{"id":60469,"date":"2018-08-28T08:20:08","date_gmt":"2018-08-28T13:20:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.ou.org\/life\/?p=60469"},"modified":"2018-09-20T08:19:54","modified_gmt":"2018-09-20T13:19:54","slug":"beyond-the-letter-of-judgment-day","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.ou.org\/life\/inspiration\/beyond-the-letter-of-judgment-day\/","title":{"rendered":"Beyond the Letter of Judgment Day"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Somehow, this time of year \u2013 the lead-up to Yom Hadin \u2013 often makes me think not only about Heavenly judgment, but about humans who judge each other. Maybe it\u2019s just the word \u201cjudgment\u201d; maybe it\u2019s coming off of the Three Weeks, when we talk so much about <em>sinat chinam<\/em>; maybe it\u2019s the necessity of <em>teshuva <\/em>for interpersonal infractions, in which judgmentalism might play a role.<\/p>\n<p>We might also consider possible parallels \u2013 similarities as well as differences \u2013 between human <em>din <\/em>and divine <em>din<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>\u201c<em>Din<\/em>\u201d doesn\u2019t just mean \u201cjudgment,\u201d as in \u201cYom Hadin\u201d; it also means \u201claw,\u201d as in the <em>\u00a0<\/em>phrase <em>lifnim mishurat hadin<\/em> &#8211; literally \u201cinside the line of the law\u201d but more often explained as \u201cgoing beyond the letter of the law.\u201d I recently came across this concept in the context of the ins and outs of <em>hashavat aveida<\/em>, returning lost objects. Halachic technicalities can sometimes lead to a ruling of \u201cfinders keepers\u201d that doesn\u2019t sit quite right with our moral instincts, and it occurred to me that it might be almost a relief to know that halachic tradition sometimes encourages returning an object despite those technicalities.<\/p>\n<p>However, our moral instincts might be less relieved to find that while one sage on Bava Metzia 24b does call for a <em>lifnim mishurat hadin<\/em> approach, another sage in a parallel anecdote remains adamantly committed to the letter of the law.<\/p>\n<p>In the first anecdote, Rav Yehuda is walking through a grain market with his <em>rebbe<\/em>, Shmuel, and asks him a hypothetical question: If one were to find a wallet in a public place such as this, would one be obligated to find the owner, or could one assume the owner has despaired of recovering it (<em>yeush<\/em>) and thereby relinquished ownership, so that the finder can keep it? Shmuel responds that the finder may keep the wallet; however, when pressed \u201cWhat if a Jew then shows up to claim it with identifying information,\u201d he says it would have to be returned. How can both rulings be true? Either halacha awards ownership to the finder or it doesn\u2019t! Shmuel explains that his follow-up answer was actually <em>lifnim mishurat hadin<\/em>. After all, how could our moral sensibilities allow us to keep an item when the original owner is standing right there pleading that he or she still wants it?<\/p>\n<p>Except\u2026 that\u2019s exactly how Rav Nachman rules in the next anecdote.<\/p>\n<p>This time, it is Rava who walks with his <em>rebbe<\/em>, Rav Nachman, in another public marketplace, and asks the question: If one finds a wallet here, what is the halacha? Like Shmuel, Rav Nachman says the finder may keep it. Rava then asks, \u201cWhat if a Jew shows up to claim it with identifying information?\u201d Here, the stories diverge, as Rav Nachman holds his ground: It belongs to the finder. Rava and his moral instincts object: But the owner is standing and screaming that it\u2019s his! Rav Nachman, unlike Shmuel, displays no sympathy: that <em>previous <\/em>owner can scream all he wants, but he may as well be screaming over his collapsed house or sunken ship. No amount of screaming will put the milk back in the bottle, or rebuild a house or raise a ship, or restore to one\u2019s possession an item halacha has declared is no longer his.<\/p>\n<p>What\u2019s the difference between these rulings? Is Rav Nachman just mean, while Shmuel is nice?<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019d like to share a couple of approaches to this pair of anecdotes, each of which has ramifications far beyond the laws of wallets lost in public marketplaces.<\/p>\n<p>We first have to ask whether Shmuel is actually saying one <em>must <\/em>return the wallet if the owner shows up, that one <em>should<\/em>, or simply that one is <em>encouraged<\/em> to do so. It might seem odd to rule that one <em>must <\/em>go \u201cbeyond the letter of the law,\u201d and indeed, Rambam essentially reconciles the two rulings by saying the item belongs to the finder free and clear, but that \u201cone who<strong> wants <\/strong>to follow the good, upright path and do <em>lifnim mishurat hadin<\/em>\u201d will return it if the original owner indeed shows up (Hilchot Gezeilah 11:7). On the other hand, the Raavyah (cited in Hagahot Maimoniot) suggests Shmuel was truly saying one <strong>must<\/strong> go beyond the letter of the law in such a case \u2013 but he also indicates that different people might actually have different halachic responsibilities: Shmuel refers to a case where the finder <strong>can<\/strong> return the object, while Rav Nachman teaches that halacha does <strong>not<\/strong> compel the finder to do so if he is poor and the original owner is rich.<\/p>\n<p>In the Raavyah\u2019s approach, then, there is a basic law \u2013 finders keepers, in a situation where <em>yeush <\/em>can be reasonably assumed \u2013 but that law only applies when necessary. Wherever possible, a person is actually required to go farther \u2013 as far as possible without incurring undue hardship.<\/p>\n<p>This sounds like a really complicated legal system to apply, but we actually see this sort of thing all the time in halachic tradition. We often find a halachic work suggesting that X is permitted, but a <em>yarei shamayim<\/em>, or one who wants to do the really right thing \u2013 will do Y. And when you put it that way\u2026 well, it\u2019s often complicated to apply. After all, don\u2019t we all strive to be G-d-fearing? How can we settle for second-best X when we know there is Y out there, and that Y is what the G-d-fearing people do? How I can keep an object I found, even if it would make all the difference in the world to me and I\u2019m technically permitted to take it, knowing that the <em>best <\/em>practice would be to return it?<\/p>\n<p><em>Lifnim mishurat hadin<\/em> is extremely appealing, to those who genuinely want to do the best they can. It\u2019s tempting to do more, always more. Be a little extra careful to keep milk and meat separate; just throw away the meat that might have come in contact with a drop of milk! Add an inch to that skirt; no, another one. Better yet, put on two skirts, so no one can possibly see anything. In fact, ladies, better stay home, just to be sure.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s easy to see why people get swept up in adding <em>chumra <\/em>after <em>chumra<\/em>, going beyond the actual requirements of law. If some is good, more must be better, right?<\/p>\n<p>Within the Raavyah\u2019s reading, I would suggest that the natural temptation to exceed technical requirements is the reason Rav Nachman\u2019s ruling is so important. Rav Nachman reminds us that more is not always better \u2013 because more of Y might mean less of Z, and Z is also important. Really, truly, halachically important. Halacha cares about Z, even if Z doesn\u2019t look as pious as Y. Halacha cares about the finder\u2019s means; halacha cares that we not throw out food that\u2019s completely kosher; halacha cares about women\u2019s dignity and opportunities to contribute to the world in a variety of ways.<\/p>\n<p>Halacha weighs a lot of different considerations from a lot of different angles, and while Shmuel reminds us that there is sometimes value in going beyond the law in one direction \u2013 Rav Nachman reminds us that there is legitimacy in <em>not<\/em>, that the considerations from the other direction are valid and valuable as well.<\/p>\n<p>Most important, perhaps, is the gray area the Gemara leaves open between these two rulings.<\/p>\n<p>If Shmuel and Rav Nachman rule differently because the circumstances of their cases differ, there is also the matter of how to make that determination. Who decides whether to return the item or not in any given scenario, and how?<\/p>\n<p>Rav Joshua Amaru, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.etzion.org.il\/en\/elu-metziot-shiur-15-24a-24b\"><strong>on the Etzion website<\/strong><\/a>, suggests another distinction between Shmuel and Rav Nachman: the question of what sort of ruling should be made, by whom. \u201cShmuel teaches his favorite student that what is allowed and what one ought to do morally are not the same\u2026 To benefit from someone\u2019s loss in this way, thought not illegal, is not the way in which Shmuel expects Rav Yehuda to behave.\u201d On the other hand, he suggests, \u201cPerhaps Rav Nachman believes that it is not appropriate for him to answer his student\u2019s question by telling him the <em>lifnim mi-shurat ha-din<\/em>. Rav Nachman is a professional judge\u2026 By putting moral pressure on the finder, one may be exhibiting kindness to the original owner but at the expense of the finder. It is one thing for the finder to give the money back on his own initiative and another for the judge to encourage him to do so.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This reading, alongside the Gemara itself, and the Raavyah, and even the Rambam, speaks to the intricately-woven challenges of making decisions in a world that is not black and white.<\/p>\n<p>It is easy to say going beyond the letter of the law is better \u2013 and sometimes it is, but sometimes it\u2019s not, because there are multiple sides to every story and those sides are different for every person.<\/p>\n<p>In some cases, the choice may be made under advisement from a trusted mentor to a close student; Shmuel might well be in a position to direct Rav Yehuda as to what he <em>expects <\/em>of him. But for any authority figure to lay down the law from on high that everybody must do Y, the most Y ever, despite solid basis for X or Z \u2013 that\u2019s not fair, and it\u2019s not authentic. Law is law, even if <strong>sometimes<\/strong>, for those who <strong>want <\/strong>and are <strong>able<\/strong>, going beyond the law is better. It\u2019s a delicate balancing act and ultimately, no one can make those determinations for others.<\/p>\n<p>No one can say anyone else does or doesn\u2019t go far enough in any <em>chumra<\/em>. Halacha is halacha, and <em>chumra <\/em>is <em>chumra <\/em>\u2013 and different halachic opinions are often equally valid different halachic opinions, and no one gets to say everybody must always choose the most strict.<\/p>\n<p>To return to the time of year and the upcoming Yom Hadin: The only One who can make these determinations, apart from each individual and perhaps a trusted mentor, is G-d. Not coincidentally, He\u2019s also the only One who has no personal bias affecting His view of <em>din<\/em>. We trust His judgment, not that of our friends and neighbors, in determining what standards we must uphold, because He is not swayed like our friends and neighbors might be by their subjective ideals regarding <em>lifnim mishurat hadin<\/em>. He sees all the X\u2019s and Y\u2019s and Z\u2019s, and knows what is right for each of us, and we can trust Him to judge each of us only in terms of the integrity of our individual attempts to weigh X, Y, and Z.<\/p>\n<p>And at the same time, we beg of Him that he take the <em>lifnim mishurat hadin<\/em> path in judging us, having compassion even when we don\u2019t deserve it (see, for instance, Berachot 7a) \u2013 because for Him, there is no other side; unlike us, He has nothing to lose.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><em>Sarah C. Rudolph is a Jewish educator and freelance writer. She has been sharing her passion for Jewish texts of all kinds for over 15 years, with students of all ages. Sarah\u2019s essays have been published in a variety of internet and print media, including Times of Israel, Kveller,\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/jewishaction.com\/\">Jewish Action<\/a>, The Lehrhaus, TorahMusings, and more. Sarah lives in Cleveland with her husband and four children, but is privileged to learn online with students all over the world through\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.torahtutors.org\/\">www.TorahTutors.org<\/a>\u00a0and\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.webyeshiva.org\/\">www.WebYeshiva.org<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Somehow, this time of year \u2013 the lead-up to Yom Hadin \u2013 often makes me think not only about Heavenly judgment, but about humans who judge each other. Maybe it\u2019s just the word \u201cjudgment\u201d; maybe it\u2019s coming off of the Three Weeks, when we talk so much about sinat chinam; maybe it\u2019s the necessity of<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":133529,"featured_media":60470,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_cloudinary_featured_overwrite":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[85],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-60469","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-inspiration"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v24.9 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Beyond the Letter of Judgment Day - OU Life<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"While there is often value in going beyond the law there can be reasons not to. 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Rudolph is a Jewish educator and freelance writer. She has been sharing her passion for Jewish texts of all kinds for over 15 years, with students of all ages. Sarah's essays have been published in a variety of internet and print media, including Times of Israel, Kveller, Jewish Action, The Lehrhaus, TorahMusings, and more. 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