See what Rabbi Shafier says about the commandment to stone the criminal:
http://www.theshmuz.com/ki.htmlספר דברים פרק כא
(כב) וכי יהיה באיש חטא משפט מות והומת ותלית אתו על עץ:
(כג) לא תלין נבלתו על העץ כי קבור תקברנו ביום ההוא כי קללת אלהים תלוי ולא תטמא את אדמתך אשר ידוד אלהיך נתן לך נחלה:
רש"י על דברים פרק כא פסוק כג
(כג) כי קללת אלהים תלוי - זלזולו של מלך הוא שאדם עשוי בדמות דיוקנו וישראל הם בניו משל לשני אחים תואמים שהיו דומין זה לזה אחד נעשה שר ואחד נתפס ללסטיות ונתלה כל הרואה אותו אומר השר תלוי כל קללה שבמקרא לשון הקל וזלזול כמו והוא קללני קללה נמרצת
The punishment of StoningOf the four capital punishments in the Torah, the most severe is Skilah. The nation gathers around to watch as the criminal is thrown off of a second story cliff to the jagged rocks below. If he survives it, he is then stoned to death. And after being proclaimed dead, his body is hung publicly for all to see – so that others will learn not to do as he did.
Yet the Torah warns us his body should not remain hanging for too long. He must be buried that day because it is an embarrassment to the king to let him hang.
Rashi explains: It is an embarrassment to HASHEM to have a human being hanging because man was formed in the image of HASHEM. Since the Jewish people are called “sons of HASHEM,” the shame is even greater. Therefore, the body must be taken down that day before sunset.
Rashi then gives the Moshol that this is comparable to identical twins. One twin rises through the ranks and eventually becomes king. The other twin turns to a life of crime. Eventually, the hoodlum is caught and hung. Since he was identical to the king, anyone passing by will proclaim, “Look! The king has been hung!” Rashi explains that it is for that reason that the Torah commands us not to leave the body hanging too long. A person is made in the image of HASHEM, and it is an embarrassment to HASHEM to leave His likeness hanging.
This Rashi is very difficult to understand. Whenever our sages use a moshol, it is to bring us into a different realm of understanding. It is as if to say our current frame of reference isn’t large enough to understand the point, so we broaden it by stepping into a different dimension. This moshol implies that one passing a hanging human would on some level mistake him for HASHEM. But this seems preposterous. No one would mistake man for HASHEM. HASHEM created the heavens and the earth; man can barely make it through his day. HASHEM lives on for eternity; man puts his head down to sleep, not knowing whether he will ever awaken. How can anyone mistake man for the Creator? What is Rashi trying to teach us with this moshol?
Replica vs. Representation
If you ride the elevator to the 86th floor of the Empire State building, you will find a gift store selling models of the very building that you are standing in. That is a replica. A replica reminds a person of the original. Granted it is in miniature, and granted no one would mistake it for the original, but it carries, almost in caricature form, some reminiscence of the original.
A flag, on the other hand, is not just a piece of cloth that reminds us of a particular country. It stands for and symbolizes the nation itself. It is a representation of the county. The American flag is not allowed to touch the ground. It would be considered an affront to the people it represents. So too, a throne is more than a seat the king sits upon. It embodies the distinction and nobility of the king. If one sits on the king’s throne, it is a affront to the king’s honor.
If the Torah were teaching us that man was a replica of HASHEM, or even a representation of Him, it would be a huge perspective change in the way that we view man. Rashi seems to be saying that man is far more than a replica of HASHEM, and even more than a representation of HASHEM. Man is in a completely different category. To understand this Rashi, we must understand the role that HASHEM gave man in the universe.
All physical manifestations have a spiritual counterpart
Chazal explain to us that all physical manifestations have a spiritual counterpart. The spiritual counterpart of Creation is maintained by man. If he accomplishes his mission in the world, he elevates himself and the world along with him. If he doesn’t live up to his role, then both he and the world that depends upon him become damaged. In the case of Adom, one sin caused a radical change in the destiny of the world and mankind. HASHEM placed the keys to Creation in man’s hands.
We don’t see this because look at the world in its physical form and see a static existence. Physicality is. Matter exists. A solid piece of wood is unmoving and inert. However, if you were to ask a scientist about that seemingly solid piece of wood, he would tell you it is actually comprised of electrons spinning around in constant motion. There is far more to it than meets the eye.
So too, the spiritual dimension of existence is in constant flux, ever changing. For its continued existence, it requires man’s input. His actions and decisions fuel the spiritual state of existence, and therefore the physical as well.
Man as a partner in Creation
HASHEM is the Creator and Maintainer of the world. The entire cosmos is dependent upon Him. HASHEM put man in the center of Creation and made the world dependent upon him. If we were fully attuned to the Torah’s view of man, we would see him as the maintainer of physicality. In that sense, he is almost like a little creator– the world depends upon him for its existence.
This is what Rashi is adding with his Moshol. If one truly understood the basis of the universe, he would see that man is far greater than even a replica or representation of HASHEM – man is so great that he could almost be mistaken for a creator.
This point is even more powerful because the individual we are discussing didn’t receive the death sentence for eating Shalosh Seudos in shul. The Torah considers him so corrupt and depraved that he lost his lease on life. Yet even this criminal remains so much like HASHEM that it would be an embarrassment to the King to leave him hanging.
The Torah is teaching us to view man in a very different light. We should look at man and gasp, “That is a man! Man is created in the image of HASHEM! How much honor and accord is due to that great person?” Obviously, this concept will greatly affect the way we treat others. But just as significantly, it will impact the way we view our own potential and how much we should come to expect from ourselves.