The Way of Torah, Rav Nachum Rabinovitch
The Way of Torah, Rav Nachum Rabinovitch
The Way of Torah, Rav Nachum Rabinovitch
"Lord, You are my God, I will exalt You and praise we stumble at noon as at night.4 …Israel said, "'For
Your Name, For You have done wondrous things; You light my lamp,' 5 yet You say that we should illu-
counsels of old, in faithfulness and truth." (Isa. minate before You? God replied, "In order to ele-
25:1) vate you, so that you illuminate Me, just as I have
illuminated you."…The Holy One Blessed be He
The Sages taught:1 said, "Let My lamp be in your hand and your lamp
in Mine." And what is the lamp of The Holy One
Accordingly, the Holy One blessed be He said to Blessed be He? It is Torah, as Scripture says, "For
Moses, "and they will take for you pure olive oil"2 – the commandment is a lamp and Torah is light."6
not that I need them to do so, but that you shall And what is the lamp of the commandment?
illuminate for me as I have illuminated for you….It Everyone who performs a commandment is as if
may be compared to a blind and a sighted person he lights a lamp before The Holy One Blessed be
walking together. The sighted person said, "Come; I He…. "And you shall command"7 – that refers to
will guide you," and the blind person walked along what is written, "You would call and I would answer
with him. When they entered a house, the sighted You; you would desire Your handiwork."8 …God
person said to the blind one, "Go and light the desired His handiwork…He illuminates the world,
lamp to illuminate for me; I ask you to do that so as Scripture says, "The earth shone with His glory."9
you will not feel obligated to me for having guided He said to Israel, "They will take for you pure olive
you." The sighted person represents the Holy One, oil!" – i.e., "You would desire Your handiwork."
blessed be He, as Scripture says, "His eyes range
over the entire world,"3 and the blind person repre- I. Free Will – The Glory of Man
sents Israel, as Scripture says, "We grope for the
wall like the blind; like those without eyes we grope; The Image of God (Tselem Elokim) is man's unique qual-
*Translation by Joel Linsider. The original Hebrew essay appeared in Me'aliyot, the publication of Yeshivat Birkat Moshe Ma'ale
Adumim in 1988. An expanded version of this essay can be found in the full volume, "Darkhah Shel Torah," by the same author,
(Me'aliyot: Jerusalem, 1999).
1
Exod. Rabbah, Parashat Ve-Attah Tetsaveh, sec. 36.
2
Exod. 27:20.
3
2 Chron. 16:9.
4
Isa. 59:10.
5
Ps. 18:29.
6
Prov. 6:23.
7
Ex. 27:20. (The words form the beginning of the directive to Moses to instruct the Israelites regarding the lamps. – trans.)
8
Job 14:15.
9
Ezek. 43:2.
10
Cf. Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Teshuvah 5:1 – "As it is written in the Torah, 'And so, man has become as one of us,
knowing good and evil' (Gen. 3:22); that is, this human species has become singular in the world, and no other species resem-
bles it with respect to this matter: that he, of himself, in his wisdom and understanding knows the good and the evil and does
what he wills, and there is none to restrain his hand from doing the good or the evil." See also my explanation in Yad Peshutah
ad loc. and the parallels there cited, as well as Guide of the Perplexed 3:8.
11
Ps. 8:6.
12
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Teshuvah 5:1.
13
Ps. 8:7.
14
Sanhedrin 38b.
15
Sifri on Deut. 32:4.
16
Maimonides, Guide of the Perplexed 3:32.
17
Avot 3:17.
18
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Teshuvah 10:5.
19
Maimonides, Commentary on the Mishnah, Sanhedrin, Introduction to Heleq.
20
Id.
21
Exod. 19:17.
22
Shabbat 88a.
23
Exod. 24:7.
24
Shabbat 88a.
25
Esth. 9:27.
The second stage began in the days of Ahasuerus. Like Still, those epochs saw progress. The nation's elite rose to
the youngster who studies Torah to be rewarded with the highest levels, and even the simple folk registered the
sweets and treats, the Jews accepted the Torah because of influence of generations of training in Torah. False ideas
their appreciation of the miracle. They were pleased that that had once been commonplace withered away.
"All the princes of the provinces…regarded the Jews Throughout the First Temple period, the belief in idola-
highly."2 6 That form of acceptance, to be sure, is not con- try remained a force to be reckoned with, notwithstand-
sidered for legal purposes to have been compelled, and it ing the revelation of God's presence that pervaded the
is regarded as unqualified, for "one compelled by his own Temple. Even when believers in God predominated,
will is different [from one externally compelled]"27 – he belief in idolatry did not disappear totally; it continued to
assumes the obligation because he desires the reward and lurk underground, ready to burst forth at any opportuni-
makes that decision willingly. But while the obligation ty. By the time of the Second Temple, that was no longer
entered into is binding, the exercise of genuine free will the case. The Men of the Great Assembly annulled the
is still absent. Even one "compelled by his own will" impulse to idolatry3 2 ; a thousand years of Torah had left
remains compelled, and his action does not express the its mark on the people of Israel as a whole.
splendor of man as the Image of God.
The belief in idolatry became a thing of the past,
After the passage of another several hundred years, removed from the hearts of all Israel, even the least of
Antiginos of Sokho was perfect in piety and he attained them. Even Zadok and Boethius could not displace the
truth and thought the time had come to declare the end Torah from its central place in the nation's consciousness.
of the second phase of the nation's training.28 "He would The Torah became the mark of Israel's identity, and
say, 'Be not as servants who serve the master in order to monotheism became the characteristic that distinguished
receive a reward; rather, be as servants who serve the it from other nations.
master not to receive a reward.' 29 They understood him to
mean thereby belief in the truth for its own sake, which II. The Real and the Ideal
they referred to as service on account of love."30 But the
generation was not yet ready for that, and two students The system of Torah and commandments is two-fold.
distorted the words of their master and set out in hereti- On the one hand, it conveys concepts, instills eternal val-
26
Esth. 9:3
27
Bava Batra 47b.
28
Maimonides, Commentary on the Mishnah, Sanhedrin, Introduction to Heleq.
29
Avot 1:3.
30
Maimonides, Commentary on the Mishnah, Sanhedrin, Introduction to Heleq.
31
Avot de-Rabbi Natan 5:2.
32
Yoma 69b.
33
Gen. 1:27.
34
Gen. 2:24.
35
See Yevamot 119a.
36
Gen. 3:12.
37
Mal. 2:13-14.
38
Song of Sol. 6:9.
39
Song of Sol. 6:2.
40
Hosea 2:21.
41
Pesahim 87a.
42
Isa. 50:1.
43
Mal. 2:16.
44
Gittin 90b.
45
Lev. 17:11. ("Bayit," here translated "household," is routinely understood by the rabbis to connote "wife." – trans.)
46
Yoma 13a.
47
See Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Ishut 12:1-3; Guide of the Perplexed 3:49.
48
Ketubbot 11a.
49
Shulhan Arukh, Even ha-Ezer 119:6, comment of R. Moses Isserles.
50
Shulhan Arukh, Even ha-Ezer 1:10.
51
Sanhedrin 4:5.
52
Maimonides, Commentary on the Mishnah, ad loc.
53
Job 31:13-15.
54
Lev. 25:44-45.
55
Guide of the Perplexed 3:32.
56
Sifra on Lev. 25:44.
57
Exod. 21:20.
58
Exod. 23:12. See Guide of the Perplexed 1:67, where Maimonides explains that "'be refreshed' [ve-yinafesh]" is a passive verb con-
structed from 'soul' [nefesh]; it refers to satisfying his needs and carrying out his will."
59
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Avadim 8:1.
The halakhic acceptance of the institution of slavery was In summarizing the positive commandments at the end
paradoxical, for despite the principled opposition to slav- of his presentation, Maimonides again emphasized the
ery, it was impossible legally to free a slave, for every act distinction between regulations and obligations:
of emancipation entailed a degree of compulsion, and
how could one become a Jew through compulsion? How Some of the commandments are legislative provi-
could converts be accepted if they were not shown to sions, as we have explained, such as the rule of the
have the proper intention? Maimonides treated the mat- Hebrew slave or maidservant, the rule of the
ter in Sefer ha-Mitsvot:6 0 Canaanite slave, the rule of the gratuitous bailee or
the borrower, and others like them, mentioned
Commandment 235 is the one we were commanded above. And it is possible that a person will live his
with respect to the law affecting a Canaanite slave, entire life without encountering these rules and will
i.e., that he is to be enslaved forever and not to be not be subject to these commandments.
emancipated except as a consequence of [a blow
that knocks out] a tooth or an eye, and the same But does it not follow that even if a legal mechanism to
rule applies to the loss of other major limbs that emancipate a slave were found, it would be regarded as a
cannot be restored, as we know from the traditional circumvention of the law and forbidden in any event qua
interpretation [of Scripture]. And that is as He, may seyag (lit., "a fence"; a prohibition imposed to distance
He be exalted, said, "You shall work them forev- people from the risk of a more serious violation)? That is
er,"61 and he said, "If a man strike [his slave's indeed the case; the law is decided as follows:
eye…],"6 2 and the gemara in Gittin63 states that one
who frees his slave violates a positive command- A woman may purchase maidservants but may not
ment, for Scripture says, "You shall work them for- purchase slaves because of suspicion [of improper
ever," and the Torah says he shall be freed [only conduct], but if she purchases them, she gains own-
through loss of] tooth or eye. ership as does a man….Likewise, it is forbidden for
a man to emancipate his slave, and anyone who
All the laws with respect to a Canaanite slave thus rely on does so infringes a positive commandment, as
a single positive commandment, which is the essence of Scripture says, "You shall work them forever." But if
60
Positive Commandment 235. The words "not to be emancipated" appear in the translation of Ibn Iyyub in the edition of R. H.
Heller of blessed memory. That translation appears to be to be more accurate than that of R. Y. Kapah, may he be granted good
and long life, even though I generally quote from the latter's translation.
61
Lev. 25:46.
62
Exod. 21:26.
63
Gittin 38a.
64
But see the comments of Nahmanides, who disputes Maimonides on the point and identifies two positive commandments with
respect to Canaanite slaves. For the definition of a commandment that is a rule, see positive commandment 95.
65
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Avadim 9:6.
66
See Kesef Mishneh ad loc., who considers the significance of the wording "likewise."
The source of the rule is in Berakhot 47b, printed editions of which include the objection that freeing a slave for the sake of per-
forming a commandment results in "a commandment performed by means of a sin." The response is that "a commandment
affecting the public is different." That suggests that a slave may be emancipated only to facilitate performance of a rabbinic
commandment that affects the public but not otherwise. But see Diqduqei Soferim, which notes the existence of manuscripts that
omit both the objection and the response, and it is clear that Maimonides was reading from such a manuscript.
67
See, for example, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Tsitsit 3:11 and Yad Peshutah ad loc.
68
See Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Avadim 5:4.
69
Avodah Zarah 17b.
70
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 11:4, citing Zeph. 3:9.
71
Derekh Erets Zuta, Pereq ha-Shalom.
72
Judg. 6:24.
73
End of Mishnah `Uqtsin.
74
Ps. 29:11.
75
Ps. 34:15.
76
Micah 4:1-4.
77
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 5:1.
78
Midrash Tanhuma (ed. Buber) 96:5.
79
Prov. 3:17.
80
Sanhedrin 72a.
81
Maimonides, Guide of the Perplexed 3:32.
One finds that the Holy One blessed be He revoked a Of course, realization of the Torah's peaceful tendencies
decree for the sake of peace. How so? When the Holy does not depend on us alone. As long as there is contin-
One blessed be He said to Moses, "When you besiege a ued plotting by "the wicked of the nations, compared to
city for many days…,"83 He said as well that Moses should wolves and leopards, as Scripture says, 'a wolf of the
utterly destroy [the cities of the Canaanite nations]…But desert plunders them; a leopard lies in wait at their
Moses did not do so, saying, instead, "I now go to attack, cities,'"89 as long as hatred of an eternal nation endures,
but I do not know who has sinned and who has not we are powerless to establish peace among the nations.
sinned. Rather, I will approach them in peace," as The goal for now remains beyond us, but the day will
Scripture says, "I sent messengers from the wilderness of surely come, "for the mouth of the Lord of Hosts has
Qedemot…with words of peace."84 When [King Sihon] spoken."90
did not respond in peace, [Moses] attacked him…. God
said to [Moses], "I said 'utterly destroy them,' 85 and you III. Study Is Its Own Reward
approached them in peace? By your life, as you have said,
so will I do," as Scripture says: "When you approach a city The Torah's 613 commandments fall into two categories.
to make war on it, you shall [first] call out to it in peace."8 6 Some commandments are destined to endure, in their
present forms, at the end of days; and as a person rises
All the commandments related to war were given in order higher in character and intellect, he becomes aware of
to restrict the scope of warfare and to replace an attitude broader opportunities for fulfilling those commandments
and understanding their meanings. But there are other
that glorifies war and its heroes with one that longs for
commandments that are primarily a mechanism for bet-
peace. tering society and moving it toward the formation of cir-
cumstances that permit carrying out the purposes for
And the halakhah was decided accordingly: "War is not to which man was created – the Kingdom of Heaven on
be waged against any person in the world without first earth. These commandments apply only in certain situa-
calling out to him in peace."8 7 All the commandments tions, and our aim is to move beyond them, to a state in
related to war were given in order to restrict the scope of which we will no longer be bound to fulfill them – just as
warfare and to replace an attitude that glorifies war and its it is the practice, after the halitsah ritual, for "the judges
heroes with one that longs for peace. As long as danger- [to] say, 'May it be [God's] will that the daughters of Israel
82
Midrash Tanhuma (ed. Buber) 96:5.
83
Deut. 20:19. (The passage goes on to forbid the cutting down of fruit trees in connection with the siege. – trans.)
84
Deut. 2:26.
85
Deut. 20:17.
86
Deut. 20:10.
87
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 6:1.
88
Shabbat 6:4, citing Isa. 2:4.
89
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 12:1, citing Jer. 5:6.
90
Micah 4:4.
91
Shulhan Arukh, Even ha-Ezer 169:56. (Yibbum is the act of levirate marriage, which requires the brother of a married man who
dies childless to wed the widow and bear children with her. Halitsah is the ritual by which the widow is released to marry another
in the event the surviving brother is unwilling to fulfill his yibbum obligation – trans.)
92
Sefer ha-Mitsvot, Introduction, third principle.
93
Maimonides, Commentary on the Mishnah, Sanhedrin, Introduction to Heleq.
94
Id.
95
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Teshuvah 3:8.
96
Maimonides, Sefer ha-Mitsvot, positive commandment 187.
97
Deut. 21:18-21.
98
Sanhedrin 69a.
99
Sanhedrin 72a.
100
Deut. 13:13-18.
101
Tanhuma Yashan, Parashat Metsora`.
102
Ps. 107:34.
103
Lev. 14:34. (Tsara`at, often but imprecisely rendered "leprosy," is an impurity-causing affliction that can affect human beings
and buildings – trans.)
104
Sanhedrin 71a.
105
Id.
106
Deut. 21:21.
107
Qiddushin 30b.
108
Jer. 23:29.
109
Isa. 55:1.
110
Job 14:19.
111
Gen. 32:28.
112
Deut. 16:20.
113
Deut. 21:21.
114
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Sanhedrin 1:1.
115
Sanhedrin 6:2.
116
Ps. 10:3. (R. Eliezer's statement plays on two different verbs with the root b-ts-`. In the verse from Psalms, the verb is related to
the noun meaning ill-gotten gain and signifies grasping. The homonym used by R. Eliezer means to "split [the difference]" or
"impose a settlement" and is derived from the core meaning "to break" or "to cut off," as a piece of bread; by extension, it means
to resolve a case by giving each side something . – trans.)
117
Deut. 1:17.
118
Zech. 8:16.
119
2 Sam. 8:15.
120
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Sanhedrin 22:4.
121
Maimonides, Sefer ha-Mitsvot, positive commandments 226-229.
122
Makkot 1:11.
123
Makkot 7a.
The view of R. Tarfon and R. Akiva can be understood But this should not be seen as an act of despair. The
in two ways. They may have believed that humanity had Talmud Yerushalmi 125 recounts: "It was taught: Forty years
already improved to the point of no longer needing a before the destruction of the Temple capital jurisdiction
deterrent and that the incident in question was excep- was taken away, and in the days of Simeon b. Shetah
tional, unlikely to recur. Alternatively, they may have been [some texts: Simeon b. Yohai], monetary jurisdiction was
persuaded that capital punishment no longer served as an taken away. R. Simeon b. Yohai said, Blessed is God, that
effective deterrent, in which case there would be no point I know not how to judge!" Why would R. Simeon b.
to the judicial shedding of blood. Indeed, it might have Yohai utter praise and thanksgiving over the revocation
the opposite of its intended effect: if people came to see of authority to adjudicate in accordance with the Torah?
the harsh punishments as exemplifying the acts of a And even if the view of R. Tarfon and R. Akiva accounts
wicked government, they might be impelled by them not for his comment with respect to capital cases, why would
to improve themselves but only to scorn, God forbid, the he include monetary cases as well? The rishonim126 inter-
Torah and those who act in its name. Since, as a matter of preted the statement on the premise that it referred to
law, imposition of the death sentence can always be cir- preference for compromise over judgment, and that R.
cumvented, it may be preferable to avoid it entirely. Simeon b. Yohai was offering praise over the termination
of authority to adjudicate and to compel the litigants to
Rabbeinu Hananel echoed the second interpretation in submit to the court's judgments. As a result, they had to
another context.124 "It was taught: Forty years after the pursue compromises that would be acceptable to both
destruction of the Temple, the Sanhedrin went into exile sides, and the judges were saved from the risk of sinning
and convened in the marketplace…so they could not by failing to muster the understanding to resolve the case
impose capital punishment. What was their reason? properly, in accordance with the law of the Torah. And
When they saw that people were committing murder and even though the judgment legislated by the Torah was not
could not be disciplined, they said, 'It is better that we thereby carried out, as a practical matter the Torah's high-
wander from place to place and not impose the death er goal – a judgment of peace – was achieved. What we
penalty…since it is precluded by our meeting place.'" have here, then, is not annulment of the commandments
Rabbeinu Hananel commented on this: "For when they related to judges, but elevation of the judicial process to
saw that bloodshed had become cheap and people were a higher level.
124
Avodah Zarah 8:2.
125
Yerushalmi Sanhedrin 1:1. Cf. id. 7:2, with slightly different wording. See also Perishah on Tur, Hoshen Mishpat 12:6.
126
Sefer Mitsvot Gadol, Positive Commandments, sec. 107, and see the commentary of R. Stein ad loc. The comments of Sefer
Mitsvot Gadol are cited in Tur, Hoshen Mishpat sec. 12, and see Bah ad loc., n. 6.
127
R. Joseph Elijah Henkin, of blessed memory, in Ha-Darom 10 (5719):6.
128
Avodah Zarah 9a.
129
Yerushalmi Berakhot 2:4.
130
Isa. 1:21-24.
131
Num. 35:25.
132
Cf. Ps. 10:15.
133
Cited in Bet Yosef, Hoshen Mishpat sec. 2.
134
Bava Metsi`a 30b.
135
Yevamot 90b: "R. Elazar b. Jacob said: I heard that a court imposes lashes and other penalties not specified in the Torah, and
they do so not to violate the Torah but to erect a fence around the Torah."
136
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Sanhedrin 24:4.
137
See R. Zevi Hirsch Chayes of blessed memory, Torat ha-Nevi'im, chap. 5 ("Hora'at Sha`ah"), where he writes: "And I have seen
the comment of Tosafot (on Yevamot 90b)…and the thrust of their response is that when the general improvement that will result
from the uprooting [of a law] is evident to all, in that situation, a sage may annul…for the severe punishment that will be inflict-
ed on evildoers will lead other people to take notice, fear, and obey, so that they will cease taking prohibitions lightly. But if the
great benefit is not evident to all, then even if the sage concludes in his mind that the uprooting is essential, as long as we do not
see the benefit clearly, a commandment of the Torah may not be uprooted."
138
Tur Hoshen Mishpat sec. 2, citing R. Isaac Alfasi of blessed memory.
139
Shulhan Arukh, Hoshen Mishpat 2:1, gloss of R. Moses Isserles. See also Sefer Mei'rat Einaim 13.
140
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Sanhedrin 24:5. Cf. the Rashba's responsum cited in n. 133. I treated this matter at length in
my book Hadar Itamar, pp. 171-173.
141
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Hovel u-Maziq 5:1.
142
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 4:10, citing 1 Sam. 8:20.
143
Id. 3:10.
144
1 Sam. 8:4-5.
145
Sanhedrin 20b.
146
1 Sam. 8:19-20.
147
1 Sam. 10:24.
148
1 Sam. 10:25.
149
2 Sam. 5:1-3.
150
1 Kings 12:1-4.
151
1 Kings 12:16. See also R. Zevi Hirsch Chayes, Torat ha-Nevi'im, chap. 7 ("Din Melekh Yisrael"): "For all the rules of the monar-
chy are simply a matter of the relationship between the king and the nation, and these arrangements were satisfactory to both
sides, the people having been willing to give up their riches and property for the common good, etc. But it was not only their
riches and property that they were willing to abandon for the glory of the king and the benefits that would result from his gover-
nance. They undertook as well to grant the king permission to kill any man who defied his word, and the entire nation agreed to
this when they established the monarchy, etc". See his lengthy treatment of that connection, where he cites proof from
Yerushalmi Sanhedrin the end of the chapter Kohen Gadol: "'You shall place over you a king' – Scripture says not 'I shall place' but
'you shall place'; it is your act. See also below, n. 182, where I cite Maimonides wording in Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Gezeilah va-
Aveidah c. 5, where the matter is explicitly clarified.
152
Rabbeinu Nissim (Ran) in his discourses, in the name of Rabbeinu Jonah of blessed memory in Megillat Setarim (Derishot ha-
Ran, Feldman edition, Discourse 11, p. 202.)
153
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Gezeilah va-Aveidah 5:14. Previously, at 5:11, it is explained that this rule applies to both gen-
tile kings and kings of Israel. See below, n. 182, where I cite Maimonides' statement there.
154
1 Kings 3:28.
155
Rosh ha-Shanah 21b.
156
Eccl. 12:10.
157
Id.
158
Deut. 19:15.
159
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Shegagot 15:6.
160
Id., Hilkhot Melakhim 3:8.
161
Maimonides, Sefer ha-Mitsvot, negative commandment 316.
162
Id.
163
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Sanhedrin 1:3.
164
Discourses of Rabbeinu. Nissim (Ran), of blessed memory, Discourse 11. See also R. Isaac Abarbanel's commentary on the
Torah, Parashat Mishpatim.
165
Rabbeinu Nissim, Discourse 11 (ed. Feldman, p. 192): "When there is no king in Israel, the judge encompasses both powers –
the power of the judge and the power of the king."
166
Midrash Tanhuma (ed. Buber), Parashat Qorah sec. 6 – "Moses was king and Aaron his brother High Priest," etc. See also id., sec.
3 – "And Moses…to sovereignty." See Ibn Ezra on Deut. 33:5, "And there was a king in Yeshurun" – That refers to Moses,
from whose mouth the leaders of the nation heard the Torah interpreted." To similar effect is the commentary of R. Sa`adiah
Gaon on the Torah (ed. R. Y. Qapah), and it is implied as well by Maimonides' wording in Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 2:6.
167
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Teshuvah 9:2 and Yad Peshutah ad loc.
168
Maimonides, Commentary on the Mishnah, Bekhorot 4:4.
169
Sanhedrin 5a.
170
Gen. 49:10.
171
Nahmanides, Commentary on the Torah, Exod. 15:25.
172
Rabbeinu Nissim, Discourse 11, pp. 189-190.
173
Ibn Ezra, Commentary on the Torah, Exod. 34:26. His point is that from the beginning of Parashat Mishpatim (Exod. 21:1) to
"Six years you shall sow your land" (Exod. 23:10), the Torah sets out all the laws classified as civil statutes. Thereafter, the Torah
speaks of the sabbatical year, the Sabbath, and the festivals, matters that do not pertain specifically to the king.
174
Cf. Tosafot, Yoma 12b, s.v. Kohen, stating the appointment and removal of the high priest "depend on the king and his fellow
priests."
175
Rabbeinu Abraham son of Maimonides, Sefer ha-Maspiq le-`0vedei ha-Shem (tr. R. Y. b. Sallah Dori), Jerusalem 1973, p. 181.
176
Commentary of R. David Qimhi on Ps. 101:1. In citing 2 Sam. 8:15, he is referring to the gemara's statement in Sanhedrin 6b
referred to above, n. 115. See also the commentary of R. Menahem Me'iri on Psalms.
177
Commentary of Ibn Ezra ad loc.
178
Midrash Tehillim (ed. Buber), Psalm 72, sec. 2.
179
1 Kings 3:16.
180
Eccl. 10:17.
181
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 3:10.
182
Id. 3:8. And cf. Hilkhot Gezeilah va-Aveidah 5:11 – "A tax imposed by the king, taking one-third or one-fourth or some fixed
amount…one who evades such a tax transgresses, for he is misappropriating the king's portion, regardless of whether it is a gen-
tile king or a king of Israel." But he later adds (5:18): "When does that apply? Where the king's coin is accepted, for the people
of that land accepted him and agreed that he would be their lord and they his servants. But where the king's coin is not accept-
ed, then he is like a powerful robber or a band of armed bandits – their law is no law, and so, too, such a king and his servants
are robbers in all respects."
183
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 3:9. See also Sefer ha-Mitsvot, positive commandment 173.
184
Yevamot 89b-90a.
185
Pesahim 92a.
186
Berakhot 4a.
187
Ps. 119:46.
188
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Sanhedrin 2:5.
See Shabbat 14b – "When Solomon instituted eruvin (legal mechanisms permitting carrying objects on the Sabbath in certain cir-
cumstances or walking further than would otherwise be permissible – trans.)…" But Maimonides, in citing that text in Hilkhot
Eruvin 1:2, used the following precise wording: "And this matter was instituted by Solomon and his court." See also Avodah Zarah
36b – "David's court decreed," cited by Maimonides in Hilkhot Issurei Bi'ah 22:3 as "David and his court decreed." Maimonides'
wording conveys the thought that David and Solomon did not issue these decrees as kings, for in these matters, the king qua
king has no authority. Rather, given that the courts issued the decree, and David and Solomon were sages seated with the court,
the decrees were issued in their names. Accordingly, even though the gemara mentioned only Solomon, Maimonides added "his
court," since it would otherwise make no sense. As for David, the gemara mentioned only the court, but since it is explicitly stated
in Avot 4:4 that David was "the head of the seventy elders," we see that he, too, was among them.
189
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 3:7.
190
See above n. 149.
191
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Rotseiah u-Shemirat Nefesh 2:4.
192
Shulhan Arukh, Hoshen Mishpat 2:1.
193
Sefer Mei'rat Einaim, 9.
194
Bava Qamma 84b.
195
Tur, Hoshen Mishpat sec. 2. The responsum is actually by R. Solomon b. Adret, of blessed memory, but the printers erroneously
attributed a volume of his responsa to Nahmanides. R. Joseph Karo himself noted that in his introduction to Bet Yosef, but nev-
ertheless quoted those responsa in Nahmanides' name in order to show where to locate them.
196
Bet Yosef, id., citing R. Solomon b. Adret's responsum.
197
Megillah 27a.
198
Responsa of Maimonides (ed. Blau) sec. 271.
199
Id. sec. 270.
200
Maimonides, Commentary on the Mishneh, Bekhorot 4:4.
The distinction between the administrative function and that of teaching and issuing halakhic rulings means that some individu-
als will be fit for only one or the other, though both are called "judges." That point was emphasized by Rabbeinu Abraham, son
of Maimonides in his commentary on the Torah (Exod. 18:22).
It may be noted that the editor of that commentary rendered the Arabic al-si'asah as "memshalah" (government) and therefore per-
ceived a conflict with Maimonides' statement in Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 1:5 (see n. 57). But my friend R. Isaac Shilat
referred me to his edition of "Maimonides' Epistle to R. Samuel ibn Tibbon Regarding the Translation of the Guide" (in vol. 1 of
the R. Isaac Nissim Memorial Publication, Jerusalem 1985), where Maimonides writes that "si'asah should be rendered as 'nehilah
be-rahamim' (administration with mercy). This parallels the concept of "al-tadbir =hanhalah (administration)" that Rabbeinu
Abraham refers to together with al-si'asah, and it is clear that the son's words reflect his father's scheme. [This refers to the ques-
tion discussed by Rabbeinu Abraham as to eligibility of women to serve in governmental positions. Some people ascribe to
Maimonides the view that this is completely prohibited, but it clear from Rabbeinu Abraham's discussion that this is not so.]
201
Zech. 5:16, as explained above, n. 118.
202
See, for example, Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Sanhedrin 2:4-5; Hilkhot Melakhim 1:4; id. 1:8-10; id. 3:7; and elsewhere.
203
Hilkhot Melakhim 1:3.
204
Hilkhot Sanhedrin 5:1.
205
Id. 4:11.
206
See above, n. 198.
207
In his commentary on the Torah, Parashat Shofetim (Deut. 17:14).
208
Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Teshuvah 5:3.
209
As explained above, n. 15.
210
Gersonides, Commentary on the Torah, Parashat Va'ethanan, To`elet 14.
Cf. Maimonides' illuminating comments in Guide 3:11:
All these great evils are done among men…because of an absence of wisdom. Just as a blind person because of the absence of
vision will constantly stumble and be injured and injure others, since he has nothing to guide him along the way, so, too, groups
of people, each in accord with the extent of his foolishness, inflict great evils on themselves and others…But if there were pres-
ent with them wisdom that could bear the same relation to humankind as the power of vision bears to the eye, all those harms
to themselves and others would be avoided. And [the prophet] already promised as much, saying that "the wolf shall dwell with
the lamb and the leopard lie down with the kid…and the cow and the bear shall graze…and an infant shall play…" (Isa. 11:6-8).
And he goes on to give the reason for it, saying that the cause for the removal of the hatreds and conflicts and domination is
that humanity will come to know the truth of God, and he said, "They will do no evil and wreak no destruction throughout my
holy mountain, for the world will be filled with knowledge of God, as waters cover the sea." Know this.
See also Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Melakhim 11:4. And he had previously explained this in Hilkhot Teshuvah 9:2: "The king that arises
from the descendants of David will be wiser than Solomon, and he will be a great prophet nearer than Moses our teacher, and
he therefore will teach the entire nation and instruct them in the ways of God."
211
Isa. 42:1-4.