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The 613 Commandments of the Torah
Mar 4th, 2009 by Elijah

BOOK ONE: THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE

Fundamentals of Torah:
1 To know there is a God Ex. 20:2
2 Not to entertain thoughts of other gods besides Him Ex. 20:3
3 To know that He is one Deut. 6:4
4 To love Him Deut. 6:5
5 To fear Him Deut. 10:20
6 To sanctify His Name Lev. 22:32
7 Not to profane His Name Lev. 22:32
8 Not to destroy objects associated with His Name Deut. 12:4
9 To listen to the prophet speaking in His Name Deut. 18:15
10 Not to test the prophet unduly Deut. 6:16

Laws of Character
11 To emulate His ways Deut. 28:9
12 To cleave to those who know Him Deut. 10:20
13 To love Jews Lev. 19:18
14 To love converts Deut. 10:19
15 Not to hate fellow Jews Lev. 19:17
16 To reprove Lev. 19:17
17 Not to embarrass others Lev. 19:17
18 Not to oppress the weak Ex. 21:22
19 Not to speak derogatorily of others Lev. 19:16
20 Not to take revenge Lev. 19:18
21 Not to bear a grudge Lev. 19:18

Laws of Torah Study
22 To learn Torah Deut. 6:7
23 To honor those who teach and know Torah Lev. 19:32

Laws of Idolatry and Paganism
24 Not to inquire into idolatry Lev. 19:4
25 Not to follow the whims of your heart or what your eyes see Num. 15:39
26 Not to blaspheme Ex. 22:27
27 Not to worship idols in the manner they are worshiped Ex. 20:5
28 Not to worship idols in the four ways we worship God Ex. 20:5
29 Not to make an idol for yourself Ex. 20:4
30 Not to make an idol for others Lev. 19:4
31 Not to make human forms even for decorative purposes Ex. 20:20
32 Not to turn a city to idolatry Ex. 23:13
33 To burn a city that has turned to idol worship Deut. 13:17
34 Not to rebuild it as a city Deut. 13:17
35 Not to derive benefit from it Deut. 13:18
36 Not to missionize an individual to idol worship Deut. 13:12
37 Not to love the missionary Deut. 13:9
38 Not to cease hating the missionary Deut. 13:9
39 Not to save the missionary Deut. 13:9
40 Not to say anything in his defense Deut. 13:9
41 Not to refrain from incriminating him Deut. 13:9
42 Not to prophesize in the name of idolatry Deut. 13:14
43 Not to listen to a false prophet Deut. 13:4
44 Not to prophesize falsely in the name of God Deut. 18:20
45 Not to be afraid of killing the false prophet Deut. 18:22
46 Not to swear in the name of an idol Ex. 23:13
47 Not to perform ov (medium) Lev. 19:31
48 Not to perform yidoni (magical seer) Lev. 19:31
49 Not to pass your children through the fire to Molech Lev. 18:21
50 Not to erect a column in a public place of worship Deut. 16:22
51 Not to bow down on smooth stone Lev. 26:1
52 Not to plant a tree in the Temple courtyard Deut. 16:21
53 To destroy idols and their accessories Deut. 12:2
54 Not to derive benefit from idols and their accessories Deut. 7:26
55 Not to derive benefit from ornaments of idols Deut. 7:25
56 Not to make a covenant with idolaters Deut. 7:2
57 Not to show favor to them Deut. 7:2
58 Not to let them dwell in our land Ex. 23:33
59 Not to imitate them in customs and clothing Lev. 20:23
60 Not to be superstitious Lev. 19:26
61 Not to go into a trance to foresee events, etc. Deut. 18:10
62 Not to engage in astrology Lev. 19:26
63 Not to mutter incantations Deut. 18:11
64 Not to attempt to contact the dead Deut. 18:11
65 Not to consult the ov Deut. 18:11
66 Not to consult the yidoni Deut. 18:11
67 Not to perform acts of magic Deut. 18:10
68 Men must not shave the hair off the sides of their head Lev. 19:27
69 Men must not shave their beards with a razor Lev. 19:27
70 Men must not wear women’s clothing Deut. 22:5
71 Women must not wear men’s clothing Deut. 22:5
72 Not to tattoo the skin Lev. 19:28
73 Not to tear the skin in mourning Deut. 14:1
74 Not to make a bald spot in mourning Deut. 14:1

Laws of Repentance
75 To repent and confess wrongdoings Num. 5:7


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BOOK TWO: THE BOOK OF LOVE OF GOD

Laws of Reading the Shema
76 To say the Shema twice daily Deut. 6:7

Laws of Prayer and Kohanic Blessings
77 To serve the Almighty with prayer daily Ex. 23:25
78 The Kohanim must bless the Jewish nation daily Num. 6:23

Laws of Tefillin, Mezuza and Sefer Torah
79 To wear tefillin on the head Deut. 6:8
80 To bind tefillin on the arm Deut. 6:8
81 To put a mezuzah on each door post Deut. 6:9
82 Each male must write a Sefer Torah Deut. 31:19
83 The king must have a separate Sefer Torah for himself Deut. 17:18

Laws of Tzitzit
84 To have tzitzit on four-cornered garments Num. 15:38

Laws of Blessings
85 To bless the Almighty after eating Deut. 8:10

Laws of Circumcision
86 To circumcise all males on the eighth day after their birth Lev. 12:3

BOOK THREE: THE BOOK OF SEASONS

Laws of the Sabbath
87 To rest on the seventh day Ex. 23:12
88 Not to do prohibited labor on the seventh day Ex. 20:10
89 The court must not inflict punishment on Shabbat Ex. 35:3
90 Not to walk outside the city boundary on Shabbat Ex. 16:29
91 To sanctify the day with Kiddush and Havdallah Ex. 20:8

Laws of Eruvin (Rabbinical)

Laws of Yom Kippur Rest
92 To rest from prohibited labor Lev. 23:32
93 Not to do prohibited labor on Yom Kippur Lev. 23:32
94 To afflict yourself on Yom Kippur Lev. 16:29
95 Not to eat or drink on Yom Kippur Lev. 23:29

Laws of Festival Rest
96 To rest on the first day of Passover Lev. 23:7
97 Not to do prohibited labor on the first day of Passover Lev. 23:8
98 To rest on the seventh day of Passover Lev. 23:8
99 Not to do prohibited labor on the seventh day of Passover Lev. 23:8
100 To rest on Shavuot Lev. 23:21
101 Not to do prohibited labor on Shavuot Lev. 23:21
102 To rest on Rosh Hashana Lev. 23:24
103 Not to do prohibited labor on Rosh Hashana Lev. 23:25
104 To rest on Sukkot Lev. 23:35
105 Not to do prohibited labor on Sukkot Lev. 23:35
106 To rest on Shmini Atzeret Lev. 23:36
107 Not to do prohibited labor on Shmini Atzeret Lev. 23:36

Laws of Chometz and Matzah
108 Not to eat chametz on the afternoon of the 14th day of Nissan Deut. 16:3
109 To destroy all chametz on 14th day of Nissan Ex. 12:15
110 Not to eat chametz all seven days of Passover Ex. 13:3
111 Not to eat mixtures containing chametz all seven days of Passover Ex. 12:20
112 Not to see chametz in your domain seven days Ex. 13:7
113 Not to find chametz in your domain seven days Ex. 12:19
114 To eat matzah on the first night of Passover Ex. 12:18
115 To relate the exodus from Egypt on that night Ex. 13:8

Laws of Shofar, Sukkah, Lulav
116 To hear the Shofar on the first day of Tishrei (Rosh Hashana) Num. 29:1
117 To dwell in a Sukkah for the seven days of Sukkot Lev. 23:42
118 To take up a Lulav and Etrog all seven days Lev. 23:40

Laws of Shekalim
119 Each man must give a half shekel annually Ex. 30:13

Laws of Sanctification of Months
120 Courts must calculate to determine when a new month begins Ex. 12:2

Laws of Fasts
121 To afflict and cry out before God in times of catastrophe Num. 10:9

Laws of Megillah and Chanukah (Rabbinical)

BOOK FOUR: THE BOOK OF WOMEN

Laws of Marriage
122 To marry a wife by means of ketubah and kiddushin Deut. 22:13
123 Not to have relations with women not thus married Deut. 23:18
124 Not to withhold food, clothing, and relations from your wife Ex. 21:10
125 To have children with one’s wife Gen 1:28

Laws of Divorce
126 To issue a divorce by means of a “get” document Deut. 24:1
127 A man must not remarry his wife after she has married someone else Deut. 24:4

Laws of Yivum and Chalitzah (Levirate Marriage)
128 To do yibum (marry childless brother’s widow) Deut. 25:5
129 To do chalitzah (freeing a widow from yibum) Deut. 25:9
130 The widow must not remarry until the ties with her brother-in-law
are removed
Deut. 25:5

Laws of Women
131 The court must fine one who seduces a maiden Ex. 22:15-16
132 The rapist must marry the maiden (if she chooses) Deut. 22:29
133 He is not allowed to divorce her Deut. 22:29
134 The slanderer must remain married to his wife Deut. 22:19
135 He must not divorce her Deut. 22:19

Laws of Sotah (Suspect Wife)
136 To fulfill the laws of the Sotah Num. 5:30
137 Not to put oil on her meal offering Num. 5:15
138 Not to put frankincense on her meal offering Num. 5:15

BOOK FIVE: THE BOOK OF HOLINESS

Laws of Forbidden Relations
139 Not to have relations with your mother Lev. 18:7
140 Not to have relations with your father’s wife Lev. 18:8
141 Not to have relations with your sister Lev. 18:9
142 Not to have relations with your father’s wife’s daughter Lev. 18:11
143 Not to have relations with your son’s daughter Lev. 18:10
144 Not to have relations with your daughter Lev. 18:10
145 Not to have relations with your daughter’s daughter Lev. 18:10
146 Not to have relations with a woman and her daughter Lev. 18:17
147 Not to have relations with a woman and her son’s daughter Lev. 18:17
148 Not to have relations with a woman and her daughter’s daughter Lev. 18:17
149 Not to have relations with your father’s sister Lev. 18:12
150 Not to have relations with your mother’s sister Lev. 18:13
151 Not to have relations with your father’s brother’s wife Lev. 18:14
152 Not to have relations with your son’s wife Lev. 18:15
153 Not to have relations with your brother’s wife Lev. 18:16
154 Not to have relations with your wife’s sister Lev. 18:18
155 A man must not have relations with a beast Lev. 18:23
156 A woman must not have relations with a beast Lev. 18:23
157 Not to have homosexual relations Lev. 18:22
158 Not to have homosexual relations with your father Lev. 18:7
159 Not to have homosexual relations with your father’s brother Lev. 18:14
160 Not to have relations with a married woman Lev. 18:20
161 Not to have relations with a menstrually impure woman Lev. 18:19
162 Not to marry non-Jews Deut. 7:3
163 Not to let Moabite and Ammonite males marry into the Jewish people Deut. 23:4
164 Don’t keep a third generation Egyptian convert from marrying
into the Jewish people
Deut. 23:8-9
165 Not to refrain from marrying a third generation
Edomite convert
Deut. 23:8-9
166 Not to let a mamzer marry into the Jewish people Deut. 23:3
167 Not to let a eunuch marry into the Jewish people Deut. 23:2
168 Not to castrate any male (including animals) Lev. 22:24
169 The High Priest must not marry a widow Lev. 21:14
170 The High Priest must not have relations with a widow even outside of marriage Lev. 21:15
171 The High Priest must marry a virgin maiden Lev. 21:13
172 A Kohen must not marry a divorcee Lev. 21:7
173 A Kohen must not marry a zonah (a woman who had forbidden relations) Lev. 21:7
174 A priest must not marry a chalalah (party to or product of 169-172) Lev. 21:7
175 Not to make pleasurable contact with any forbidden woman Lev. 18:6

Laws of Forbidden Foods
176 To examine the signs of animals to distinguish between kosher and non-kosher Lev. 11:2
177 To examine the signs of fowl to distinguish between kosher
and non-kosher
Deut. 14:11
178 To examine the signs of fish to distinguish between kosher and non-kosher Lev. 11:9
179 To examine the signs of locusts to distinguish between kosher and non-kosher Lev. 11:21
180 Not to eat non-kosher animals Lev. 11:4
181 Not to eat non-kosher fowl Lev. 11:13
182 Not to eat non-kosher fish Lev. 11:11
183 Not to eat non-kosher flying insects Deut. 14:19
184 Not to eat non-kosher creatures that crawl on land Lev. 11:41
185 Not to eat non-kosher maggots Lev. 11:44
186 Not to eat worms found in fruit on the ground Lev. 11:42
187 Not to eat creatures that live in water other than fish Lev. 11:43
188 Not to eat the meat of an animal that died without ritual slaughter Deut. 14:21
189 Not to benefit from an ox condemned to be stoned Ex. 21:28
190 Not to eat meat of an animal that was mortally wounded Ex. 22:30
191 Not to eat a limb torn off a living creature Deut 12:23
192 Not to eat blood Lev. 3:17
193 Not to eat certain fats of clean animals Lev. 3:17
194 Not to eat the sinew of the thigh Gen. 32:33
195 Not to eat meat and milk cooked together Ex. 23:19
196 Not to cook meat and milk together Ex. 34:26
197 Not to eat bread from new grain before the Omer Lev. 23:14
198 Not to eat parched grains from new grain before the Omer Lev. 23:14
199 Not to eat ripened grains from new grain before the Omer Lev. 23:14
200 Not to eat fruit of a tree during its first three years Lev. 19:23
201 Not to eat diverse seeds planted in a vineyard Deut. 22:9
202 Not to eat untithed fruits Lev. 22:15
203 Not to drink wine poured in service to idols Deut. 32:38

Laws of Slaughtering
204 To ritually slaughter an animal before eating it Deut. 12:21
205 Not to slaughter an animal and its offspring on the same day Lev. 22:28
206 To cover the blood (of a slaughtered beast or fowl) with earth Lev. 17:13
207 Not to take the mother bird from her children Deut. 22:6
208 To release the mother bird if she was taken from the nest Deut. 22:7

BOOK SIX: THE BOOK OF OATHS

Laws of Oaths
209 Not to swear falsely in God’s Name Lev. 19:12
210 Not to take God’s Name in vain Ex. 20:7
211 Not to deny possession of something entrusted to you Lev. 19:11
212 Not to swear in denial of a monetary claim Lev. 19:11
213 To swear in God’s Name to confirm the truth when deemed necessary by court Deut. 10:20

Laws of Vows
214 To fulfill what was uttered and to do what was avowed Deut. 23:24
215 Not to break oaths or vows Num. 30:3
216 For oaths and vows annulled, there are the laws of
annulling vows explicit in the Torah
Num. 30:3

Laws of The Nazir
217 The Nazir must let his hair grow Num. 6:5
218 He must not cut his hair Num. 6:5
219 He must not drink wine, wine mixtures, or wine vinegar Num. 6:3
220 He must not eat fresh grapes Num. 6:3
221 He must not eat raisins Num. 6:3
222 He must not eat grape seeds Num. 6:4
223 He must not eat grape skins Num. 6:4
224 He must not be under the same roof as a corpse Num. 6:6
225 He must not come into contact with the dead Num. 6:7
226 He must shave after bringing sacrifices upon
completion of his Nazirite period
Num. 6:9

Laws of Estimated Values and Vows
227 To estimate the value of people as determined by the Torah Lev. 27:2
228 To estimate the value of consecrated animals Lev. 27:12-13
229 To estimate the value of consecrated houses Lev. 27:14
230 To estimate the value of consecrated fields Lev. 27:16
231 Carry out the laws of interdicting possessions (cherem) Lev. 27:28
232 Not to sell the cherem Lev. 27:28
233 Not to redeem the cherem Lev. 27:28

BOOK SEVEN: THE BOOK OF SEEDS

Laws of Mixed Species
234 Not to plant diverse seeds together Lev. 19:19
235 Not to plant grains or greens in a vineyard Deut. 22:9
236 Not to crossbreed animals Lev. 19:19
237 Not to work different animals together Deut. 22:10
238 Not to wear sha’atnez, a cloth woven of wool and linen Deut. 22:11

Laws of Gifts to the Poor
239 To leave a corner of the field uncut for the poor Lev. 19:10
240 Not to reap that corner Lev. 19:9
241 To leave gleanings Lev. 19:9
242 Not to gather the gleanings Lev. 19:9
243 To leave the gleanings of a vineyard Lev. 19:10
244 Not to gather the gleanings of a vineyard Lev. 19:10
245 To leave the unformed clusters of grapes Lev. 19:10
246 Not to pick the unformed clusters of grapes Lev. 19:10
247 To leave the forgotten sheaves in the field Deut. 24:19
248 Not to retrieve them Deut. 24:19
249 To separate the tithe for the poor Deut. 14:28
250 To give charity Deut. 15:8
251 Not to withhold charity from the poor Deut. 15:7
252 To set aside Trumah Gedolah (tithe for the Kohen) Deut. 18:4
253 The Levite must set aside a tenth of his tithe Num. 18:26
254 Not to preface one tithe to the next, but separate them in
their proper order
Ex. 22:28
255 A non-Kohen must not eat Trumah Lev. 22:10
256 A hired worker or a Jewish bondsman of a Kohen must
not eat Trumah
Lev. 22:10
257 An uncircumcised Kohen must not eat Trumah Ex.12:48
258 An impure Kohen must not eat Trumah Lev. 22:4
259 A chalalah must not eat Trumah Lev. 22:12

Laws of Ma’aser
260 To set aside Ma’aser each planting year and give it to a Levite Num. 18:24

Laws of The Second Tithe and Fourth Year Produce
261 To set aside the second tithe (Ma’aser Sheni) Deut. 14:22
262 Not to spend its redemption money on anything but
food, drink, or ointment
Deut. 26:14
263 Not to eat Ma’aser Sheni while impure Deut. 26:14
264 A mourner on the first day after death must not eat Ma’aser Sheni Deut. 26:14
265 Not to eat Ma’aser Sheni grains outside Jerusalem Deut. 12:17
266 Not to eat Ma’aser Sheni wine products outside Jerusalem Deut. 12:17
267 Not to eat Ma’aser Sheni oil outside Jerusalem Deut. 12:17
268 The fourth year crops must be totally for holy
purposes like Ma’aser Sheni
Lev. 19:24
269 To read the confession of tithes every fourth and seventh year Deut. 26:13

Laws of First Fruits and other Kohanic Gifts
270 To set aside the first fruits and bring them to the Temple Ex. 23:19
271 The Kohanim must not eat the first fruits outside Jerusalem Deut. 12:17
272 To read the Torah portion pertaining to their presentation Deut. 26:5
273 To set aside a portion of dough for a Kohen Num. 15:20
274 To give the shoulder, two cheeks, and stomach of slaughtered animals
to a Kohen
Deut. 18:3
275 To give the first sheering of sheep to a Kohen Deut. 18:4
276 To redeem the firstborn sons and give the money to a Kohen Num. 18:15
277 To redeem the firstborn donkey by giving a lamb to a Kohen Ex. 13:13
278 To break the neck of the donkey if the owner does not intend to redeem it Ex. 13:13

Laws of The Sabbatical and Jubilee Years
279 To rest the land during the seventh year by not doing any
work which enhances growth
Ex. 34:21
280 Not to work the land during the seventh year Lev. 25:4
281 Not to work with trees to produce fruit during that year Lev. 25:4
282 Not to reap crops that grow wild that year in the normal manner Lev. 25:5
283 Not to gather grapes which grow wild that year in the normal way Lev. 25:5
284 To leave free all produce which grew in that year Ex. 23:11
285 To release all loans during the seventh year Deut. 15:2
286 Not to pressure or claim from the borrower Deut. 15:2
287 Not to refrain from lending immediately before the release of
the loans for fear of monetary loss
Deut. 15:9
288 The Sanhedrin must count seven groups of seven years Lev. 25:8
289 The Sanhedrin must sanctify the fiftieth year Lev. 25:10
290 To blow the Shofar on the tenth of Tishrei to free the slaves Lev. 25:9
291 Not to work the soil during the fiftieth year Lev. 25:11
292 Not to reap in the normal manner that which grows
wild in the fiftieth year
Lev. 25:11
293 Not to pick grapes which grew wild in the normal
manner in the fiftieth year
Lev. 25:11
294 Carry out the laws of sold family properties Lev. 25:24
295 Not to sell the land in Israel indefinitely Lev. 25:23
296 Carry out the laws of houses in walled cities Lev. 25:29
297 The Tribe of Levi must not be given a portion of the land in Israel,
rather they are given cities to dwell in
Deut. 18:1
298 The Levites must not take a share in the spoils of war Deut. 18:1
299 To give the Levites cities to inhabit and their surrounding fields Num. 35:2
300 Not to sell the fields but they shall remain the Levites’ before and
after the Jubilee year
Lev. 25:34

BOOK EIGHT: THE BOOK OF SERVICE

Laws of The Temple
301 To build a Sanctuary Ex. 25:8
302 Not to build the altar with stones hewn by metal Ex. 20:22
303 Not to climb steps to the altar Ex. 20:23
304 To show reverence to the Temple Lev. 1930
305 To guard the Temple area Num. 18:2
306 Not to leave the Temple unguarded Num. 18:5

Laws of Temple Vessels and Employees
307 To prepare the anointing oil Ex. 30:31
308 Not to reproduce the anointing oil Ex. 30:32
309 Not to anoint with anointing oil Ex. 30:32
310 Not to reproduce the incense formula Ex. 30:37
311 Not to burn anything on the Golden Altar besides incense Ex. 30:9
312 The Levites must transport the ark on their shoulders Num. 7:9
313 Not to remove the staves from the ark Ex. 25:15
314 The Levites must work in the Temple Num. 18:23
315 No Levite must do another’s work of either a Kohen or a Levite Num. 18:3
316 To dedicate the Kohen for service Lev. 21:8
317 The kohanic work shifts must be equal during holidays Deut. 18:6-8
318 The Kohanim must wear their priestly garments during service Ex. 28:2
319 Not to tear the priestly garments Ex. 28:32
320 The breastplate must not be loosened from the Efode Ex. 28:28

Laws of Entering the Temple
321 A Kohen must not enter the Temple intoxicated Lev. 10:9
322 A Kohen must not enter the Temple with long hair Lev. 10:6
323 A Kohen must not enter the Temple with torn clothes Lev. 10:6
324 A Kohen must not enter the Temple indiscriminately Lev. 16:2
325 A Kohen must not leave the Temple during service Lev. 10:7
326 To send the impure from the Temple Num. 5:2
327 Impure people must not enter the Temple Num. 5:3
328 Impure people must not enter the Temple Mount area Deut. 23:11
329 Impure Kohanim must not do service in the temple Lev. 22:2
330 An impure Kohen, following immersion, must wait until after sundown before returning to service Lev. 22:7
331 A Kohen must wash his hands and feet before service Ex. 30:19
332 A Kohen with a physical blemish must not enter the sanctuary or approach the altar Lev. 21:23
333 A Kohen with a physical blemish must not serve Lev.21:17
334 A Kohen with a temporary blemish must not serve Lev. 21:17
335 One who is not a Kohen must not serve Num. 18:4

Laws of Restrictions Concerning Sacrifices
336 To offer only unblemished animals Lev. 22:21
337 Not to dedicate a blemished animal for the altar Lev. 22:20
338 Not to slaughter it Lev. 22:22
339 Not to sprinkle its blood Lev. 22:24
340 Not to burn its fat Lev. 22:22
341 Not to offer a temporarily blemished animal Deut. 17:1
342 Not to sacrifice blemished animals even if offered by non-Jews Lev. 22:25
343 Not to inflict wounds upon dedicated animals Lev. 22:21
344 To redeem dedicated animals which have become disqualified Deut. 12:15
345 To offer only animals which are at least eight days old Lev. 22:27
346 Not to offer animals bought with the wages of a harlot or the
animal exchanged for a dog
Deut. 23:19
347 Not to burn honey or yeast on the altar Lev. 2:11
348 To salt all sacrifices Lev. 2:13
349 Not to omit the salt from sacrifices Lev. 2:13

Laws of Sacrificial Procedure
350 Carry out the procedure of the burnt offering as prescribed in the Torah Lev. 1:3
351 Not to eat its meat Deut. 12:17
352 Carry out the procedure of the sin offering Lev. 6:18
353 Not to eat the meat of the inner sin offering Lev. 6:23
354 Not to decapitate a fowl brought as a sin offering Lev. 5:8
355 Carry out the procedure of the guilt offering Lev. 7:1
356 The Kohanim must eat the sacrificial meat in the Temple Ex. 29:33
357 The Kohanim must not eat the meat outside the Temple courtyard Deut. 12:17
358 A non-Kohen must not eat sacrificial meat Ex. 29:33
359 To follow the procedure of the peace offering Lev. 7:11
360 Not to eat the meat of minor sacrifices before sprinkling the blood Deut. 12:17
361 To bring meal offerings as prescribed in the Torah Lev. 2:1
362 Not to put oil on the meal offerings of wrongdoers Lev. 5:11
363 Not to put frankincense on the meal offerings of wrongdoers Lev. 3:11
364 Not to eat the meal offering of the High Priest Lev. 6:16
365 Not to bake a meal offering as leavened bread Lev. 6:10
366 The Kohanim must eat the remains of the meal offerings Lev. 6:9
367 To bring all avowed and freewill offerings to the Temple on the first subsequent festival Deut. 12:5-6
368 Not to withhold payment incurred by any vow Deut. 23:22
369 To offer all sacrifices in the Temple Deut. 12:11
370 To bring all sacrifices from outside Israel to the Temple Deut. 12:26
371 Not to slaughter sacrifices outside the courtyard Lev. 17:4
372 Not to offer any sacrifices outside the courtyard Deut. 12:13

Laws of Constant and Additional Offerings
373 To offer two lambs every day Num. 28:3
374 To light a fire on the altar every day Lev. 6:6
375 Not to extinguish this fire Lev. 6:6
376 To remove the ashes from the altar every day Lev. 6:3
377 To burn incense every day Ex 30:7
378 To light the Menorah every day Ex. 27:21
379 The Kohen Gadol must bring a meal offering every day Lev. 6:13
380 To bring two additional lambs as burnt offerings on Shabbat Num 28:9
381 To make the show bread Ex. 25:30
382 To bring additional offerings on the New Month Num. 28:11
383 To bring additional offerings on Passover Num. 28:19
384 To offer the wave offering from the meal of the new wheat Lev. 23:10
385 Each man must count the Omer - seven weeks from the day the new
wheat offering was brought
Lev. 23:15
386 To bring additional offerings on Shavuot Num. 28:26
387 To bring two leaves to accompany the above sacrifice Lev. 23:17
388 To bring additional offerings on Rosh Hashana Num. 29:2
389 To bring additional offerings on Yom Kippur Num. 29:8
390 To bring additional offerings on Sukkot Num. 29:13
391 To bring additional offerings on Shmini Atzeret Num. 29:35

Laws of Disqualified Offerings
392 Not to eat sacrifices which have become unfit or blemished Deut. 14.3
393 Not to eat from sacrifices offered with improper intentions Lev. 7:18
394 Not to leave sacrifices past the time allowed for eating them Lev. 22:30
395 Not to eat from that which was left over Lev. 19:8
396 Not to eat from sacrifices which became impure Lev. 7:19
397 An impure person must not eat from sacrifices Lev. 7:20
398 To burn the leftover sacrifices Lev. 7:17
399 To burn all impure sacrifices Lev. 7:19

Laws of Yom Kippur Service
400 To follow the procedure of Yom Kippur in the sequence
prescribed in Parshat Acharei Mot
Lev. 16:3

Laws of Misusing Sanctified Property
401 One who profaned property must repay what he
profaned plus a fifth and bring a sacrifice
Lev. 5:16
402 Not to work consecrated animals Deut. 15:19
403 Not to shear the fleece of consecrated animals Deut. 15:19

BOOK NINE: THE BOOK OF SACRIFICES

Laws of Pascal Sacrifice
404 To slaughter the paschal sacrifice at the specified time Ex. 12:6
405 Not to slaughter it while in possession of leaven Ex. 23:18
406 Not to leave the fat overnight Ex. 23:18
407 To slaughter the second paschal lamb Num. 9:11
408 To eat the paschal lamb with matzah and Marror on the night of the
15th of Nissan
Ex. 12:8
409 To eat the second paschal lamb on the night of the 15th of Iyar Num.9:11
410 Not to eat the paschal meat raw or boiled Ex. 12:9
411 Not to take the paschal meat from the confines of the group Ex. 12:46
412 An apostate must not eat from it Ex.12:43
413 A permanent or temporary hired worker must not eat from it Ex. 12:45
414 An uncircumcised male must not eat from it Ex. 12:48
415 Not to break any bones from the paschal offering Ex. 12:46
416 Not to break any bones from the second paschal offering Num. 9:12
417 Not to leave any meat from the paschal offering over until morning Ex. 12:10
418 Not to leave the second paschal meat over until morning Num. 9:12
419 Not to leave the meat of the holiday offering of the 14th until the 16th Deut. 16:4

Laws of Pilgrim Offerings
420 To be seen at the Temple on Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot Deut. 16:16
421 To celebrate on these three Festivals (bring a peace offering) Ex. 23:14
422 To rejoice on these three Festivals (bring a peace offering) Deut. 16:14
423 Not to appear at the Temple without offerings Deut. 16:16
424 Not to refrain from rejoicing with, and giving gifts to, the Levites Deut. 12:19
425 To assemble all the people on the Sukkot following the seventh year Deut. 31:12

Laws of First Born Animals
426 To set aside the firstborn animals Ex. 13:12
427 The Kohanim must not eat unblemished firstborn animals
outside Jerusalem
Deut. 12:17
428 Not to redeem the firstborn Num. 18:17
429 Separate the tithe from animals Lev. 27:32
430 Not to redeem the tithe Lev. 27:33

Laws of Offerings for Unintentional Transgressions
431 Every person must bring a sin offering for his transgression Lev. 4:27
432 Bring an asham talui when uncertain of guilt Lev. 5:17-18
433 Bring an asham vadai when guilt is ascertained Lev. 5:25
434 Bring an oleh v’yored offering (if the person is wealthy, an animal; if poor, a bird or meal offering) Lev. 5:7-11
435 The Sanhedrin must bring an offering when it rules in error Lev. 4:13

Laws of Lacking Atonement
436 A woman who had a running issue must bring an offering
after she goes to the Mikveh
Lev. 15:28-29
437 A woman who gave birth must bring an offering after she goes
to the Mikveh
Lev. 12:6
438 A man who had a running issue must bring an offering after he goes
to the Mikveh
Lev. 15:13-14
439 A metzora must bring an offering after going to the Mikveh Lev. 14:10

Laws of Substitution of Sacrifices
440 Not to substitute another beast for one set apart for sacrifice Lev. 27:10
441 The new animal, in addition to the substituted one, retains consecration Lev. 27:10
442 Not to change consecrated animals from one type of offering to another Lev. 27:26

BOOK TEN: THE BOOK OF PURITY

Laws of Impurity of Human Dead
443 Carry out the laws of impurity of the dead Num. 19:14
Laws of The Red Heifer
444 Carry out the procedure of the Red Heifer Num. 19:2
445 Carry out the laws of the sprinkling water Num. 19:21

Laws of Impurity through Tzara’at
446 Rule the laws of human tzara’at as prescribed in the Torah Lev. 13:12
447 The metzora must not remove his signs of impurity Deut. 24:8
448 The metzora must not shave signs of impurity in his hair Lev. 13:33
449 The metzora must publicize his condition by tearing his garments,
allowing his hair to grow and covering his lips
Lev. 13:45
450 Carry out the prescribed rules for purifying the metzora Lev. 14:2
451 The metzora must shave off all his hair prior to purification Lev. 14:9
452 Carry out the laws of tzara’at of clothing Lev. 13:47
453 Carry out the laws of tzara’at of houses Lev. 13:34

Laws of Impurity of Reclining and Sitting
454 Observe the laws of menstrual impurity Lev. 15:19
455 Observe the laws of impurity caused by childbirth Lev. 12:2
456 Observe the laws of impurity caused by a woman’s running issue Lev. 15:25
457 Observe the laws of impurity caused by a man’s running issue Lev. 15:3

Laws of Other Sources of Impurity
458 Observe the laws of impurity caused by a dead beast Lev. 11:39
459 Observe the laws of impurity caused by the eight shratzim Lev. 11:29
460 Observe the laws of impurity of a seminal emission Lev. 15:16

Laws of Impurity of Food
461 Observe the laws of impurity concerning liquid and solid foods Lev. 11:34

Laws of Vessels (Rabbinical)

Laws of Mikveh
462 Every impure person must immerse himself in a Mikveh to become pure Lev. 15:16

BOOK ELEVEN: THE BOOK OF DAMAGES

Laws of Property Damage
463 The court must judge the damages incurred by a goring ox Ex. 21:28
464 The court must judge the damages incurred by an animal eating Ex. 22:4
465 The court must judge the damages incurred by a pit Ex. 21:33
466 The court must judge the damages incurred by fire Ex. 22:5

Laws of Theft
467 Not to steal money stealthily Lev. 19:11
468 The court must implement punitive measures against the thief Ex. 21:37
469 Each individual must ensure that his scales and weights are accurate Lev. 19:36
470 Not to commit injustice with scales and weights Lev. 19:35
471 Not to possess inaccurate scales and weights even if they are not for use Deut. 25:13
472 Not to move a boundary marker to steal someone’s property Deut. 19:14
473 Not to kidnap Ex. 20:13

Laws of Robbery and Lost Objects
474 Not to rob openly Lev. 19:13
475 Not to withhold wages or fail to repay a debt Lev. 19:13
476 Not to covet and scheme to acquire another’s possession Ex. 20:14
477 Not to desire another’s possession Deut. 5:18
478 Return the robbed object or its value Lev. 5:23
479 Not to ignore a lost object Deut. 22:3
480 Return the lost object Deut. 22:1
481 The court must implement laws against the one who assaults
another or damages another’s property
Ex. 21:18

Laws of Murder and Preservation of Life
482 Not to murder Ex. 20:13
483 Not to accept monetary restitution to atone for the murderer Num. 35:31
484 The court must send the accidental murderer to a city of refuge Num. 35:25
485 Not to accept monetary restitution instead of being
sent to a city of refuge
Num. 35:32
486 Not to kill the murderer before he stands trial Num. 35:12
487 Save someone being pursued even by taking the life of the pursuer Deut. 25112
488 Not to pity the pursuer Num. 35:12
489 Not to stand idly by if someone’s life is in danger Lev. 19:16
490 Designate cities of refuge and prepare routes of access Deut. 19:3
491 Break the neck of a calf by the river valley following an unsolved murder Deut. 21:4
492 Not to work nor plant that river valley Deut. 21:4
493 Not to allow pitfalls and obstacles to remain on your property Deut. 22:8
494 Make a guard rail around flat roofs Deut. 22:8
495 Not to put a stumbling block before a blind man (nor give harmful advice) Lev. 19:14
496 Help another remove the load from a beast which can
no longer carry it
Ex. 23:5
497 Help others load their beast Deut. 22:4
498 Not to leave others distraught with their burdens (but to help either load or unload) Deut. 22:4

BOOK TWELVE: THE BOOK OF ACQUISITION

Laws of Sales
499 Buy and sell according to Torah law Lev. 25:14
500 Not to overcharge or underpay for an article Lev. 25:14
501 Not to insult or harm anybody with words Lev. 25:17
502 Not to cheat a sincere convert monetarily Ex. 22:20
503 Not to insult or harm a sincere convert with words Ex. 22:20

Laws of Acquisitions and Gifts (Rabbinical)

Laws of Neighbors (Rabbinical)

Laws of Agents and Partners (Rabbinical)

Laws of Slaves
504 Purchase a Hebrew slave in accordance with the prescribed laws Ex. 21:2
505 Not to sell him as a slave is sold Lev. 25:42
506 Not to work him oppressively Lev. 25:43
507 Not to allow a non-Jew to work him oppressively Lev. 25:53
508 Not to have him do menial slave labor Lev. 25;39
509 Give him gifts when he goes free Deut. 15:14
510 Not to send him away empty-handed Deut. 15:13
511 Redeem Jewish maidservants Ex. 21:8
512 Betroth the Jewish maidservant Ex. 21:8
513 The master must not sell his maidservant Ex. 21:8
514 Canaanite slaves must work forever unless injured in one of their limbs Lev. 25:46
515 Not to extradite a slave who fled to Israel Deut. 23:16
516 Not to wrong a slave who has come to Israel for refuge Deut. 23:16

BOOK THIRTEEN: THE BOOK OF JUDGEMENTS

Laws of Hiring
517 The courts must carry out the laws of a hired worker and hired guard Ex. 22:9
518 Pay wages on the day they were earned Deut. 24:15
519 Not to delay payment of wages past the agreed time Lev. 19:13
520 The hired worker may eat from the unharvested crops where he works Deut. 23:25
521 The worker must not eat while on hired time Deut. 23:26
522 The worker must not take more than he can eat Deut. 23:25
523 Not to muzzle an ox while plowing Deut. 25:4

Laws of Borrowing and Depositing
524 The courts must carry out the laws of a borrower Ex. 22:13
525 The courts must carry out the laws of an unpaid guard Ex. 22:6

Laws of Creditor and Debtor
526 Lend to the poor and destitute Ex. 22:24
527 Not to press them for payment if you know they don’t have it Ex. 22:24
528 Press the idolater for payment Deut. 15:3
529 The creditor must not forcibly take collateral Deut. 24:10
530 Return the collateral to the debtor when needed Deut. 24:13
531 Not to delay its return when needed Deut. 24:12
532 Not to demand collateral from a widow Deut. 24:17
533 Not to demand as collateral utensils needed for preparing food Deut. 24:6
534 Not to lend with interest Lev.25:37
535 Not to borrow with interest Deut. 23:20
536 Not to intermediate in an interest loan, guarantee, witness,
or write the promissory note
Ex. 22:24
537 Lend to and borrow from idolaters with interest Deut. 23:21

Laws of Plaintiff and Defendant
538 The courts must carry out the laws of the
plaintiff, admitter, or denier
Ex. 22:8

Laws of Inheritance
539 Carry out the laws of the order of inheritance Num. 27:8

BOOK FOURTEEN: THE BOOK OF JUDGES

Laws of Sanhedrin and Punishments
540 Appoint judges Deut. 16:18
541 Not to appoint judges who are not familiar with judicial procedure Deut. 1:17
542 Decide by majority in case of disagreement Ex. 23:2
543 The court must not execute through a majority of one; at least a majority of two is required Ex. 23:2
544 A judge who presented an acquittal plea must not present an
argument for conviction in capital cases
Deut. 23:2
545 The courts must carry out the death penalty of stoning Deut. 22:24
546 The courts must carry out the death penalty of burning Lev. 20:14
547 The courts must carry out the death penalty of the sword Ex. 21:20
548 The courts must carry out the death penalty of strangulation Lev. 20:10
549 The courts must hang those stoned for blasphemy or idolatry Deut. 21:22
550 Bury the executed on the day they are killed Deut.21:23
551 Not to delay burial overnight Deut. 21:23
552 The court must not let the sorcerer live Ex. 22:17
553 The court must give lashes to the wrongdoer Ex. 25:2
554 The court must not exceed the prescribed number of lashes Deut. 25:3
555 The court must not kill anybody on circumstantial evidence Ex. 23:7
556 The court must not punish anybody who was forced to do a crime Deut. 22:26
557 A judge must not pity the murderer or assaulter at the trial Deut. 19:13
558 A judge must not have mercy on the poor man at the trial Lev. 19:15
559 A judge must not respect the great man at the trial Lev. 19:15
560 A judge must not decide unjustly the case of the habitual transgressor Ex. 23;6
561 A judge must not pervert justice Lev. 19:15
562 A judge must not pervert a case involving a convert or orphan Deut. 24:17
563 Judge righteously Lev. 19:15
564 The judge must not fear a violent man in judgment Deut. 1:17
565 Judges must not accept bribes Ex. 23:8
566 Judges must not accept testimony unless both parties are present Ex. 23:1
567 Not to curse judges Ex. 22:27
568 Not to curse the head of state or leader of the Sanhedrin Ex. 22:27
569 Not to curse any upstanding Jew Lev. 19:14

Laws of Evidence
570 Anybody who knows evidence must testify in court Lev. 5:1
571 Carefully interrogate the witness Deut. 13:15
572 A witness must not serve as a judge in capital crimes Deut. 19:17
573 Not to accept testimony from a lone witness Deut. 19:15
574 Transgressors must not testify Ex. 23:1
575 Relatives of the litigants must not testify Deut. 24:16
576 Not to testify falsely Ex. 20:13
577 Punish the false witnesses as they tried to punish the defendant Deut. 19:19

Laws of Insurgents
578 Act according to the ruling of the Sanhedrin Deut. 17:11
579 Not to deviate from the word of the Sanhedrin Deut. 17:11
580 Not to add to the Torah commandments or their oral explanations Deut. 13:1
581 Not to diminish from the Torah any commandments, in whole or in part Deut. 13:1
582 Not to curse your father and mother Ex. 21:17
583 Not to strike your father and mother Ex. 21:15
584 Respect your father or mother Ex. 20:12
585 Fear your father or mother Lev. 19:3
586 Not to be a rebellious son Deut. 21:18

Laws of Mourning
587 Mourn for relatives Lev. 10:19
588 The High Priest must not defile himself for any relative Lev. 21:11
589 The High Priest must not enter under the same roof as a corpse Lev. 21:11
590 A Kohen must not defile himself for anyone except relatives Lev. 21:1

Laws of Kings and their Wars
591 Appoint a king from Israel Deut. 17:15
592 Not to appoint a convert Deut. 17:15
593 The king must not have too many wives Deut. 17:17
594 The king must not have too many horses Deut. 17:16
595 The king must not have too much silver and gold Deut. 17:17
596 Destroy the seven Canaanite nations Deut. 20:17
597 Not to let any of them remain alive Deut. 20:16
598 Wipe out the descendants of Amalek Deut. 25:19
599 Remember what Amalek did to the Jewish people Deut. 25:17
600 Not to forget Amalek’s atrocities and ambush on our journey
from Egypt in the desert
Deut. 25:19
601 Not to dwell permanently in Egypt Deut. 17:16
602 Offer peace terms to the inhabitants of a city while holding siege, and treat them according to the Torah if they accept the terms Deut. 20:10
603 Not to offer peace to Ammon and Moab while besieging them Deut. 23:7
604 Not to destroy fruit trees even during the siege Deut. 20:19
605 Prepare latrines outside the camps Deut. 23:13
606 Prepare a shovel for each soldier to dig with Deut. 23:14
607 Appoint a priest to speak with the soldiers during the war Deut. 20:2
608 He who has taken a wife, built a new home, or planted a vineyard is given a year to rejoice with his possessions Deut. 24:5
609 Not to demand from the above any involvement,
communal or military
Deut. 24:5
610 Not to panic and retreat during battle Deut. 20:3
611 Keep the laws of the captive woman Deut. 21:11
612 Not to sell her into slavery Deut. 21:14
613 Not to retain her for servitude after having relations with her Deut. 21:14

Following is a concise listing of the 613 commandments, as recorded and classified by Maimonides in the 12th century. This listing is taken from his classic compendium of Jewish law, the “Mishneh Torah,” which contains 14 primary “books” or sections and as a reference guide to the Five Books of Moses. This list should not be used as a source for any practical Halachic ruling. Distinctions must often be made between rabbinically-decreed commandments and those that still have binding force as Torah-law today. In all cases of doubt, a competent rabbinical authority should be consulted.

Biblical Judges
Mar 4th, 2009 by Elijah

The Judges are the Jewish leaders who arise during this time, unify the people, get them to repent, deal with the spiritual problems of the nation, and also deal with the physical threat. They are sometimes military leaders who know how to mobilize the nation for war against an enemy, but their real power lies in their Torah knowledge and ability to adjudicate Jewish law.

The transmission from Moses until today is an unbroken chain of transmission of 120 generations. The following list of Rabbinic leaders, from Moses until the completion of the Talmud in 500 CE appears in the introduction to Maimonides’ “Mishneh Torah.” Following this list is an explanation from Maimonides on the precise method of transmission, beginning with Moses.

Mount Sinai (1312 BCE)
1. Moses
2. Joshua

The Elders (l260-860 BCE)
3. Pinchas and the 70 Elders
4. Eli the Kohen
5. Samuel the Prophet
6. King David

The Prophets (860-360 BCE)
7. Achiyah
8. Elijah the Prophet
9. Elisha
10. Yehoyada the Priest
11. Zechariah ben Yehoyada
12. Hosea
13. Amos
14. Isaiah
15. Micah
16. Joel
17. Nachum
18. Habakuk
19. Zephaniah
20. Jeremiah
21. Baruch ben Neriah


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The Great Assembly (360-260 BCE)
22. The Great Assembly consisted of 120 Elders, including Ezra, Zechariah, Daniel and Mordechai
23. Shimon the Tzaddik

TANA’IM - Mishnaic Era (260 BCE - 200 CE)
24. Antigonos of Socho
25. Yose ben Yoezer, Yose ben Yochanan
26. Yehoshua ben Perachiah, Nittai of Arbel
27. Yehuda ben Tabbai, Shimon ben Shatach
28. Shemayah and Avtalyon
29. Hillel and Shamai
30. R’ Shimon ben Hillel, R’ Yochanan ben Zakkai
31. Rabban Gamliel the Elder, R’ Eliezer ben Hyrcanus, R’ Yehoshua ben Chananiah, R’ Shimon ben Netanel, R’ Elazar ben Arakh
32. Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel I, Rebbe Akiva, Rebbe Tarfon, R’ Shimon ben Elazar, R’ Yochanan ben Nuri
33. Rabban Gamliel II, Rebbe Meir, Rebbe Yishmael, Rebbe Yehudah, Rebbe Yose, R’ Shimon bar Yochai
34. Rabbi Shimon ben Gamliel II
35. Rabbi Yehudah the Prince (codifier of the Mishnah in 190 C.E.)

AMORA’IM - Talmudic Era (200-500 CE)
36. Rav, Shmuel, Rabbi Yochanan (compiler of the Jerusalem Talmud)
37. Rav Huna, Rav Yehudah, Rav Nachman, Rav Kahana, Rabba bar bar Channa, Rav Ami, Rav Asi
38. Rabbah, Rav Yosef, Rav Chisda, Rabba bar Rav Huna.
39. Abaya, Rava
40. Rav Ashi, Ravina (compilers of the Babylonian Talmud in 500 C.E.)

Maimonides, citing sources from the Talmud and Midrash, recounts in graphic detail the transmission process from Moses to the people of Israel. Moses personally wrote 13 copies of the Torah and distributed them – one to every tribe – before his death.

Maimonides’ “Introduction to the Mishnah:”

Know that every mitzvah which G-d gave to Moses was given with its clarification. First He told him the mitzvah and then He expounded on its explanation and content, including all that which is included in the Torah.

The manner of transmittal to Israel occurred as stated in the Talmud (Eruvin 54b): [How was the system of teaching? Moses first learned the law from the mouth of the Almighty.]

Moses then went into the Tent, and Aaron went in with him. Moses then stated to him a single time the mitzvah he had received, and taught him its explanation, (following which) Aaron retreated to the right of Moses.

Then, Elazar and Itamar, Aaron’s sons, entered – and Moses told them what he had told Aaron, and then they stepped back. One sat to the left of Moses, and the other on the right of Aharon.

Then the seventy Elders arrived, and Moses taught Aaron and his sons. Following this came the masses of people and every one seeking God, and he (Moses) placed before them the mitzvah, until all had heard it from his mouth.

The result is that Aaron heard that precept from the mouth of Moses four times, his sons three times, the Elders twice, and the remainder of the people once.

Moses then left, and Aaron repeated the explanation of that mitzvah which he had learned, having heard it from the mouth of Moses four times (as we have mentioned), to all those present.

Aaron then left, after his sons had heard the precept four times (three times from Moses, and once from Aharon). After Aaron had departed, Elazar and Itamar repeated and taught that mitzvah to all the people present, and then ceased their teaching.

Thus we find that the seventy Elders heard the precept four times: twice from Moses, once from Aharon, and once from Elazar and Itamar. The Elders themselves then repeated and expounded the mitzvah to the people one time. As a result, we find that the entire congregation heard the precept in question four times: once from Moses, once from Aharon, a third time from his sons, and the fourth time from the Elders.

After this, all the people went to teach one another what they had heard from Moses and to write that mitzvah on scrolls. The leaders would roam through the Israelites to (insure that the people) learned and applied themselves until they would know the traditional version of that mitzvah and were fluent in reading it. They would then teach the explanations of that G-d-given precept. That explanation would include all aspects, and they would write the precept and learn by heart the Oral Tradition.

Thus, our Sages said in the Midrash: “And G-d spoke to Moses at Mount Sinai” (Leviticus 25:1). Why does the Torah state specifically at Mount Sinai? Was not the entire Torah given at Sinai? This is to tell us that just as the law of the Sabbatical year was stated with its generalities, specifics and fine details at Sinai, so too all the mitzvahs were stated with their generalities, specifics and fine details at Sinai.

Maimonides - “Mishneh Torah,” Laws of Sanhedrin 4:1-2No one is qualified to act as judge in the Sanhedrin, or even in a court of three judges, unless he has been ordained by one who has himself been ordained. Moses ordained Joshua by laying his hands upon him, as it says (Numbers 27:23), “And he laid his hands upon him, and commissioned him.” Likewise, Moses ordained the seventy Elders, and the Divine Presence rested upon them. The Elders ordained others, who in turn ordained their successors. Hence there was an uninterrupted succession of ordained judges, reaching back to the tribunal of Joshua, indeed, to the tribunal of Moses…

What has been the procedure throughout recent generations with regard to ordination? It has been done not by the laying of hands upon the elder, but by designating him by the title “Rabbi,” and saying to him: “You are ordained and authorized to adjudicate (matters of Torah law).”

In the Book of Exodus, the elders of the Israelites eventually became the judges. In the Book of Judges the term judges (shôphitîm) is applied to the leaders of Israel. The position of Shamgar in the list below varies between versions of the ancient text; most modern translations list them in the following order:

  • Othniel, the son of Kenaz from the tribe of Judah
  • Ehud, the son of Gerah from the tribe of Benjamin
  • Shamgar, the son of Anath from the tribe of Levi
  • Deborah (and Barak)
  • Gideon, the son of Joash from the tribe of Manasseh
  • Tola, the son of Puah from the tribe of Issachar
  • Jair, from the tribe of Gilead
  • Jephthah, from the tribe of Gilead
  • Ibzan, from the tribe of Judah
  • Elon, from the tribe of Zebulun
  • Abdon, the son of Hillel, from the tribe of Ephraim
  • Samson, the son of Manoah, from the tribe of Dan

Of these, Ehud, Deborah, Gideon/Jerubbaal, Jephtah, and Samson are given extensive narratives. Textual criticism views the other judges as being added to the list simply to make the total number equal 12, a number of religious significance to the Israelites

The judges of the Books of Samuel

The First Book of Samuel describes two further individuals as being judges:

  • Eli
  • Samuel

The Judges are the Jewish leaders who arise during this time, unify the people, get them to repent, deal with the spiritual problems of the nation, and also deal with the physical threat.

They are sometimes military leaders who know how to mobilize the nation for war against an enemy, but their real power lies in their Torah knowledge and ability to adjudicate Jewish law.

The narrative for this entire period appears in the Book of Judges, authored by the last great personality in the period of the Judges-Samuel the Prophet. The period of the Judges spans a period of 365 years from the first judge, Otniel ben Kenaz, and with the last judge, the Prophet Samuel.

During this period there were seventeen different judges. Some led the Jewish people for decades while others only for a few years. The Book of Judges goes into great detail for some of the Judges (Ehud, Deborah and Samuel) while others get only the briefest mention (Ibzan, Elon, Avdon). While all were great leaders, some where greater than others. Tradition tells us that the level of the judge depended on the collective level of the Jewish people. Every generation got the leadership it deserved. During this entire We will highlight a few of the 16 Judges described in the Bible:

DEBORAH

- One of the first of the Judges is a woman — Deborah. (Judges, Chapters 4-5.) She is famous for sitting under a palm tree where anyone could seek her advice, and from where she issued battle orders.

Barak, Israel’s top warrior during that time, refuses to go into battle without her. Together they lead the troops against the much larger Canaanite force backed up by 900 iron chariots, of which Israel had none.

The Book of Judges describes a key battle with the Canaanites led by Sisera.

On the eve of the battle, Barak is doubtful that Israel’s warriors could ever beat such a strong opponent but Deborah stands firm. An unexpected storm is unleashed in the heavens, and the resulting downpour turns the ground to mud; the iron chariots get stuck and the Canaanites panic.

Deborah’s prophecy that “This is the day on which the Lord will deliver [the Canaanite general] Sisera into your hands…” is thus fulfilled.

SAMSON

Samson is the Judge famous for his superhero strength, and for leading the struggle against Israel’s arch-enemy, the Philistines. (Judges, Chapters 13-16.)

The Philistines were a seafaring people. They probably migrated from the area of the Aegean near Greece about 3,200 years ago. They settled along the eastern Mediterranean Coast from the southern coast of Israel to Lebanon. In the southern coastal area of Israel they established a confederation of five city-states (Gaza, Ahskelon, Ashdod, Gath and Ekron). During the period of the Judges they are constantly at war with the tribes of Israel pushing them away from much of the coast and into the hilly, inland regions of the country.

Excavations show that the Philistines — despite what the word “Philistine” has come down to mean in the English language — were very sophisticated culturally. They had perfected iron tools and iron weapons, gaining an important technological advantage over their neighbors.

Samson, who judged Israel for 20 years, was one of the people who takes on the Philistines. Samson is a Nazir. (Nazir is a form of penitence in which a person temporarily refrains from cutting his hair and abstains from wine) Samson’s Nazir status is unusual in that he is a Nazir from birth and remains one his entire life. In addition, his long hair gives him super-human strength.

To undermine the Philistines he pretends to join them by deliberately taking a Philistine woman as his wife. She is killed by her own people; he then consorts with another Philistine woman — Delilah. This turns out to be a mistake as Sampson becomes very attached to her.

Delilah catches on that Samson is a major threat to her people. After many failed attempts and much pleading she finally succeeds in getting Samson to reveal the secret of his superhuman strength and cuts off his hair while he is asleep. As a result the Philistines are able to capture him. They then blind him and throw him in prison.

But they forget that hair grows. As his hair grew back, his superhuman strength returns.

The Philistines decides to execute Samson in a public display at the Temple of Dagan, one of their gods.

As the masses gather to watch the execution, blind Samson asks a slave boy to position him next to one of the columns supporting the temple.

At the climax of the narrative Samson prays:

“My Lord, God! Remember me and strengthen me just this one time, O God, and I will extract vengeance from the Philistines for one of my two eyes.” Samson grasped the two central pillars upon which the building rested, and he leaned on them; one with his right hand and one with his left hand. Samson said, “Let my soul die with the Philistines!” (Judges 16:28-30)

With his renewed superhuman strength he overturns the column and collapses the building killing all inside.

He dies giving his life for the Jewish people and the Bible says he killed more Philistine enemies in that moment than he vanquished the whole rest of his life.

SAMUEL

The last great personality of the period of the Judges is the Prophet Samuel, who is one of the most important prophets in Jewish history, and who is also famous for anointing the first two kings of Israel — Saul and David. (1 Samuel, chapters 1-16.) He authored the Book of Judges and, together with the prophets Gad and Nathan, the book of Samuel.

By the time Samuel appears on the scene, the Jewish people have gone through close to 400 years of no strong central leadership. They had to live up to a very high level of individual responsibility or else God would let them know they were off course via the Canaanites or the Philistines or the Midianites. This was a very difficult way to live. In the final analysis, the nation couldn’t maintain this level of scrutiny without stronger guidance.

When Samuel was younger, he would travel the land adjudicating Jewish law and giving people advice, but now that he has grown old, he can’t do it anymore. Meanwhile, his two sons, who have taken over for him, prove unpopular with the people.

So a delegation is dispatched to ask Samuel to anoint a king instead: And they the people said [to Samuel] “Behold, you have grown old and your sons do not walk in your ways. Now set up for us a king to judge us like all the nations. And the thing was displeasing in the eyes of Samuel …” (1 Samuel, 8:5-7)

Samuel doesn’t want to do it, but God tells him to go ahead and find a king for the people.

And this is how the Time of Judges comes to a close. Samuel functions as a leader for 13 years and the last of two years he actually co-leads the Jewish people with the first Jewish king whose name is Saul.

Natural Law
Jan 30th, 2009 by Elijah

“An agent of evil will fall into bad; a faithful messenger will bring healing.” (Proverbs 13:17)

The universe has its own state of innate balance. Try as we may to alter the natural way; in the end there will only be failure. This is inevitable. For being mere mortal humans our influence upon our world is insignificant at best. Our world is far greater than are we, either as individuals or as a race.

The Earth was not created by human beings, nor shall it be destroyed by them. Sully and smitten the Earth we may, but in the end, the Earth will cleanse herself of the dirt and that which causes the dirt as a cat would lick its paws.

We human beings come from a Divine origin, so too does our planet. We are endowed with a Divine mission of accomplishment and a collective destiny of greatness; so too is our planet. Although we human beings are created in the Divine Image, we have not been given Divine power or authority to destroy. We can create and make things better, but there is a limit to what we can destroy and how much worse we can make things to be.


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When we follow the Divinely ordained natural law we live in harmony with our world and our universe. When we think ourselves clever and proclaim ourselves above natural law we inadvertently transform ourselves into agents of evil. We do not see the ultimate destruction and bad that results and await us because of our mortal arrogant human foolishness.

Let no one be so deceived to believe that there is no pay back and that injustice continues forever. Look back into history at the mighty nations and empires that have arisen and fallen. Their only remnants are relics in museums and information on pages in history books.

The mighty have indeed been toppled. Nature itself directed the course of human events and the Divine order spoke into the hearts and minds of the collective consciousness. One nation rose to the heights. In its arrogance it became drunk with power. It grew fat and became lazy. Soon, its replacement arose, filled with righteous indignation, it struck down that which had become unable to sustain itself.

The replacement then ascended to the heights of power, it too them became arrogant, fat and lazy. It too provoked righteous indignation in yet a third, which came and did to it exactly what it had done to its predecessor. Then came the forth, the fifth and so on. This has been the history of humanity.

Righteousness is good motivation; but righteousness must never be complacent. Arrogance, fatness and laziness are evils that violate the Divinely ordained natural law. Once they are embraced evil is sure to follow. One cannot become an agent of evil and expect good to result. Such a consideration is madness and the heights of delusion and self deception.

When one is faithful to the Divinely ordained natural order, one is faithful to oneself, one’s home and to one’s Source. Such faithfulness creates an alignment and balance that naturally brings in its stead healing and all things good.

Faithfulness means proper alignment and steadfastness to one’s relationship to the Source. There is no greater source for healing in the universe than for one to be in proper alignment with the Force above that is the source of all below.

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