In the middle of the civil and criminal laws of Parshat Mishpatim, we have a reminder to keep Shabbat. This is to remind us that our civil and criminal laws come from God, not man.
Shabbat in the Middle of the Laws
This week’s parsha, Mishpatim, is—on the surface—a very “dry” parsha.
It deals with torts, damages, property law, servants, loans, courts. Very intellectual. Very legal. It reads almost like a civil code.
And then suddenly—right in the middle—we encounter Shabbat.
At first glance, it feels out of place. We’re talking about oxen goring and property damage—why interrupt that with Shabbat?
But in reality, it is exactly where Shabbat belongs.
Law Needs Soul
The Torah is teaching us something profound:
These civil laws may appear logical. Any advanced society could theoretically develop rules about damages, theft, and justice. But the Torah insists that these laws are not merely social contracts. They are Divine commands.
Shabbat is inserted here to remind us:
Without God at the center, even the most rational legal system loses its foundation.
The civil laws buttress the spiritual ideals.
The spiritual ideals buttress the civil laws.
You cannot separate the two.
“More Than the Jews Have Kept Shabbat…”
The early Zionist thinker Ahad Ha’am—not a traditionally observant Jew—made the famous remark:
“More than the Jews have kept Shabbat, Shabbat has kept the Jews.”
What did he mean?
That Shabbat is not just another mitzvah.
It is the center that holds everything together.
Remove Shabbat, and Jewish identity slowly dissolves.
Remove transcendence, and the law becomes mechanical.
Radical Equality
In the ancient world, slaves did not rest. Animals did not rest. Productivity was everything.
Shabbat says:
- Your servant rests.
- Your maidservant rests.
- The stranger rests.
- Even your animals rest.
The animal does not know it is Shabbat.
But you know.
Shabbat trains the human being to stop.
To limit power.
To recognize that we are not masters of the universe.
If you do not allow others to rest, you will never rest.
The Friday Night Boundary
You told the story of your employer who invited you for Friday night—but with one condition:
“If you bring up work, don’t bother coming in on Monday.”
That is Shabbat.
Six days we build the business.
One day we remember why we build it.
Without that boundary, work consumes life.
With that boundary, work has meaning.
The Psalm Before Barchu
On Friday night we say Mizmor Shir L’Yom HaShabbat (Psalm 92).
It has a magnificent title—“A song for the day of Shabbat”—
yet the word Shabbat barely appears in the body of the psalm.
It seems almost forgotten.
But perhaps that’s the point.
Shabbat is not only about saying “Shabbat.”
It is about what Shabbat produces:
- Perspective
- Gratitude
- Family
- Reconnection to God
- Recognition that life is not just productivity
Why Here?
So why place Shabbat in the middle of Mishpatim?
Because the Torah is teaching:
A just society without spirituality becomes cold.
Spirituality without justice becomes empty.
Shabbat reminds us that all law comes from God.
And the laws remind us that holiness must shape how we treat one another.
Without Shabbat, nothing else matters.
And that is why it sits—not at the beginning, not at the end—
—but in the middle.


