The Weekly Daf #85 Shavuos 28-34 Week of 25 Elul 5755-2 Tishrei 5756 / 20-26 Sept. 1995 By Rabbi Mendel Weinbach, Dean, Ohr Somayach Institutions =========================================================================== We wish all of our readers a Ketiva v'Chatima Tova. =========================================================================== Two Lines of Lying It is not sufficient to avoid telling an outright lie. The Torah (Shmos 23:7) insists that "you must distance yourself from falsehood." What are the examples of outright lying and only keeping a safe distance? Case One: A teacher tells his disciple: "You know that I would never lie even if they gave me a fortune of a hundred weights of silver. Reuven owes me some money and I only have one witness to testify in my behalf. I want you to testify as a second witness based on your confidence in me that I am telling the truth." If the disciple testifies as requested he is guilty of an outright lie and has transgressed the Torah prohibition against bearing false witness. Case Two: A teacher tells his disciple: "I have only one witness to prove my claim. All I ask of you is to stand next to him in court so that Reuven will assume that you are also a witness and he will be intimidated into admitting his guilt." If the disciple does as requested, even though he has not uttered one word of untruth, he is guilty of not distancing himself from falsehood. Shavuos 31a =========================================================================== Case of the Cane A case come before the Sage Rava in which the borrower claimed he had paid the creditor his entire debt and Rava instructed him to take an oath to verify his claim. Unknown to the court the borrower put the contested sum of money into a hollow cane which he used to support himself. When the time came to swear he asked the creditor to hold his cane for him while he took a Sefer Torah in his arms for the purpose of taking an oath. The creditor became so incensed to hear him brazenly swear that he had given him the money in question that he angrily smashed the cane. As the money came pouring out it became clear to the court that this had been a clever subterfuge to lie about repayment without actually swearing falsely, because he had indeed given the creditor the contested sum of money. In truth, however, he was guilty of taking a false oath. When the court orders a litigant to take an oath he is specifically informed that the oath is in accordance with the court's understanding and not what he is thinking at the moment of oath-taking. Shavuos 29a =========================================================================== SUBSCRIBE! to one of the many weekly "lists" published by Ohr Somayach Institutions: weekly - Summary of the weekly Torah portion dafyomi - Rav Mendel Weinbach's insights into the Daf Yomi ask - The Rabbi answers YOUR questions on Judaism parasha-qa - Challenging questions on the weekly Torah portion os-special - All the SPECIAL publications produced by Ohr Somayach os-alum - "B'Yachad" - the Ohr Somayach Electronic Alumni Newsletter judaismo - Spanish-Language newsletter on the Parsha & Judaism month - Seasons of the Moon - The Jewish Year through its months There is NEVER a charge for any of the above lists (though your local information provider, such as AOL, Prodigy or CompuServe, might charge a nominal fee). To subscribe to any of these lists, send the message: subscribe {listname} {your full name} to: listproc@jer1.co.il =========================================================================== Dedication opportunities are available for The Weekly Daf. Please contact us for details. =========================================================================== Jewish L EEEEEEEE Prepared by the Jewish Learning Exchange of J L E Ohr Somayach International J L E 22 Shimon Hatzadik Street, POB 18103 J L Exchange Jerusalem 91180, Israel J L E Tel: 972-2-810315 Fax: 972-2-812890 J J L E Internet: ohr@jer1.co.il JJJJ Learning EEEEEEEE WWW: http://jer1.co.il/orgs/ohr =========================================================================== (C) 1995 Ohr Somayach International - All rights reserved. This publication may be distributed to another person intact without prior permission. We also encourage you to include this material in other publications, such as synagogue newsletters. However, we ask that you contact us beforehand for permission, and then send us a sample issue.