torah

As we read the parsha, understanding mishpatim

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The mishpatim are most often viewed as a category of laws the Jewish people theoretically could have formulated on their own. In many instances, Torah contrasts these with the term chukim, as we find in Talmud Bavli, Yoma 67b:

“Our Rabbis taught: ‘You should perform my mishpatim’ (Vayikra 18:4). These are matters that were they not actually written [by G-d] it is logical that they would have been. They include: the prohibitions of idol worship, illicit sexual behavior, murder, stealing, and cursing Hashem. ‘Chukim,’ these are matters wherein the Satan [Rashi, yetzer harah, the “evil inclination”] attempts to disprove their validity and veracity, including: the prohibitions of eating pig flesh, wearing garments comprised of a mixture of linen and wool threads, the act of relieving a brother-in-law of his obligation to marry his widowed sister-in-law (chalitzah), the ritual purification of the individual afflicted with tzarat, and the scapegoat rite [of Yom Kippur]. [Since you cannot understand them] perhaps you will say that they are completely worthless and devoid of meaning! Therefore the Torah states: ‘I am the L-rd your G-d.’ I am He who has decreed it [the chukim] and you do not have permission to question them.

The Rambam codifies the distinction between chukim and mishpatim: “The mishpatim are those commandments wherein their rationale is revealed and the value that obtains as a result of their performance is manifest in this world. For example: the prohibitions of stealing and murder and the obligation to honor one’s father and mother. [In contrast,] the chukim are those commandments whose rationale is unknown.” (Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Meilah 8:8)

In sum, mishpatim are laws we could have derived on our own if left to our own devices. In this sense, they are “natural laws” that stand in stark contrast to chukim, whose underlying reasoning is beyond the scope of human understanding.

We must be very careful, however, regarding the mishpatim, precisely because “their rationale is revealed and the value that obtains as a result of their performance is manifest in this world.” This can easily lead us to the false conclusion that we observe the mishpatim because “they make sense to us.”

Nothing could be further from the truth! In reality, we observe all of the mitzvot solely because G-d commanded us to do so. In other words, one of our basic obligations as Jews is to view the entire Torah in its proper light. This means that whether or not we understand a mitzvah, or believe we have discovered its rationale, its absolute demand upon us is exclusively based upon the Voice that eternally issues forth from Mount Sinai.

On the most basic level, therefore, we must recognize that a tripartite nexus forms the background of each mitzvah: Hashem the metzaveh (the Commander), the mitzvah (the commandment), and the metzuveh (the commanded). As a result, each time we fulfill a Torah precept, whether it is one of the chukim or mishpatim, we demonstrate our unswerving loyalty to our Creator and His holy Torah. Moreover, we are declaring to all mankind that the relationship the Holy One blessed be He forged with our forebears continues in full force until our own historical moment.

As such, when we fulfill the mitzvot, we are proclaiming: “Hashem Hu HaElokim.” (“Hashem is our G-d and Master,” Sefer Devarim 4:35)

In sum, we need to approach every commandment with a sense of awe, and an ever-present recognition that we are fulfilling G-d’s will. Humility, especially regarding the mishpatim, must ever be our watchword. As Michah the prophet declared so long ago:

“O man, what is good, and what does the L-rd demand of you, but to do justice, to love loving-kindness, and to walk humbly with your G-d.” (6:8) With His loving help, and our fervent desire, may this be so. V’chane yihi ratzon.