This piece was first published in Hanassi Highlights, 12 February 2026. You can also read it in Ivrit, thanks to AI, by clicking here.
After the drama of Ma’amad Har Sinai—the thunder, fire, and overwhelming revelation—Parshat Mishpatim can feel like an anticlimax. We move abruptly from the Ten Commandments to a long and detailed list of civil laws: damages, property, loans, lost objects, and interpersonal disputes. It is hardly the soaring spiritual vision one might expect to follow Sinai.
“Ve’eleh hamishpatim asher tasim lifneihem” — These
are the laws you shall place before them. Why does the Torah descend so quickly
from revelation to regulation?
The commentators note the Torah’s deliberate use of the
connecting vav—ve’eleh hamishpatim. These laws are not a new
chapter but a continuation of what happened at Sinai. Revelation was never
meant to remain abstract or confined to lofty ideals. It was meant to shape
real life.
Rashi sharpens the question even further. Parshat Mishpatim
follows immediately after the
command to build the mizbe’ach , the
altar. Why place detailed civil law next to the symbol of divine worship? What
do courts, contracts, and damages have to do with sacrifices and holiness?
The answer emerges from a scene at the end of the parsha—one
that Rashi explains actually took place before Sinai (invoking the
principle that events in the Torah do not necessarily follow chronological
order). As Bnei Yisrael entered into a covenant with Hashem and declared na’aseh
venishma, korbanot were brought. Their blood was divided: half
sprinkled on the mizbe’ach and
half on the people.
Rashi adds a striking detail: an angel was required to
divide the blood precisely in half. Rav Hutner zt”l explains why this mattered.
This moment defined the essence of Torah itself. The mizbe’ach represents bein adam laMakom—our
relationship with God. The people represent bein adam laChaveiro—our
responsibilities to one another. The blood, the symbol of life, had to be
shared equally. Neither dimension outweighs the other. Without both, the
covenant is incomplete.
History shows the danger of forgetting this balance. The
Mishnah describes how competition among Kohanim in the Beit HaMikdash once
degenerated into violence—even murder—at the foot of the mizbe’ach itself. Religious devotion severed from
ethical responsibility can become deeply distorted.
This is why Parshat Mishpatim follows the mizbe’ach .
Serving Hashem is not limited to moments of prayer or ritual. It is expressed
just as powerfully in how we conduct ourselves at home, at work, and in
society. The Torah insists that holiness must permeate our everyday
interactions.
Ve’eleh hamishpatim are not a step down from Sinai. Rather,
they are its fulfillment: the blueprint for building a holy society and
bringing God’s presence into every corner of our lives.
Shabbat Shalom!
