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EXODUS — 23:11 rest

EXOD882 Let the land rest during the sabbatical year. Disown all that grows on your land during the seventh year, whether fruits, grains or vegetables, and allow all to take of the produce freely. Key concept: To strongly fix in our hearts and minds that Hashem created the world. The mitzvah serves to uproot the false notion that the world always existed. All who espouse such heresy about the world seek only to live their lives without any bounds or restrictions, ignoring the walls of the Torah. Accordingly, the Torah commands, “You may work your land for six years but it must rest on the seventh.” In addition, Jewish landowners must disavow ownership of all that grows from their land in the seventh year. By doing so, we are reminded that although the land yields produce year after year, it is not because the land has this power. Rather, the Creator of the Universe causes the land to give forth produce. As the land’s Creator, He is also its true owner, so He commands us to relinquish our ownership of the land’s produce every seventh year for the entire year. Another benefit from the mitzvah: We acquire the ability to forgo our rights for the sake of others, for he who gives up one of his possessions with no hope of payment is a true benefactor. In addition, the mitzvah helps to greatly strengthen faith and trust in Hashem. A person becomes used to eating the fruits of his land year after year, and when every seven years, for a whole year, he behaves as if his produce is not his and allows others to freely take it, his faith in Hashem grows tremendously. He will never acquire the trait of miserliness or suffer lack of trust in Him.

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EXODUS — 23:13 idol

EXOD889 Do not take an oath in the name of an idol. Do not swear an oath in the name of an idol, and do not have a gentile swear such an oath. Some explain that the main prohibition is on doing business with an idol worshipper on one of his religious holidays, for if the gentile profits from the venture he might go and give thanks to his deity and the Jew will have caused the idol’s name to be mentioned and praised. To distance us from possible violation of the prohibition, our Sages even forbid us to say to someone, “Wait for me near idol such and such.” Key concept: To alienate ourselves from idol worship to the greatest degree possible, never thinking about it. [Owing to the fact that idol worship is so abhorrent in Hashem’s eyes, we are warned about it in forty-four places in the Torah.]

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EXODUS — 23:19 cook

EXOD896 Do not cook meat in milk. The prohibition on eating milk and meat together does not appear to be based on health considerations. Rather, the Torah does not want meat and milk to be cooked together, for as we wrote above (mitzvah 62 [i.e., Exodus 22:17--AJL) regarding sorcery, certain mixtures and combinations are prohibited simply because they run counter to Hashem's Will. The Almighty wants everything in [the] world to operate according to the laws of nature that He instituted when He brought Creation into being. The Torah does not allow the combination of milk and meat, so cooking the two together is forbidden, even if no one consumes the mixture.

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EXODUS — 23:19 fruits

EXOD897 Bring your first fruits to the Beis HaMikdash. Key concept: To know and remember that all of the good that we have comes from Hashem. Therefore, He commands us to bring our first fruits to His sanctuary and give them to a Kohen who serves Him there. Through recalling that He is the Source of all blessing, through accepting His rule and authority and declaring before Him and His Sanctuary that all good in the world comes from Him, we become worthy of His blessings and He will bless our fruits.

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EXODUS — 23:32 covenant

EXOD903 Do not make a covenant with the seven Canaanite nations or other idol worshippers. The Torah forbids any treaty or covenant with the seven Canaanite nations that dwelled in the Jewish homeland when the Jewish nation arrived there from Egypt. Do not make peace with them and do not allow them to continue to practice idol worship in the Jewish homeland. Key concept: Rid the world of idols and idol worship. The seven Canaanite nations were the world's most ardent worshippers of idols and were the prime founders of this evil. Therefore, the Torah commands us to search them out everywhere and eliminate them. The command also forbids us to make a covenant with any nation that worships idols. Regarding other idol worshipping nations, however, we are not commanded to make war against them and kill them if they do not attack us. Rather, such peoples are simply not allowed to dwell in our homeland as long as they worship idols. As to the seven Canaanite nations, we must search them out everywhere and wage constant war against them until no trace of them remains, unless they renounce idol worship--for as noted, these nations are the world's main idol worshippers and are the source of this evil.

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EXODUS — 25:8 sanctuary

EXOD940 Build a Sanctuary in Hashem's Name. The Jewish nation must build a sanctuary where they shall pray to Hashem and sacrifice offerings to Him to help us to serve Him with a full heart. Not that He needs a sanctuary; rather, the mitzvah is for our benefit. Through praying and bringing offerings in this holy place on a steady basis, we refine and purify our thoughts and hearts. Out of His great kindness, Hashem fixed a place of the highest level of purity and holiness, and by going there we can elevate our thoughts and turn our hearts to serve Him devotedly. On the strength of the good deeds performed there, the sanctuary is always a place of great blessing and holiness, causing an abundance of good to be sent from Heaven. Reasons for the offerings: (1) A person's actions strongly influence his heart. Accordingly, if he sins, verbal confession and apology will not sufficiently cleanse his heart of the negative effects of the sin. Rather, to completely cleanse his heart he must act. He must invest much time and effort to bring an offering in the Beis HaMikdash. Having performed these efforts-filled actions, he comprehends the sin’s seriousness and will avoid sinning in the future. (2) The Ramban writes that when a person sins and brings an offering to atone for it, he should realize that what is done to the animal should actually be done to him. That is, man's deeds are composed of thought, speech and action, so for an offering to atone for a sinful deed, the procedure must involve thought, speech an action. The sinner performs semichah--placing his hands on the animal's head and leaning his weight on it--to atone for the sinful act. Verbal confession atones for use of the power of speech in the sin. The animal’s kidneys and other innards are burned on the Altar, and this atones for having used one’s mind in the sin, for these organs are centers for sinful thoughts and desires. On the Altar we also burn the animal’s hind legs, to symbolize that we sinned with our feet and hands. Then the animal's blood is sprinkled on the Altar in place of our blood. The procedures impress upon the person that he sinned against Hashem with his body and soul, so really, for the sake of his atonement, his own blood should be offered and his body should be burned, but out of His kindness Hashem accepts an offering instead. Certain portions of the animal are given to the Kohen--a teacher of Torah--so that the Kohen will pray for the person who had sinned. (3) The Ramban writes that there are additional, hidden kabbalistic reasons for the offerings (see his commentary on Parashas Vayikra). Additional insights regarding the offerings: (1) We are commanded to bring offerings from commodities that people generally desire, enjoy and regard as important--such as meat, wine and bread. Thereby the heart is more likely to be moved by the procedure. As to a pauper, whose eyes and thoughts always are trained on his daily bread, he must bring a flour offering when he sins--from the small amount of flour that he has. (2) Only in terms of his body does man resemble the animals. Man has a soul that animals do not have. Thereby he has unique intelligence, but if he slips into sin his intelligence no longer is governing him so he descends to the level of an animal. To gain atonement he takes an animal whose body resembles his and brings it to the Beis Hamikdash, the most inspiring and elevating place for his intelligent soul. There he completely burns the animal’s body until there are no remains. Thereby, he receives a vivid, visual message that a body that acts not according to the dictates of intelligence perishes and is gone forever. He takes joy in the appreciation that in giving him an intelligent soul that can live forever, Hashem has set him apart from the animals. He recalls that his body is his soul's partner and that if he heeds the urging of his soul and does not sin, Hashem will return his body to him at the time of the resurrection of the dead, so that his body, too, will gain eternity. Understanding this important truth, he will be extremely careful to avoid sins in the future. The Torah promises him that if his sin was unintentional and he brings his offering according to the required procedures and regrets the sin with all of his heart and soul, he will gain atonement. On the other hand, if his sin was intentional, this matter of atonement does not suffice. Because he sinned with his conscious self, offering an unthinking animal in place of himself does not relay a strong enough message to him. Rather, because of his conscious foolishness, he needs to be physically punished in order to gain atonement. Reasons for other types of offerings: There is a daily sin offering of the community, since unavoidably, some member of the congregation has sinned. This offering atones for him. The Torah allows us to bring voluntary offerings even in the absence of sin. The symbolism of the destruction of the animal’s body impresses upon us the lowly and fleeting nature of the physical body and the supremacy of the soul. Accordingly, there is ethical gain in bringing the offering, despite that it is not brought for a specific sin. The scapegoat that is thrown to its death on Yom Kippur carries away the sins of our nation. The procedure sends a message to the grave sinners such as heretics and those who deny the Torah and resurrection of the dead. This animal is not slaughtered. None of its blood or meat is brought on the Altar. None of its remains, even ashes, are left in the Beis Hamikdash. So, too, grave sinners are quickly and utterly destroyed and no trace of them is left anywhere. When they see the fate of the scapegoat they will understand where they are heading and will mend their ways.

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