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The Devar Torah is sponsored in honour of the bar-mitzva of Netanel Katz. Mazal-tov to his parents, Doron and Micol and to the extended family. May Netanel bring honour to the Jewish people. Shabbat Shalom, Jay
Shoftim: Words are Not Enough "The hand of the witnesses should be against him first to put him to death and the hand of the nation at the end" (Devarim 17:7). Giving testimony in a court of law, especially in capital cases, is an awesome responsibility. The Talmud describes the harsh tone and even accusatory statements directed at the witnesses, warning them of the dire consequences of false testimony: "You are responsible for their blood and the blood of their descendants until the end of time" (Sanhedrin 37a). "Say little and do much", our Sages instruct. The witnesses must be prepared to do much more than talk; they must actually administer the death penalty. It is one thing to argue in favour of the right of a dying patient to pull the plug. It is quite another to be the one to actually pull that plug. No doubt having to actually kill the criminal would give pause to many a potential false witness. It would also give pause to many a truthful witness—yet testifying is an obligation that allows us to fulfil the end of verse quoted above "and you shall destroy evil from your midst". Similarly, our Sages rule that when faced with a situation of pikuach nefesh, when we are mandated to violate the Torah in order to save someone's life, it is the leading scholar who should do the violating. This serves not only as an example for others, but allows the scholar to actually feel first hand the impact of his ruling. If one is not prepared to act upon one's convictions, one's words ring hollow. When discussing ideas, what one says has little meaning. It is actions that count. Immediately following the command to the witnesses to carry out the execution, the Torah describes the "rebellious elder" who defies the ruling of the high court. He is given the death penalty—but only if he actually acts in direct opposition to the court’s ruling. If, however, he just tells everyone the court is wrong, but does not act on his bravado, no punishment is meted out. Words without actions change little