Sotah 099
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BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel
RABIN MISHNAH STUDY GROUP
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The elders from Jerusalem leave and the elders of that particular township bring "a heifer of the herd, which hasn't been worked with and which has not drawn in the yoke". [Physical] blemishes do not disqualify it. They take it down to "a valley with running water": [the Hebrew] must be understood literally, a hard, fast flowing stream. But even if it is not fast flowing it is valid. It is decapitated with a hatchet from behind. The place [where this is done is then] forbidden for sowing seed or for tilling, but it is permitted to comb flax and to hew stones.
EXPLANATIONS:
1:
Once the elders from Jerusalem have completed their task of measuring the distances and determining which is the township nearest to the corpse which has been found they take their leave. It is now the task of the members of the local bet Din to perform the actual ceremony of decapitation. As our mishnah points out the Torah itself has already determined the nature of the sacrificial victim: it must be a female calf which is too young to ever have been used for agricultural labour. 2: 3: 4: 5: DISCUSSION:
Bruce Yeamans writes that in Sotah 097 the following comment was made: During the early decades of the first century CE legislation was initiated by the sages which was designed to reduce socializing of Jews with non-Jews to a very great degree – the so-called 'eighteen decrees' enacted by the Sanhedrin. Could you elaborate a little more on what these decrees contained?
I respond: The Mishnah [Shabbat 1:4] relates that
These are the halakhot that they determined in the upper apartment of Ĥananyah ben-Ĥizkiyyah ben-Guryon, when they went to visit him. They took a vote and the school of Shammai outvoted the school of Hillel. On that day they decreed eighteen things.
From this mishnah is seems reasonably clear that due to a chance meeting of sages in a private apartment where many had gone to visit a sage who was convalescing from an illness, discovering for once that the followers of Shammai had a majority over the followers of Hillel they took the opportunity to pass a series of measures. The next few mishnayot detail some of these measures, of which some are clearly designed to prevent casual social contact between Jews and non-Jews in Eretz-Israel. For example [Shabbat 1:7]:
The school of Shammai say that one may not sell [anything] to a non-Jew, may not help him load up his beast [of burden]… but the school of Hillel permit.
Elsewhere [Avodah Zarah 35b] we learn, for example, that it was forbidden to borrow oil from non-Jews – a measure which, it seems, the general public refused to accept.
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