The Hebrew Institute of Riverdale
WelcomeHome Page Weekly Newsletter Weekly Classes weekly D'Var Torah Current Course Guild Outreach - Encounter J.Y.E.P Hebrew School Youth Department Social Action Programs Seniors & Special Friends Women's Tefillah Israel - Activism Riverdale Jewish Encounter Past Events Gallery About Us Contact Us






























            
Orthodox Union
Hebrew Institute of Riverdale
is a proud member of the
Orthodox Union.
WEEKLY DIVREI TORAH   
Shabbat Forshpeis      

A Taste of Torah in Honor of Shabbat


PARSHAT NASO
THE SOTAH TEACHES US THE TRUE
PURPOSE OF TORAH LEARNING
JUNE 3-4, 2011 / 2 SIVAN 5771
By Rabbi Avi Weiss

The enigmatic process of the sotah (Numbers 5:11-31) is found in this portion of the Torah. Many rationales have been used to explain this concept, but this week I would like to show how the sotah laws (which, actually, due to rampant immorality, soon after the destruction of the Second Temple, were suspended by Rabbi Yohanan Ben Zakki) can explain a comment made by Rabbi Eliezer in Talmud tractate Sotah: "Whoever teaches his daughter Torah teaches her tiflut (sometimes translated as 'obscenity')." (Sotah 3:4)

Although Rabbi Eliezer's dictum is often quoted as a primary source for excluding women from Torah study, an analysis of the talmudic context of Rabbi Eliezer's comment could yield a different conclusion.

A sotah, a woman suspected by her husband of infidelity, was forced to drink bitter waters. If she was guilty, these waters had a devastating physical effect upon her. If she was innocent, the waters had no effect. In fact, if the sotah's husband had himself acted immorally, the bitter waters were inoperative.

Concerning the laws of sotah, the Mishnah states: "If she (the women accused) has merit, that merit [causes the water] to suspend its effect upon her. Some merit suspends the effect for one year, another for two years, and another for three years. Hence, declared Ben Azzai, a man is under the obligation to teach his daughter Torah, so that if she has to drink [the waters of bitterness], she may know that the merit of her learning suspends its effect. Then Rabbi Eliezer says: Whoever teaches his daughter Torah teaches her tiflut."

The first three chapters of Tractate Sotah describe how the rabbis use every legal means at their disposal to make it unnecessary for an accused woman to drink the bitter waters for it is preferable that women not drink the sotah waters due to the fact that they may actually be irrelevant to deciding the case of accused adultery.

Ben Azzai feels that this ability to use Torah to ward off the devastation of the bitter waters is advantageous. Therefore he declares that every father should teach his daughter Torah. With that merit, the waters, if ever tasted, would be rendered null and void.

Rabbi Eliezer responds by saying that Torah should not be used for such a purpose. Firstly, it would give women carte blanche to commit immoral acts, knowing that their Torah learning would make them immune to the effects of the bitter waters. Secondly, Rabbi Eliezer may have been saying that using Torah for this type of personal insurance policy would be an outrage and an abuse of the power of Torah.

From this perspective, Rabbi Eliezer's statement is not a sweeping restriction of woman's place in Torah study. The statement rather teaches us the important lesson that while all of us should continue to strive to learn more and reach higher, any Torah learning is valueless unless it is used to enhance our personal morality and foster a closer relationship to God.


Shabbat Shalom,

Rabbi Avi Weiss


Rabbi Avi Weiss is Founder and Dean of Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, the Open Orthodox Rabbinical School, and Senior Rabbi of The Hebrew Institute of Riverdale.
  
© Hebrew Institute of Riverdale. All rights reserved 2001-11/5771
Comments to
webmaster