The Curse and Relief (?) of Agriculture
Cursed be the ground because of you;
By toil shall you eat of it
All the days of your life: (18) Thorns and thistles shall it sprout for you.
But your food shall be the grasses of the field; (19) By the sweat of your brow
Shall you get bread to eat,
Until you return to the ground—
For from it you were taken.
For dust you are,
And to dust you shall return.”
Midrash Tanhuma (Warsaw) Bereshit: 11
Immediately after Noah was born and circumcised Lamech knew and said surely ‘This one will provide us relief from our work and from the toil of our hands…’ (Gen. 5:29) And what is the meaning of ‘from our work and from the toil of our hands?’ Before Noah was born, what was harvested was not what had been sewn. Rather, when wheat was sewn, thorns and thistles were harvested. When Noah was born the earth/world returned to orderly growth/to its composure. People harvested that which they sewed. They sewed wheat and harvested wheat, [sewed] barley and harvested barley.
And what is even more—before Noah was born people worked [the soil] with their [bare] hands, as implied by the words, “and from the toil of our hands.” (Gen. 5:29) But after Noah was born, he invented for them, the plow, the scythe, the hoe, and all manner of tools [for working the ground].
Spiritual Ecology, Water and the Promised Land
Laws About Sharing Harvests
The 7th: Shabbat, Shmitah, Yovel
When you enter the land that I assign to you, the land shall observe a sabbath of the LORD. (3) Six years you may sow your field and six years you may prune your vineyard and gather in the yield. (4) But in the seventh year the land shall have a sabbath of complete rest, a sabbath of the LORD: you shall not sow your field or prune your vineyard. (5) You shall not reap the aftergrowth of your harvest or gather the grapes of your untrimmed vines; it shall be a year of complete rest for the land. (6) But you may eat whatever the land during its sabbath will produce—you, your male and female slaves, the hired and bound laborers who live with you, (7) and your cattle and the beasts in your land may eat all its yield.
Tzar Baalei Hayyim: Preventing Animal Suffering
To relieve an animal of pain or danger is a biblical law, superseding any rabbinic ordinance.
- Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 128b
Maimonides, Guide to the Perplexed, Part 3, Chapter 48
It is forbidden to slaughter “it and its young on the same day,” this being a precaution against killing a child in front of its mother. For in these cases animals feel great pain, as there is no real distinction between the pain of humans and the pain of animals. This is because the love and compassion of the mother for her young is not reasoned intellectually, but has only to do with emotions and instincts, which are found among animals no less than among human beings.
The 7 Species and Trees
Babylonian Talmud Taanit 23a:15תענית כג א:טו
One day, he was walking along the road when he saw a certain man planting a carob tree. Ḥoni said to him: This tree, after how many years will it bear fruit? The man said to him: It will not produce fruit until seventy years have passed. Ḥoni said to him: Is it obvious to you that you will live seventy years, that you expect to benefit from this tree? He said to him: That man himself found a world full of carob trees. Just as my ancestors planted for me, I too am planting for my descendants.
Avot d’Rabbi Natan, Chapter 31 Composed in Talmudic Israel/Babylon (c.650 - c.950 CE) ְ
Rabbi Yohanan Ben Zakai used to say: "If you have a sapling in your hand and they tell you 'The Messiah is coming!' first plant the sapling and then go to greet them [the Messiah]."
Midrash Rabbah, Genesis 10:7
The Rabbis said: Even things you may think superfluous in the world such as fleas, gnats, and flies, even they are included in the creation of the world. The Holy One has a purpose for everything including the snakes, scorpions, gnats, and frogs.