Sotah 028
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BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel
RABIN MISHNAH STUDY GROUP
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He would wave it, present it, take the handful and offer it; what is left over may be eaten by the priests. He would make her drink and then offer her cereal-offering. Rabbi Shim'on says that he [first] offers her cereal-offering and then makes her drink; as it says: 'then shall he make the woman drink the water'. If he made her drink and then offered her cereal-offering the procedure is valid.
EXPLANATIONS:
1:
The Torah [Numbers 5:25-26] stipulates:
The priest shall take the cereal-offering of jealousy out of the woman’s hand, and shall wave the cereal-offering before God, and bring it to the altar. The priest shall take a handful of the cereal-offering, as the memorial of it, and burn it on the altar, and afterward shall make the woman drink the water.
There is here a very precise scenario: first the offering is to be waved (as described at the end of the previous mishnah), then it is to be brought to the altar. Now the priest is required to dip his hand into the basin containing the barley meal and take a handful, which he drops onto the fire burning on the altar. Lastly he makes the woman drink the prepared potion.
2: 3: 4: DISCUSSION:
I presented a suggestion made by Aviva Orenstein: It has always struck me that the indication of infidelity prompted by the sotah waters seems a lot like a description of an abortion or a parody of a pregnancy gone wrong. If indeed drinking the waters aborts the fetus, this would explain why the husband cannot lie with the wife once he formally makes his suspicions known, on the chance a legitimate child would be aborted. Has anyone ever put forward this or a related theory?
Art Werschultz now sends the following information: A physician friend of mine once opined that dirty moistened barley without a preservative (i.e., the levonah) could perhaps be used as a medium for growing an ergot derivative, the latter being an abortificant. I comment: But, as we already see in the mishnah discussed in this shiur, the woman herself did not partake of the barley at all. A query from Richley Crapo raised once again the issue of the flagstone from under which the dirt was taken that was introduced into the water that the woman was to drink. Mike Rodin now asks: Was there another purpose for which the stone was raised and soil collected? Were there other special design elements in the sanctuary for special, but not widely used rituals? I assume sotah was not an 'everyday' or regular occurrence. I respond: As far as I know there is no other purpose for which the stone was raised. To accurately answer the second part of Mike's question would require an expertise in the minutiae of the procedures of the Bet Mikdash which I do not have. |
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