Parashat Mishpatim
Here Comes The Judge
Parashat Mishpatim
teaches us that our society cannot function without laws, judges, and courts of
justice.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
At its deepest core, America prides itself on the rule of
law--the insistence that no individual, however wealthy, influential, popular
or powerful, is superior to the rules which govern human conduct. Above any
individual--even the President of the United States--is a body of laws that
translate general principles into legal guidelines for harmonious living.
That priority was not always the case in America. The West, with its frontier ethic, the South
with its racial hatred, and the Northeast with its violence against labor unions
often acted against this general commitment to the rule of law. As great a president as Andrew Jackson was,
when told of a decision of the Supreme Court that he opposed, responded,
"They've made their decision, now let them get their own troops to enforce
it!"
In our own age as well, we are accustomed to various
presidents claiming immunity from various laws because of their high
office. For all the times that
Americans don't live up to the principle of law, that ideal still remains a
potent force for justice and equality in our society.
That principle allowed the Reverend Martin Luther King to
fight the powerful status quo of the South and of Chicago. It allowed student
protesters to publicize unpopular views, and it allowed the women's movement
and the environmentalists to be able to oppose injustice in our courts. The principle that the law is supreme is a
direct inheritance from our biblical heritage.
The Torah itself is, in part, a book of law, presenting the
Jewish conviction that the will of God is translated into action through
law. By using the metaphor of law to
frame Jewish religious obligations, our tradition lifts goodness beyond the
flimsy level of preference or mood, establishing the hatred of evil and the
pursuit of righteousness as a mandate at all times and places.
The Torah argues for the rule of law not only through its
overarching structure, but also explicitly in today's portion. "In all
charges . . . the case of both parties shall come before judges." Establishing courts of law where disputes
can be resolved is a requirement that the Torah views as an indispensable part
of a religious society. According to
rabbinic understanding, this obligation applies throughout time, not only while
the Temple stood in Jerusalem. And it
binds in all places, not only in the Land of Israel.
As the author of the Sefer
Ha-Hinnukh (13th Century Spain) recognized, the absence of a legal system
and open trials "causes ruin for the land, since a country cannot be
civilized except by law." That
perception echoes the claim of the Mishnah that "the world stands on three
things," one of which is law. Not
only is this mitzvah binding on Jews, but rabbinic tradition applies this
minimal requirement to all peoples.
Out of the 613 biblical commandments, only seven pertained
to B’nei Noah (the children of Noah),
all of humanity. These laws were of
such import that no person could claim to be civilized, or fully human, without
embracing them. For the Rabbis, establishing
courts of justice was a fundamental human act, one that allowed for the values
of ethical monotheism to extend to everyone, regardless of their religious
affiliation or social status.
Ours is a religion of law.
Take away the force of law and Judaism is nothing more than (at best)
helpful suggestions. Just as one cannot
claim to embrace American values without adhering to American law, so too one
cannot distinguish Jewish values from Jewish law. But the point here goes beyond the structure of our faith,
beyond a definition of what it means to be an American.
By insisting that the establishments of law courts are part
of the laws of B'nei Noah, our tradition reminds us that the key to human
potential and harmony is adherence to a legal system that is accessible, fair,
speedy and just. As Jews, as Americans,
and as human beings, we all have an interest in that.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit
Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the University
of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is the
author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill). For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary,
please send an email request to bartson@uj.edu.