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DEUTERONOMY — 13:9 pity

DEUT628 But there are mercies which are worse than cruelty – such as being merciful to the wicked and strengthening them. There is a great stumbling block in elevating the wicked and supporting them, and putting down the good and rejecting them. About this the Torah writes [this verse]: "And do not pity him, and do not spare him, and do not cover up for him." One must also not pity the poor man in judgment, as it is written (Shemos 23:3): "Nor favor a poor man in his quarrel," that one not pervert judgment because of the poor man's hardship. And there is mercy which is like cruelty, such as giving charity to a poor man and afterwards pressuring him by saying: "I gave you so and so much. You ought to help me out and do whatever I ask of you." About this it is written (Mishlei 12:10): "And the mercies of the wicked are cruel."

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DEUTERONOMY — 13:11 stone

DEUT634 We do have instances in the Book of Deuteronomy where punishments were given for a certain group of transgressions and the explanation offered seems to suggest not so much retributive or expiatory considerations as primarily utilitarian or deterrent ones. Thus, we find [this and following verses, Deuteronomy 17:13, 21:21]. Nachmanides makes it clear that these locutions indicate that the harshness of the penalty in these cases is not generated by the mere grievousness of the sin, but by the need to have the punishment act as a deterrent against future occurrences (Nachmanides on Deuteronomy 21:21). This introduces into the Torah's concept of justice an element of consequentialism. That is to say, one justifies punishment not only by the fact that the agent deserves it, but by the beneficial consequences the punishment will have on others. This would seem to imply that the welfare of society as a whole is to be viewed as a positive moral value for which the interests of the individual may sometimes be sacrificed.

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DEUTERONOMY — 13:12 afraid

DEUT635 One of the important implications of perceiving the Torah as a moral-cultic code "fixed in a national framework" is the fact that the Torah addresses primarily the group, the people as a whole. … As a code imposed upon an entire society, the moral and cultic rules take on a legal character, and in order that compliance be achieved, an enforcement policy supported by sanctions is included. Hence, if the Torah embodies the law of the covenanted society, then the judicial system which it establishes can be expected to authorize penalties for the obvious purpose of deterrence: "In order that they may hear and be afraid and not sin" [this verse]. The rewards and punishments contained in the Torah are therefore pedagogical means of inducing compliance, a method familiar to every society, and should not be confused with the ultimate value of the rules themselves. This view of the Torah as addressed primarily to the nation as a whole may provide the key to the problem of why material rewards are stressed to the near-exclusion of spiritual rewards, such as immortality of the soul and the sheer ecstasy of fellowship with God. Spiritual rewards of this nature are directed primarily to the individual. They attach themselves essentially to the self and to the ego. It makes little sense to speak of a nation collectively enjoying the hereafter or of an entire community, as such, meriting immortality in some spiritual sense.

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DEUTERONOMY — 13:12 continue

DEUT638 The administration of justice thus conceived is to serve two readily comprehended purposes. (a) It is to serve as a deterrent, "so that all may hear and fear and not continue to do such an evil thing" [this verse], and thus assure to the law-abiding members of the society, the enjoyment of their rights. (b) It sees to it "that the sinner shall not profit by his sin." It justifies the imposition of an injury upon the transgressor which as accurately as possible equals the injury he may have caused it to others. Hence, justice is conceived as being relevant only to the affairs of man, and from the long range point of view it is considered to be the indispensable servant of man's mundane self-interest.

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DEUTERONOMY — 13:14 scoundrels

DEUT641 Among those injunctions associated with tightfistedness and refraining from an action: "You must not close your hand to your destitute brother… Beware, lest there be a lawless thought in your heart to say, 'The seventh year is approaching, the year of remission [of loans]', and you regard your destitute brother malevolently and do not give him" (Devarim 15:7-9). We learn from here that one who refrains from lending the poor has violated two negative commandments, which are "beware" [and] "lest." If when the seventh year approaches, we are admonished not to cease from lending for fear of the matter of remission [of loans] [The seventh year of the Shemittah cycle cancels all loans.] -- how much greater is the sin of one who tightfistedly refuses to lend when he will not lose what is owed him! [I.e. when the remission of Shemittah does not apply.] Due to the gravity of the sin, the Torah declares the mean thought of not giving out loans -- "a lawless thought." Furthermore, our Sages, z"l, said (Ketubos 68a), "Whoever turns a blind eye to charity is as if he has committed idolatry --the pasuk states here, 'Lest there be a lawless thought in your heart,' and the pasuk states there [this verse], 'Lawless men from among you went out.'" [I.e., Regarding a city that practices idolatry, the Torah describes the inhabitants similarly as lawless.] Our Sages, z"l, (Midrash Tehillim 53) also referred to one who has meanness of spirit as lawless. Similarly, the pasuk states (I Shmuel 25:25), "… Against this lawless person, against Naval"--because he had meanness of spirit, for he said to the servants of David [HaMelech] (ibid. 11), "Should I take my bread and my water and my meat… [… And give them to men who I know not from where they come?"] Our Sages, z"l, said (Shabbos 63a), "One who gives a loan to the poor is superior to one who gives charity."

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