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    KI TESEH- THE SINNER’S PRISTINELY PURE SOUL

    The Torah in Parashat
    Ki-Teseh introduces
    the obligation of
    “Malkut” – the
    lashes given to sinners
    who are found guilty
    of certain transgressions. In the times of
    the Sanhedrin, there were courts with the
    authority to administer corporal punishment,
    and those who were convicted of certain
    Biblical violations were given “Malkut.”
    The Torah states explicitly that an individual
    deserving of this punishment receives forty
    lashes – “Arba’im Yakenu” (25:3). The Sages,
    however, understood that the Torah’s intent
    is that the sinner receives thirty-nine lashes,
    and not forty. The Gemara (Makkot 22b)
    inferred this reduction from the juxtaposition
    between this verse and the preceding verse,
    which concludes with the words “Be’mispar”
    (literally, “in the number”). This word,
    together with the words “Arba’im Yakenu,”
    form the phrase “Be’mispar Arba’im Yakenu,”
    which can be read to mean “he shall strike him
    in the number that leads to forty,” referring to
    thirty-nine.
    The question, however, obviously arises as to
    why the Torah did not simply write that the
    sinner receives thirty-nine lashes. Why did it
    formulate this law in a manner which clearly
    indicates forty lashes, and only through a
    subtle allusion instructs reducing this number
    to thirty-nine?

    An insightful answer to this question is
    given by the Maharal of Prague (d. 1609),
    in his Gur Aryeh. He explains that it is
    appropriate for a sinner to receive forty
    lashes, because sin contaminates a person’s
    being, which was formed in forty days. The

    fetus takes form over the course of the forty-
    day period following conception, and thus

    forty is associated with the human being’s
    creation. As sin undermines the very purpose
    for why we were created, a sinner must be
    punished once for each day of his formation,
    for a total of forty lashes. However, the
    Maharal writes, a person’s essence is
    comprised of two elements – the body and the
    soul. A person’s physical properties take form
    during the thirty-nine days after conception,
    whereas the soul enters at the very end of
    this process, on the fortieth day. Now each
    morning, in the “Elokai Neshama” blessing,
    we proclaim that the soul which Hashem
    has given us is pristinely pure (“…Neshama
    She’natata Bi Tehora Hi”). Even if a person
    commits the gravest sins, his soul remains
    perfectly pure. It is the body that commits
    the sin; the soul is merely an unwilling
    participant, so-to-speak, “dragged” into the
    act of sin due to its being bound together with
    the body. Fundamentally, the soul needs to be
    punished, too, because of its involvement in
    the process of wrongdoing, by virtue of its
    connection to the body. However, after the
    sinner receives thirty-nine lashes, his entire

    physical being is cleansed. These thirty-nine
    lashes atone for the contamination of his body
    which was formed during the thirty-nine days
    after conception. And thus, at this point, there
    is no reason for the soul to be punished. The
    soul deserved punishment only due to its
    association with the body that had committed
    the wrongful act, and so once the body has
    been renewed through the thirty-nine lashes,
    there is no longer a need for the fortieth lash,
    which would serve to atone for the soul.
    This is why, the Maharal explains, the Torah
    writes that the sinner receives forty lashes,

    whereas in truth he receives only thirty-
    nine. At the outset, he requires forty lashes,

    because even the soul deserves punishment
    due to its connection to the body, which
    committed the act. But in practice, once the
    sinner receives thirty-nine lashes, there is no
    longer any reason to administer the fortieth,
    which corresponds to the soul, since the
    thirty-nine lashes had cleansed the body, and
    it was only on account of the body’s guilt that
    the fortieth lash was needed.
    I believe there is a critical message being
    conveyed by this Halacha, as understood
    by the Maharal. When the sinner is brought
    to the court to receive his punishment, he is
    shown that his soul remains pure despite his
    wrongdoing. His sentence is reduced by one
    because his pure, sacred soul was not tainted
    by his mistake. The purpose of the Torah’s
    punishments is not to destroy the sinner, but

    to the contrary – to motivate him to grow and
    change. To this end, he is told that he will not
    receive any lashes corresponding to his soul,
    because no matter what he did wrong, his soul
    remains holy and untarnished. Knowing that
    he still possesses a sacred soul, the sinner will
    be encouraged to change and refrain from
    wrongdoing in the future.
    One of the greatest obstacles to Teshuba is the
    feeling that it’s too late, that we’re too tainted,
    that we’ve fallen too low to recover. The
    thirty-nine lashes show us that there’s a part
    of us that can never be tainted, a spark of
    goodness and holiness within our beings that
    will always remain pristinely pure no matter
    what mistakes we have made. Although we
    at times fail, we must feel confident in our
    inherent G-dliness, in the element of Kedusha
    within our beings that assures our ability to
    improve and return to Hashem.