Several Examples of EXPLICIT Halachic Obligations That Are No Longer Observed

537) When Did We All Start Ignoring the “Sealing of the Talmud”?

Sunday, 4 January 2026
This post, by Boruch Clinton, originally appeared on the B’chol D’rachecha site.It’s popularly understood that the completion of the Talmud around 1,500 years ago marked a critical transition in halachic history. From that point on, halachic conclusions found in the Talmud were binding on all Jews everywhere and for all time.

In fact, the Rambam writes as much in the introduction to his משנה תורה:

אבל כל הדברים שבתלמוד הבבלי חייבין כל ישראל ללכת בהם וכופין כל עיר ועיר וכל מדינה ומדינה לנהוג בכל המנהגות שנהגו חכמים שבתלמוד ולגזור גזֵרותם וללכת בתקנותם הואיל וכל אותן הדברים שבתלמוד הסכימו עליהם כל ישראל.

The problem is that, while everyone seems to agree in principle, there are so many exceptions that the rule has kind of gotten lost. I should note that I’m not suggesting that the many innovations in question are necessarily inappropriate. But they are indicators that the Jewish people somehow doesn’t seem to understand the principle of חתימת התלמוד the way they once did.

Here are just a few examples of explicit halachic obligations from Chazal that are no longer observed:

  • The near-universal requirement to stop work and learning for a funeral (see this recent post).
  • The prohibition on adding tefilos without the express permission of kehila members (see this recent post).
  • The requirement to wear tefilin every day – even on chol hamoed.
  • The requirement to teach one’s son a trade (it’s not at all obvious that a high school diploma – or even a college degree – satisfies this requirement).

Here are some more examples from the fourth chapter of דרכי ההוראה by the מהר”ץ חיות.

  • The requirement for close relatives of a mourner to formally join in the mourning period.
  • The requirement to fully cover one’s head (עטיפת הראש) while in mourning.
  • The requirement to overturn beds and benches in a house of mourning.
  • The requirement to avoid doing things in pairs (זוגות) – see Pesachim 111b where some are described as הלכה למשה מסיני.
  • The requirement to avoid uncovered water (משקין שנתגלו)
  • The prohibition to marry a woman whose previous two (or three) husbands had died – see Yevamos 64b (וע’ רמ”א שו”ע אהע”ז סימן ט וגם בית יוסף).
  • A fetus born during the eighth month of pregnancy is not viable (and would therefore be muktza on Shabbos).
  • The requirement to sleep in a succah (weather permitting).
  • The requirement to wash one’s hands before eating wet fruits and vegetables – see Bava Basra 60b.
  • The mitzva d’oraissa to sound horns (חצוצרות) during a time of serious danger.
  • The prohibition of work on chol hamoed or during the week of mourning even in a context of minimal financial loss (דבר האבד). It’s true that דבר האבד is invoked by Chazal in some cases, but those always involve בהול על ממונו וכדומה.

Some of those examples are justified by mainstream poskim using arguments like “nature has changed” (נשתנו הטבעים) or “circumstances have changed”. But has anyone rechecked “nature” and “circumstances” in the five hundred years since the Shulchan Aruch, Rema, and others offered those rationalizations?

And even if it were confirmed that things really have been consistently altered, why would we not use the same logic for widespread prohibitions (like the requirement for avoiding non cholov yisroel milk) instead of insisting that Chazal might have had other reasons for their decrees? How is one change prioritized over a second?

I think it’s reasonable to understand most – if not all – of those rationalizations as efforts to justify (לימודי זכות) changes to observance that occurred outside of the normal halachic process. But the common denominator is that change is common and, if anything, the pace of change is picking up.

Does this mean that, as a community, we’re falling out of sync with “halachic” Torah Judaism?

From Kotzk Blog, here.

The Jewish Leftist Vanguard Have Progressed to Justifying Murdering Jews Worldwide

Thursday, January 01, 2026

Matt Chun describes himself on his Substack:

Matt Chun is an artist, writer and picture book maker of Chinese and European family, currently dividing his time between Yuin Land and Wurundjeri Land.
Matt is a founding and current co-editor of anti-imperialist print periodical The Sunday Paper. He is also one half of the collaborative art and history project UnMonumental, alongside fellow artist James Tylor. UnMonumental has collaborated with Richard Bell’s Tent Embassy, Art Gallery South Australia, Sydney Living Museums, and Cordite Poetry Review.
Previously, Matt has created work for National Museum Australia, Meanjin Quarterly, Overland Literary Journal, Art Monthly Australasia, 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art, State Library Victoria, un Magazine, 關渡國際自然藝術季 Guandu International Art Festival, Lowkey and Jaafar Touffar, and مخيم شاتيلا Shatila Palestinian Refugee Camp.

Here’s an example of his “artwork:”

Pretty good progressive credentials, right? And proper progressives cannot possibly be antisemitic because they are against all bigotry, right?

Here, this paradigm for wokeness discusses why the Jews in Bondi deserved to be slaughtered in an article titled “We Don’t Mourn Fascists:”

On 14 December, an event hosted by the Zionist Jewish-supremacist organisation Chabad was targeted by shooters on Bondi Beach. While this was immediately and widely reported as an ‘antisemitic attack’ at an ‘innocent Hannukah gathering’, Chabad is in fact a network of centres and institutions which actively, publicly, and extensively helps to facilitate the ongoing Zionist and Euro-American imperialist holocaust of Palestine.
The Chabad of Bondi holds regular events to advance settler-colonisation in Palestine amidst the ongoing extermination of Gaza. …
‘We don’t mourn fascists’ has been a popular refrain from the Australian left. How quickly this slogan is discarded when the idyll of colonial Bondi is ruptured. This reactionary effort to perform respectability and avoid accusations of ‘antisemitism’ is futile. It capitulates to Zionist framing, intentionally wastes our time, feeds institutionalised Islamophobia, and further calcifies a false analysis of ‘antisemitism’.

Chun says that the article was written “in close consultation with members of my extended community, including Indigenous people across three continents and antizionist Jewish comrades,” who include an apparent Jew named Amanda Gelender who has a Substack named “L’Chaim Intifada” who calls every Jew who supports Israel’s existence in any form a “fascist” and routinely compares Jews to Nazis.

Chun has a Jew on his side to prove that his supporting the murder of Jewish senior citizens and a child is perfectly moral.
This is the end result of each “anti-Zionist” trying to outdo the other. Once you pretend that you established that Israel is worse than Nazi Germany, there is nowhere else to go but to start justifying murdering Jews worldwide.

From Elder of Ziyon, here.

חשש כרת – לא סיבה לסגור את הר הבית

הלא גם חילול שבת זה כרת…

שו”ת ציץ אליעזר חלק ו סימן ג סק”ט:

בסיכומם של דברים, נלע”ד דמעיקרא דדינא יש למול המילה בזמנה בשבת מכיון שזה חיוב המוטל בכלל לא רק על האב בלבד כי אם על הבי”ד ועל כל בית ישראל אשר בכללם המוהל. וכשם שלא יצוייר לומר למשל שלא יפתחו הבית כנסת בשבת להתפלל בו מפני שעי”כ ישמעו מחללי שבת שישנו בכאן בית כנסת ותפלה בצבור ויסעו במכונית לבית כנסת לעת מצוא שלהם (דבר שמצוי בעו”ה באמריקה), כן אין לומר שהמוהל יבטל החיוב שמוטל עליו למול הבן הנולד ביום השמיני אפילו בשבת, ושוטים המקלקלים ומחללים את השבת יתנו את הדין.

ומובן שעם זאת יש להתריע ולמחות בכל האמצעים שביד כשרואים על המקום את החילולים לדרוש במפגיע להפסיק החילולים ולחכות עם המילה עד שיחדלו. אלא שאם לפי ראות עין ישנה איזה תקוה לגדירת פירצת החילול שבת להבא בזה שימנעו מלמול בשבת מילות כאלה ארבע או חמש פעמים, דישמעו ויראו ולא יזידון עוד, דלא יתאים להם להיות מובדלים לרעה משאר בנ”י הכשרים שאינם מחללים את השבת, בכה”ג אפשר שפיר להמנע מלמול, וכדנתבאר לעיל בדברינו במילתא בטעמא.

(טוב, אני מבין שלא בזה לבד נחתם כל הדיון, עכ”פ נטל ההוכחה מתהפך מעט לצד השני.)