Rabbi Avi Grossman Finds More Biblical Personage Parsimony

On the Identity of an Anonymous Prophet

I Kings 13:1:

And, behold, a man of God came from Judah to Beth-el by the word of the Lord, and Jeroboam was standing by the altar to offer.

Rashi and other commentators note that the sages (Sanhedrin 89) identify this prophet with Iddo/Jeddo, who, although otherwise absent from the book of Kings, is mentioned explicitly in a number of places in the book of Chronicles, and is perhaps the ancestor of the second prophet Zechariah (Zechariah 1:1). However, this identification can not be taken to be equivocal.

Right before this prophet’s appearance, we read about Jeroboam’s religious innovations (I Kings, 12:31):

He established shrines of high places, and appointed priests from among some of the people – who were not of the sons of Levi.

And after the prophet’s ominous death we find that Jeroboam had not learned his lesson (ibid, 13:33):

After this matter, Jeroboam did not repent of his evil path, but once again appointed from among some of the people priests of the high places; whosoever desired could be initiated into the service and be of the priests of the high places.

That is, originally Jeroboam appointed priests of his own choosing, and included himself, but later he took a more egalitarian approach, opening up his new priesthood to anyone.

Jeroboam and Rehoboam began their reigns simultaneously, and Abijah inherited the Judean throne after Jeroboam had reigned for most of eighteen years. In his short, (almost) three-year reign, he made war with Jeroboam, but before the battle began he delivered a stern rebuke to the ten tribes, admonishing Jeroboam for his innovations, including (II Chronicles 13:9):

Have you not rejected the priests of the Lord, the sons of Aaron and the Levites, and made priests for yourselves as the peoples of other lands [do]? Whoever comes to initiate himself with a young bullock and seven rams, will be a priest to a non-god!

Abijah referred to Jeroboam’s latter reform, which opened the priesthood to all. Yet, when concluding the account of Abijah’s reign, the Chronicler includes (ibid, 22):

And the rest of the acts of Abijah, and his ways and his matters, are written in the commentary of the prophet Iddo.

Thus, because Iddo recorded part of Abijah’s royal history, which included Abijah recounting Jeroboams latter innovations, he could not have been the anonymous prophet who died shortly after chastising Jeroboam for his initial innovations.

From Rabbi Avi Grossman, here.

‘In Those Days There Was No King in Israel’ – Rabbi Avi Grossman Explains

More On Returning Our Judges

A colleague claimed that the ideal Jewish government was that of the time of the Judges; I agree with that view.

The Maimonidean viewpoint: although the Talmud says that Israel was commanded to both appoint a king and build the Temple, Maimonides’s formulations of these halachoth show that the kingdom does not have to be led by a hereditary king, but rather that the role of the king can also be filled by a prophet or judge, and thus we have Talmudic statements that Moses, Joshua, Gideon, Jephtah, and Samuel all counted as kings, and explains why Samuel himself felt that the arrangement that had existed until then should remain. Further, the Tabernacle at Shilo was considered a Temple for all intents and purposes, even if it was eventually relocated. Thus, the situation as described at the end of the Book of Joshua was an ideal and optimistic situation. The nation had a king and a Temple, and they had a golden opportunity to complete the conquest of the land.

As for the book of Judges and how it describes periods of backsliding into paganism, the book also makes clear that is was the judges themselves who brought about the return to proper worship, and the backsliding only happened once a judge was dead. If anything, the prophetic voice might be implicitly criticizing the leaders for not ensuring that they would be succeeded by other suitable leaders. Moses himself made sure he would be succeeded, but we do not find that Joshua or any others sought to do likewise. Samuel himself was the first to set the stage for his own succession, but it was his unpopular choices that partially led the people to request the appointment of an established hereditary monarch. The last chapters of Judges, which describe two catastrophies shortly after Joshua’s death, also have a refrain, almost like a chorus, that “in those days, there was no king in israel.” One could be excused if he were to understand this to mean that the people had an established idolatrous shrine and a disastrous civil war because they had no hereditary king to enforce Torah law. However, a closer look at the text indicates as the Redak and the other mideival commentators understood it: these tragedies happened because there was no “king” then. I.e., Joshua had died, and no judge had yet arisen, but had Joshua or one of the judges been around, it would not and could not have happened.

As we prepare for yet more elections here in Israel, and as we see America reeling in the midst of a sweeping regime change, I wonder what people honestly expect from government. Too many people I know voted against Trump because they blamed him for Covid and all of its repercussions, that he should have done something, but they have yet to consider that had he done any of those somethings that they suggest, they would have hated him even more for restricting their freedoms. Trump is and was far from perfect, but at least he realized that certain things can and should not be in the hands of government, because not only can it not succeed, it will cause even more harm. Here is Israel, we should be held to a higher standard, and we will only have a proper government when, as a people we realize what government’s role should be: absolutely nothing except national security and the enforcement of the rule of law.

From Rabbi Avi Grossman, here.

RABBI GROSSMAN: Coronavirus (& Political Stalemate)? Renew the Half-Shekel Fund!

Here is an excerpt:

When we hear the reading of Sh’qalim, we have to ask ourselves, why is there no public organization that collects the Sh’qalim? How can we establish one?

The fact remains that even once the Temple was destroyed and there was no longer a commandment to contribute to it, the sages maintained the practice of publicly announcing the obligation to give, and this perhaps also explains why the tractate of the Yerushalmi found its way into the Bavli: study leads to practice, and this tractate is full of ideally-practical applications. We may not have put them into practice last year, but this year there should be nothing to stop us.

I would even argue that this year, more than any other, when we have experienced three-rounds of useless national elections and society has been overwhelmed by the threat of plague, we should form an official Temple trust for the collection of actual half-sh’qalim, because of what we read in the very first verse of Sh’qalim:

כִּי תִשָּׂא אֶת-רֹאשׁ בְּנֵי-יִשְׂרָאֵל לִפְקֻדֵיהֶם וְנָתְנוּ אִישׁ כֹּפֶר נַפְשׁוֹ לַיהוָה בִּפְקֹד אֹתָם, וְלֹא-יִהְיֶה בָהֶם נֶגֶף בִּפְקֹד אֹתָם

When you take the sum of the children of Israel according to their numbers, then every man shall give his life’s ransom unto the Lord when you number them, and there shall be no plague among them when you number them.

Find the rest of the article here…

Rabbi Avi Grossman on Monarchy, Secession, and Slavery

I appreciate your bringing Rothbard’s statement to my attention. It brings up an interesting topic that I was discussing recently, secession from a national body within Jewish thought. Whenever considering concepts such as these, I first look at it in terms of halachic applicability, and then in terms of practicality and utility. The former must be divided between the two major halachic domains, Torah as it applies to Jews, and Noahide law as it applies to the rest of mankind.

It seems to me that if, in an ideal and united Jewish state, such a thing was proposed, namely, that a given tribe or tribes of Israel wished to form their own state, it would certainly be technically permissible, and perhaps even the default condition of the Jewish people, and maybe even under the right circumstances, encouraged by one of God’s spokesmen. However, despite this technical permissibility, it might very well be the wrong thing to do under most circumstances, and certainly not the right thing to do if the nation truly wishes to achieve its national goals.

I will now elaborate:

  1. The technical permissibility is indicated by the fact that History records incidences of a number of contemporaneous Israelite states, e.g., the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, or of the various autonomous Jewish communities ruled by exilarchs during the Hasmonean era and beyond. Maimonides even codifies this possibility in his Laws of Kings and approves of multiple kingdoms.
  2. The default condition of our people was distinctly defined tribes, with distinct borders and systems of governance: for centuries, each tribe had its own official nasi, leader, and Sanhedrin, a relatively new word that describes the body of elders that made decisions, etc., for the tribe. In one of the most unfortunate aspects of this condition, tribes could even conduct their own military/foreign policies, which sometimes led to civil war, and in rare cases, cooperation, and this appears as early as the Pentateuch, wherein three tribes made independent decisions to conditionally join the others in the conquest of Canaan, and then, after said conquest, were threatened with punitive action by the others. In the book of Judges, we first read about a war conducted by the tribe of Judah with Simon’s assistance, while other tribes were meant to conduct their own wars, and later we read about most of the tribes uniting against the single tribe of Benjamin. There are many more examples of this. When I think about this point, I see that the state of Jewish unity is actually miraculous: it was nothing short of unprecedented that our stubborn and dedicated people managed to stay united in one kingdom long enough to build the Temple.
  3. As Maimonides writes based on an evaluation of our biblical history, it may be that sometimes a prophet will appoint a king over some of Israel even if there is a reigning Davidic monarch, and we have two explicit incidences of this happening in history. However, there were many dynasties in Israel that did not receive prophetic approval, and perhaps it would have been better for them to defer to Davidians, who always carry a divine mandate.
  4. However, as the later prophets make clear, if we are ever to achieve the messianic and utopian ideal, the Jewish people will have to somehow find a way to get over their mostly petty differences and reunite in God’s service. I hope and pray that day will come soon. (The modern state of Israel still contains a large religious population that does not recognize its legitimacy, as they view everything in terms of their own understanding of halacha, and a large leftist population that refuses to recognize the state’s sovereignty in many places, and leads an international campaign to delegitimize its necessary security arrangements.)

As for humanity at large, history is replete with examples of a national body becoming too large, and naturally dividing into daughter nations/tribes/etc. I would argue that this is the message in many of the lineages recorded in the book of Genesis, for instance, where eponymous founders of the ancient nations sometimes had sons and grandsons who formed their own. For example, Canaan begat both the Sidonians and Tyrians, who were always known as Canaanites, but he also had the Hittites and Amorites, and Abraham himself, while having the Jews as his most important (in a cosmic sense) descendants, also had the Ishmaelites and Edomites. The thirteen colonies broke away from Great Britain perhaps prematurely, while Canada and Australia became adult nations of their own, without violent schisms. I argue that secession is a natural phenomenon built into humanity, and the opposite, maintaining overgrown and unnatural national unions, or worse, trying to form large unions where they do not occur naturally, is inherently wrong and doomed to failure, and this is the lesson of numerous states of the modern era and of the Tower of Babel, noticeably included in the biblical narrative right after the critical statement: “These are the families of the sons of Noah, after their generations, in their nations; and of these were the nations divided in the earth after the flood.” That is, the union that started to form after the nations had already proliferated needed to be thwarted.

I, therefore, see no halachic reason for opposing any form of political secession per se. If California wishes to secede from the United States, or if Los Angeles wants to declare its independence, so be it. However, I do believe that the Noahide, and therefore, universal obligation of men to govern themselves by rule of law demands that government exist at the very least on the local level, the “city’s gates” so to speak, so that disputes can be adjudicated and men “do not come to eat each other alive.” No man can declare that he has his own state. But aside from the most basic forms of local government and law, the Torah certainly does not demand more from humanity, nor does it recommend more. History would also indicate that the destructiveness and lethality of any given war are exponentially proportional to the sizes of the belligerent parties, and therefore if warring parties were limited in size, the casualties and collateral damage could be minimized. Two cities with populations in the hundreds can expect to lose tens in armed conflict; 20th-century superpowers sustain and cause casualties in the millions, and use technology much more efficiently (read: devastatingly).

Thus, many of us understand why, for instance, the American founding fathers felt that leaving arms in the hands of private citizens could be a reasonable protection from encroaching government tyranny, while today it is laughable to believe that the NRA’s membership could stand a chance against a rogue federal government, or why it may have been wrong for Abraham Lincoln and his federal government to fight a devastating civil war to prevent the secession of states from the union, and we hope that if some states were to ever resolve to leave the union, they would be allowed to do so peacefully. I have much sympathy for the Brexit movement if only for this reason.

However, I would also like to point out that, despite my second-guessing the propriety of the American Civil War, the form of slavery in 19th century America was not condoned by halacha. All people are forbidden to kidnap and enslave others, and what the Sages describe as slavery is nothing like that as has been practiced in most of the world throughout history. When the Torah describes Israelites acquiring slaves of gentile origin, it is on the assumption that either the servitude started with some sort of consensual transaction, i.e., a gentile man sold himself into servitude to a Jew in exchange for his family acquiring a sum of money from the Jew, or that he elected to become a Jew’s slave instead of undergoing complete conversion (and his family may have also received some compensation), or non-Jews entered the service of Jews because they were captured in war. (That which is described regarding conquered populations, or ones that have accepted terms of surrender, is what the sages termed geirei toshav, resident aliens, or Gentiles who remain free by swearing allegiance to Noahide law and accepting second-class citizenship and national service.)

Gentiles could only acquire each other as slaves through fair, legal means, but if a slaver went to a distant continent and kidnapped people in order to sell them elsewhere, those people should rightfully be set free and their captors executed by a court of law. (I am working on the assumption that unless we are explicitly told otherwise, Noahides are held to the same standards as Jews with regard to injunctions that apply mutually. Kidnapping is either a form of theft or if he then subjugates or sells his victim, it is a form of murder, both of which carry the death penalty for Noahides. The various differences between how these laws apply to Jews and gentiles can be found in the literature, e.g., although there is a universal prohibition against eating from a living animal, the definition of the animal’s death is different for Jews.)