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The Pledged Outer Garment
The 'Salmah' (outer garment) often served as a poor man's only bed-covering. The Law required its return by sunset, even if held as collateral, illustrating that human dignity and physical survival take precedence over legalistic debt claims.
The Sojourner, Widow, and Orphan
God identifies specifically as the protector of the 'Ger' (stranger), widow, and orphan. This is the first systematic warning that divine wrath will fall on any society that exploits those without natural social or economic defense.
The Stranger (Ger)
The 'Ger' represents a non-Israelite living within the borders. God links the treatment of the Ger directly to Israel's own historical identity as 'strangers in Egypt,' making empathy for the outsider a theological prerequisite for national stability.
Sorceress (Mekhashepah)
Derived from 'kashaph' (to whisper or cast spells), the prohibition against allowing a sorceress to live marks the first capital mandate against occult practices that sought to manipulate divine or demonic power outside the covenant of YHWH.
The Fullness of the Winepress
Referred to as 'mela-ath' (fullness), this is a command to not delay giving the first portions of grain and wine. It signifies a priority of devotion where the harvest belongs first to the Provider before the laborer consumes it.
The Judicial Oath
Establishing the 'Shebuah' (Oath of the LORD) as a mechanism to end all strife when material evidence is missing. It shifts the burden of judgment to God Himself, with the swearer risking divine judgment for perjury.
Prohibition of Bestiality
The biblical mandate against sexual relations with animals categorizes the act as a perversion of the created order, warranting capital punishment to maintain the ritual and moral purity of the community.
Liability for Negligence
Establishing civil responsibility for the actions of one's livestock or the spread of fire, these statutes require that damage caused by negligence to a neighbor's field or vineyard must be compensated from the best of one's own harvest.
Law of Restitution
The law of restitution establishes that justice is served not merely through punishment, but through the restoration of the victim to a state better than or equal to their original position, involving 400% to 500% repayment in specific cases of theft.
Laws of Defiled Meat (Terephah)
To maintain status as 'holy people' (Anshe-kodesh), Israel was forbidden from eating meat of animals killed by wild predators ('Terephah'). Such meat was to be cast to the dogs, preserving the boundary between civil/sacred consumption and natural scavenging.