From Sinai’s Fire to the Architecture of a Just Society
From Sinai’s Fire to the Architecture of a Just Society
Shalom from Yoel and Orly, founders
of Ulpan-Or, the International Center
for Hebrew and Israeli Culture Studies.
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Last week in Torah portion Yitro the mountain trembled.
- Thunder.
- Lightning.
- A Divine voice.
This week?
- Contracts.
- Damages.
- Employment law.
- Financial responsibility.
And this Shabbat, alongside the Torah portion Mishpatim (משפטים), we read an additional portion — Parashat Shekalim (שקלים).
At first glance, the transition feels abrupt.
In truth, it is one seamless movement.
The portion opens:
וְאֵלֶּה הַמִּשְׁפָּטִים אֲשֶׁר תָּשִׂים לִפְנֵיהֶם
“And these are the laws that you shall set before them.” (Exodus 21:1)
They are Sinai translated into society.
According to Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, Judaism’s revolution was this:
Holiness is not mystical detachment.
It is ethical structure.
Why Begin with the Vulnerable?
The first legal case? The Hebrew servant.
כִּי תִקְנֶה עֶבֶד עִבְרִי… שֵׁשׁ שָׁנִים יַעֲבֹד וּבַשְּׁבִעִת יֵצֵא לַחָפְשִׁי חִנָּם
“If you acquire a Hebrew servant… six years he shall serve, and in the seventh he shall go free.” (Exodus 21:2)
- Before property rights.
- Before corporate regulation.
- Before statecraft.
- Human dignity.

Centuries later, John Rawls would argue that justice must be structured from the standpoint of the least advantaged.
Mishpatim quietly begins there.
And when the Torah commands:
וְגֵר לֹא תוֹנֶה וְלֹא תִלְחָצֶנּוּ
“You shall not oppress the stranger.” (Exodus 22:20)
It transforms memory into morality:
כִּי גֵרִים הֱיִיתֶם בְּאֶרֶץ מִצְרָיִם
“For you were strangers in Egypt.”
Justice in Judaism is not abstract philosophy.
It is historical empathy.
And Then — Parashat Shekalim
Why do we read Shekalim now?
The origin lies in Temple times.
Every year, beginning in the month of Adar, a public announcement was made reminding the people to bring their half-shekel contribution for communal offerings in the Beit HaMikdash.
The Mishnah (Shekalim 1:1) teaches:
On the first of Adar, announcements were made concerning the shekalim.
Why in Adar?
Even after the Temple’s destruction, the Sages instituted the reading of this section in preparation for Adar — to preserve the memory of shared national responsibility.
We do not bring coins to the Temple today. (There is a custom nowadays to donate monetary value equal to the estimated current value of the original Half-Shekel)

But we still renew the idea.
The Radical Equality of the Half-Shekel
The Torah commands:
זֶה יִתְּנוּ… מַחֲצִית הַשֶּׁקֶל
“This shall they give… a half-shekel.” (Exodus 30:13)
And then:
הֶעָשִׁיר לֹא יַרְבֶּה וְהַדַּל לֹא יַמְעִיט
“The rich shall not give more and the poor shall not give less.” (Exodus 30:15)
This is extraordinary.
In taxation, wealth differs.
In covenantal identity, it does not.
Each person gives the same symbolic amount.
Why half?
Because no one is complete alone.
Rabbi Sacks often stressed that Judaism is not a religion of isolated spirituality. It is a covenantal community.
Contemporary Resonance
Modern society debates taxation, social responsibility, and public goods.
Michael Sandel argues that markets alone cannot sustain moral community.
Shekalim teaches that certain things — like national service, sacred purpose, communal worship — require shared contribution, not privatized spirituality.
Even more striking:
Every person gives exactly the same amount.
Because before God, dignity is not measured by wealth.
Equality here is not economic sameness.
It is equal belonging.
Mishpatim + Shekalim: The Full Vision
Sinai revealed God’s voice.
Mishpatim builds a just legal order.
Shekalim funds a shared spiritual center.
Na’aseh V’Nishma
At the end of Mishpatim:
נַעֲשֶׂה וְנִשְׁמָע
“We will do and we will hear.” (Exodus 24:7)
First action.
Then understanding.
The covenant is lived before it is fully comprehended.
Justice is practiced before it is theorized.
Community is built before it is analyzed.
A Chassidic Insight
A student once asked:
“If every Jew is precious, why not give a full coin?”
The Rebbe answered:
“Because only together do we become whole.”
Holiness is never solitary.
When Biblical Law Becomes Modern Language
One of the most fascinating aspects of Mishpatim is how its legal vocabulary did not remain in ancient courts.
It became the backbone of modern Hebrew — and even modern Israeli law.
Let’s explore.
מִשְׁפָּט (Mishpat) – Justice / Law
Root: ש–פ–ט
In the Torah: judicial decision, restoring balance.
Modern Hebrew:
• בית משפט – courthouse
• משפט פלילי – criminal law
• משפט אזרחי – civil law
• מערכת המשפט – judicial system
Biblical covenant → modern legal infrastructure.
The same root that governed oxen damages now governs Supreme Court deliberations.

Language itself reflects structure.
צֶדֶק (Tzedek) – Righteousness / Justice
In the Torah: moral righteousness.
The Hebrew language refuses to separate compassion from obligation.
The Deeper Message
Last week — revelation. This week — responsibility.
This Shabbat — shared contribution.
The Torah does not end at inspiration.
It insists on institution.
It demands structure.
It asks each of us:
- Will you build a society worthy of Sinai?
- Will you invest in a community larger than yourself?
- Will you turn awe into action?
Spirituality is not escape.
It is construction.
Shabbat Shalom,
Yoel & Orly





