בס”ד

A THOUGHT ABOUT PARSHAT NASSO 5786

In Numbers 5:6–7, we read about what happens when someone wrongs another person and realizes their guilt.

The sages explain that this verse specifically refers to theft from a deceased convert who has no heirs. At first glance, this may seem like an unusual case, since there are no family members left to claim the money. Yet the Torah’s laws are meant to encompass even situations where a person might assume no wrongdoing is involved. Even here, the Torah teaches that the money is not simply free to take.

This connects to what we previously discussed in the Vayikra blog about theft: the Torah repeatedly emphasizes that ownership and moral responsibility do not disappear simply because a situation appears “unclaimed” or unclear.

Theft and other misdeeds can happen easily, and it is common for people to create logical justifications for their actions: “He has no descendants, so it doesn’t matter if I take his money.”

However, the Torah closes this moral gap completely. In such cases, G-d Himself, as it were, assumes the role of the wronged party, and the restitution is given to the priests (kohanim).

The key lesson is clear: we must be careful not to invent excuses to keep what belongs to someone else.

Acknowledgment and Repentance

It’s important to recognize when we have done wrong. According to Derech Mitzvotecha, repentance consists of three steps:

  1. Regret for the past 
  2. Verbal confession to G-d
  3. Positive intention for the future

Every misdeed creates what the text calls negative energy, which has a body and a soul:

Repentance addresses both levels: feeling genuine regret destroys the “soul” of the wrongdoing—its inner motivation—while verbally confessing and making restitution corrects the “body,” the act itself. This way, both the deed and the intent are repaired.

Restitution: 1/5 vs 50%

Numbers 5:7 instructs the wrongdoer to return the stolen amount plus an extra fifth (25%). This may seem different from the 50% extra payment mentioned in the Vayikra blog. The difference depends on how the wrongdoing is revealed:

In short, the extra payment depends on the circumstances: voluntary acknowledgment leads to a smaller 25% addition, while external proof leads to a larger penalty.

Conclusion

Numbers 5:6–7 teaches multiple lessons at once:

This parsha combines practical justice with a deeper moral and spiritual lesson: responsibility applies always, regardless of whether anyone sees or can prove the wrongdoing.

By Angelique Sijbolts
With thanks to Rabbi Tani Burton

Sources

Commentaries: Chizkuni, Rashi, Ramban, Rashbam, Numbers 5:6–7


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