Did Yated Neeman Exist In Tacitus’ Day?

“There is nothing that is hidden or obscure in Judaism. Anyone who wishes to obtain a clear view of Jewish thinking and Jewish life can do so without difficulty. Jewish scriptures are not mysterious hieroglyphics; the Jewish Bible is available and accessible to every man, woman and child… Yet almost no subject of scholarly research is less understood and more misinterpreted than Jewish life and thought.

From Tacitus — whose writings usually reflect a clear-thinking, razor-sharp mind but who maintains that Jews worship donkey heads — down to the most recent ‘experts’ on Judaism, almost everything that is said and written about things Jewish amounts to pure caricature.”

Hirsch, Collected Writings, Vol. VIII, 249

Rabbi Hirsch then tries to answer from Berachos 17a, ראשית חכמה יראת ה’ שכל טוב לכל עושיהם לעושים לא נאמר אלא לעושיהם לעושים לשמה ולא לעושים שלא לשמה.

But I don’t see the difficulty at all. We should put more faith in Tacitus’ razor-sharp mind!

Shabbos 112b:

קרי עליה לית דין בר אינש איכא דאמרי כגון דין בר אינש אמר רבי זירא אמר רבא בר זימונא אם ראשונים בני מלאכים אנו בני אנשים ואם ראשונים בני אנשים אנו כחמורים ולא כחמורו של רבי חנינא בן דוסא ושל רבי פנחס בן יאיר אלא כשאר חמורים.

Soncino:

[Thereupon] he [Hezekiah] exclaimed concerning him, This one is not the son of man! Others say, Such a one is indeed the son of man! R. Zera said in Raba b. Zimuna’s name: If the earlier [scholars] were sons of angels, we are sons of men; and if the earlier [scholars] were sons of men, we are like asses, and not [even] like asses of R. Hanina b. Dosa and R. Phinehas b. Jair, but like other asses.

And they had “Luktemin”, too (Shabbos 66)…

Sarcasm.

Know What Jews Need LESS OF? National Self-Worship!

Tosefta B.K. 7:3

שבעה גנבין הן הראשון שבכולן גונב דעת הבריות והמסרב בחבירו לאורחו ואין בלבו לקרותו והמרבה לו בתקרובות ויודע בו שאינו מקבל והמפתח לו חביות שמכורות לחנוני והמעול במדות והמשקר במשקלות והמערב הנורה בתלתן ואת החומץ בשמן אע”פ שאמרו אין השמן מקבל דלים לפיכך מושחין בו את המלכים ולא עוד אלא שמעלין עליו שאילו היה יכול לגנוב דעת העליונה היה גונב שכל הגונב דעת הבריות נקרא גנב שנא’ ויגנב אבשלום את לב אנשי ישראל מי גדול גונב או נגנב הוי אומר נגנב שיודע שנגנב ושותק.

See what we wrote on “Jewish Auto-Idolatry”.

Tosefta continues:

וכן מצינו כשהיו ישראל עומדין לפני הר סיני בקשו לגנוב דעת העליונה שנאמר כל אשר דבר ה’ נעשה ונשמע כביכול נגנב הוא להם תלמוד לומר מי יתן והיה לבבם זה להם ליראה אותי וגו’ א”ת שאין הכל גלוי לפניו והלא כבר נאמר (תהלים ע”ח) ויפתוהו בפיהם ובלשונם יכזבו לו ולבם לא נכון עמו ולא נאמנו בבריתו אעפ”כ והוא רחום יכפר עון וגו’ ואומר כסף סיגים מצופה על חרש שפתים דלקים ולב רע.

Be sure to mention this Chazal at the next mention of “Na’aseh Venishma“…

מתוך שיודעין בהקב”ה שאמתי הוא לפיכך לא כיזבו בו.

Rabbi Chaim Brisker’s Logical Argument Against… [INSERT: A Jewish State]

Rabbi Chaim of Brisk separated from “Agudas Yisroel” after the Katowice conference.

His reasoning is described in “Mikatowitz Ad Hei B’Iyar“, p. 56 (find more background over here):

Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik of Brisk was invited by the German architects of Agudath Israel to their founding conferences in 1909 and 1912, but afterwards he withdrew his support from it. Family members relate that Rabbi Chaim gave the following analogy to explain his opposition to the Moetzes Gedolei Hatorah: In the old times, everyone had a candle in his house to give light. It was a small candle, but a candle nonetheless. And even if someone did not have a candle in his house, there was always a candle in his neighborhood that he could use. But then they built an electric power station to supply light to the entire city at once. Once the electricity was running, nobody kept candles in his house anymore, and if, G-d forbid, the power station stopped working, the entire city would be in the dark, with no source of light.

Rabbi Chaim in his wisdom foresaw that a worldwide Orthodox organization could be a good thing, but could also be a very bad thing. As long as every rabbi is independent, even if some rabbis err, there will always be some still on the right path. But when all rabbis subscribe to a single organization, if something goes wrong with that organization, all of its members go down with it. With eerie accuracy, Rabbi Chaim’s analogy foreshadowed events that took place many years after his passing, when the Agudah activists in 1947-49 led their followers into full-fledged participation in the Zionist enterprise, without the benefit of any ruling even from their own rabbinical council.

(I doubt the last, editorializing sentence is factual.)

And his point is that “if something goes wrongis not an “if”, but rather a “when”! (Not to mention related arguments.)

The electric power plant metaphor was also used by the Chafetz Chaim to great effect, see what we once wrote here.

But this serves as an argument against any organization not mandated by the Torah (Beis Hamikdash, courts) such as the state! Indeed, Rabbi Chaim Brisker was “anarchic”, not just in his “lifestyle”, but also in his politics, as opposed to Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum, who was fine with any Goyish state except Israel (endorsing democratic government in Vayoel Moshe!) and furthermore would be completely on board with the same kind of super-oppressive totalitarianism (beyond limited statism, which, itself, inevitably prevents Jews keeping mitzvos from free will), as long as it was under Mashiach’s management…

His son, Rabbi Yitzchak Ze’ev was similar. This is how I interpret the Satmar Rebbe’s following testimony.

“Tiferes Yoel” (part four, chapter 145), as quoted elsewhere:

“הנה אצל הרב מבריסק הייתי בעצמי ודברתי עמו וראיתי שדעתו כדעתי, ולפעמים הוא יותר קנאי ממני.”

But what can this mean? One logically cannot be more extreme than the rabbi who called the State of Israel satanic and all involved parties worse than idolaters. So, I suspect he means as I said.