Ki Tetze: A
Summary of the Parsha
Moses enumerates many laws that relate to topics of family relationships,
interpersonal ethics, forbidden mixtures, and sexuality.
By Nancy Reuben Greenfield
The following article is reprinted with permission from Jewish Family & Life!
In continuing his last speech, Moses delivers specific rules
on family relationships. "If a beautiful woman is taken captive in war,
you may take her as your wife. However, you must wait a month before you take
her, so that she may weep for her mother and her father. If you do not take
pleasure in her, you must let her go as she wishes, and neither sell her for
money, nor take advantage of her.
"If a man has two wives, one beloved and one hated, and
they each give him a son, then the man is not at liberty to give the rights of
the first-born son to the beloved wife's son over the hated wife's son. Rather,
he must recognize the first-born, even if he is the son of the hated one, by
giving him a double portion of all the man's possessions, because it is his
birthright.
"If a man has a son who is disobedient and will not
listen to his father and mother, then the parents shall take him to the elders
of the city for judgment."
Then Moses continues with laws involving many aspects of
daily living, justice, family responsibility, work and sexuality.
"If a murderer is killed by hanging, then you must bury
him the same day.
"If you see your brother's animals go astray and find
them, you must return the animals to your brother. If your brother is not near
or you do not know the owner, then you may keep the animal until someone
inquires for it and then you shall return it. You must apply this same rule to
any lost items of your brother.
"No male garment shall be upon a woman nor any woman's
garment be upon a man.
"If a mother bird is sitting on her eggs or is with her
young ones, you must not take the mother with her young. You must set the
mother free, but the young you may take for yourself.
"When you build a new house, you shall make a guardrail
for your roof so no one shall fall.
"Do not sow your vineyard with mixed varieties of
species.
"Do not plow with an ox and a donkey together.
"Do not clothe yourself with wool and linen together.
"Make yourself twisted threads on the four corners of
your garment."
The specific laws pertaining to sexuality include promoting
sexual innocence before marriage and stern commandments against adultery, rape,
incest and children born out of wedlock.
"Keep away from every evil thing. Keep close guard to
what is clean and what is unclean.
"You must not return a slave who has taken refuge with
you from his master.
"There shall be no lewdness among the men and women of
Israel.
"You shall not pay your brother any interest, be it
interest in money or food, or anything that could be considered interest. You
may pay interest to the stranger.
"Keep your promises.
"You may eat of your neighbor's grapes but you may not
carry the grapes with you.
"There are laws regarding the way a man can divorce his
wife.
"When a man takes a new wife, he shall not go out into
the army but shall remain free in his home for one year with his wife.
"If a man steals from his brother, the thief shall die.
"Take heed of any leprous marks and observe and carry
out all the rules concerning lepers.
"When collecting a debt, you shall do so in a righteous
way.
"Do not withhold anything from a day laborer who is
poor or a stranger. Pay them their rightful wages before sundown. Let him not
cry out to God against you, for that sin would cling to you.
"Fathers shall not be put to death on account of sons,
nor sons be put to death on account of fathers.
"You shall not twist justice for the orphans, widows or
strangers. Leave some remains of your crops in the field for them, too.
"If there is a dispute between men, then they shall
come before the court to be judged. The righteous shall be justified and the
guilty condemned with strict guidelines.
"A brother-in-law shall marry the widow of his brother.
If they have a child, it will carry the name of the dead brother so his name
shall live on in Israel. If the man does not want to take his sister-in-law,
she shall go to elders, who will confirm this fact, and the legacy of this
rejection shall remain part of his name.
"All your weights and measurements shall be truthful.
Questions For Discussion
1) One mandate within the laws given in this portion is to
be fair. What does it mean to be fair?
Give a recent example of how you were fair to someone and how you were unfair
to someone. Give a recent example of how someone was fair to you and an example
of how someone was unfair to you.
2) Why are the Israelites not to mix varieties of species in
planting, nor wear clothing of different materials, nor even plow at the same
time with two different kinds of animals? Is there something wrong with mixing
"differences?"
3) The Israelites are told to keep their promises. What is
so important about keeping promises? Are there promises you have not kept? Can
you find a way to keep them now?
Nancy Reuben Greenfield is a free-lance writer who lives
in Carrollton, Texas, with her husband and two young children. She writes
frequently on Jewish themes and is finishing a book, co-authored with her
father, called The Golden Medina.