Blessing of the Mitzvot at Kiddushin and Girushin
Have a good week, Rabbi,
It is written in the Rambam in the Laws of Marriage:
3:3 [23] Anyone who consecrates a woman – whether by himself or by a representative – must first bless the consecration, he or his representative, and then consecrate, in the same way that all the commandments are blessed first.
According to this, why is the blessing not also recited upon the divorce in the same way that one recites upon all the mitzvot (according to the Rambam, there is a positive mitzvot upon the divorce in the book).
Best regards,
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I thought of another possible explanation, that the mitzvah is that if and only if the man and woman are in a relationship, they should have it under kiddushin. This fits with the educational system that whoever divorces without a book annuls the act, and also explains why they don't bless, because the beginning of the mitzvah was in kiddushin, and divorce is just a continuation of it.
The Rambam counts this as a separate mitzvah. According to him, two details of the same mitzvah count as one mitzvah (see Shors Shevii, 11, 12 and more).
It is clear that breaking up a home is not God's will. Where do you get it from?
To the same extent, divorce can be considered as redemption; imagine if there was a prohibition against divorcing.
It has nothing to do with what you and I think. The sages were the ones who fixed the blessing of the commandments, and they themselves said that whoever divorces his wife, the altar sheds tears over him, and so on. Therefore, even if you think there is no problem with this, the sages who fixed the blessings think there is, and therefore they did not fix the blessing.
Maybe.. Shalom Beit Vedi is certainly an important value in Chazal.
But in any case, the betrothal blessing from which the questioner drew his inspiration. Beit Yosef and the Sela assume that this is a general blessing on the holiness of Israel.. and not a blessing on the commandments as such. For several reasons.
By the way, there is no blessing in the halitza either..
I am surprised not to see answers based on sources. Rashba, answer 18, said that there is no blessing in an action that is sometimes a transgression (as sometimes men expel women for no reason). I would like to see other sources that discuss this question.
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