Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Before and after you read Halakhah, by Chaim Saiman: what should you know? What will you learn?

I have written in glowing terms about the book  Halakhah: The Rabbinic Idea of Law, by Chaim Saiman. It's a novel explanation of an important topic, and the author writes well. But it is still not easy going.

If you plan to read it (and I hope you do!), think about acquainting yourself with these terms first:

  1. Torah
  2. Rabbi
  3. Mishnah
  4. Gemarah
  5. Talmud
  6. Midrash
  7. Halakhah
  8. Aggadah
  9. Shulchan Aruch
  10. Responsa
The Judaism 101 and My Jewish Learning websites would be good places to start.

And here's your reward: in addition to being able to follow Saiman's ingenious arguments and examples, you'll learn about topics like the following!
  • The way that Jewish interpretation of text changed from Talmudic times through the early and late medieval periods and into the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries.
  • How Ashkenazi Jews thought and wrote about halakhah differently from Sephardi Jews.
  • Quick sketches of major thinkers like Maimonides, Nahmanides, and the sages known as the Rif, the Ran, the Tur, and the Brisker.
  • The difference between Talmud, codes of law, and responses to particular questions (and the way that all those differences can get blurred sometimes by creative interpretation).
Honestly, you could spend years of study just following up the introductions that Saiman gives you in this book. But if you only read this book, you'll get a road map that you never had before.

Halakhah: The Rabbinic Idea of Law, by Chaim Saiman

This might be your story.

You grew up in an environment where Christian culture was the norm. Even if you weren't religious yourself, from an early age, you heard people contrast Jewish legalism with Christian spiritual freedom. You heard that the letter of the Law killeth and the Spirit brings life.

Even today, you dimly recall Bible stories where it sounds like Jesus is throwing off the chains that the "old covenant" put on the Jews. In the back of your mind, you wonder why the Jews stubbornly clung to their dried-up set of rules.

Then you read Halakhah: The Rabbinic Idea of Law, by







Then you read Halakhah: The Rabbinic Idea of Law, by







, when you get detailed rules about how to light the Shabbat candles at home, that's one thing. But when you get equally detailed and elaborated procedures for judging murder cases when no Jewish courts had jurisdiction over them...or instructions for how the priests should offer sacrifices in the Temple in Jerusalem, debated after the Temple had been destroyed and Jews weren't even allowed by the Romans to enter Jerusalem...then this is not "the Law" as we know it.

What is it? In a word, it's Torah.

Torah doesn't mean law. It means teaching: by God to us, about the right way to live.

That teaching can take all the different forms I mentioned above:


The Talmud assumes that the story is always already going on, and that you are a character in it. You don't need abstractions. You need to know how to play your part.










If you decide to ask, "What is the Shema? Why is it said? Why is it said at set times? Why the evening? Who were the priests, what was their consecrated food, and when did they eat it? What were the watches of the night, and what was the first watch? Who was Rabbi Eliezer, and what do we know about his methodology? Who were "the sages"? Who was Rabban Gamliel? What were their methodologies, and how did they arrive at differing conclusions? What did later generations do to decide among them? What practical implications did this question have, the one about when you have missed your opportunity to say the evening Shema? What ethical implications does it have? What does it tell us about our relationship to God?"...then you are part of that age-old partnership with God.

And if you are not, at least you can now stop thinking of it as just a set of rules!