דף הביתשיעוריםSanhedrin

Sanhedrin 091

נושא: Sanhedrin




Sanhedrin 091

BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel


RABIN MISHNAH STUDY GROUP

Bet Midrash Virtuali
Today's shiur is dedicated by Steve Koppel for a Refu'ah Shlemah for Ruth bat Rasel and Chaim.

TRACTATE SANHEDRIN, CHAPTER SEVEN, MISHNAH FOUR:
אֵלּוּ הֵן הַנִּסְקָלִין: הַבָּא עַל הָאֵם, וְעַל אֵשֶׁת הָאָב, וְעַל הַכַּלָּה, וְעַל הַזְּכוּר, וְעַל הַבְּהֵמָה, וְהָאִשָּׁה הַמְבִיאָה אֶת הַבְּהֵמָה, וְהַמְגַדֵּף, וְהָעוֹבֵד עֲבוֹדָה זָרָה, וְהַנּוֹתֵן מִזַּרְעוֹ לַמֹּלֶךְ, וּבַעַל אוֹב וְיִדְעוֹנִי, וְהַמְחַלֵּל אֶת הַשַּׁבָּת, וְהַמְקַלֵּל אָבִיו וְאִמּוֹ, וְהַבָּא עַל נַעֲרָה הַמְאֹרָסָה, וְהַמֵּסִית, וְהַמַּדִּיחַ, וְהַמְכַשֵּׁף, וּבֵן סוֹרֵר וּמוֹרֶה:

The following are the offences for which people are stoned: copulation with one's mother, one's father's wife and one's daughter-in-law, with another male, with an animal; blasphemy, idolatry, offering one's children to Molekh; being a medium or a necromancer; desecration of the Sabbath; cursing a parent; copulating with an affianced woman; seduction to idolatry; occultism; the rebellious son.

EXPLANATIONS:

1:
Having discussed in detail the manner of the four methods of execution since the start of chapter six, the Mishnah now proceeds to detail the offences for which each modes of execution was meted out. This part of our discussion will continue through to the end of chapter nine.

2:
There are discrepancies between the way the material is divided into mishnayot in the Talmud and the way it is presented in the Mishnah codices. Both methods have logic to commend them and lack of logic to suggest otherwise. I have chosen to ignore both methods and to present the mishnaic material according to what seems a convenient division.

3:
We begin our survey with eighteen crimes the punishment for which was stoning – as described in chapter six. However, my translation of our mishnah does not add up to eighteen since "copulation with an animal" is treated separately for male and female offenders, and "seduction to idolatry" is divided into seduction of an individual and general seduction of a whole township. The eighteen offences can be categorized as follows:

  • five offences of effrontery to God's unique supremacy (blasphemy, idolatry, offering one's children to Molekh, desecration of the Sabbath, seduction to idolatry of the individual and seduction to idolatry of the whole population of a township);
  • four sexual offences between men and women (copulation with one's mother, one's father's wife, one's daughter-in-law, and with an affianced woman);
  • three sexual offences not involving copulation between men and women (a male with another male, a male with an animal and a woman with an animal);
  • three offences connected with occultism (being a medium, being a necromancer and practicing occultism);
  • two offences of effrontery to parents (cursing a parent and the case of the stubborn and rebellious son).

4:
However, very little weight should be placed on the above categorization since the punishment of stoning is derived ultimately not from some logical system but from textual exegesis of the Torah. In most of the above cases the Torah states explicitly that the punishment for offending against this or that mitzvah is stoning. In a few cases it is not stated explicitly, but is deemed to be implicit. The Torah states:

Any man or woman who act as a medium or a necromancer shall die: they shall be stoned and their blood is theirs [Leviticus 20:27]

The phrase I have translated as "their blood is theirs" obviously means to indicate that they are responsible for their deaths by their own actions. However, the sages understood the phrase differently. They understood it as meaning that "stoning" was a mode of killing in which the victim's blood remained within him, for the Hebrew phrase should be translated literally as "they shall be stoned and their blood is in them". In this verse, therefore, there is an explicit connection between stoning and the criminal's blood being in him. It is but a simple step thereafter to adduce that wherever the Torah uses the phrase "his blood is in him" (or some similar phrase) it intends to indicate that the same punishment, stoning, is to be meted out. And that is how the eighteen offences discussed by our mishnah were arrived at.

5:
The seven sexual offences mentioned in our mishnah all belong to a category of mitzvot given the general appellation of Arayot [forbidden sexual liaisons] – though the category of Arayot is wider than the offences itemized in our mishnah. In his commentary on our present mishnah Rambam [Moses Maimonides, North Africa 12th century CE] embarks upon a rather long excursus concerning the technical minutiae connected with these offences. His language is most explicit – indeed, the sages were never puritanically inhibited when dealing with such mitzvot. In general, let us say that all sexual offences (including Arayot not dealt with by our present mishnah) can be circumscribed by the following considerations – and I mention them only because of a certain notorious publicity that they have received of late. A sexual offence may be deemed to have taken place regardless of whether penetration was complete or partial, regardless of whether there was ejaculation or not, regardless of the position chosen, and regardless of the physical orifice involved.

6:
Of the seven sexual offences mentioned in our mishnah it seems to me that most would still be considered "unnatural" by all sections of our society: even the recognition of the Oedipus complex does not bring about a general approbation of copulation between a mother and her son or between a man and his son's wife and so forth. In my innocence I would also assume that more than ninety-nine people in every hundred would consider bestiality [copulation between a human being and another kind of animal] as being "inappropriate" to say the very least! However, other instances of Arayot nowadays do not meet with either universal condemnation or universal approbation. The interdiction of copulation between two unmarried adults of different sexes now seems to be "a custom more honoured in the breach than the observance", as Shakespeare's Hamlet observes in a different connection – though it is not an Ervah [singular of Arayot]. But copulation between two males is categorized as an Ervah but our modern society looks upon it with anything ranging from approval through indifference to condemnation. And this is true not only of the proverbial "man in the street" but of our rabbis too – of all persuasions. (I recently met with an orthodox rabbi who makes no secret of his being actively homosexual.)

DISCUSSION:

Juan-Carlos Kiel writes:

I am following your Mishnah classes and it appears from them that the Judgment by a Beit Din was final. As in these days it has become a matter of discussion here in Israel the appeal to the Higher Court of justice, was there any provision in Talmudic times for a higher instance were to redress judicial errors? Was the judgment final? What would happen if someone would consider – ex post facto – that the sentence was unfair? What if new evidence would appear? Was it there any procedural difference between the different sizes of Beit-Din? Was it possible to bring a matter tried before a Beit-Din of 3 to a Beit Din of 23, to 71?

I respond:

As far as Dinei Mamonot are concerned, we have already dealt with this issue. Here is what I wrote in Sanhedrin 063:

Every case must end with a verdict, and in Dinei Mamonot this means that the judges must find either for the claimant or for the defendant. Under normal circumstances the loser has the right to demand that the case be re-opened if new evidence is forthcoming. Tanna Kamma would give the judges the right to circumscribe this possibility, and require the person against whom their verdict went to bring fresh proof within – say – thirty days. Rabban Shim'on ben-Gamli'el was the head of the Sanhedrin in the difficult period of national reconstruction subsequent to the abject failure of the Bar-Kokhba revolt (which was savagely put down by the Romans in 135 CE). He points out that such a right is not in the best interests of justice: if a person finds further proof that could rescind the verdict that went against him and restore his money to him, but discovered this proof only after the time-limit set by the court – does this mean that he cannot have judicial redress? Shall he lose his legitimate property because of a calendrical date?! n the Gemara [Sanhedrin 31a] Rabba bar-Rav Huna says that the view of Rabban Shim'on ben-Gamli'el is accepted Halakhah and not the view of Tanna Kamma, and that any time-limit set by the court for the introduction of new evidence has no judicial standing whatsoever. This is Halakhah to this day:

Anyone against whom the verdict went, if he can [later] produce witnesses or evidence to prove his case, the verdict must be rescinded and the case re-opened – even if it has been closed and he has paid the damages a long time since: as long as evidence can be produced the verdict must be rescinded. [Shulĥan Arukh, Ĥoshen Mishpat 20:1]

We have also noted that in a Bet Din shel Hedyotot the judges might be liable to make compensation out of their own pockets for a misjudgment. [See Sanhedrin 066.]

As far as Dinei Nefashot are concerned the situation is more difficult. In Sanhedrin 079 we learned the following mishnah:

When the trial is over he is taken forth for stoning. The place of execution was outside the court house, as it is said [Leviticus 24:14]: "Remove the blasphemer". One person stands at the entrance of the court house holding a flag, and there is another waiting on horseback distant from him but within sight. Should anyone say that they have a point in favour [of the condemned man] the one waves his flag, and the horse dashes forward to stay [the execution]. Even if the condemned man himself says that he has a point to make in his own favour – he is brought back into court, even four or five times, provided there is substance in what he says. If they accept his innocence he is released; if not, he is taken out to be stoned. A herald goes before him [announcing]: "So-and-So son of So-and-So is being taken to be stoned to death for having committed such-and-such an offence, and that So-and-So are his witnesses: anyone who knows of his innocence must come forward".

However, there was no appeal (in either Dinei Mamonot or Dinei Nefashot) to a court of higher instance. The Judges (not the accused) did have the right and the duty to take to the Sanhedrin any doubts that they had as to points of law, but once their verdict had been pronounced there was no possibility of an appeal – except to that same court.



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