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CAN WE REVIVE RASHI AND R. YEHOSHUA B. LEVI, NOTWITHSTANDING REISNER?TWO METHODOLOGICAL REFLECTIONS ON RABBI AVRAM REISNER'S ‘NO-ZOOM-MINYANS' TESHUVAH Richard Claman While ‘Zoom' has been a lifeline these past several weeks, allowing us to maintain some sense of synagogue community and continuity, I have found participation in ‘Zoom' minyans these past weeks to be a disconcerting experience, on many levels. It helped somewhat to read a N.Y. Times[1] explanation as to how ‘Zoom,' to preserve transmission ‘bandwidth,' obscures those details of persons' faces, particularly around the eyes and mouth, that we rely upon, in face-to-face conversations, as critical cues. Conversely, however, I suggest that it has not helped that the Conservative Movement, even while recognizing the necessity of ‘Zoom' minyans in this hour of crisis, has persisted in the position first expressed in a Teshuvah authored by Rabbi Avram Reisner in early 2001, viz., that a minyan requires ‑‑ as a matter that, in Reisner's view, has never been seriously challenged ‑‑ the physical presence of ten persons in the synagogue, before anyone else can participate in prayer with such a minyan.[2] My frustration led me to revisit Reisner's analysis: for perhaps he ignored, given the relatively calm times of early 2001 when he published his opinion, some minority viewpoint that might help us today. In that regard, we learn in Tosefta Eduyot 1:4 (or, in some editions, 1:5) that, as one answer to the question why the tradition records both majority and minority views, that “The opinion of the individual [i.e., the minority opinion] is recorded along with that of the majority only so that, if times necessitate [‘hutz-rakh la'hen sha'ah'] they [i.e., even the majority] may rely upon [that minority view].”[3] [Ironically, this view is presented in the Tosefta itself as a minority viewpoint,[4] but it seems to be validated by the statement in the Babylonian Talmud (“BT”), Berakhot 9b, that “Rabbi Shimon is a great enough authority to rely upon in cases of emergency/pressing need (she'at ha-dehak).”[5]] This note suggests that indeed, on further analysis, Reisner, in adopting two methodological principles that, I suggest, are open to reconsideration, failed to at all recognize how Rashi (Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki, France, 1040-1105), in interpreting a dispute at BT Pesachim 85b, understood R. Yehoshua b. Levi (hereafter “RYBL”) as presenting a genuine minority opinion, dissenting from the opinion of Rav (as reported by R. Yehudah), and allowing (with some implicit limitations based on intention and hearing) ‘distance' minyans, based on RYBL's doctrine, “Even a metal barrier does not interpose between the Jews and their Father in Heaven” (‘afilu mechitzah shel barzel eina mafseket bein Yisrael la'Avihem She'Bashamayim').[6] I do not mean to suggest that RYBL's viewpoint should be adopted as the general halakha: there are of course post-Talmudic texts that need to be given weight, and variety of practical considerations, as reviewed by Reisner and others.[7] (I note, however, that it may be that Meiri [Southern France, 1249-1310] followed RYBL; but his views were a practical matter ‘lost' to the ‘mainstream' halakhic tradition.[8]) I do mean, however, to suggest that if we can recover Rashi's understanding of RYBL's position, then that might add some legitimacy to, and might make some of us feel better about, the steps that we need to take until this hour of necessity has ended (and we all hope that it ends soon). DO WE BEGIN ANALYSIS WITH OUR OWN READING OF THE TORAH, OR WITH THE RABBIS'? One of the controversial features, for some of us, of the Dorff-Nevins-Reisner teshuvah concerning homosexuality[9], was its starting-point declaration that “Judaism is based on how the Rabbis interpreted the Bible …” Accordingly, those authors refused to even consider modern critical or other alternative approaches to the two key texts in Leviticus, but rather insisted on starting with the Talmud's reading thereof. I do not wish here to challenge that declaration, nor to revisit the available alternative approaches to the Leviticus text.[10] My point here, simply, is that Reisner, in his ‘Internet Minyan' teshuvah, seems from the start to violate this principle. The Gemara's discussion at BT Pesachim 85b follows the discussion in the Mishnah (Pes. 7:12), addressing the question presented “if part of a limb of the pesach [offering] projected outside its boundary (‘mik-tza-to').” (The Mishnah explains that one cannot just saw-off the protruding portion, for that would violate the Biblical rule against breaking any bone of the pesach offering; rather, one must detach the entire limb.) What is the ‘boundary' at issue here? According to Reisner, this must refer-back to the requirement stated in Ex. 12:46, that the pesach-offering “may only be eaten ‘in one house.'” Reisner then continues: “The Mishnah defines the parameters of ‘one house' in clearly physical terms, considering the door and window spaces.” And he then asserts: “It is thus clear to me [sic] that ‘one house' in the Biblical verse needs to be taken physically.” Therefore, Reisner concludes, the declaration of Rav, in the ensuing Gemara, “establishes the equation” between this physical proximity requirement applicable to eating the paschal offering within ‘one house,' and that of a prayer minyan. Reisner's reading of the Biblical verse (and of the Mishnah), as “clear to [him],” however, is simply contrary to Rashi's reading of the Mishnah, and of the Biblical verse ‑‑ where Rashi relies on the early Rabbinic reading in the Mekhilta (see further below). First, as to the Mishnah: while Rashi does not comment thereon specifically at BT Pes. 85b, Rashi already explained, however (see “Likutei Rashi” at 85b), in connection with an earlier discussion of this Mishnah (at BT Pes. 84b), that ‘boundary' here refers not to the boundary of any particular house, but rather to the walls of Jerusalem! Earlier, in BT Pes. 64b, the Talmud tells a story about how, in the generation prior to the destruction of the Second Temple, millions of people would go up each year to Jerusalem, to offer the Passover sacrifice. One can imagine how, with these throngs, many persons would only be able to find spaces for their family/friends' communal eating-together units (‘havurot') pressed against the walls of the City, which defined the boundaries of the City's special holiness. Conversely, however, these millions of pilgrims, consisting of thousands of havurot, would not be finding accommodations within houses. Also, the Mishnah, after discussing that the pesach-offering must be entirely within the walls of Jerusalem, explains that the areas consisting of the thickness of the doorways, and of the windows, themselves count as ‘inside.' Plainly, doorways and windows only have such thickness in the context of city walls, and not individual homes. Second, looking at Ex. 12:46, the verse to which Reisner refers: the Mekhilta de-Rabbi Ishmael (compiled in around early 4th cent. CE, in the Land of Israel, based on the teachings of the Tanna'im, the Sages of the Mishnah [dated around 220 CE]), Tractate Pischa, ch. 15, teaches that the Torah's statement, while literally translated as ‘in one house (ba-bayit) shall it be eaten,' should nevertheless be read differently: “Scripture here means ‘in one group (ba-havurah a'hat).'”[11] Rashi, in his explanation of Ex. 12:46, simply follows the Mekhilta. Accordingly, drawing upon the understanding of the Mishnah and of Ex. 12:46 in Rashi and the Mekhilta, it would appear that there are two competing notions involved: there is the special, and perhaps unique, holiness of Jerusalem, as a physically-bounded conception, but there is also the holiness (in some sense) of the ‘havurah,' which would seem to depend on some sense of intentionality and participation. Rav, in ‘our' Gemara (see below), may indeed have stressed that the rules relating to the special holiness of Jerusalem must apply to the recitation today of those prayers that refer to holiness (e.g., the ‘kedusha'); compare BT Menachot 110a, where R. Giddel, in the name of Rav, teaches that the sacrifices are today still being performed on a heavenly altar, by the angel Michael. But perhaps the significance of RYBL's teaching that prayer has replaced sacrifices (in contrast to the opinion that the mitzvah of prayer is of Biblical origin) (see BT Berakhot 26b) is that prayer now brings with it its own, different, sense of holiness, which may accordingly appropriately reflect elements of intentionality and participation, as opposed to sheer physical presence. (We assume here a ‘traditional' understanding of the Talmud, in which attributions of different statements, in different places, to a particular sage, are deemed to reflect the approach of that sage.) In any event, it seems to me that Reisner, by starting-off his analysis with his own reading of the Mishnah, in light of his own reading of Ex. 12:46,[12] without even a mention of Rashi's explication of the Mishnah, or the Mekhilta/Rashi's understanding of Ex. 12:46, has assumed for himself a ‘pure physicality' starting-point, where such an assumption is inconsistent with the methodological principle that he (and Dorff-Nevins) subsequently stressed. DOES THE CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT ACCEPT TOSAFOT'S ASSUMPTION THAT THERE CAN BE NO INCONSISTENCIES WITHIN THE TALMUD? As background: in connection with Bible commentary, we understand that even while, for example, Rashi may criticize a midrashic interpretation (e.g., at Ex. 6:9) and later, other commentators would criticize Rashi, that does not somehow eliminate those criticized understandings as legitimate. Thus, Rashi, even when criticizing a midrashic reading as incompatible with the plain meaning of the texts (id.), allows nevertheless that all such teachings are legitimate “sparks” emitted when the ‘hammer' of analysis is applied to the ‘rock' of Torah (per the analogy articulated in BT Sanhedrin 34a). When we encounter the ‘commentaries' on the Talmud by Rashi and by Tosafot (the scholars of ‘Ashkenaz,' Western Europe, in the 200 or so years following Rashi, as compiled by the early publishers of the Talmud), however, we see a very different attitude. Whether or not Rashi believed in the internal self-consistency of the entire Talmud, Rashi took as his mission the task of giving the best explanation of each Talmudic discussion or debate, within its immediate, “localized” context.[13] (Such explanations may represent Rashi's own analysis, and/or may represent the ‘oral tradition' that he inherited.)[14] By contrast, Tosafot viewed their task, and viewed the Talmud itself, very differently. Just as the Sages viewed the entire Tanakh as a necessarily self-consistent document, and just as the Amoraim viewed the entire body of Tannaitic teaching (including the Mishnah, and the ‘halakhic midrashim' such as the Mekhilta) as a necessarily self-consistent body of teaching, so too the medieval rabbis whose teachings became incorporated in the Tosafot (printed in the margin opposite Rashi in, e.g., the modern ‘Vilna' editions of the Talmud) took as their starting-point the assumption that the entire Talmud was necessarily self-consistent.[15] Accordingly, just as the Gemara adopted various techniques to ‘eliminate' conflicts that the Amoraim perceived within the Tanaitic literature, so too Tosafot would reject any plain-meaning interpretation of any particular Gemara text that might lead to a perceived contradiction between that text and another Gemara teaching, in favor of a harmonizing ‘reading,' however ‘artificial' that ‘reading' might be. One popular method for such ‘harmonization' adopted in the Gemara was known as “ukimta” i.e., a pronouncement declaring that an apparently broad statement, or broad dispute, in the Mishnah was ‘really' concerned with only a very narrow and limited matter.[16] Tosafot likewise regularly engaged in such ‘ukimta' pronouncements, so as to eliminate perceived disputes within the Talmud[17] ‑‑ and we will see in a moment an example of this approach in connection with the dispute between Rav and RYBL in ‘our' Talmud passage at BT Pes. 85b. One key upshot of this difference between Rashi's “localized” approach, and Tosafot's ‘global' approach, is that Tosafot, and the subsequent ‘mainstream' halakhic literature, felt free to reject, and to thereafter altogether disregard, Rashi, in cases where Rashi advocated a ‘local' plain-meaning interpretation of a Gemara text, but Tosafot saw a need, because of a perceived conflict with a different text, to insist upon an ‘ukimta,' or other similar restrictive (artificial) reading of the first text. From Tosafot's perspective, Rashi was simply failing to address the relevant text ‑‑ i.e., in failing to limit the ‘local' ‘plain' meaning in the light of the Talmud text as a whole. I question, however, whether the Conservative Movement, which does not generally accept a view of the entire Tanakh as a uniform composition (or even, perhaps, of the Pentateuch as a unified composition)[18] ‑‑ means to endorse, however, as a predicate of our ‘halakhic' decision-making, this very strong assumption as held by Tosafot as to the unity of the Talmud. Indeed, our leading scholars have shown how the Talmud developed over time, per a highly complex ‘editorial' process.[19] Reisner, however, in his ‘Internet Teshuva,' without giving any recognition to the above-described different agendas of Rashi and Tosafot, simply adopts Tosafot's ‘ukimta'-type analysis of the key text, and never even mentions Rashi's very-different reading. The result is that the viewpoint of RYBL, as understood by Rashi, has now been ‘lost' in Reisner. The next several paragraphs will review the key Talmudic discussion, as understood by each of Rashi and Tosafot. * * * The relevant Talmud passage (at BT Pesachim 85b), directly following Mishnah Pes. 7:12, (as reviewed above) is brief: Rav Yehuda said in the name of Rav: and so regarding prayer. But [Rav] is in disagreement with [u'fliga d'] RYBL, for RYBL said: Even a metal barrier does not interpose between the Jews and their Father in Heaven. That's it. Plainly, the Talmud text is unclear as to what the dispute was between Rav and RYBL. Rashi proceeds to first explicate Rav's view, and then RYBL's view. For Rav, Rashi explains (s.v. “v'chein li'tefilah), that “a person standing from the doorway and inward is counted in [‘mitz'taref'[20]] for the ten [necessary to constitute a minyan], but the person standing outside is not counted.”[21] According to Rashi, RYBL's position (s.v. “eina mafseket'), by contrast, is that “there is no dividing before Him, and there is no closing-off before Him.”[22] In short, according to Rashi, there is a debate between Rav and RYBL as to whether, to constitute a minyan, there must be (at least) 10 persons sharing a physical presence within a single defined space. Rav says yes, and RYBL says no. Further insight into RYBL's view may be discerned from a second place in the Talmud where his dictum, ‘even a metal barrier …” is invoked. In BT Sotah 38b, there is a discussion about the general rule that, to ‘receive' the Priestly Blessing, the recipient must generally be facing the priest who is pronouncing the Blessing. The Talmud first notes an exemption for those who are forced by their occupations to work outside the synagogue: for if they hear the Blessing and intend to participate therein, they are deemed included. The Talmud then asks: what if one is short, and so is shielded from the sight of the priest by the taller people in front of him? The Talmud declares an exemption for such short people as well. Finally, the Talmud asks: what if there is a partition (‘mechitza') between the priest and the person wishing to be blessed?[23] And the Talmud answers the question by citing RYBL's dictum. (Strikingly, Rabbi Heller, in his new teshuvah [see fn. 2, supra], characterizes RYBL's dictum as “a beautiful expression” but he does not identify RYBL as the author thereof; rather, Heller just quotes [at p. 10] the echo thereof in the Shulchan Aruch, in the context of its discussion of the Priestly Blessing. The statement by RYBL, in its context in Pesachim, concerning the constitution of a minyan, is not addressed there, and so a “beautiful expression” in that context has been forgotten.) Accordingly, Rashi's understanding of the elliptical Talmudic debate between Rav and RYBL, in BT Pes. 85b, as concerning what is necessary to constitute a minyan, certainly makes sense in the ‘local' context of BT Pesachim 85b, and also in light of what else we ‘know' about Rav and RYBL (i.e., reading the statements attributed to them elsewhere in the Talmud as indeed ‘theirs') and so, we might expect, would be accorded at least some legitimacy in the subsequent tradition. Tosafot, however, expressly refuses to follow Rashi, and instead it adopts an ‘ukimta'-type reading of the dispute between Rav and RYBL, in order to avoid what Tosafot perceives as a potential inconsistency with a text at BT Eruvin 92b. Here is Tosafot (at BT Pes. 85b, s.v. vi'chein li'tefilah): TOSFOS DH V'CHEIN LI'TEFILAH
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