Five Towns Jewish Home - 2-4-21

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FEBRUARY 4, 2021 | The Jewish Home The Jewish Home | OCTOBER 29, 2015

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Torah Thought

Parshas Yisro By Rabbi Berel Wein

O

ne of the basic lessons learned from this week’s Torah reading, though barely discussed by the commentators, is that there is no perfect system of justice if it involves human beings and judges. After the granting of the Torah to the Jewish people at Mount Sinai, our teacher Moshe allows himself to become the sole judge regarding disputes that arise in the camp of the Israelites. He is besieged by claimants and litigants from early morning until sunset. Naturally, anyone who had the ability to appear before such a judge as Moshe would wish to take

advantage of that opportunity. Though Moshe possesses supernatural wisdom and insight, he is known to be incorruptible, fair, equitable and decisive. What other qualities can one expect or hope for in a human judge? None. Nevertheless, as his father-in-law Yisro points out to him, the judge may be as perfect as can be, but the judicial system that Moshe has instituted is far from perfection. Yisro warns that by being the sole judge and having everyone wait their turn to have their claims adjudicated by him alone, both Moshe and the people will eventually become

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exhausted and wither away. What is needed is a tiered system of judges, courts, police, and other officials of the judicial system that must be appointed and empowered. This signifies the creation of a bureaucracy, with all the attendant fields that it contains and necessarily entails. But it is the only practical way of dealing with this issue of sustainability that will allow Moshe and the people of Israel to continue to function. In effect, we are being taught that attempting to achieve perfection

Moshe aspired to give every Jew who came before him a perfect answer, a judgment that would harmonize with ultimate truth and nobility. He realized that this could not be done through the establishment of a bureaucracy. Within that system, there would be many cooks in the kitchen, and power would be diffused. Personal interests could govern all decisions, no matter how noble the intent of the persons involved. His father-in-law agreed with Moshe’s goal, but Yisro told Moshe, based

Moshe aspired to give every Jew who came before him a perfect answer, a judgment that would harmonize with ultimate truth and nobility.

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in this instance will lead to exhaustion and eventual destruction. One of the great lessons of the Revelation at Sinai was and is a simple basic understanding of the true nature of human beings, both individually and in society. The L-rd is perfection, while humans are doomed to operate within an imperfect and frustrating world. Sometimes better is the enemy of good, in the attempt to achieve perfection, and only leads to greater imperfection, frustration, and even violence.

upon his own life experience as being the chief executive priest of Midian, that Moshe’s goal was unachievable in this world. In this world one can only deal with practicalities, and practicalities always spell imperfection, compromise, and the possibility for error and wrong decisions. But that is the human condition, and one must operate within that condition and accept imperfection as one of the basic tenets of human life and society. Shabbat shalom.


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Your Money

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page 118

Which Way Do I Go? by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

2min
pages 119-120

Jewish Medics in World War II by Avi Heiligman

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Russia is Trying to Set the Rules for the Internet by David Ignatius

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Haunting Putin from Prison by David Ignatius

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The Aussie Gourmet: Blizzard Soup

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Parenting Pearls

8min
pages 104-105

Dating Dialogue, Moderated by Jennifer Mann, LCSW

13min
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Weinberger MS, RD

5min
pages 102-103

This by Dr. Deb Hirschhorn

6min
pages 100-101

The Wandering Jew

9min
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Israel Today

3min
pages 86-87

Remembering Rabbi Yehuda Kelemer by Elana Jacobs

8min
pages 84-85

My Uncle Shia by Yaakov Ganz

6min
pages 80-81

Rabbi Dr. Abraham J. Twerski, zt”l by Zvi Gluck

7min
pages 78-79

Community Happenings

29min
pages 42-65

Parsha Ponderings

10min
pages 72-75

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

3min
pages 68-69

Israel News

14min
pages 18-24

Centerfold

5min
pages 66-67

Learning to Fly by Rav Moshe Weinberger

7min
pages 70-71

Odd-but-True Stories

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Delving into the Daf 7

3min
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