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Shabbat Shalom: Parshat Vayikra Leviticus1:1-5:26
By Shlomo Riskin |
Efrat, Israel – “If the entire congregation of
Israel commits an inadvertent violation as a result of (a mistaken
legal decision of the Highest Court)….and they thereby violate one
of the prohibitory commandments of G-d, they shall incur guilt”
(Lev.4:13).
If the Jewish state could be revived virtually from the ashes of
destruction after 2000 years, then why hasn’t the Sanhedrin, the
great Jewish court of the 1st and 2nd Commonwealths, been revived?
During the centuries of its existence, this august body, comprised of
71 elders and sages who ruled on every aspect of life, brought unity
to the land because their decisions were binding on the entire nation.
On the surface, reviving the Sanhedrin seems impossible because its
members must be recipients of the classic Jewish ordination that
traces itself back to Moses himself, and even to the Almighty, as it
were, who ordained Moses, then Moses ordained Joshua, Joshua the
elders, the elders the prophets, the prophets the Men of the Great
Assembly. But this special ordination came to an end in the 3rd
century of the common era. And since intrinsic to the idea of the
Sanhedrin is a living tradition of ordination, when ordination died
out, so, it would seem, did the Sanhedrin, and the possibility of its
revival.
But a verse in this week’s portion creates alternative
possibilities. In his commentary to the Mishna, Maimonides writes,
“…if all the Jewish Sages and their disciples would agree on the
choice of one person among those who dwell in Israel as their head
[but this must be done in the land of Israel], and (that head)
establishes a house of learning, he would be considered as having
received the original ordination and he could then ordain anyone he
desires.” Maimonides adds that the Sanhedrin would return to its
original function as it is written in Isaiah (1:26), “I will restore
thy judges as at first and thy Sages as in the beginning.” Such a
selection would mean an election, a list of candidates, ballots. And
who does the choosing? The sages and their disciples — everyone with
a relationship to Torah sages, to Jewish law. In an alternate source,
however, Maimonides extends the privilege of voting to all adult
residents of Israel! (Interpretations of the Mishnah, Chapter 4 of
tractate B’Khorot, on the words “one who slaughters a first born
animal and shows its blemish…).
This idea reappears in Maimonides’ Mishna Torah, Laws of Sanhedrin,
Ch. 4, Law, 11, except here he concludes with the phrase: “….this
matter requires decision.”
In 1563, a significant attempt was made by a leading sage of Safed,
Rabbi Yaakov BeRab to revive classic ordination using the Mainionidean
formula, and in an election in Safed, Rabbi BeRab was declared
officially ordained. He proceeded to ordain his most important
student, Rabbi Yosef Karo, the author of the Shulchan Aruch, along
with several others of his disciples.
In the meantime, the rabbis in Jerusalem, led by Rabbi Levi ibn Habib,
strongly opposed the Safed decision. When the question was put before
the Ridbaz, Rabbi David Ben Zimra, the chief rabbi of Egypt, he ruled
in favor of the Jerusalem rabbis because not only had the election
been restricted to one city of Israel, Safed and not Jerusalem, but
also because the closing phrase, “…this matter requires decision”
opened up the possibility that Maimonides may have changed his mind,
was in effect leaving the issue un-adjudicated.
Rabbi Yaakov BeRab, on the other hand, understood that the phrase in
question, “requires decision,” referred to whether one sage was
sufficient to ordain others, or three sages were required for
ordination. But he was absolutely convinced that Maimonides had no
doubt whatsoever about the method and the inevitability of reviving
classic ordination.
Three centuries later, the first minister of religion in the new
government of the Jewish state, Rabbi Yehuda Leib Maimon, renewed this
controversy when he tried to convince the political and religious
establishments that along with the creation of the state there should
also be a creation of a Sanhedrin.
In his work, The Renewal of the Sanhedrin in Our Renewed State, he
cites the existence of a copy of Maimonides’ commentary to the
Mishna published along with emendations and additions written by
Maimonides himself after he wrote the Mishna Torah, where he
specifically writes that ordination and the Sanhedrin will be renewed
before the coming of the Messiah, which implies that it must be
achieved through human efforts. A photocopy of these words, in
Maimonides’ own handwriting, is provided in the book by Rav Maimon.
What is the basis for his most democratic suggestion? I believe it
stems from a verse which we find in this week’s portion of Vayikra,
quoted above, which deals with the issue of the sins of the entire
congregation.
Commentators ask how can an “entire congregation” sin, and Rashi
identifies the “congregation of Israel” with the Sanhedrin. In
other words, when it says “..if the entire congregation of Israel
errs..” it really means that if “the Sanhedrin errs.”
The Jewish people are a nation defined by commandments, precepts and
laws. Therefore the institution that protects and defines the law is
at the heart of the nation’s existence. In fact, how the Jewish
people behave, what they do, can become the law. (“A custom of
Israel is Torah.”)
Knowing all this, it should not come as a surprise that Maimonides
wanted to revive the ordination, and found a method utterly democratic
in its design. The “people” equals the Sanhedrin, the “people”
can choose one leading Jew who will then have the right to pass on his
ordination to others, to re-create the Sanhedrin!
And for Maimonides, it is the population living in the land of Israel
which represents the historical congregation of Israel (B.T. Horayot
3b).
And apparently Maimonides is saying that before the next stage of
Jewish history unfolds, the nation will have to decide as to who shall
be given the authority to recreate the ordination, as to who will be
the commander-in-chief of the rabbis. Will it happen in our lifetime?
Shabbat Shalom
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