דף הביתשיעוריםSotah

Sotah 001

נושא: Sotah




Sotah 001

BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel


RABIN MISHNAH STUDY GROUP


Bet Midrash Virtuali

TRACTATE SOTAH, CHAPTER ONE, MISHNAH ONE:
One who warns his wife – Rabbi Eli'ezer says that this warning is done
[in the presence of]
two [witnesses] and that he makes her drink
on the testimony of one witness or [even just of] himself. Rabbi
Yehoshu'a says that he must warn her [in the presence of] two
[witnesses] and make her drink on the testimony of two witnesses.

EXPLANATIONS:

1:
For modern susceptibilities, one of the most difficult passages among the legal portions of the Torah must
be the legislation that provides for the 'trial by ordeal' of the wife suspected by her husband of
adultery. It is a 'trial by ordeal' because the outcome is not decided on the basis of evidence offered
and weighed, but on the results obtained when the woman drinks a potion. And for people with contemporary
standards for measuring legislation of this kind the provisions of the passage seem to be decidedly
'politically incorrect'. The suspicious husband accuses the wife; not only does she seem to have no
defence, but neither is there is any reciprocal resource. The wife is required to take part in the ordeal
whether she wishes to or not. And the details of the ordeal seem to be decidedly misogynistic, for the
woman is judicially subjected to embarrassing public humiliation.

2:
Since the Torah source [Numbers 5:11-31] is long it would perhaps be useful to quote here its main
provisions:

If any man's wife goes astray, and is unfaithful to him,and a man lies with her carnally … and he is
suspicious of his wife… then the man shall bring his wife to the priest,… The priest shall bring her
near, and set her before God; and the priest shall take holy water in an earthen vessel; and of the dust
that is on the floor of the sanctuary the priest shall take, and put it into the water. The priest shall
set the woman before God, and let the hair of the woman's head go loose… The priest shall have in his
hand the bitter cursing water. The priest shall cause her to swear an oath, and shall tell the woman, 'If
no man has lain with you, and if you haven't gone astray to impurity, being under your husband, be free
from this bitter cursing water. But if you have gone astray, being under your husband, and if you are
defiled, and some man has lain with you other than your husband:…' then the priest shall cause the woman
to swear with the oath of cursing, and the priest shall tell the woman, 'May God make you a curse and an
oath among your people, when God allows your thigh to fall away, and your body to swell; and this cursing
water will go into your bowels, and make your body swell, and your thigh fall away.' The woman shall say,
'Amen, Amen.' The priest shall write these curses on a page, and he shall blot them out into the bitter
water. He shall make the woman drink the bitter cursing water… When he has made her drink the water,
then it shall happen, if she is defiled, and has committed a trespass against her husband, that the
cursing water will enter into her and become bitter, and her body will swell, and her thigh will fall
away: and the woman will be a curse among her people. If the woman isn't defiled, but is clean; then she
shall be free, and shall conceive seed.

3:
It is quite clear that this whole piece of legislation was problematic for the sages. (Indeed, as we
shall see when we reach the last chapter of this tractate, one of the greatest of them actually acted on
the courage of his convictions and eventually abolished the ceremony altogether – and the reasons he
gives are decidedly PC.) The sages were not unused to such a situation. When we studied tractate
Sanhedrin we saw how the sages spent the whole of chapter 8 so re-interpreting the legislative
requirements connected with the 'stubborn and rebellious son' [Deuteronomy 21:18-23] that they were
even able to boast that no such case had ever been or ever would be! [Tosefta Sanhedrin 11:2, Gemara
Sanhedrin 71a
]. Unfortunately, human nature being what it is, they probably knew that they would not
be bale to make such a boast about the 'Sotah' – the woman suspected of infidelity to her husband.

4:
In RMSG of August 2nd 1999 I wrote the following, which by happy coincidence as just as applicable to this
shiur:

Before we begin our review of our present mishnah I would like to re-emphasize a point that has been made
throughout our study of this tractate [Sanhedrin]. The best way that I
can make this emphasis is to suggest that you do the following: read through the Torah reading for last
Shabbat (Parashat Ki-Tetze). First of all think about the literal meaning of some of the mitzvot that
you find there – and there are many to choose from that are topics that we have covered in our study in
this tractate [Sanhedrin]. After that, re-read the mitzvot you have
chosen and try to recall how the sages re-interpreted them. I think that you will then realize the true
power of 'The Unwritten Torah' [Torah she-b'al-Peh]. In many cases the sages completely
revolutionized the implications of the mitzvah; in many more cases they reduced its scope or applicability
almost to non-existence. It will then become clear that, compared with the literal meaning of the
biblical text, the sages were liberal in their outlook (though I do not think that this was their
conscious intent). Hermeneutic interpretation was, perhaps, one of the greatest gifts that the sages
collectively possessed.

The methodology of the sages is not to deny the scriptural law (as moderns would probably do). They
could not do so and would not dream of doing so. But they could 'interpret' scripture – and they did!

To be continued.


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