- Who Goes Out to Measure?
There is a dispute:
- How many judges go out (3, 5, or more)
- Whether the entire Sanhedrin or only representatives participate
Key idea:
- The Torah requires distinguished leaders themselves to go—not agents.
👉 Even if it is obvious which city is closest:
- They must still measure physically
- Because the act of measuring is itself a mitzvah
- Measurement Details
The Gemara analyzes:
- From where on the body do we measure?
Opinions:
- From the navel
- From the nose
- From the place of death (neck area)
Halacha:
- Follows measuring from the nose (seat of life-breath)
- If Two Cities Are Equally Close
If the corpse is exactly between two cities:
- Both cities bring an eglah arufa
This shows:
Responsibility is shared when certainty cannot be determined.
- Nature of the Ritual
Core idea behind eglah arufa:
- The leaders of the closest city declare:
- “Our hands did not spill this blood”
Meaning:
- Not that they literally killed
- But that they did not neglect societal responsibility
Core Themes of Sotah 45
- Leadership must act personally
- Society bears responsibility for violence
- Even doubtful cases demand accountability
One‑sentence takeaway
Sotah 45 teaches that when injustice occurs, leaders must step forward physically and morally, taking responsibility even when guilt is uncertain.