Holiness is to be found in how we treat each other. Someone who cheats in business or in some other way abuse his fellow man is by definition not holy.
We’ve just come off the greatest spiritual high in Jewish history: Har Sinai. Thunder, lightning, קול ה’, the Aseret HaDibrot. You would expect the Torah to say: Okay, now let’s go even higher. Let’s talk about the Mishkan, the Tabernacle. Sacred space. Divine presence.
But instead, the Torah makes a sharp detour.
Before we talk about how to build a house for God, we talk about how human beings treat one another.
And not lofty ideals either. The Torah starts with the most uncomfortable cases: the ama ivriyah, the maidservant—the lowest rung of society. Someone with no power, no prestige, no voice. The kind of person society would rather not see, let alone legislate protections for.
And the Torah says: Start here.
That’s not an accident. It’s a statement.
Judaism is not a religion that allows you to soar spiritually while stepping on people below you. You can daven with passion, bring offerings “from the heart,” talk about holiness all day—but if you exploit the weak, your spirituality is hollow.
Mishpatim reminds us what the Torah is really building: not just a spiritual people, but a just society.
Everyone is equal before the law. Rich or poor. Powerful or powerless. Slave or free. No one is above the law, and no one is beneath it.
That idea was revolutionary in the ancient world.
If you look at the Code of Hammurabi, you see a society built on class. A noble harms a slave? Minimal consequence. A slave harms a free person? Death. Human value depended on status.
The Torah rejects that outright.
Every human life has value. Every person is accountable. Justice is not adjusted based on wealth or power. And that includes property rights as well—what you earn through honest labor matters, and stealing it is not a “minor” sin. It’s a violation of God’s will just as much as idolatry.
That’s why the parsha opens with “Ve’eleh hamishpatim”—and these are the laws.
“And” means they are connected. These laws are not separate from Sinai. They are Sinai applied to real life.
Belief in God and building a just society are not two tracks. They are one system.
So before we build a sanctuary for God, the Torah insists we build a society worthy of Him.
Something very much worth thinking about.

