Sanhedrin 121
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BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel
RABIN MISHNAH STUDY GROUP
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מִי שֶׁלָּקָה וְשָׁנָה, בּ יֵת דִּין מַכְנִיסִים אוֹתוֹ לַכִּפָּה וּמַאֲכִילִין אוֹתוֹ שְׂעוֹרִין עַד שֶׁכְּרֵסוֹ מִתְבַּקַּעַת. הַהוֹרֵג נֶפֶשׁ שֶׁלֹּא בְעֵדִים, מַכְנִיסִין אוֹתוֹ לַכִּפָּה וּמַאֲכִילִין אוֹתוֹ לֶחֶם צַר וּמַיִם לַחַץ:
Someone who has been flogged but repeats his offence is incarcerated by the Bet Din in a cell and fed on barley until his stomach bursts. The unwitnessed homicide is incarcerated in a cell and fed on minimal rations of bread and water.
EXPLANATIONS:
1:
Our mishnah contains two sections: Reisha, a first section, whose topic is what happens when a person has incurred the penalty of a flogging and repeats the offence. The second section, is concerned with what happens when someone commits a murder, but for technical reasons the death penalty can not be applied. 2:
Two people appear in court: judgment is found in favour of one and against the other. If the guilty one is sentenced to a flogging the judge shall have him lashed in a number appropriate to his fault. But no more than forty may be administered, lest he [the judge] over-punish him and your brother is thus disgraced in your eyes. [Deuteronomy 25:1-3].
The sages were so anxious to abide by the "forty lash" limit that they prohibited the administration of even this number and reduced the limit to thirty-nine [Gemara Makkot 22a]. Moreover, by limiting the offences for which a flogging might be administered the sages deprived the judge of his discretionary powers and flogging lost its character of a general judicial deterrent. In order to prevent accidental death resulting from flogging the person to be flogged was first physically examined in order to determine the number of lashes that could safely be administered to him [Mishnah Makkot 3:11]. Where, as a result of such an examination, less than thirty-nine lashes were administered, and it subsequently became apparent that the offender could well bear more, the previous estimate would be allowed to stand and the offender discharged. But the offender would also be discharged where physical symptoms manifested themselves during the course of the flogging itself, so that he would not be able to stand any more lashes. Makkat Mardut was an innovation of the sages and may be categorized as disciplinary or coercive rather than punitive in nature, calculated to enforce obedience to the court. Wile punitive floggings had to be restricted to a maximum number of blows, disciplinary floggings had to be unrestricted so that they could be continued until the offender was prepared to submit and do his duty.
3:
An example of the first category would be someone who deliberately eats ĥametz on Pesaĥ, or someone who deliberately eats the forbidden intestinal fat of an animal. Both of these are negative mitzvot whose punishment according to the Torah is excision. (Excision is a punishment from heaven that implies that physical death is also spiritual death for that transgressor.) The idea, as explained by the rabbis, is that by suffering the flogging the culprit has already been punished and thus will escape the punishment of excision. Now that we have recalled these details we can understand our mishnah better. The Gemara [Sanhedrin 81b] says that the flogging referred to in our present mishnah is of the kind noted in category a) above. This kind of flogging was administered when a culprit had been apprehended for having transgressed a command of the Torah whose punishment was Karet, "excision". In other words, says the great Amora of Eretz-Israel, Resh Lakish, this person is already "technically dead" – dead to heaven. However, the Gemara also explains, the punishment of incarceration was administered only when the culprit had offended and been flogged, had offended yet again and been flogged a second time. Under circumstances in which the culprit had twice committed an offence which he had been warned was threatening his eternal life and had yet jeopardized his soul a third time, under such circumstances he was considered to have willingly forfeited his life. Thus, having offended a third time he is to be incarcerated in a small cell. 4: 5:
we saw the accused chasing after the the victim with a sword in his hand. The victim entered a shop and the accused entered the shop after him. We followed them in only to find the victim dead and the bloody sword in the hands of the accused. You might ask 'who else could possibly have killed him?' Shim'on ben-Shataĥ says: By golly, I once saw just such a one chasing after another with a sword in his hand. The victim tried to escape by going into a ruin and the killer went in after him. I followed only to find the one killed and the other with the bloodied sword in his hand. I said to him, "You wicked man! Who killed this person?! … But what can I do since I cannot testify against you … [Tosefta, Sanhedrin 8:3].
Our present mishnah teaches that such a culprit would be incarcerated until he dies.
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