Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael

1,517 texts in Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael

That She Does Not Require a Get for a Hebrew Maid-servant

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:6

"and he shall go out alone": We are hereby apprised that a (Canaanite) bondswoman does not require a get (a divorce) from a Jew. Whence do we derive the same (i.e., that she does n...

WisdomTribesLevi

What About a Bondsman Whose Ear Has Been Bored

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:7

The phrase "and he shall go out alone" in (Exodus 21:4) seems redundant. If the bondsman's term is up, of course he goes out. Why add "alone"? The Mekhilta finds hidden legal conte...

ProphecyKabbalahWomen of the BibleHumor

Why Did the Torah Bother to State the Law Explicitly When Logic Alone

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:8

Rabbi Yitzchak examined a verse concerning the laws of Hebrew servants and declared that the verse, strictly speaking, was not necessary. The legal principle it teaches could alrea...

ProphecyPatriarchsHumor

Six Years Shall He Serve to Include One Who Was Sick

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:9

"Six years shall he serve", from this simple statement, the Mekhilta derives a ruling about sick bondsmen. If a Hebrew bondsman fell ill and was unable to work for the entire six-y...

WisdomHealingTimeAdam & Eve

I love my master, etc

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:11

The Torah describes a Hebrew bondsman who declares: "I love my master, my wife, and my children, I will not go free" (Exodus 21:5). This bondsman chooses to stay, and his ear is pi...

WisdomLoveWomen of the Bible

I Love My Master, Etc Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2 12

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:12

The Torah describes a remarkable scenario in the laws of servitude: a Hebrew servant whose term of service has ended, yet who declares, "I love my master" and chooses to remain. Th...

WisdomLoveTorahHumor

He Shall Bring Him Near to the Door

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:17

"and he shall bring him near to the door or to the door-post": The door is being compared to the door-post, viz. Just as a door-post stands in its place, so, the door must be stand...

WisdomTribesCommandmentsEgypt

Only the Master Himself Can Bore the Servant's Ear

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:18

The Torah prescribes a vivid ritual for a Hebrew servant who refuses to go free after six years of service: "Then his master shall bore his ear" with an awl against a doorpost (Exo...

WisdomConversionTorahEgypt

When the Torah Describes the Ear-boring of a Hebrew Bondsman

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:19

When the Torah describes the ear-boring of a Hebrew bondsman who chooses to remain in service, it says "his ear" shall be pierced. But which ear, left or right? The Mekhilta determ...

CharityPovertyTribes

Where Exactly on the Ear Is the Bondsman Pierced

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:20

Where exactly on the ear is the bondsman pierced? The Mekhilta records a dispute between two authorities. Rabbi Yehudah said the piercing goes through the lobe, the soft, fleshy pa...

WisdomPriesthoodTempleAdam & Eve

Why Was the Ear Singled Out for Boring from All

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:21

When a Hebrew slave chooses to remain in servitude rather than go free at the end of his six-year term, the Torah prescribes a specific ritual: his master takes an awl and bores th...

TorahMosesSinMusic & Song

He Shall Serve Him Forever Until the Jubilee Year Yovel

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:23

"and he shall serve him forever": until the Jubilee year (Yovel). For it would follow otherwise, viz. If money, whose "power" is formidable, and which acquires everything, acquires...

WisdomAdam & EveTribes

The Torah Commands Freedom Forever, but the Jubilee Trumps

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:24

Rebbi, the great Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi, offered a precise definition of a word that usually sounds limitless. When the Torah says a Hebrew servant "shall serve him forever" (Exodus ...

DeathAdam & EveHumor

He Shall Serve Him Him, and Not His Son

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 2:25

"and he shall serve him": him, and not his son. For it would follow (otherwise), viz. If one (i.e., a Hebrew bondsman) who serves for six years, limited service, serves both him an...

WisdomWomen of the Bible

You Say That It Speaks of a Minor in Nezikin

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:1

(Exodus 21:7) "And if a man sells his daughter": Scripture speaks of a minor (under twelve). You say that it speaks of a minor, but perhaps it speaks of an adult!. Would you say th...

MiraclesEgyptExodusPassover

If a Man Sells His Daughter a Man May Sell His

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:2

"And if a man sells his daughter" (Exodus 21:7), the Torah permits a father to sell his daughter as a maidservant. The Mekhilta immediately asks: can a mother do the same? The answ...

WisdomWomen of the BibleProtectionTorah

The Torah States and If a Man Sells His Daughter

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:3

The Torah states: "And if a man sells his daughter" (Exodus 21:7). The Mekhilta immediately draws attention to a legal distinction embedded in this verse that might otherwise go un...

WisdomWomen of the BibleProtectionLaw

If a Man Sells His Daughter He Sells Her, but She

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:4

The Torah states that a father may sell his daughter into servitude (Exodus 21:7). The Mekhilta asks the next logical question: if a father can sell his daughter, can a daughter se...

WisdomWomen of the BibleAdam & EveLaw

Let her, then, be sold for her theft, and it would, indeed

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:5

The Mekhilta continues its rigorous legal analysis of who can be sold into servitude. Having established that a daughter cannot sell herself, a new question arises. Should a daught...

WisdomWomen of the BibleLawHumor

Let Her, Then, Be Bored, as It Would, Indeed, Follow

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:6

Let her, then, be bored, as it would, indeed, follow that she should be, viz. If a son, whose father is not permitted to sell him, is bored, how much more so a daughter, whose fath...

WisdomWomen of the Bible

Who Is Acquired as a Wife by Cohabitation

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:7

"And if a man sells": We are hereby apprised that he may sell her (as a maid-servant). And whence is it derived that he is permitted to betroth her?, If he can remove her from (the...

WisdomWomen of the BibleHumorAbraham

Rabbi Yosei Haglili Elaborates on the Boundaries of Paternal Power by

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:8

The Torah states: "And if a man sells his daughter as a maid-servant" (Exodus 21:7). The Mekhilta draws a striking inference from this phrasing. A father may sell his daughter as a...

WisdomEgyptExodusPassover

She Shall Not Go Out as the Canaanites Go Out

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:9

(Ibid.) "she shall not go out as the bondsmen go out": i.e., she shall not go out as the Canaanites go out. You say (that the intent is) she shall not go out by (the mutilation of)...

WisdomHumorHeresy

The Mekhilta Examines How the Torah's Laws Governing Hebrew Servants

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:10

The Mekhilta examines how the Torah's laws governing Hebrew servants apply equally to men and women. The verse states "the Hebrew man or the Hebrew woman" (Deuteronomy 15:12), and ...

WisdomTorahLawWomen of the Bible

No, this may be true of a Hebrew maid-servant, who is not

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:12

The Mekhilta addresses the legal status of a Hebrew maid-servant in relation to the laws of bodily injury. The general rule in Torah law is that a servant who loses an "organ promi...

WisdomTruthEgyptExodus

Who Did Not Designate Her If Her Master Does

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:14

The Torah uses the phrase "who did not designate her" in reference to a Hebrew maid-servant whose master has not taken her as his wife (Exodus 21:8). The Mekhilta unpacks this phra...

MiraclesKabbalahWomen of the Bible

After He the Father Has Been Faithless Bagdah to Her

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:16

The Torah uses the Hebrew word "bagdah" in connection with a father who has sold his daughter as a maid-servant (Exodus 21:8). The Mekhilta interprets this word as a description of...

ProphecyHoly LandFaithWomen of the Bible

Who Does Not Take His Place Through Yibum Levirate Marriage

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:19

(Exodus, Ibid. 9) "And if to his son he designate her (as a wife)": He designates her to his son, but not to his brother. For it would follow (that he does designate her to his bro...

MiraclesWomen of the Bible

according to the ordinance of the daughters shall he

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:20

The Torah states that a master who takes a Hebrew maid-servant as his wife must provide for her "according to the ordinance of the daughters" (Exodus 21:9). The Mekhilta asks what ...

WisdomWomen of the BibleLawHeresy

What, Then, Is the Intent of According to the Ordinance

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:21

R. Yonathan says: It ("according to the ordinance, etc.") speaks of a Hebrew (maid-servant, i.e. that he is to do with his maid-servant according to the ordinance of the Jewish dau...

WisdomLawWomen of the Bible

This Passage Commands the Transmission of Torah Knowledge Across

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:22

The Torah verse "If another he take for him" (Exodus 21:10) is read by the Mekhilta as the source for a surprising obligation. From this verse, the Sages ruled that a father is obl...

WisdomTorahCommandmentsMusic & Song

Rabbi Yoshiyah Identifies the Three Terms as Food, Clothing

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:23

The Torah lists three things a husband must provide for his wife: "she'eirah, kesuthah, and onathah" (Exodus 21:10). These three Hebrew terms are cryptic, and the Mekhilta preserve...

CharityKing DavidPsalmsTzedakah (Charity)

How Much More So Things Which Are Life Sustaining

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:24

R. Yonathan says: "she'erah" is her clothing, i.e., clothing that is adapted to her flesh ("she'er"). If she were young, he should not give her (the clothing) of an elderly woman. ...

CreationWomen of the BibleHumor

Where Rabbi Yoshiyah Identified She'eirah as Food and Onathah

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:25

Rebbi (Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi) offers a dramatically different reading of the three marital obligations listed in (Exodus 21:10). Where Rabbi Yoshiyah identified "she'eirah" as food ...

WisdomTribesTimeLevi

Rabbi Yoshiyah Raises an Important Question About Who Exactly Is

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:26

The Torah instructs that if a master takes an additional wife, "he shall not diminish" what he owes to the first wife (Exodus 21:10). Rabbi Yoshiyah raises an important question ab...

WisdomHeresyHumor

Where Rabbi Yoshiyah Understood the Verse as Protecting the Hebrew

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:27

Rabbi Yonathan disagrees with Rabbi Yoshiyah's reading of "he shall not diminish" (Exodus 21:10). Where Rabbi Yoshiyah understood the verse as protecting the Hebrew maid-servant (t...

WisdomHumorBibleProtection

Two Possible Answers Emerge, and the Correct One Depends on

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:28

The Torah states: "And if these three he does not do to her, then she shall go out free, without money" (Exodus 21:11). The Mekhilta asks the obvious question: what are "these thre...

WisdomHumorWitCommandments

The Torah on the Hebrew Maid-servant Shall Go Out Free If Her Master

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:29

The Torah says the Hebrew maid-servant "shall go out free" if her master fails to fulfill his obligations (Exodus 21:11). The Mekhilta probes the meaning of the word "free" with a ...

WisdomWomen of the BibleHumorLaw

When She Had Been a Na'arah and Becomes a Bogereth

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:30

"then she shall go out free": when she is a bogereth (i.e. after twelve and a half years); "without money": when she is a na'arah (from twelve and a day until twelve and half.) Now...

WisdomConversionWomen of the BibleHumor

Rabbi Eliezer Reads Without Money as Code for Something Else Entirely

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:31

The Torah describes a young woman sold into servitude by her father and establishes the conditions under which she goes free. Rabbi Eliezer interprets the verse "Then she shall go ...

MiraclesHumorAdam & EveWomen of the Bible

Rabbi Nathan's Answer Turns on Timing and the Appearance of Miraculous

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 3:32

The Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael preserves a legal teaching from Rabbi Nathan that resolves an apparent contradiction in the Torah's laws about monetary obligations. On the one hand, ...

TorahMiraclesAdam & EveSin

If One Strikes a Man and He Dies, He

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:1

The Torah states: "If one strikes a man and he dies, he is to be put to death" (Exodus 21:12). The Mekhilta explains why this verse is necessary when a similar law already appears ...

DeathEgyptExodusPassover

The Torah States in If One Strikes a Man

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:2

The Torah states in (Exodus 21:12): "If one strikes a man." The language is specific, "a man." The Mekhilta immediately asks the obvious question: does this mean the law only appli...

WisdomWomen of the BibleTribesHeresy

What About a Woman Who Kills Another Woman

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:3

The Torah's laws of homicide use masculine language: "If one strikes a man" (Exodus 21:12). The Mekhilta recognizes that this phrasing could be read as limiting the death penalty t...

DeathWomen of the BibleViolenceHeresy

Would the Killer Be Liable for Murder Under Torah Law

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:4

The Torah states: "And if a man strikes any soul of a man." The Mekhilta examines this verse with extraordinary precision, asking exactly which victims are covered by the prohibiti...

WisdomSoulSouls

He Shall Be Put to Death Only After Having Been

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:5

The Torah declares that a person who strikes and kills another "shall be put to death" (Exodus 21:12). The Mekhilta immediately qualifies this statement with a critical procedural ...

DeathWarHumor

He Shall Be Put to Death in Beth-din

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:6

The Torah states plainly: "He shall be put to death." But where? Under whose authority? Left unqualified, these words might mean that anyone could carry out the execution, a mob, a...

Divine justiceDeathLawHumor

He Shall Be Put to Death by the Sword

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:7

The Torah declares of a certain offender: "he shall be put to death." But the text does not specify the method of execution. The Mekhilta records a debate about which form of capit...

DeathWarViolence