Parashat Misphatim
Letting Our People Go
Bringing us all out of Egypt
By Rabbi Jonathan Spira-Savett
Reprinted with permission of SocialAction.com.
After the Ten Commandments, Parashat
Mishpatim seems like a letdown. One week we read of God's thundering voice,
of mountains ablaze and trembling listeners, of the fundamental laws of the
Torah. The next, it's the most everyday of worlds--donkeys and sheep, lost
objects and paid guardians, fistfights and insulted parents.
But we should read Mishpatim more
carefully, because it's here that we learn what God really meant by making
these words the prologue to the Ten Commandments: I am Adonai your God, the one
who brought you out from the land of Egypt, the house of slaves. By looking at
two sets of laws which structure this parasha, we can uncover what it
means for us to live our everyday lives with the awareness of former slaves.
The very first law in Mishpatim
seems at first glance to be built on the opposite idea. It begins: "When
you buy a Hebrew slave. . . " Stop right there!--how can the Israelites,
so fresh out of Egypt, be buying each other as slaves?
To answer the question we have to
continue reading. "Six years he shall work, and in the seventh you shall
let him go, free, without payment." A couple of things catch our
attention. One is surely the numbers, six and seven, which remind us of the
weekly cycle of work and rest characteristic of free people. The other is most
apparent in Hebrew. The word "y'shalchenu, he shall let him go," is
built from the same root as Moses' famous demand of Pharaoh, uttered in God's
name: "Shalach et ami, Let My people go!"
We are being told here that the
act of freeing a personal slave is really the same as God's act of freeing an
entire nation from slavery. And the parallel builds: "But if the slave
declares, 'I love my master...I do not wish to go free,' his master shall take
him before God. He shall be brought to the door [or the doorpost; mezuzah,
in Hebrew] and his master shall pierce his ear with an awl--and he shall then
remain his slave for life."
My teacher Rabbi Ed Greenstein
explains that if you pierce an ear at the doorpost, what is left behind is a
spot of blood. That detail completes the parallel between the slave owner in
Israel and the Blessed Holy One in Egypt. The master who wishes to free his
slave recreates the scene of the last night in Egypt. There, the slaves
performed their first act as free people, defying the Egyptians by smearing
blood on their doorposts from the sacrifice of a lamb, an animal sacred to the
oppressors. In Mishpatim, by contrast, the master in effect says to the slave:
"I want you free. You could walk out this door into freedom. If you don't,
it's not because I didn't try, not because I held you back, not because I
desired to oppress you."
This law, in the end, is not
really about permission to keep slaves. In its historical time, the Torah
presumed a society where there were slaves, who had sold themselves because of
debts or poverty. The law emphasizes instead the freeing. The very first thing
these former slaves are being told is not to become like their Egyptian
oppressors. They are being told to free their slaves--not only to offer
freedom, but to sing it loud, to pull out all the stops, even to the point of
creating a mini-drama about oppression and freedom.
The lesson is the same for our
time and our society. We do not own slaves anymore, but as a society we
tolerate oppression and participate in it. We tolerate a two-tiered society,
where some have access to education and encouragement, to wealth and the means
to make it, and others far less so. We tolerate the attitudes that let this
continue--the lazy stereotypes about people of different colors and about
"the poor," the lazy fatalist feeling that there are no real
solutions. This is, in our time, what it means to buy and keep a slave of our
own people.
The Torah commands us, living
today, to free the oppressed around us. To set a limit to the time we are
willing to tolerate the inequities and injustices before we rid ourselves of
slavery. The first law set down by the God who brought us out of slavery is to
go back, split the sea, and rescue those for whom life among us is still life
in Egypt.
The law of the Hebrew slave freed
in the seventh year begins the law code of Mishpatim. The code ends with a
final series of laws, and the laws that open that this final section each evoke
and extend one aspect of the law of the slave. "Do not oppress the
stranger--because you know what it is like to be a slave. Six years you shall
sow the land and gather its produce, but in the seventh you shall let it
rest--so that your wealth belongs for one year to the needy."
And finally, "six days you
shall do your work, but on the seventh day you shall cease from labor." It
is significant that Shabbat, the command to rest each week in celebration of
our own freedom, is at the end of the list. Only when the strangers are welcome
does our freedom have any meaning. Only when the hungry are fed does Shabbat,
the pinnacle of Jewish spiritual life, have any significance.
And it works the other way,
too--Shabbat is a daylong meditation on the responsibilities of free people in
a society not yet rid of the suffering made by human beings. We must enter each
new week like the master in Mishpatim, unsatisfied to see that suffering
continues, blood on the door but the people still trapped inside.
The Blessed Holy One went
first--"I am Adonai your God, the One who brought you out of the land of
Egypt, the house of slaves." The laws of Mishpatim teach us to go next, to
keep on going, to be like God, so that we too can say that we have brought
every last person out of Egypt, out of the house of slaves.
Rabbi Jonathan Spira-Savett is Director of Programs at the
Solomon Schechter High School of Long Island in Glen Cove, N.Y.