Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael

1,517 texts in Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael

Comparing the Kidnapper to the Blasphemer by the Same Death Phrase

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:8

The Mekhilta records a sharp legal debate about how to determine the correct form of execution for a kidnapper. The Torah says a kidnapper must be put to death, using the phrase "m...

WisdomDeathKabbalahSin

Still, Let His Blood Be Spilled from Other Limbs

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:10

Still, let his blood be spilled from other limbs (and not through "the sword" [i.e., decapitation])! It is, therefore, written (in respect to eglah arufah [the "heifer of the broke...

Divine justiceViolenceEgyptCommandments

The Mekhilta Chooses These Examples Carefully

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:12

The Mekhilta examines one of the most consequential legal distinctions in the Torah: the difference between intentional killing and accidental death. The text lays out three vivid ...

ExileViolenceDeathTorah

Each Illustrating the Same Legal Principle

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:13

The Mekhilta presents a series of vivid scenarios involving accidental death, each illustrating the same legal principle. A man pulls a heavy roller up to a rooftop, and it slips f...

ExileViolenceHumor

When David Revealed What He Had Done, Saul Acknowledged David's

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:14

The Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael cites a verse from (I Samuel 24:19) that contains one of the most intriguing phrases in all of Scripture: "As stated in the apothegm of the Primal One...

WisdomViolenceDivine justiceKing David

Then I Shall Make for You a Place [Even Now

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:15

The Torah promises that God will provide "a place where he shall flee" for a person who kills accidentally (Exodus 21:13). This is the institution of the city of refuge, where an u...

WisdomPriesthoodAdam & EveMusic & Song

The Sabbath Boundary of Two Thousand Cubits

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:16

Issi ben Akiva noticed something peculiar about the cities of refuge described in the Torah. The verse says "then I shall make for you a place", a place where an accidental killer ...

ShabbatEgyptExodusPassover

You say it is two thousand ells, but perhaps it is four ells

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:17

The Mekhilta debates the physical dimensions of the refuge space that a person who killed accidentally was confined to. The previous passage established that even in the wilderness...

WisdomHeresyViolenceExodus

If a Man Be Deliberate Against His Neighbor to Kill Him

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:18

(Exodus 21:14) "And if a man be deliberate against his neighbor to kill him, etc.": What is the intent of this section? From (Leviticus 24:17) "And a man if he strike any soul of m...

DeathViolenceEgyptExodus

Before the Torah Was Given at Sinai

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:19

Issi ben Akiva raises a profound moral question about the scope of the prohibition against murder. Before the Torah was given at Sinai, he argues, humanity was already warned again...

TorahDivine justiceViolenceSinai

The Torah Describes the Premeditated Murderer as One Who Kills with

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:20

The Torah describes the premeditated murderer as one who kills "with subtlety" in (Exodus 21:14). The Mekhilta seizes on this word, "subtlety". And uses it to carve out a series of...

WisdomViolenceHumor

Who Has Committed Murder in Nezikin

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:21

The Torah's command in (Exodus 21:14), "From My very altar shall you take him to die," addresses a chilling scenario: a priest, a Kohen (a priest), who has committed murder. The Me...

TempleSacrificePriesthoodViolence

Scripture hereby teaching us that murder (i

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:22

Scripture hereby teaching us that murder (i.e., one's having murdered) overrides the sacrificial service. For it would follow (otherwise), viz. If the Sabbath, which is overridden ...

WisdomTempleShabbat

No, this may be true of the sacrificial service, which is

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:23

The Mekhilta presents a sophisticated chain of legal reasoning about which commandments can override which other commandments. The question at stake is whether the obligation to bu...

ShabbatTruthDeathCommandments

One of the disciples of R

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:24

One of the disciples of R. Yishmael said: It is written (Exodus 35:3) "You shall not light a fire in all of your dwellings on the Sabbath day." Burning was in the category (of all ...

ShabbatDeathSabbathCommandments

Since the Temple Service Yields to Murder

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:25

The Mekhilta continues its analysis of the legal hierarchy between the Sabbath, the sacrificial service, murder, and burial of the dead. The argument now approaches from the opposi...

ShabbatTruthDeathCommandments

Murder Overrides the Sacrificial Service How Much More

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:26

The Mekhilta now draws the ultimate conclusion from the legal hierarchy it has been constructing. Murder overrides the sacrificial service. This is established. But saving a life o...

ShabbatViolenceMurderSabbath

My Very Altar Shall You Take Him to Die to Die

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 4:28

The Torah contains a dramatic command about a murderer who has taken refuge at the altar: "From My very altar shall you take him to die" (Exodus 21:14). Even the holiest place in t...

CreationExileTemple

The Torah Creates a Specific Exception for Parental Assault, Elevating

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:1

The Torah declares: "And if one strikes his father and his mother, he shall be put to death" (Exodus 21:15). The Mekhilta explains why this verse is necessary when the Torah alread...

DeathEgyptExodusPassover

If One Strikes His Father and His Mother This Tells

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:2

"And if one strikes his father and his mother": This tells me only of (one who strikes both) his father and his mother. Whence do I derive (liability for one who strikes) his fathe...

DeathWomen of the BibleKingsMusic & Song

Rabbi Yitzchak Addresses a Grammatical Question in the Verse About

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:4

Rabbi Yitzchak addresses a grammatical question in the verse about striking one's parents that has enormous legal consequences. The Torah states: "And if one strikes his father and...

WisdomWomen of the BiblePatriarchs

If One Strikes His Father or His Mother a Blow

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:5

"And if one strikes his father or his mother": a blow which causes a wound. You say a blow which causes a wound, but perhaps even a blow which does not cause a wound? Would you say...

Divine justiceWomen of the BibleHumor

He Shall Be Put to Death by Strangulation

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:6

The Torah says a person who strikes his father or mother "shall be put to death" (Exodus 21:15), but it does not specify the method of execution. The Mekhilta identifies this silen...

TorahDeathAdam & EveLaw

When the Torah Prescribes Capital Punishment for Certain

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:7

Rebbi (Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi) drew a profound parallel between divine punishment and human punishment. "There is 'death' at the hands of Heaven and 'death' at the hands of man," he ...

MiraclesDeathDivine justiceHeaven

Here They Ruled the Mitzvah of Strangulation

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:8

The Mekhilta records the precise procedure for carrying out the judicial penalty of strangulation, one of the four methods of capital punishment prescribed by Torah law. Far from b...

WisdomCommandmentsAdam & EveDivine justice

The Torah Warns Forty Stripes He May Give Him

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:10

The Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael presents a classic a fortiori argument, known in rabbinic logic as kal va-chomer, "from the light to the heavy." This particular kal va-chomer address...

WisdomViolenceAdam & EveCommandments

Where Does the Torah Require Witnesses to the Sale

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:11

The Torah states: "And one who steals a man and sells him, and he is found in his hand, he shall be put to death" (Exodus 21:16). The Mekhilta asks what this verse adds, since kidn...

WisdomEgyptExodusPassover

What About One Who Kidnaps a Minor, a Child

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:12

The Torah states: "And one who steals a man.. shall surely be put to death" (Exodus 21:16). The crime of kidnapping carries the death penalty. But the Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael imm...

WisdomWomen of the BibleHeresy

This ("If a man be found") tells me only of a man who stole

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:13

The Torah uses masculine language when describing the crime of kidnapping. (Deuteronomy 24:7) says "if a man be found to have stolen," and (Exodus 21:16) says "one who steals a man...

WisdomWomen of the BibleHeresy

One Who Steals a Man This Would Exclude from

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:14

"And one who steals a man": This would exclude (from liability) his stealing a minor. Whence is it derived that he is liable for stealing a minor? From "If a man be found to have s...

WisdomHeresySoul

(Then) "If a man be found to have stolen a soul" would also

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:15

The Torah states plainly: "If a man be found to have stolen a soul" (Deuteronomy 24:7). This is the law against kidnapping, one of the gravest crimes in Jewish jurisprudence, punis...

WisdomSoulAdam & EveDeath

The Torah on About a Kidnapper and Sells Him

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:16

The Torah says about a kidnapper: "and sells him" (Exodus 21:16). The Mekhilta derives from this phrasing that the kidnapper is liable only if he sells the entire person, not half....

WisdomCreationHumor

When the Torah on Death Without Qualification, It Means

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:17

The Torah states that a kidnapper "shall be put to death" (Exodus 21:16), but does not specify the method of execution. The Mekhilta identifies the method as strangulation. But how...

TorahDeathAdam & EveSefirot

Restates the Teaching of Rabbi Rabbi Yehudah Hanasi That Appears

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:18

This passage, appearing in Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:18, restates the teaching of Rebbi (Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi) that appears earlier in the same tractate: "There is 'death' at the...

MiraclesDeathDivine justiceHeaven

What Kind of Stealing Does It Prohibit

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:21

"You shall not steal", this is the eighth of the Ten Commandments. But what kind of stealing does it prohibit? The Mekhilta argues it refers to kidnapping, not theft of property. T...

WisdomSoulCommandmentsTribes

But perhaps the first is an exhortation against stealing

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:22

Perhaps the first is an exhortation against stealing money, and the second an exhortation against stealing souls? Would you say that? Three mitzvoth (commandments) are mentioned in...

TorahDeathCommandmentsSoul

If One Curses His Father and His Mother, Etc

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:23

(Exodus 21:17) states: "And if one curses his father and his mother, he shall be put to death." The Mekhilta asks why this verse is needed at all, since (Leviticus 20:9) already sa...

DeathWomen of the BibleEgyptExodus

If One Curses His Father and His Mother

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:24

"And if one curses his father and his mother", the Mekhilta notices that this verse uses "and," connecting father and mother together. Taken literally, this might mean the death pe...

WisdomWomen of the BibleMusic & SongSin

What About Women, or Individuals of Indeterminate Sex

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:27

The Mekhilta asks yet another question about the verse "And if one curses his father and his mother." From (Leviticus 20:9), which says "every man who curses," we would know only t...

WisdomWomen of the BibleAdam & EveBible

Cursing Your Parents Is Forbidden Even After They Die

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:28

The Torah commands, "And if one curses his father and his mother" he is liable for a grave sin (Exodus 21:17). The Mekhilta noticed that the verse as written only clearly applies w...

WisdomAdam & EveSinMusic & Song

Perhaps Cursing with a Mere Epithet, a Descriptive Title for God

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:29

The phrase "if one curses his father and his mother" raises yet another question: with what name must the curse be spoken? Rabbi Achai taught that the offender is liable for the de...

DeathWomen of the BibleHumorTribes

Perhaps by One of the Other Deaths of the Torah

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:30

R. Chanina b. Iddi says: Since Scripture states "Swear" and "Do not swear," "Curse" and "Do not curse," since swearing is by the Name, so, not swearing is by the Name (i.e., "Do no...

TorahDivine justiceDeath

What Happens If Your Father Is a Judge

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:31

What happens if your father is a judge? The Torah prohibits cursing judges: "Elohim you shall not curse" (Exodus 22:27). It also prohibits cursing leaders: "And a prince in your pe...

WisdomJudgmentMusic & SongCommandments

But perhaps the common element between them is that they

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 5:32

Perhaps the common element between them is that they are dignitaries, and it is their eminence that accounts for this, wherefore you are exhorted against cursing them, as opposed t...

WisdomMusic & SongSinJudgment

Why Add a Separate Passage About Quarreling Men

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 6:1

(Exodus 21:18) introduces the laws of personal injury: "And if men quarrel." The Mekhilta asks why this section exists at all. The Torah already states in (Exodus 21:24) the princi...

WisdomEgyptExodusPassover

What About Women Who Injure Others or Are Injured

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 6:2

"And if men quarrel", this verse mentions men. But does the law of personal injury apply only to men? What about women who injure others or are injured? Rabbi Yishmael argued that ...

TorahWomen of the BibleAbraham

Why Does the Torah Mention Either Gender at All

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 6:3

Rabbi Yoshiyah pushed the question of women in injury law even further. If men and women are truly equated, he argued, why does the Torah mention either gender at all? Let neither ...

TorahWomen of the BibleAdam & EveBible

Rabbi Yonathan's Answer Is That the Phrase Serves a Broader Teaching

Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 6:4

Rabbi Yonathan argued that the explicit mention of "a man or a woman" in (Exodus 21:29) was not even necessary to include women in injury law. Two other verses already accomplished...

WisdomWomen of the BibleAdam & EveTorah