Sotah 060
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BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel
RABIN MISHNAH STUDY GROUP
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On that very day Rabbi Akiva gave the following exegesis: "You shall measure outside the city eastwards two thousand cubits…" and another verse reads: "from the wall of the city and outward a surround of one thousand cubits". You cannot say that [the surround] must be one thousand cubits for it has said two thousand; and you cannot say two thousand cubits since it has said one thousand. What is one to do? One thousand cubits is surround and two thousand cubits is the Sabbath boundary. Rabbi Eli'ezer the son of Rabbi Yosé ha-Gelili says: the one thousand cubits are the surround and the two thousand cubits are the fields and vineyards.
EXPLANATIONS:
1:
This mishnah continues with material unrelated to the general topic of the tractate – material which has been prompted by an associational format: midrashic explications given by Rabbi Akiva "on that very day" – on the day that Rabban Gamli'el was deposed from the presidency of the Sanhedrin and replaced by Rabbi El'azar ben-Azaryah. 2:
The surround of the towns, which you shall give to the Levites, shall be from the wall of the town and outward one thousand cubits round about.
And then, the continuation in verse 5 reads:
You shall measure outside the town eastwards two thousand cubits, and southwards two thousand cubits, and for westwards two thousand cubits, and northwards two thousand cubits, the town being in the centre. This shall be to them the surround of the town.
There seems to be a clear contradiction between the two thousand cubits prescribed for the "surround" in one verse and the one thousand cubits prescribed in the other.
3: 4: 5:
The people collected it every morning … and on Friday they collected double … And Moses said, "This is what God has said: Tomorrow is God's solemn holy Sabbath; bake what you will and boil what you will, and leave over for the morrow …" And Moses said, "Eat it today, for today is God's Sabbath: you will not find it in the open"… But some of the people did go out on the seventh day, but found none. God said to Moses, "How long will you refuse to keep my commands and my laws? … Let each person stay where he is; let no one leave his place on the seventh day".
The Karaites in the middle ages, who adopted a literal approach to the text of the Torah and denied the validity of the Unwritten Torah of the sages, required their adherents to remain in one room throughout Shabbat. The sages were much more liberal, and interpreted the term "place" in the Torah as meaning "township": "let no one leave his township on the seventh day". One could walk any distance within the town or village where one was when Shabbat began, and one could even walk 2000 cubits (about 1 kilometre) beyond the furthest residence of the place. But that was all. Anyone who went further inadvertently was restricted to his own personal space only [see Gemara, Eruvin 41b].
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