by Steve BrizelAvraham and Jewish Continuity
The Relationship Between Avraham and Sarah
Avraham and Grief
The Third Wife
The Life of Sarah
Mitzvos, Halacha and Details
Avraham, Eliezer & Rivkah
This blog has moved to TorahMusings.com
11:03 PM
Gil Student
by Steve Brizel
6:58 AM
Gil Student
Of course not. It is forbidden because of three reasons, each of which is sufficient on its own:Note also that R. Ovadiah Yosef called the Prime Minister to wish him a speedy recovery (link).
A. How do you know why he is sick? You know the secrets of the Master of the Universe. How do you know that it happened because of this or that reason? Don't you know that there are bad people and sometimes good things happen to them, and there are good people and sometimes bad things happen to them?...
B. It is forbidden to cause anguish to another person with words (hona'at devarim)... It is true that there is a mitzvah to rebuke, but it has to be done with wisdom. This is not the way.
C. People who make comments like this think that they will help the Nation of Israel to repent. "You see, he did this and look what happened to him." This is repentance out of fear. A movie came out which said that anyone who had any part in the expulsion from Gush Katif is or will be punished. It has been explained over and over during the last one hundred years that this generation will not repent out of fear. This generation will only repent out of love. This is all explained by our Master, Rav Kook, in "Ma'amar Ha-Dor"...
It is therefore forbidden to say that he deserves this sickness: A. You're not a prophet. B. It is forbidden to distress another person. C. We do not help people repent out of fear, but only out of love.
6:35 AM
Gil Student
שהאדם לא נברא אלא להתענגThis, R. Miller wrote, proves that a person must be happy because that is why he was created.
Man was only created to delight
ומקום העדון הזה באמת הוא העולם הבא כי הוא הנברא בהכנה המצטרכת לדבר הזה.The Messilas Yesharim is teaching us that we must work in this world, by doing mitzvos, in order to reach the world of pleasure. This world is not necessarily for pleasure but for work.
But in truth, the place for this pleasure is the World to Come, as it was created, readied and prepared for just such a pleasure.
1:20 PM
Gil Student
6:16 AM
Gil Student
It is now a staple in the history of Parshanut (Jewish Bible commentary) that the term "peshat" has meant different things in different times and places. To some, it has meant the literal translation of the words. To others, it has meant a contextual meaning. This has been amply explored in a number of studies, two that come to mind are Prof. David Weiss Halivni's Peshat and Derash and a brief essay in R. Reuven Margoliyos' Ha-Mikra Ve-Ha-Mesorah.
11:13 PM
Gil Student
1:19 PM
Gil Student
10:08 PM
Gil Student
button in the top right corner of Hirhurim. See here for readership statistics.)
10:05 PM
Gil Student
There is a full-page editorial by Zev Eleff in the latest issue of The Commentator in which he argues for the utility of a college newspaper in the life of a Yeshiva University student (link). His main point is that YU is a busy place and the various interested parties do not always have the time or opportunity to become aware of issues that require resolution. The student newspaper is the place to raise such issues and bring them to the attention to the students, faculty and administration so conversation can begin and problems can be resolved.
3:44 PM
Gil Student
A few more interesting news items from papers that posted to the web since the last roundup:
10:22 AM
Gil Student
I mention this because as I was reading the responses to Miriam Shear’s Enough is Enough!, column which I posted on my website, it struck me how many similarities there are between the phenomenon of school bullying and the actions of the criminal ‘tzniyus-patrol’ thugs who are assaulting our women. (For the record, I condemned their actions in the strongest terms in my essay They Don't Represent Us).Read the whole article here.
What is equally striking is how the reactions of many decent people to Mrs. Shear is similar to how well-meaning adults often mistakenly treat children who are victims of bullying – telling them to ‘just ignore it’ and questioning if their behavior provoked the attacker. (FYI; this is a also a classic response to victims of domestic abuse – implying that it is the fault of the victim and suggesting that they ‘ignore things’ and they will improve.)
Below, I share with you verbatim text from the excellent U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Stop Bullying Now website. I ask all decent, fair-minded people to read it carefully. Then; if you feel, as I do, that there are parallels, engage in a serious cheshbon hanefesh and think carefully if the time has come for ALL of us to say as Miriam Shear has said. “Enough is Enough!”
10:04 AM
Gil Student
One of the most interesting from a sectarian perspective is Yashar Books, located in Brooklyn and the brainchild of Gil Student, who grew up locally and who graduated from the Solomon Schechter Day School and the Frisch high school. Yashar publishes what it calls "Orthodox Jewish books for the contemporary reader," but the books have a far greater appeal than that.
Yashar tends to be daring in its offerings. Take, for example, "Between the Lines of the Bible," by Yitzchak Etshalom. It is a commentary on the Book of Genesis, but it dares to go where other "Orthodox" commentaries fear to tread — into the world of modern biblical scholarship. It is, in fact, an outgrowth of a small, but growing trend within Orthodox erudition to bring history, archeology, linguistics, and literary criticism to bear on the Torah text.
Yashar also publishes a number of books by Rabbi Natan (Nosson) Slifkin, a brilliant scholar whose works were banned by several prominent haredi rabbis in 2005. That is because Slifkin dares to suggest that modern science provides a more accurate picture of the universe and all that is in it than the Sages of blessed memory.
Not every author Yashar publishes is Orthodox. One on its list is Rabbi David Feldman, rabbi emeritus of the Jewish Center of Teaneck. His book "Where There’s Life" offers readers "a comprehensive exploration of abortion, euthanasia and the right to die, martyrdom, the mandate to heal, the mind-body connection, embryonic stem cell research, organ transplants — including the controversial questions of heart transplantation," according to Yashar.
11:09 PM
Gil Student
Hospitality, or hakhnasat orchim, occupies a unique position of honor even within the distinguished plane of chesed. The Talmud teaches that its importance is such that it outweighs even receiving the Divine presence.[1] This is derived from the behavior of Abraham, who received a Divine visitation during his recuperation from his circumcision. Nonetheless, he interrupted that experience to greet the three mysterious guests, apparently in need of hospitality, who appeared afterward. This interpretation of events is based on a specific reading of the Biblical text, one that is itself debated, and, if understood in this manner deepens the astonishing nature of Abraham’s behavior.
1:57 PM
Gil Student
I am still looking for someone to write this on a regular basis.So what can be ordered at Starbucks? While there are no guarantees here, it has been told to this author that the regular coffee and the espresso (even the triple one) are generally washed separately and therefore would not present a problem of kashrus.(UPDATE: The OU on Starbucks: link)
1:03 PM
Gil Student
New issue of Yeshiva College's The Commentator:
button in the top right corner of Hirhurim. See here for readership statistics.)
1:01 PM
Gil Student
Following a brutal attack on a woman by five Charedi men for failing to move to the back of the bus (JPost, JTA, Haaretz), R. Yaakov Horowitz published a column (link) in which he called for, among other things, the issuance of halakhic rulings that:More recently, he published an article by Miriam Shear, a victim of similar violence a year ago (link), in which she proclaimed:Violence is forbidden by our Torah under any circumstances Those who commit violence constitute a real and present danger to the safety of the public and one is halachicly obligated to report them to the police, and If one finds himself in the presence of a violent act perpetrated by criminals, he is halachicly obligated to defend the victim as the Torah says, “Lo sa’amod al dam re’echa”
As for all charedi Jews worldwide; it is high time that we collectively say in a loud and clear voice, “Enough is Enough!”I'm not Charedi so my declaration that this is unacceptable is worth little. But I'm glad to add my voice. The real question, though, is why great Torah scholars are willing to sign statements denouncing all sorts of things as halakhically problematic, which are posted on walls throughout religious communities and published in newspapers, but -- to my knowledge -- have not done similarly for this issue. Why the silence? It seems like a no-brainer to condemn this.
8:54 AM
Gil Student
Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks has published a new book, The Home We Build Together: Recreating Society. See here for excerpts: I, II and here for reviews of this new book: Times, Guardian, Totally Jewish. The last begins with a brief discussion of the controversy surrounding Rabbi Sacks' 2002 book, Dignity of Difference: How to Avoid the Clash of Civilizations. After a confrontation with the beis din of Manchester, R. Sacks revised his book for a second edition.P. 46: The first recorded act of religious worship is (leads directly to) [directly followed] by the first murder, the first fratricide.
P. 46: I read this as a clear and fateful warning, at the very beginning of the book of books, that just as there is a road from faith to redemption, so there is a path from [the misuse of] religion to violence.
P. 46: The sense of belonging goes back to the (prehistory, to the hunter-gatherer stage in the evolution of mankind, when homo sapiens first emerged) [dawn of humanity, when being part of the group was essential to life itself].
P. 52: Babel – the first global project – is the turning point in the biblical narrative. [From then on, God will not attempt a universal order again until the end of days.] It ends with the division of mankind into a multiplicity of languages, cultures, nations and civilizations.
Pp. 52-53: (it) [Judaism] is a particularist monotheism. It believes in one God (but not in one exclusive path to salvation. The God of the Israelites is the God of all mankind, but the demands made of the Israelites are not asked of all mankind.) [but not in one religion, one culture, one truth. The God of Abraham is the God of all mankind, but the faith of Abraham is not the faith of all mankind.]
P. 53: God, the creator of humanity, having made a covenant with all humanity, then turns to one people and commands it to be different, (teaching humanity to make space for difference. God may at times be found in human other, the one not like us.) [in order to teach humanity the dignity of difference.] Biblical monotheism is not the idea that there is one God and therefore one (one truth, one faith, one way of life.) (gateway to His presence.) [On] (To) the contrary, it is the idea that (unity creates diversity. That is the non-Platonic miracle of creation.) [the unity of God is to be found in the diversity of creation. This applies to the natural world.] What is real and the proper object of our wonder is not the (quintessential) [Platonic form of a] leaf but the 250,000 different kinds there actually are…
P. 54: (Judaism is about the miracle of unity that creates diversity.) [Unity in heaven creates diversity on earth.]
P. 54: (The same applies to civilizations.) The essential message of the (Book of Genesis) [Hebrew Bible] is that universality – the covenant with Noah – is only the context of and prelude to the irreducible multiplicity of cultures…
P. 54: There is a difference between physis and nomos, description and prescription, nature and culture(, or – to put it in biblical terms – between creation and revelation)
P. 55: (The same applies to religion. The radical transcendence of God in the Hebrew Bible means nothing more or less than that there is a difference between God and religion. God is universal, religions are particular. Religion is the translation of God into a particular language and thus into the life of a group, nation, a community of faith. In the course of history, God has spoken to mankind in many languages: through Judaism to Jews, Christianity to Christians, Islam to Muslims. Only such a God is truly transcendental – greater not only than the natural universe but also than the spiritual universe articulated in any single faith, any specific language of human sensibility. How could a sacred text convey such an idea? It would declare that God is God of all humanity, but no single faith is or should be the faith of all humanity. Only such a narrative would lead us to see the presence of God in people of other faiths. Only such a worldview could reconcile the particularity of cultures with the universality of the human condition.) [So too in the case of religion. The radical transcendence of God in the Hebrew Bible means that the Infinite lies beyond our finite understanding. God communicates in human language, but there are dimensions of the divine that must forever elude us. As Jews we believe that God has made a covenant with a singular people, but that does not exclude the possibility of other peoples, cultures and faiths finding their own relationship with God within the shared frame of the Noahide laws. These laws constitute, as it were, the depth grammar of the human experience of the divine: of what it is to see the world as God's work, and humanity as God's image. God is God of all humanity, but between Babel and the end of days no single faith is the faith of all humanity. Such a narrative would lead us to respect the search for God in people of other faiths and reconcile the particularity of cultures with the universality of the human condition.]
P. 55: (This means that religious truth is not universal. What it does not mean is that it is relative.) [This means that though God makes absolute demands of the Jewish people, other than the Noahide laws these demands are not universal.]
P. 56: God as we encounter Him in the Bible is not simply a philosophical or scientific concept: the first cause, the prime mover, (initiator of the Big Bang) [necessary being]. He is a parent(, sometimes male) {'Have we not all one father?'(}, sometimes female {)'Like one whom his mother comforts, so will I comfort you'}(, but always) bearing the love that a parent feels for a child he(/)[or ]she has brought into being.
P. 56: He is a particularist, loving each of his children for what they are: Isaac (and) [but also blessing] Ishmael, [favouring] Jacob (and) [but also commanding his children not to hate those of] Esau, Israel and the nations, (choosing one for a particular destiny, to be sure, but blessing the others, each in their own way) [the God 'whose tender care rests upon all his works'].
P. 56: (God no more wants all faiths and cultures to be the same than a loving parent want his or her children to be the same. That is the conceptual link between love, creation and difference. We serve God, author of diversity, by respecting diversity.) [Just as a loving parent is pained by sibling rivalry, so God asks us, his children, not to fight or seek to dominate one another. God, author of diversity, is the unifying presence within diversity.]
P. 59: Indeed, (it is hard to avoid the conclusion that this is precisely the reason why the Israelites have to undergo exile and slavery prior to their birth as a nation) [that is what the Israelites are commanded never to forget about their shared experience of exile and slavery].
P. 59: (We encounter God in the face of a stranger. That, I believe, is the Hebrew Bible's single greatest and most counterintuitive contribution to ethics. God creates difference; therefore it is in one-who-is-different that we meet god. Abraham encounters God when he invites three strangers into his tent. Jacob meets God when he wrestles with an unnamed adversary alone at night.) [God cares about the stranger, and so must we. Abraham invites three strangers into his tent and discovers that they are angels. Jacob wrestles with an unnamed adversary alone at night and thereafter says, 'I have seen God face to face'. Welcoming the stranger, said the sages, is even greater than 'receiving the divine presence'.]
P. 60: The human other is a trace of the Divine (Other).
P. 60: The (supreme religious) challenge [to the religious imagination] is to see God's image in one who is not in our image.
P. 60: The God of Israel is larger than the (faith) [specific practices] of Israel.
P. 60: (Judaism was born as a protest against empires) [[Judaism has historically been a living alternative to empires], because imperialism and its latter day successors, totalitarianism and fundamentalism, are attempts to impose a single (truth) [regime] on a plural world…
P. 62: We will need to understand that just as the natural environment depends on biodiversity, so the human environment depends on cultural diversity, because (no one creed has a monopoly on spiritual truth;) no one civilization encompasses all the spiritual, ethical and artistic expression of mankind.
P. 64: Yes, humanity is capable of great acts of altruism (and self-sacrifice), but it is also constantly at war.
P. 64: (Truth on the ground is multiple, partial. Fragments of it lie everywhere. Each person, culture and language has part of it; none has it all.)
P. 64: (Truth on earth is not, nor can it aspire to be, the whole truth. It is limited, not comprehensive; particular, not universal.) [The divine word comes from heaven but it is interpreted on earth. The divine light is infinite but to be visible to us it must be refracted through finite understanding. Truth in heaven transcends space and time, but human perception is bounded by space and time.]
Pp. 64-65: (In heaven there is truth; on earth there are truths. Therefore, each culture has something to contribute. Each person knows something no one else does.) [God, wrote Rabbi Abraham Kook, 'deals kindly with this world by not putting all the talents in one place, in any one man or nation, not in one generation or even one world.' Each culture has something to contribute to the totality of human wisdom.]
P. 65: The way I have discovered, having listened to Judaism's sacred texts in the context of the tragedies of the twentieth century and the insecurities of the twenty-first, is that the truth at the beating heart of monotheism is that (God is greater than religion; that He is only partially comprehended by any faith. He is my God, but also your God. He is on my side, but also on your side. He exists not only in my faith, but also in yours.) [God transcends the particularities of culture and the limits of human understanding. He is my God but also the God of all mankind, even of those whose customs and way of life are unlike mine.]
P. 65: Only such a God would be truly transcendent – greater not only than the natural universe but also than the spiritual universe capable of being comprehended in any (one language, any single faith) [human language, from any single point of view].
Pp. 65-66: It would be to know that I am a sentence in the story of my people and its faith, but that there are other stories, each written by God out of the letters of lives bound together in community, (each bearing the unmistakable trace of his handwriting) [each part of the story of stories that is the narrative of man's search for God and God's call to mankind].
12:45 AM
Gil Student
10:47 PM
Gil Student
8:31 AM
Gil Student

button in the top right corner of Hirhurim. See here for readership statistics.)
11:30 PM
Gil Student
The Artscroll siddur famously uses the word “Hashem” to represent God’s name of YKVK (some have named it the “Hashemite Siddur”). Since Artscroll is the basis of the Rav Soloveitchik machzorim, I was thinking about whether Rav Soloveitchik would have wanted the English translation to represent YKVK by “Hashem” or “God” and/or “Lord”.
1:09 PM
Gil Student
by Jonathan Baker (crossposted from Thanbook)
11:47 PM
Gil Student
The same year that The Law of God (1845), [Isaac] Leeser's five-volume, exquisitely produced Hebrew-English edition of the Pentateuch appeared, Leeser also founded America's first Jewish Publication Society, designed "to support the noble fabric of our faith." "The press is at our service," he announced in an address to the "Israelites of America." He hoped that the new society would solve the problem caused by the fact that "our people live dispersed over so wide a space of country that we are precluded from waiting upon all individually." The American Tract Society and the American Bible Society, he knew, had long since used the press to spread Protestantism's religious message. Now, showing that he too had assimilated the lessons of the market revolution, he sought to emulate "the plan adopted by our opponents" and to "profit by them." He proposed to "prepare and publish works to be placed in the hand of all Israelites" and listed two major religious objectives for his new society: first, to provide American Jews with a "knowledge of their faith," and second, to arm them with the "proper weapons to defend... against the assaults of proselyte-makers on the one side and of infidels on the other." The publication society produced fourteen small English-language volumes, each an approximately 125-page tract, but in 1851 a fire consumed its entire stock of undistributed books, and it went out of business.
Yet even as the society's literary effort went up in smoke, Leeser's Bible, prayer books, monthly magazine, and textbooks remained in print, in some cases well into the twentieth century. His strategy for revitalizing American Jewish life--his use of print media, his willingness to borrow successful techniques from non-Jews, his focus on education and aesthetics, and his commitment to communal defense--proved equally long lasting.
9:21 AM
Gil Student
The answer, we suggest, is the “two brotherly people solution”: Jewish Jews and non-Jewish Jews. This would involve creating communities of “non-Jewish Jews” in which those who are not prepared to go the whole way could develop their own brand of Judaism. They could have their own synagogues in which to practice aspects of Jewish tradition that they wish to use. They could decide for themselves to what extent to observe Shabbath or keep kosher. Their wedding ceremonies could make use of many Jewish rituals and they could have their own “Jewish” cemeteries where they could adopt as many Jewish religious practices as possible rather than be forced to bury their dead in totally secular or non-Jewish burial grounds. We could set up outreach programs for them, enabling them to study Judaism and choose whatever aspects they wish to adopt. We could even create yeshivoth and seminars for this specific purpose.This seems to me to be a recipe for schismatic disaster, not to mention the encouragement of intermarriage by those who will see this all as a technicality.
11:08 PM
Gil Student
I am still looking for someone to write this on a regular basis.
1:25 AM
Gil Student
There is a terrible misconception that the laws of Shabbos do not apply to doctors. This is absolutely incorrect. No profession exempts anyone from any mitzvos. Medical students are certainly not exempt from Shabbos observance. And even after having completed his school years, the future doctor must take special care to make sure he has a Sabbath-observant residency. If this can not be arranged, the student must simply look for a different profession.On the other hand, some doctors will argue that while this is absolutely correct, any residency can be made "Shomer Shabbos" if you know how to do it. See this post and the comments.
12:02 AM
Gil Student
Rashi (Gen. 2:23) quotes a midrash and states: "Adam mated with every [species of] domesticated animal and wild animal but his appetite was not assuaged by them, until he discovered Eve." This is, to put it mildly, a startling suggestion. While it is based on textual clues, it still offers an historical scenario that seems quite difficult to accept (note the non-literal translation in the Metsudah Rashi). In two recent articles, Dr. Eric Lawee addressed the commentarial literature on this Rashi ("From Sepharad to Ashkenaz: A Case Study in the Rashi Supercommentary Tradition" in AJS Review 30:2 [2006]; "The reception of Rashi's 'Commentary on the Torah' in Spain: The Case of Adam's Mating with the Animals" in JQR 97:1 [2007]).
1:12 PM
Gil Student
Oct. 15, 2007
Letters to the Editor, Magazine
The New York Times
620 Eighth Ave.
New York, NY 10018
To the Editor,
Jakie Kassin is the son and grandson of rabbis and a dynamic do-gooder, but he is neither a rabbi nor a scholar of Judaic studies. The statements attributed to him in “The SY Empire” (Zev Chafets, Oct. 14, 2007) are a gross distortion of Judaism as well as of the 1935 Edict promulgated in the Syrian Jewish community of Brooklyn. That Edict was enacted to discourage community members from intermarrying with non-Jews. It acknowledged the reality of the time that conversions were being employed insincerely and superficially. Accordingly, conversion for marriage to a member of the community was automatically rejected.
However, it is important in this regard to clarify the policy of the community rabbinate and particularly that of the long-time former chief rabbi of the community, Jacob S. Kassin (the originator of the Edict), and his son, the present chief rabbi, Saul J. Kassin. I quote from an official formulation of the Sephardic Rabbinical Council of several years ago that reflects their position: “1. A conversion not associated with marriage that was performed by a recognized Orthodox court – such as for adoption of infants or in the case of an individual sincerely choosing to be Jewish – is accepted in our community. 2. If an individual not born to a member of our community had converted to Judaism under the aegis of an Orthodox court, and was observant of Jewish Law, married a Jew/Jewess who was not and had not been a member of our community, their children are permitted to marry into our community.” Based on these standards a goodly number of converts have been accepted into the community. Genetic characteristics play no role whatsoever.
No rabbi considers sincere and proper conversions “fictitious and valueless.” (The comma in the English translation cited in the article that gives that impression was the result of a mistranslation by a layman, a matter I made clear to Mr. Chafets when we spoke.)
In addition, the quote claiming that even other Jews are disqualified from marrying into the community “if someone in their line was married by a Reform or Conservative rabbi” is a totally false portrayal of community rabbinical policy. Many Ashkenazim whose parents were married by such rabbis have married into our community.
Sincerely,
Moshe Shamah
Rabbi, Sephardic Synagogue
511 Ave. R
Brooklyn, NY 11223
1:03 PM
Gil Student
The Dialogue Continues:
Rabbi Slifkin Answers Critics
Last week’s letter-writers pointed out that the scientific jargon quoted by reader Amnon Goldberg in support of the notion of a stationary Earth actually provides no such support. Mr. Goldberg was correct in noting that many Acharonim were strongly opposed to Copernicus, but he is mistaken in believing that modern science supports their geocentrism. Relativity, even according to Mr. Goldberg’s mistaken understanding of it, does not lend any support to what these Acharonim were stating – they believed that the earth is absolutely stationary, not merely stationary from a relative perspective.
I explain this matter in greater detail in my book The Challenge Of Creation.
Reader Chaim Silver writes that he disagrees with my claims “that the concept of Divine Providence is limited to the chassidic movement and that God does not test our faith.”
Click here to read moreI, too, strongly disagree with such claims, which is why I wrote no such thing. I am at a loss to account for why he characterized my views in this way.
In Dr. Yaakov Stern’s latest letter, he (somewhat strangely) completely changes the topic that was the subject of my article and his first letter. Instead of discussing Chazal’s scientific knowledge, he writes instead about the age of the universe. But he does not offer any arguments against my position in this matter either, and soon switches the line of discussion to one of authority.
Dr. Stern, citing Rashi on the pasuk of Lo Sasur, argues that it is incumbent upon us to follow the views of the gedolim about my books, even if their rulings appear to be in error.
Yet, according to the majority of opinions, that pasuk is referring to the Beis Din HaGadol in Yerushalayim, not to contemporary rabbinic authorities. Sefer HaChinnuch states that it applies to the Torah authorities of every generation, but this is a decidedly minority view amongst the Rishonim. Furthermore, even the Sefer HaChinnuch’s view is limited to certain types of piskei halachah that would not include this case, for several reasons.
One reason is that most of the distinguished rabbonim who banned three of my books were condemning my position that Chazal’s scientific statements were not based on ruach haKodesh or a mesorah from Sinai and were therefore in some cases mistaken. Now, of course these rabbonim have every right to vehemently oppose this position, and to warn those in their community against it, and I would even agree that it can be a dangerous approach for their community.
But is their prohibition applicable to people outside of their constituencies – to the entire Jewish People?
My rabbonim have told me that this is inconceivable, since this approach was presented by Rav Sherira Gaon, Rambam, Rabbeinu Avraham ben HaRambam, Tosafos, Akeidas Yitzchak, Pri Chadash, Rav Yitzchak Lampronti, Maharam Schick, Rav Hirsch, and many dozens of other Torah giants throughout the centuries, right through to our generation, where I heard it from Rav Aryeh Carmell, zt”l, and Rav Gedalyah Nadel, zt”l. It is adopted or legitimized today by scores of bona fide poskim and qualified talmidei chachamim (including, but by no means limited to, Rav Zalman Nechemiah Goldberg, Rav Shlomo Fisher, and Rav Herschel Schechter).
Thus, Rav Ovadiah Yosef, when presented with the case of a Sephardic rabbi who was making use of this approach, wrote in response that while he is personally opposed to it, one cannot deny the right of someone to adopt it, in light of its authentic roots in the Rishonim.
Switching to the topic of the age and development of the universe, Dr. Stern notes that Rav Moshe Feinstein was of the view that the Torah’s account of creation was to be interpreted literally. Indeed he was – but he was also of the view that one is not obligated to follow the opinion of a different posek, even if he is the gadol hador. In Iggros Moshe (Yoreh De’ah 3:88), he tells someone moving to Bnei Brak that he is fully entitled to dispute the positions of the Chazon Ish, although he must do so with respect.
And the Chazon Ish himself wrote (Yoreh De’ah 150) that one need not follow the majority of rabbinic opinion, past or present, in determining a ruling; only with the Sanhedrin was the ruling determined by majority vote. One need only follow one’s own rabbinic authority (if one is not competent to form an opinion oneself).
All of the above is stated with regard to halachic rulings; it is all the more true with regard to matters of hashkafa that are not related to halacha, since, as Rambam states (commentary to Sanhedrin 10:3), such matters are not subject to psak. One might perhaps make an exception for beliefs that relate to the fundamentals of faith, but the nature of creation (as opposed to the fact of creation) cannot be said to fall into that category – it does not relate to any of Rambam’s thirteen principles of faith. An opinion on these matters may be right or wrong, but it is not subject to being “paskened” that one may not believe it to be true.
Of course, not every rabbi is of sufficient stature to have credibility in forming opinions in such matters. A Torah scholar must be not only a great Talmudist, but also possess a thorough knowledge of the diverse approaches of the Rishonim on this obscure topic. This is not so easy to find; for example, notwithstanding the pre-eminent status of Rambam, it is hard to find someone who is truly knowledgeable of his positions, and open to his approach.
Credibility in these topics also requires experience in dealing with such issues, and an appreciation of the seriousness of the challenges posed by science. Without this, we face a situation such as that with the Shevus Yaakov, one of the greatest halachic authorities of the eighteenth century, who dismissed scientists on the grounds that they believe the world to be round, in contrast to his understanding of the Gemara.
There are some great Torah authorities of this and recent generations who fulfill these requirements. For example, there is Rav Yitzchak Herzog, who was eulogized by Rav Aharon Kotler, zt”l, as a “prince of Torah,” and who was a rebbe of Rav Elyashiv, shlita; he was thoroughly versed in the philosophical approaches of the Rishonim and noted that they would not mandate a literalist interpretation of Bereishis (nor a belief that Chazal’s science was infallible). Rav Gedalyah Nadel, one of the foremost disciples of the Chazon Ish, also studied modern science; he accepted that the universe was billions of years old, and that life evolved.
Many other such qualified authorities have their positions quoted in full in my books, and my own mentor, Rav Aryeh Carmell, was certainly qualified to teach me my own approach in these matters.
Dr. Stern is fully entitled to follow his own rabbinic authorities; surely, however, is not entitled to deny others the right to follow theirs.
Rabbi Natan Slifkin
Jerusalem
9:33 AM
Gil Student
I caved. After insisting for years that I prefer the written word, I finally bought an I-Pod with which to listen to lectures, primarily during my long commute. However, do not fear. I have not abandoned the written word altogether and since my inaugural I-Pod session this past Monday, I have read during 2 1/2 commutes and listened during 2 1/2.