Sotah 089
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BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel
RABIN MISHNAH STUDY GROUP
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The officers shall speak further to the people, and they shall say, "Whoever is scared and faint-hearted may go and return to his house…" – Rabbi Akiva says that 'scared and faint-hearted' is to be understood literally: that he cannot [bring himself to] stand in the battle-lines or to see a drawn sword. Rabbi Yosé ha-Gelili says that 'scared and faint-hearted' refers to someone who fears his own sins. This is why the Torah includes him with all the others, so that he can retire together with them. Rabbi Yosé says: a widow [married] to a high priest, a divorcée or woman who had undergone Ĥalitzah with an ordinary priest, an illegitimate woman or a woman who was a 'natin' who were married to an Israelite, or a Jewish woman married to an illegitimate man or to a 'natin' – these are the 'scared and faint-hearted'.
EXPLANATIONS:
1: 2: 3: 4: DISCUSSION:
We are considerably behind in the effort to bring your comments and questions: here is a comment that relates to 7:5. It comes from Avraham Jacobs. I would like to comment, like many others, on mishna 5 [of chapter 7 – SR] – the reading of the Benediction and the Curse. In Deuteronomy 27 the command for this ceremony is issued. It is important to read also the execution: Joshua 8: 30-35 and especially verse 33. There, the tribes are not mentioned. Only that one half of the people were stationed on the Ebal side, and one half on the Gerizin side. In between, next to the ark, stood the Levite Priests, either the descendants of Aaron, or the Levites, aged between 30 – 50. So, the majority of the tribe of Levi could well have joined the others. Rashi, Ibn Ezra, S.R. Hirsch i.a.. go this way also in their commentaries on Deuteronomy 27: 12-14. Interesting is the explanation of Hizkuni why the mentioned six tribes were on the Curse side. Especially Reuben, as atonement for his act with Bilhah (Genesis 35: 22). This question from Yiftah Shapir also explains why sometimes the comments and questions are distanced from the original shiur: Sometimes I have to postpone reading the Shiurim – so this question relates to a lesson given last week [well, it was 'last week' when he wrote it – SR]. You discussed the story of king Agrippa, and the sages' consolations: "Do not worry, Agrippa, you are our brother, you are our brother!" I wonder – is that the earliest source for the Halakha that a Jew is one whose mother was a Jew? I respond: I am not certain that Yiftah is correct in his assumptions. Agrippa was the son of Aristobulus and Bernice. Aristobulus Agrippa's father was indeed the son of Mariamne, the last female from the Hasmonean dynasty; therefore, according to the sages Agrippa's father was definitely Jewish. However, Agrippa's mother was Bernice, who was the daughter of Salome who was Herod's sister. Therefore, whatever taint the sages attached to Herod himself should he been attached to Salome and thereby to Agrippa. |
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