is about bringing God into the shared spaces of our collective life. That needs law: law that represents justice, honouring all humans alike regardless of colour or class; law that judges impartially between rich and poor, powerful and powerless, even in extremis between humanity and God; law that links God, its giver, to us, its interpreters; law that alone allows freedom to coexist with order, so that my freedom is not bought at the cost of yours. Small wonder, then, that there are so many Jewish lawyers.

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DEUTERONOMY — 1:16 hear

DEUT10 R. Chanina said: This is an exhortation to the beth-din not to hear the claim of one litigant before the arrival of the other, and an exhortation to one litigant not to present his claim to the judge before the arrival of the other. Whence is this derived? From its [shma] "shamea" [being, likewise, pronounceable as "shamea" ["to make heard," as well as "shamoa" ("to hear")] between your brothers (Sanhedrin 7b)

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