『Shemot Ch. 15』のカバーアート

Shemot Ch. 15

Shemot Ch. 15

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

In this episode, we explore one of the Torah’s most surprising claims: that the true birthplace of Israelite justice wasn’t Sinai or the Temple, but the desert itself. Beginning with the cryptic scene at Marah—“there He established for them chok u’mishpat, statute and judgment, and there He tested them”—we follow Rav Yaakov Medan’s radical reading that the “test” of the wilderness was not primarily about faith or ritual, but about economics. Through a close look at Amos’s prophecy, which links the desert years with the demand that “justice roll down like water,” we uncover the Torah’s earliest social experiment: a world in which resources were distributed according to need, not power. The manna becomes the heart of this desert pedagogy—an unprecedented system where no one could hoard, every person received the same measure, and survival depended on trust, restraint, and mutual responsibility.

From here, the episode turns back to Marah with new clarity, showing how the first “chok u’mishpat” may have been nothing less than water-rationing law—the essential structure that prevents newly freed slaves from collapsing into chaos or competitive greed. We trace how this ethic expands into the Sabbath regulations, where the prohibition against going out to gather sustenance becomes a weekly discipline against commercial exploitation. Across Marah, manna, and Shabbat, the wilderness emerges as a moral laboratory that forms the backbone of prophetic critique: if Israel once lived by ish lefi-achlo—each according to their need—then prophets like Amos can demand the same justice in settled society. The episode concludes with the bold thesis that the desert is not a pause between Egypt and the Promised Land, but the forge in which Israel learns the moral architecture of freedom.

まだレビューはありません