Related Topics
The Law Against Usury
Distinguishing between commercial investment and loans of necessity, this law prohibits charging interest to a fellow Israelite in poverty, presenting money not as a tool for exploitation but as a medium of community assistance.
The Jubilee Shofar
The sounding of the Shofar on the Day of Atonement in the fiftieth year signals the commencement of the Jubilee, serving as a sonic herald of liberty throughout the Land of Israel.
Year of Jubilee
Occurring every fifty years, the Year of Jubilee (Yovel) marks the ultimate economic and social reset in Israel, involving the return of ancestral lands, the manumission of slaves, and the cancellation of debts.
Levitical City Estates
The fields surrounding Levitical cities were legally forbidden from being sold permanently; they were the perpetual possession of the Levites, ensuring the tribe dedicated to God remained rooted in the land.
Generosity to the Impoverished
The command 'if your brother becomes poor... you shall help him' establishes a direct moral obligation to provide financial and communal support to those facing economic collapse, reflecting the character of God's provision.
Village Dwellings (Unwalled)
Properties in villages without defensive walls were legally classified as agricultural land, meaning they could be redeemed at any time and automatically reverted to the original owner in the Jubilee, preserving the peasant's homestead.
Dror (Liberty)
The Hebrew word 'Dror' signifies a spontaneous and total flow of freedom, specifically used for the Jubilee proclamation, later becoming the prophetic cornerstone for the Messianic release described by Isaiah and Jesus.
The Cycle of Seven
A study of how the number seven governs biblical chronology—from the Sabbath day to the Sabbath year, to the seven cycles of seven years leading to the Jubilee—revealing God's rhythmic signature on time and history.
Kinsman-Redeemer (Goel)
A fundamental legal provision allowing a near relative to buy back property or persons sold into debt, serving as a primary cultural and legal shadow of Jesus Christ's ultimate work of redemption.
Sabbath of the Land
The Sabbath of the Land, or Shemitah, is a divine mandate requiring the Israelites to cease all cultivation every seven years, acknowledging God's ultimate ownership of the earth and providing rest for the soil.