W10
Attending to Both the Lesser & the Weightier Matters of Torah

W10

We are to attend to both the lesser and the weightier matters of Torah.

Category: The Word and Will of God & Messiah

Type: Positive

Form: -

Source dataset: Old Testament

Uniqueness: Unique

Classical commandment: No

New Covenant Literal Application

Applies to Person Categories: Everyone

Literal Application: mandated

More explanation about New Covenant Literal Application

The New Covenant Literal Application Code (NCLA) is an interpretive guide used by the authors to indicate which person categories a mitzvah applies to, and at what level of literal compliance.

It combines person categories such as Jewish, K'rov Yisrael, and Gentile, together with male/female distinctions and an application level such as mandated, recommended, optional, or prohibited.

This code reflects the authors' interpretive opinion and is provided for prayerful consideration. On this page, the technical code is summarized into plain language to help new readers understand it more easily.

Detailed codes: GFm - Gentile female, mandated | GMm - Gentile male, mandated | JFm - Jewish female, mandated | JMm - Jewish male, mandated | KFm - K'rovat Yisrael female, mandated | KMm - K'rov Yisrael male, mandated

Read the full explanation from the source

Bible references

Key NT Scriptures
  • Matthew 23:23-24
Supportive NT Scriptures
  • Luke 11:42
  • Mark 12:29-33
Supportive OT Scriptures
  • Hosea 6:6
  • Proverbs 21:3

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Commentary

Rabbi Michael Rudolph

The key Scripture supporting this Mitzvah is Yeshua's rebuke to the Torah teachers and Pharisees of his time for portraying themselves as righteous by meticulously complying with minor Torah requirements that others could observe them doing, while disregarding weightier requirements of the Torah (e.g. justice, mercy, trust, justice, love, etc.), violations that they could keep hidden. It is a lesson to us that Torah is not to be pursued by observable self-sacrifice and rule-keeping, but rather by searching the depths of God's heart for how He wants us to mirror His image in relating to Him and to our fellow man.

Classical commentators

This Mitzvah is not addressed by any of the Jewish classical commentators.


Copyright © Michael Rudolph and Daniel C. Juster, The Law of Messiah, Torah from a New Covenant Perspective, Volume 1 & 2

Source and License

Based on The Law of Messiah - Torah from a New Covenant Perspective by Michael Rudolph and Daniel C. Juster.

Volume 1 & 2 | Volume 3

License: CC BY-ND 4.0 (Attribution required, NoDerivatives). CC BY-ND 4.0

Disclaimer: the original content is authored by Rabbi Michael Rudolph and Rabbi Daniel Juster; additional notes or implementation details on this website are not part of their original work and do not represent their views.

Record source: The Law of Messiah - Torah from a New Covenant Perspective - Volume 1 & 2

Copyright note: Copyright © Michael Rudolph and Daniel C. Juster, The Law of Messiah, Torah from a New Covenant Perspective, Volume 1 & 2