torah

Shemittah, Shabbat and Jews

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The beginning of parashat Behar focuses on the mitzvah of Shemittah: “And the L-rd spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai, saying, “Speak to the children of Israel and you shall say to them: ‘When you come to the land that I am giving you, the land shall rest Shabbat l’Hashem (a Sabbath to the L-rd). You may sow your field for six years, and for six years you may prune your vineyard, and gather in its produce, but in the seventh year, the land shall have a complete rest Shabbat l’Hashem; you shall not sow your field, nor shall you prune your vineyard’.” (Vayikra 25:1-4)

The phrase Shabbat l’Hashem appears twice in these pasukim, suggesting that it is a constitutive element of the Shemittah experience. Rashi interprets our term as: “L’shame Hashem (for the sake of the L-rd), just as is stated regarding the Sabbath of Creation.” In some ways, this very terse explanation conceals far more than it reveals, as we are left to ponder how it advances our understanding of the original expression “Shabbat l’Hashem.”

Many of the supercommentators on Rashi’s commentary spent a great deal of time wrestling with Rashi’s interpretation. In my estimation, the Mizrachi offers the most compelling analysis. He suggests that Rashi never meant that we fulfill the laws of Shemittah “in honor of Hashem’s name and glory.” In addition, he notes that Shemittah is not for the farmer’s benefit to enable “the land to rest for a year in order to increase the power of its fertility in the coming years    a practice that was prevalent among the farmers of the time.”

Instead, the Mizrachi maintains that Rashi held that the prohibition of working the Land of Israel during the Shemittah year is “sh’yiyeh sh’vitatah l’shame HaShabbat (so that the cessation of all agricultural work will be in recognition of Shabbat). [For, as we know,] Hashem rested on it [Shabbat] at the time of the Creation of the world.” He reinforces his understanding of Rashi’s gloss in the following manner: “Therefore [Rashi writes], “just as is stated regarding the Sabbath of Creation,” for [in the Aseret HaDibrot] the Torah explicitly states: “But the seventh day is a Sabbath to the L-rd, your G-d. … For [in] six days the L-rd made the heaven and the earth, the sea and all that is in them, and He rested on the seventh day. Therefore, the L-rd blessed the Sabbath day and sanctified it.” (Shemot 20:10-11)

The Mizrachi concludes this portion of his commentary on Rashi’s statement by noting that, while it is true that Shemittah clearly refers to resting in the seventh year and Hashem’s refraining from further creative activity at the time Creation took place “on the seventh day,” nonetheless, we can rely on the Ramban’s famous position that “all instances of the word ‘seven’ in the Torah are a zacher —a reference to the seventh day [Shabbat].” In sum, for the Mizrachi, the correct formula for understanding Rashi’s comment is: “Shabbat l’Hashem = l’shame Hashem = l’shame HaShabbat.

As we have seen, the Mizrachi focused his exegetical skills on analyzing the phrase, “Shabbat l’Hashem,” in order to comprehend the inner meaning of the Shemittah experience.

Closer to our own time, my rebbe and mentor, Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, followed a different, but complementary approach in this quest, noting the singular import of the word “land” that appears three times in our passage: “And the L-rd spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai, saying, “Speak to the children of Israel and you shall say to them: ‘When you come to the land that I am giving you, the land shall rest Shabbat l’Hashem (a Sabbath to the L-rd). You may sow your field for six years, and for six years you may prune your vineyard, and gather in its produce, but in the seventh year, the land shall have a complete rest Shabbat l’Hashem

This emphasis generates the following incisive observation of the Rav:

“The Torah speaks of a land “defiled” and of a land “resting” and observing its ‘sabbatical years.’ The Land of Israel possesses a distinct personality. It is likened to a human being who can be defiled, can be sanctified, can rest and can be appeased. Just as a Jew observes the Sabbath once a week, the Land of Israel observes the Sabbath once every seven years. In this way the Land of Israel takes on human dimensions.”

As for the Mizrachi and the Ramban, Shemittah for the Rav is ultimately a code word for Shabbat. In this case, the Land of Israel — in all its metaphorical human dimensions — observes the Shabbat once every seven years, just as we, the Jewish people, do each and every week. 

Shabbat Shalom and may Hashem in His great mercy remove the magafah from klal Yisrael and the entire world.