Tuesday, June 08, 2010

Tekufat HaChama, pt ii

In a recent post, I addressed the first of two articles by Rav Yehoshua Buch of Mechon Shiloh, which argued for a fairly radical reinterpretation of the gemara in Bavli Berachot about Birchat HaChamah. While I agree that he provided a very good and comprehensive review of the relevant sources, I disagree with the logic of his article. See that previous post for greater detail. But I disagreed with his assertion that tekufah only means 1/4th of a year in the language of Chazal; with his assertion that if Abaye indeed interpreted the brayta as using leshon mikra, that such was inappropriate; with his assertion that the wording of the setama was irregularly ambiguous; somewhat, with his assertion that the additional seemingly restrictive language of the brayta in Bavli and Yerushalmi over the Tosefta was flowery and meaningless, such that the author of the brayta was the Tanna Kamma of the Tosefta, as opposed to, say, Rabbi Yehuda; with his assertion that the "mazalot in their time/order" was meaningless.

All in all, I found these some of these assertions rather unlikely, and as this was the basis for a reinterpretation of sources in a way against the traditional -- meaning the more straightforward, immediately apparent, intuitive -- reading, I was not persuaded.


Even so, disregarding all the arguments against the "traditional explanation", I do think that his interpretation of the brayta as just features of these celestial objects, while these objects are always visible, is somewhat plausible. That is, one can indeed plausibly read the brayta that way, in which case Abaye's statement would indeed be a reinterpretation. (I just don't think you can prove it; and then dismiss Abaye's / the gemara's explicit interpretation. I certainly don't believe we can simply claim that Abaye was not interpreting the brayta, but was arguing with it.)

His second article stands on firmer ground, and once again, he shows that he knows how to do his research. Yet once again, I disagree with him on logical and methodological grounds.

First, though, I will begin with an ad hominem attack, on myself (somewhat) and on Mechon Shiloh (more). But I will be upfront that it is somewhat of an ad hominem attack, and will explain why I think it relevant.

All roads lead to Rome, and both articles from Mechon Shiloh lead to a dismissal of Abaye's explanation. There is such a thing as trying to hard. Regardless of the strength of each article, is there any motivation to draw a particular conclusion? If so, why? The existence of bias does not undermine the validity of any argument, of course, but it should teach us caution when evaluating the merits of subjective determinations of the likelihood of particular readings.

I can see two reasons for wanting to dismiss Abaye's explanation of the brayta. The first I agree with myself.
  1. The first reason is that is is rather silly to have said Birkat HaChammah when we did. (Actually, I didn't really. I showed up in order not to separate from the community, said Amen to the rabbi's beracha which had Shem uMalchut, and personally said the blessing without Shem uMalchut, which anyway is a somewhat likely meaning of the gemara.)

    There are reasons it is silly. (a) The brayta, in both Bavli and Yerushalmi, instituted the blessing when one sees the sun in its tekufah, which is an astronomical event corresponding to the vernal equinox, perhaps a particular one. But one could not really be רואה חמה בתקופתה at the time everyone said the blessing, because it was not the time of vernal equinox any more. (b) Further, it is based on the calendar of Shmuel, which is not as accurate as that of Rav Ada bar Ahava. Why should we base this blessing on this calendar, when for most other purposes we subscribe to the more accurate one? (c) The seeming reason for the 28 year interval in blessing is that, this way, the Sun returns to the place it started at maaseh bereishit. I suppose it couldn't be based, this way, on that of Rav Ada bar Ahava, for it would not return to that configuration for many thousands of years. But then say every vernal equinox. That Shmuel's calendar is inaccurate in this way is to say that the Sun is NOT truly returning to this initial spot!
  2. The second reason strikes me as something particular to Machon Shiloh. They are very nationalistic, and wish to restore Torat Eretz Yisrael to its "rightful" superior position. Since this explanation of Abaye appears only in Bavli, and there is a way that some meforshim (I would argue based on a faulty girsa) interpret Yerushalmi to give a varying position, Machon Shiloh would like to grant primacy to the Yerushalmi. They can do this by asserting that Abaye, in the Bavli, is really arguing with the brayta; or further, that it is not really Abaye saying this but some rather late accidental insertion into the Talmud.
Now, they may be absolutely right -- in the assertions of either the first article, or the second article. We should judge the arguments on their merits. But I cannot help but see this nationalist agenda at play, here and in other pronouncements (such as regarding kitniyot). And while my inclination would anyway be to evaluate claims such as this carefully and conservatively, I would lean to be even more careful and conservative here.

Enough with the quasi-ad hominem attack. On to my thoughts on the article:

It is again very well researched, with a wide array of sources presented.The question, though, is how to evaluate these sources.

There are two major claims in the article. The first is that Abaye's statement was unknown to Geonim and early Rishonim, so it must be a late insertion. The second involves an interpretation of the Yerushalmi.

1) In terms of the first, much of it strikes me as an argument from absence. And has been argued ad nauseum, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. One could argue in the opposite direction, that if it is absent in places we should have expected it to be present, then the absence is indeed evidence.

Some of the examples may indeed be indicative of absence where we should have expected it. But others, I am not so convinced. If we had explicit kitvei yad, manuscripts, which lacked this statement, then I would consider it solid evidence. But here, we are working from secondary sources which quote the primary material, perhaps not in their entirety.

For example, Rif does not cite the statement of Abaye. Therefore, he concludes, it must not have been in the gemara before the Rif. Thus:
רי"ף מסכת ברכות דף מג עמוד ב:

ת"ר: הרואה חמה בתקופתה, לבנה בטהרתה, כוכבים במשמרותיהם, מזלות בעיתם - אומר 'ברוך עושה בראשית'. אמר רב יהודה: הרואה לבנה בחידושה - אומר 'ברוך אתה ה' אלוהינו מלך העולם אשר במאמרו ברא שחקים' וכו'.

רי"ף העתיק את הברייתא בעניין חמה בתקופתה ולא הביא את פירוש אביי. בבבלי שלפני רי"ף לא היה פירוש אביי בעניין חמה בתקופתה.

But other explanations are plausible (and he even brings down those who suggest it). Namely, the Rif might not hold like this lehalachah; for we know that Rif only cites those sections of gemara he paskens like. Why wouldn't the Rif pasken like Abaye? For the reasons I gave above, for why I thought doing it nowadays was "silly". Namely, we don't usually use Shmuel's calendar; this is not the time of the vernal equinox; and since it is an estimate, it is not really the initial position of the Sun anymore. Alternatively -- much less likely -- perhaps he left it out as mere commentary.

Similarly, the Rosh does bring down the statement, but as a peirush, rather than explicitly attributing it to Abaye. Therefore, he concludes, it must not have been in the gemara before the Rosh.

רא"ש מסכת ברכות פרק ט סימן יד:

ת"ר: הרואה חמה בתקופתה, לבנה בטהרתה, כוכבים במשמרותם, מזלות בעיתם - אומר 'ברוך עושה מעשה בראשית'. חמה בתקופתה - היינו מעשרים ושמונה שנה לעשרים ושמונה שנה. אמר רב יהודה אמר רב: הרואה לבנה בחידושה - אומר 'ברוך אשר במאמרו ברא שחקים' וכו'.

רא"ש העתיק את הברייתא בעניין החמה בתקופתה והביא את עיקר פירושו של אביי בלשון "היינו...", ולא הביאו בשמו של אביי. ייתכן להסיק מלשון זו, שבבבלי שלפני הרא"ש לא היה פירוש אביי.

But would he be unaware of it as part of the gemara, given that Rashi comments on that portion? And since Rosh is effectively a commentary on Rif, perhaps he is trying to present it as not arguing with the Rif, who didn't happen to cite this statement. Also, note that he is summarizing it, rather than giving the difficult language. Also, the most this would really prove is that it was not in the gemara attributed to Abaye. It still could have been the setama digmara which offered this explanation. So it is a bit of overreach to claim that that the comment of Abaye was certainly not present.

In fact, if I were to put forth this position, I would much rather have this be setama, rather than entirely absent.

Why?

Well, it is more than a bit irregular to claim that an entire attributed statement, from an Amora, was inserted into the gemara. An unattributed statement, particularly in Aramaic when the surrounding text is Hebrew, is readily setamaitic, and often when we reconsider the words of the named Amoraim in a different light, many "difficulties" currently present in the gemara get resolved. The idea is that some later commentator -- say, a savora, put his explanation into the gemara, in a way that was clear that it was his interpretation. (Think Tosafot, but embedded inside the text.) But other interpretations are possible. Or a commentary was on the side, as a gloss, and a copyist copied it into the main body of text.

But how can you say this for an attributed statement? You would either have to say this was a deliberate corruption and lie, or else you must posit that the text was edited in stages. First, the gloss was inserted, anonymously, into the text. Subsequently, a scribe erred and attributed the statement to Abaye.

Indeed, if I were arguing this, I could even point out that a number of other explanatory statements in context are attributed to Abaye, or to Abaye / Ullah. If so, some scribe might have miscopied the attribution, or assumed that all the explanations in this area were from the mouth of Abaye.

But to argue this, it pays to have evidence of the text in stages. And we can argue for this by demonstrating instances of the text without any evidence of the statement attributed to Abaye; then with the statement without the attribution; and finally, the statement together with attribution. Say that the Rosh had it, but without attribution to Abaye, and we have the intermediate stage. (Even so, I am not convinced that it is solid evidence.)

Another example from the article:
רמב"ם הלכות ברכות פרק י הלכה יח:

הרואה את החמה ביום תקופת ניסן של תחילת המחזור של שמונה ועשרים, שהתקופה בתחילת ליל רביעי - כשרואה אותה ביום רביעי בבוקר, מברך 'עושה בראשית'. וכן כשתחזור הלבנה לתחילת מזל טלה בתחילת החודש ולא תהיה נוטה לא לצפון ולא לדרום, וכן כשיחזור כל כוכב וכוכב מחמשת הכוכבים הנשארים לתחילת מזל טלה, ולא יהיה נוטה לא לצפון ולא לדרום, וכן בכל עת שיראה מזל טלה עולה מקצה המזרח - על כל אחד מאלו מברך 'עושה בראשית'.

אביי פירש רק את עניין החמה בתקופתה, אך רמב"ם פירש גם את עניין הלבנה והכוכבים והמזלות על פי פירושו בעניין החמה.

The implication of this seems to be that Rambam is arguing against Abaye, of it returning to its initial position. But this does not, by any means, indicate that Rambam doesn't have Abaye in the gemara. Rather, Abaye only explains one of them, and one can then extrapolate to the others.

Another example from the article:
ספר הלכות גדולות (ר' שמעון קיירא, אחד מגאוני בבל) מסכת ברכות הלכות ברכות המקומות:

אמר רבי יהושע בן לוי: הרואה רקיע בטהרה - אומר 'ברוך עושה בראשית'. תנו רבנן: הרואה חמה בתקופתה ולבנה במלאותה וכוכבים במסילותם ומזלות בסידורם - אומר 'ברוך עושה בראשית'. רב יהודה אומר: הרואה לבנה בחידושה - אומר 'ברוך אשר במאמרו ברא שחקים...'.

בעל הלכות גדולות העתיק את הברייתא בעניין חמה בתקופתה ולא הביא את פירוש אביי בעניין זה. בבבלי שלפני בעל הלכות גדולות לא היה פירוש אביי בעניין חמה בתקופתה.

True, the Sefer Halachot Gedolot does not cite Abaye here. You can read it inside and confirm.

However, if we compare the Sefer Halachot Gedolot to the gemara, we will find that it is not only this statement that he does not cite. Thus, for example, in Berachot 59a-b, we have immediately before this brayta:
R. Joshua b. Levi said: If one sees the sky in all its purity, he says: Blessed is He who has wrought the work of creation. When does he say so? — Abaye said: When there has been rain all the night, and in the morning the north wind comes and clears the heavens. And they differ from Rafram b. Papa quoting R. Hisda. For Rafram b. Papa said in the name of R. Hisda: Since the day when the Temple was destroyed there has never been a perfectly clear sky, since it says: I clothe the heavens with blackness and I make a sackcloth their covering.
The Baal Halachot Gedolot just has:

אמר רב יהושע בן לוי
הרואה שמים בטהרה מן העבים ,אומר ברוך עושה בראשית ־

and then transitions to the brayta of Chama bitkufatah. Yes, he adds min he'avim. But he omits much of Abaye's statement, and does not attribute it to Abaye. Does this mean that Abaye's statement here as well was not present before the Baal Halachot Gedolot?! Or does it mean that he is selective in what he cites and summarizes?

Similarly, the gemara in Berachot 59b has:
R. JUDAH SAYS: IF ONE SEES THE GREAT SEA etc. How long must the intervals be? Rami b. Abba said in the name of R. Isaac: From thirty days.

The Baal Halachot Gedolot has:

רבי יהודה אומר הרואה את הים הגדול אומ׳ ברוך שעש׳
את הים הגדול ובזמן שרואהו לפרקי׳ וכמ׳ לפרקי׳ אחד לשלשי' יום


Since the Behag does not explicitly attribute it, does this mean that the statement of Rami bar Abba was absent in his gemara?! (At the most, it would show that it was unattributed.)

Perhaps the answer in all these cases is "indeed, it must have been absent". But I am not convinced. Rather, I don't believe one can solidly make such a conclusion. Other random literary factors might enter into the picture.

Another example from the article:
רס"ג (רבי סעדיה גאון) סידור (עמ' צ): עלינו לבאר את ברכות המקרים התלויים בחושיו (של האדם), ונאמר שהסוג הראשון מהם הם הדברים הנראים, והם שני חלקים: ארציים ושמימיים. והשמימיים, כגון הרעמים והברקים וקרני הזיקים והזוועות וגם רעידת האדמה... ועל הקשת כשנראית... ועל השמש ביום תקופת תמוז מברכים גם כן 'עושה בראשית', ועל הירח הנראה מן הלילה הרביעי עד ליל ארבעה עשר... והארציים...

רס"ג פירש את עניין החמה בתקופתה שלא כאביי. בבבלי שלפני רס"ג לא היה פירוש אביי בעניין חמה בתקופתה.

Since he does not explain bitkufatah as Abaye does, he must not have had this in the Bavli before him. We can see this in the Siddur of Rav Saadia Gaon, inside, here.

However, this is not all that Rav Saadia Gaon does. He also rejects most of the brayta! The brayta spoke of the chamah in its tekufah, the levana in its gevurah, the stars (/planets) in their paths, and the mazalot in their order. But Rav Saadia Gaon only speaks about the Sun in its tekufah. The ellipses provided in the article represent an accidental Dowdification of the quote, because one might think that the discussion of the moon is rooted in the brayta. But if we read inside, we find that the blessing in not oseh bereishit, and the statement is based on a separate statement, of Rav Yehuda citing Rav.

It could be that Rav Saadia Gaon has some cause to reject the brayta in its entirety, and is not basing himself on the gemara in Bavli so much as existing practice, as it somehow developed. And perhaps that common practice was somehow a tradition that came e.g., from Eretz Yisrael, where they have the brayta but not the explanation that came from Abaye. You cannot prove to me, from a siddur that varies this widely from the brayta, that a particular statement of Abaye was not present!

Another example, from the article, discussing Rabbenu Chananel:
יש מי שאומר (אולי הוא גיליון ונכנס בפנים (ב"מ לוין)): הרואה חמה בתקופתה בתחילת מחזור כ"ח שנופלת התקופה של ניסן באורתא דתלת נגהי ארבע בכוכב שבתי כתחילת בריאתה.

תנו רבנן: הרואה חמה בתקופתה כוכבים ומזלות כסדרן, אומר 'ברוך עושה מעשה בראשית'. ירושלמי: אמר רב הונא: הדא דאתמר - בימות הגשמים, ולאחר שלושה ימים, שנאמר "וְעַתָּה לֹא רָאוּ אוֹר בָּהִיר הוּא בַּשְּׁחָקִים וְרוּחַ עָבְרָה וַתְּטַהֲרֵם". פירוש, זה שאומר חמה בתקופתה וכוכבים ומזלות כסדרן - בימות הגשמים, בעת שהיו שלושה ימים מעוננים ולא נראתה חמה בהם ולא כוכבים, אותה העת צריכים לברך עליהם בעת שיתראו, וזולתי זו העת לא (בירושלמי שלפני ר"ח לא היו בברייתא המילים "ואת הרקיע בטהרו").ש

...

ר"ח הביא את פירוש אביי בלשון "יש מי שאומר", ולא הביאו בשמו של אביי. ייתכן להסיק מלשון זו, שבבבלי שלפני ר"ח לא היה פירוש אביי בעניין חמה בתקופתה.

I agree that Rabbenu Chananel must not have had the phrase ואת הרקיע בטהרו in the brayta in the Yerushalmi, such that he understands Rav Huna's statement as explaining the entire brayta. However, that he cites this as yesh mi she'omer is not absolute proof that he did not have Abaye's statement. As Rav Buch cited in his article:
לדרך הפירוש של ר"ח (מתוך הספר: פירוש ר"ח לתלמוד - ש' אברמסון, עמ' 65):ש

הרבה פעמים אין הוא (ר"ח) מסתפק בפירוש אחד אלא הוא מביא כמה פירושים, בדרך כלל במונח "יש מי שאומר", אלא שצריך להיזהר להוציא מסקנה מדיבור זה, משום שיש שהוא מתכוון לדעות שנמצאות בתלמוד. במקומות הרבה אנו יודעים מי הוא האומר, והרבה מהם הם גאונים שלא קרא בשמם על הדברים מאיזה טעם שהוא, והרבה פעמים אין אנו יודעים עכשיו למי הדברים מגיעים.

If I understand this correctly, a scholar of Rabbenu Chananel is asserting that even though Rabbenu Chananel says yesh mi sheOmer, one should be careful from drawing conclusions from this, because often the yesh mi sheOmer will be a position found in the Talmud itself! That is, an Amora! Yes, often it is Geonim or those who we do not know now, but there are indeed times he intends people found in the Talmud.

Thus, yesh mi sheOmer by itself does not indicate that this statement by Abaye is not found in the Bavli before Rabbenu Chananel, contrary to Rav Buch's conclusion.

I would furthermore advance a reason Rabbenu Chananel describes Abaye as a yesh mi sheOmer  instead of citing him by name. It is the same reason he puts the explanation before the brayta. Namely, he wants to dismiss this position as a yesh meforshim but append what he considers the true, correct explanation of Rav Huna immediately after the brayta as the true, real explanation. And so he is paskening like Rav Huna over Abaye.

Another example from the article:
ספר האשכול (ר' אברהם ב"ר יצחק מהעיר נרבונה שבפרובנס דרום צרפת) (אלבק) הלכות ברכת הודאה דף לב עמוד א:

אמר רבי יהושע בן לוי: הרואה רקיע בטהרה - אומר 'ברוך עושה בראשית'. אימת? - אמר אביי: כי אתא עיבא ואתי מיטרא בליליא ואתי איסטינא ומגלי ליה.

תנו רבנן: הרואה חמה בתקופתה ולבנה בטהרתה, כוכבים במשמרותם ומזלות בעיתם - אומר 'ברוך עושה בראשית'.

בעל ספר האשכול העתיק את הברייתא בעניין חמה בתקופתה ולא הביא את פירוש אביי בעניין זה. כשהעתיק את המאמר של ריב"ל בעניין רקיע בטהרו, הביא את פירוש אביי בעניין זה. בבבלי שלפני בעל ספר האשכול לא היה פירוש אביי בעניין חמה בתקופתה.

In other words, selective quoting. He quotes Abaye for the first statement, but not for the second statement. Therefore, this is stronger evidence that he didn't have the second statement of Abaye.

(I would note that Rav Buch did not make this argument for the Baal Halachot Gedolot, because there, even the first statement wasn't cited, as I noted.)

But again, as with the Rif, it could just be that he is, for some reason, paskening against Abaye. Maybe for the reasons I gave at the top of the post. Or alternatively -- and you can disagree with me and claim this is far-fetched if you wish -- if we look at the Sefer HaEshkol inside, he follows it up with:


מתני׳ אימתי  בזמן שהוא רואהו לפרקים. ופרקים
עד כמה אמר רמי בר אבא אמר ר׳ יצחק עד ל׳ יום


As a stand-alone sefer, this is slightly difficult, since he never cited the Mishna, that this is within Rabbi Yehuda's statement about making a blessing about the seas. And indeed, the piskaot, those little citations from the Mishna are Geonic. (This citation differs from the citation in our gemara, by citing the latter half of the statement, instead of the first.) Perhaps he understood the lifrakim in the gemara as modifying the brayta? Or perhaps not. Perhaps he simply doesn't pasken like Abaye, and so leaves the brayta alone.

Another example from the article:
המאירי ברכות נט,א-ב:

הרואה שמים בטהרה, והוא אחר שנכלא הגשם ובא רוח צפוני ופיזר את העבים ונזדכך האוויר, אומר: 'ברוך עושה בראשית'. ובתלמוד המערב פירשוה, בימות הגשמים ובלבד לאחר שלושה ימים.

הרואה חמה בתקופתה, ולבנה בתקופתה, כוכבים במשמרותם, ומזלות כסדרן, אומר: 'ברוך עושה בראשית'.

ועניין חמה בתקופתה הוא, שרואה ביום תקופת ניסן של תחילת מחזור של עשרים ושמונה שנה, והוא הנקרא מחזור גדול, שבשעה זו, ר"ל בסוף מחזור גדול, חמה חוזרת לנקודה ראשונה שבה נתלו המאורות מתחילה, והוא בתחילת ליל רביעי... ויש מפרשים: בתקופתה - בבהירותה (ר"ח, הערוך).

ועניין לבנה בתקופתה, כשחוזרת בכל חודש וחודש לנקודתה לתחילת מזל טלה...

וכוכבים במשמרותם, כשהשלימו כל כוכב מחמישה כוכבים הנשארים מהלכם, וחזרו כנגד תחילת מזל טלה למי שמכיר את דרכיהם.

ומזלות בעיתם הוא בנקודה שטלה עולה מצד המזרח...

המאירי פירש את דברי הברייתא בעניין החמה בתקופתה וכו' כמו רמב"ם. המאירי הביא את פירוש אביי בעניין החמה בתקופתה בלשון "ועניין...". ייתכן להסיק מלשון זו, שבבבלי שלפני המאירי לא היה פירוש אביי.

Just because he says veInyan rather than citing Abaye does not mean that Abaye's statement, with or without Abaye's name attached, is absent from his gemara. Indeed, we should really conduct a study of Meiri to see how he consistently uses the term veInyan, and if it is only to explanations not found in the gemara.

From a literary standpoint, I could understand why he would do this. Namely, he is considering each term in the brayta in turn and giving an explanation. Only one of them is drawn from the gemara. To smooth out everything as a perush, rather than explicitly citing Abaye, he just cites the explanation of that one from the gemara, and proceeds to interpret the other phrases after that.

This is not evidence that the statement did not exist, with or without attribution, in the Bavli before the Meiri.

The discussion of Rokeach:
ספר הרוקח (רבנו אלעזר מגרמייזא - וורמייזא, היא העיר וורמס שבגרמניה) הלכות ברכות - המשך סימן שמג:

הרואה חמה בתקופתה ולבנה בגבורתה וכוכבים במסילותם ומזלות כסדרם - אומר 'עושה בראשית'.

בעל ספר הרוקח העתיק את הברייתא בעניין חמה בתקופתה ולא הביא את פירוש אביי. בבבלי שלפני בעל ספר הרוקח לא היה פירוש אביי בעניין חמה בתקופתה.
which you can read inside here. Perhaps. But perhaps not, for the reasons offered above.

Rabbenu Bachya:
רבנו בחיי בראשית א,יב: "והיו לאותות" - הם (המאורות) אותות לישראל בקריאת שמע של בוקר שמצוותה עם הנץ החמה וקריאת שמע של ערב שמצוותה עם צאת הכוכבים, גם בחיוב ברכת השמש בתקופת תמוז שחייב אדם לברך 'ברוך עושה' בראשית', וכן דרשו חז"ל בברכות פרק הרואה: "תנו רבנן: הרואה חמה בתקופתה ולבנה בטהרתה וכוכבים במשמרותם ומזלות בעיתם - אומר: 'ברוך עושה בראשית'", וגם בהיות הלבנה בחידושה שחייב לברך: 'אשר במאמרו ברא שחקים'.

רבנו בחיי הביא את הברייתא שבבבלי ופירש את עניין החמה בתקופתה כרס"ג ולא כאביי. בבבלי שלפני רבנו בחיי לא היה פירוש אביי.

Perhaps. Or perhaps he was talking based on established halacha, as per Saadia Gaon, and bringing it in to his commentary on Chumash. And because Abaye's explanation was contrary to this halacha, established from elsewhere, he had no cause to cite Abaye's contrary interpretation, which would just muddy matters.

From the article's discussion of the Aruch:
הערוך (ערך חמה):

תנו רבנן: הרואה חמה בתקופתה ולבנה בתקופתה וכו' (ברכות נט,ב). פירוש: חמה בתקופה - בתחילת מחזור עשרים ושמונה, שנופלת התקופה של ניסן בתחילת ליל רביעי בכוכב שבתי כתחילת בריאתה.

פירוש אחר: חמה בתקופתה וכוכבים ומזלות כסדרן - בימות הגשמים, בעת שהיו שלושה ימים מעוננים ולא נראתה חמה בהם ולא כוכבים, אותה העת צריכים לברך עליהם בעת שיתראו, וזולתי זו העת לא. ירושלמי: אמר רב הונא: הדא דאת אמר - בימות הגשמים, ולאחר שלושה ימים, שנאמר "וְעַתָּה לֹא רָאוּ אוֹר בָּהִיר הוּא בַּשְּׁחָקִים וְרוּחַ עָבְרָה וַתְּטַהֲרֵם".

הערוך העתיק את שני הפירושים מר"ח.

הערוך הביא את פירוש אביי בלשון "פירוש". ייתכן להסיק מלשון זו, שבבבלי שלפני הערוך לא היה פירוש אביי בעניין חמה בתקופתה.

However: since, as Rav Buch writes, he is bringing both peirushim from Rabbenu Chananel, and we saw earlier that Rabbenu Chananel didn't name the first source, but did the second, perhaps he is simply copying from Rabbenu Chananel, rather than telling us anything about the girsa of Bavli in front of the Aruch. And I gave a perfectly valid reason for Rabbenu Chananel omitting Abaye there -- he was paskening like Rav Huna, and his language of yesh mi sheOmer we know is NOT indicative of the name, or statement, being present in the gemara.

Furthermore, if the proof is from the Aruch using the word פירוש, there are other times he does this even when there is a named Amora in the gemara. As one random example, from a simple OCR search:

אברנים כדאמרי בפסחי אברכי׳ בסןף  גמרא דכל שעה
פירוש אברכים היינו נא כגון שנצלה מעט

where a named Amora says it. This is not precisely the same, but I confess I am getting exhausted. Suffice it for now that in the same entry, regarding tekufa, he wrote: פירוש אחר: חמה בתקופתה וכוכבים ומזלות כסדרן - בימות הגשמים, בעת שהיו שלושה ימים... where shortly thereafter we see he drew it from the Yerushalmi.

The best proof that some Rishonim did not have this text, IMHO, is one Rav Buch didn't bring. Namely, in Rabbenu Yonah on the Rif, he explains the brayta, saying: פירוש, דבר ידוע הוא etc., then giving the explanation in the gemara. If, besides calling it an explanation, he describes it as a known matter, then it would seem he doesn't have it in his gemara. However, we can answer this up by noting that he also explains that this machzor is when it returns to the position of maaseh bereishit. In which case he is explaining the known reason for Abaye's statement. See inside.

I will have to discuss the second point of the article, namely the alternate girsa in Yerushalmi, in another post. For now, I would like to skip immediately to some concluding thoughts.

Concluding Thoughts
Rashi certainly had this text in the gemara, because he comments on it at length. So at least one fairly early Rishon had this. (We don't know explicitly that it was ascribed to Abaye.)

We then have a bunch of Geonim and Rishonim who give this explanation and don't ascribe it explicitly to Abaye. I am not convinced that all of these Geonim and Rishonim did not have the text in their gemara. They could be describing it as commentary if Abaye's name were not attached to it; or for reasons described above. I would think it rather likely that the Aruch indeed had it in his text, and that Rabbenu Chananel had it in his text as well. So too the Rosh, the Rambam and the Meiri. The absence of explicit citation from the gemara and attribution to Abaye does not bother me. Rather, it seems like over-reach. (On the other hand, as I noted, Rabbenu Yonah might be a good counter-proof.)

We then have a bunch of Geonim and Rishonim who don't give this explanation at all. There are two available explanations for this. One is that they did not have it in their girsa of the gemara. The other is that they did not hold that Abaye's statement was lehalacha, for the reasons given above; and instead understood the brayta in its plain sense. This would naturally yield that explanation of some Geonim as tekufat tammuz, since that is the summer season, which is a rather good explanation of chamah bitkufatah, which would mean the sun in the sunny tekufah.

But the problem with all this evidence is that these are all secondary sources, which are known to omit material from the gemara on the basis of holding that it is not lehalacha. So it is not extremely convincing proof, at least for me.

Assuming, however, that some of these Geonim and Rishonim indeed had a different girsa, then there are two possibilities. One is that the named statement from an Amora was accidentally omitted by a scribe. Another is that an unnamed statement was accidentally inserted into the gemara, and subsequently ascribed to Abaye. Both are possible, but absent any other data, I would consider the deletion operation easier than the dual insertion operation.

(On a related tangent, it seems like the setama conflates naghei and oreta, but named Amoraim, including Abaye in Pesachim -- אמר אביי הילכך האי צורבא מרבנן לא לפתח בעידניה באורתא דתליסר דנגהי ארבסר דלמא משכא ליה שמעתיה ואתי לאימנועי ממצוה. The usage of language there thus seems to match the language here, of Amoraim and of Abayei)

12 comments:

Student V said...

"All roads lead to Rome, and both articles from Mechon Shiloh lead to a dismissal of Abaye's explanation. There is such a thing as trying to hard. Regardless of the strength of each article, is there any motivation to draw a particular conclusion? If so, why? The existence of bias does not undermine the validity of any argument, of course, but it should teach us caution when evaluating the merits of subjective determinations of the likelihood of particular readings."

I was taught that the Chazon Ish argues emphatically against the Alter of Slobodka's approach when the Chazon Ish asserts that we do not regard talmidei chachamim as having biases within the halachic process and in the derivation of psak.

You may disagree with a pshat, but bias? Not shayach.

Student V said...

"The second reason strikes me as something particular to Machon Shiloh. They are very nationalistic, and wish to restore Torat Eretz Yisrael to its "rightful" superior position. Since this explanation of Abaye appears only in Bavli, and there is a way that some meforshim (I would argue based on a faulty girsa) interpret Yerushalmi to give a varying position, Machon Shiloh would like to grant primacy to the Yerushalmi... etc"

I'm not sure I understand your argument here. Bringing the Yerushalmi as a riya for or against what is implied/written in the Bavli is an approach utilized by rishonim in countless places. Incorporating the Yerushalmi in the psak halacha is also naturally according to the Rambam's methodology for deriving psak and was also apparently utilized in many places.

If you suggest that Machon Shilo wishes to make the Yerushalmi "superior" to the Bavli and uphold the Yerushalmi over the Bavli in all cases where they differ, you have misinterpreted their approach. This is actually the exact opposite counterpart to the approach Machon Shilo is against.

This whole aspect of the argument is pointless in my opinion. Either what they say has merit and is plausible or it isn't. Save me the philosophical speculations (with all due respect).

joshwaxman said...

first, are you a follower of Machon Shiloh? i'd like to get some perspective of whom i am arguing with.

"I was taught that the Chazon Ish argues emphatically against the Alter of Slobodka's approach..."
don't get all frum on me. i can't hold like the Alter of Slabodka?! more to the point, this is a good definition of Emunas Chachamim, and one which, e.g. Rav Herschel Schachter teaches. But the question is, who counts as "chachamim"? there are certainly contemporaries, even who have semicha, and know how to learn, who i would expect operate with bias to reach a predetermined conclusion.

besides this, Machon Shiloh is rather overt is their pro-Yerushalmi / Torat Eretz Yisrael stance.

"I'm not sure I understand your argument here."
true.

i didn't get up to my analysis of the yerushalmi yet. i am saving that for part iii.

"If you suggest that Machon Shilo wishes to make the Yerushalmi "superior" to the Bavli and uphold the Yerushalmi over the Bavli in all cases where they differ, you have misinterpreted their approach."
i calls them as i sees them. as one example, the following from an article from Rabbi Bar-Chaim:

In the Talmud HaBavli (Sanhedrin 24a) we read: "He has placed me in the dark, like those that are long dead" (Eicha 3:6) - Rav Yirmiyah said "this refers to the Talmud of Bavel [Babylon]"! On this, our teacher Rashi leaves us in no doubt as to its meaning: "Their learning is uncertain."

It is worthwhile to note that Rav Yirmiyah was born in Bavel and came to Erets Yisrael as a young man. He was thus uniquely qualified to discriminate between the Torah of Bavel and that of Erets Yisrael. We are therefore not surprised to find the same Rav Yirmiyah, upon hearing a certain explanation given in Bavel, remarked: "Those foolish Babylonians! It is because they dwell in a land of darkness that they make such dark (incorrect) statements!" (Talmud Bavli, Pesahim 34b). Once again, Rashi is very forthright: "When they do not know the true explanation for something, they come up with incorrect explanations".

Rav Yirmiyah was not alone in his view of the Torah of Galuth. His teacher, Rav Zera, who was also originally from Bavel, fasted 100 fasts upon coming to Erets Yisrael in order to forget his learning from Bavel (Talmud Bavli, Bava Mezia 85a). Rashi states plainly that this refers to the Babylonian Talmud's methodology. We should also note that these statements about the Torah of Bavel are found in the Talmud HaBavli itself. There is no attempt to hide this information (!).

All of the above can only be understood in light of the observation of our Sages on the verses "And the gold of that land is good (Bereshith 2:12) and "There is no Torah like the Torah of Erets Yisrael, and no wisdom like the wisdom of Erets Yisrael" (Bereshith Raba 16,4). The words of Rav Yirmiyah, Rav Zera, and Rashi make it clear that the difference is very real; that this is in no way an exaggeration


This I saw on a blog from a follower of Machon Shiloh who seemed to want to use it to assert the primacy of Torat Eretz Yisrael.

Another example is the pesak from Mechon Shiloh on kitniyot, which asserted that it was a Karaite custom (iirc), and furthermore asserted that all Jews of Eretz Yisrael, including Ashkenazim, should abandon it to follow the practice of Eretz Yisrael.

And we have this present instance.

And we have the following from Rabbi Bar Chaim's wikipedia page:
"He has argued for the return of the primacy of the Jerusalem Talmud and gives more weight to rulings contained therein.

He has proposed that when the first day of Sukkot falls on Shabbat, Israeli Jews should follow the Mishna and Talmud Yerushalmi's ruling and perform the lulav ritual.[2]"

You don't spot a trend?!

joshwaxman said...

"This is actually the exact opposite counterpart to the approach Machon Shilo is against."
so you claim. i don't see it. and a bald assertion to the contrary is not going to convince be.

and i am a big fan of talmud yerushalmi myself, and have even understood various gemaras in light of information from yerushalmi. i am not a fuddy-duddy, but if i spot this, i think it should be noted.

"This whole aspect of the argument is pointless in my opinion. Either what they say has merit and is plausible or it isn't. Save me the philosophical speculations (with all due respect)."
if you want, you may skip it. but i did mark it as a sort of ad hominem.

however, the biases in this regard is going to affect what "is plausible" and what isn't, what "has merit" and what hasn't. what i really had in mind was the way of interpreting the Yerushalmi. the clearly superior reading, on girsological grounds, is the one that has the rekia betiharo in the brayta, for reasons i will get into in the text post. therefore, even though rabbenu chananel doesn't have it, we should not endorse a peshat in Yerushalmi based on that. if so, the Yerushalmi does not explicitly contradict the Bavli, and there is no reason to argue with Abaye; or what I think is better, with the interpretation of Rav Saadia Gaon. and its presence in the brayta in the Yerushalmi, when parallel to the statement of Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi, and the discussions of the named Amoraim in both Bavli and Yerushalmi on this, indicates something about the remaining items -- that they consider the items in the brayta to be discrete events. (whether or not this is original meaning of the brayta.) but that is for next post, in greater detail.

kol tuv,
josh

Student V said...

"first, are you a follower of Machon Shiloh? i'd like to get some perspective of whom i am arguing with."

Who "I" am or am not is not relevant to this discussion. I am simply Student V, an anonymous reader.

"i calls them as i sees them. as one example, the following from an article from Rabbi Bar-Chaim:

In the Talmud HaBavli (Sanhedrin 24a) we read: ...

This I saw on a blog from a follower of Machon Shiloh who seemed to want to use it to assert the primacy of Torat Eretz Yisrael."

Well, like I said.
If you suggest that Machon Shilo wishes to make the Yerushalmi "superior" to the Bavli and uphold the Yerushalmi over the Bavli in all cases where they differ, you have misinterpreted their approach. This is actually the exact opposite counterpart to the approach Machon Shilo is against.
I know this for a fact.

""He has argued for the return of the primacy of the Jerusalem Talmud and gives more weight to rulings contained therein."

Indeed, more weight than those who wish to ignore it in deriving psak halacha and more than traditionally offered it, in accordance with Rav Bar Hayim's understanding of (and agreement with) Rav Kook's statements to this nature. This does not come to supplant the Talmud Bavli. I am trying to inform you that you make a mistake in thinking or suggesting that it does. Simple as that.

""This is actually the exact opposite counterpart to the approach Machon Shilo is against."
so you claim. i don't see it. and a bald assertion to the contrary is not going to convince be."

Bald?

If you don't believe me, why don't you ask Rabbi Bar Chaim yourself. He's one quick email away. Although anyone who has learned by the rabbi, or heard his shiurim, or asked him for clarification, already knows the answer to the question. If you must know about "me," then I'll inform you that "I" fall into any or all 3 of these mentioned categories. It's a very simple process to ask a question.

As to the mention of the Hazon Ish, it wasn't a matter of frumkeit, it was a matter of how we pasken and understand halacha, so I quoted a great baal halacha! The question of "biases" is simply not applicable to the discussion. And if you wish like the mussar-niks to say that all chachamim have biases and negias, then that applies equally across the board. So why don't we start asking if Rav Saadiah Gaon's opinion was based in the fact that he wanted to say it a certain day? Please. Or rather than a bias, let's suggest the fact that he held more strictly to the Talmud Bavli given that he led the main Yeshiva of Bavel. Is that relevant?

My comment was not to address the arguments in general, which I feel is the most relevant issue here and what should really be discussed, not the character traits of the participants. But while we're on the subject of bias, you make your own bias very clear by starting off your position with an ad hominem attack. So according to you, they have their position because they want to uphold the Yerushalmi, but I can easily see that you have your position because you want to prevent or counteract their upholding of the Yerushalmi over the Bavli. I fail to see how any of this type of discussion is useful. This underlies my original comment. Let's focus on the issues at hand, namely, birchat hahama.

Student V said...

BTW, what does "fuddy-duddy" mean?

joshwaxman said...

"Who "I" am or am not is not relevant to this discussion. I am simply Student V, an anonymous reader."
it is quite relevant. are you a cult-follower? do you have inside knowledge into the position of Machon Shiloh, more than I do, by being a student? if not, why should i give credence to the assertions of some pseudonymous commenter's reading of what they have presented, more than my own reading?

"I know this for a fact."
how, oh pseudonymous commenter?

"bald?"
yes. read this.
http://www.rationalresponders.com/logical_fallacy_lesson_4_bald_assertion

"Indeed, more weight than those who wish to ignore it in deriving psak halacha and more than traditionally offered it, in accordance with Rav Bar Hayim's understanding of (and agreement with) Rav Kook's statements to this nature. This does not come to supplant the Talmud Bavli."
I think it may well be a matter of spin. One can absolutely insist that one is not doing it, but then do it.

for example, in a discussion with HaRazieli, he noted that:
"I should also note in order to not misrepresent Rav Bar-Hayim's teachings that regardless of what I have stated-intellectual honesty is of supreme importance and thus regarding those issues for which it can be conclusively shown that the Bavli's argumentation is more cogent than the Yerushalmi's then the Rav's approach is not to dismiss the Bavli just because the Yerushalmi states otherwise."

emphasis mine. but who decides what makes a conclusive argument? and who decides what is more cogent? someone with explicit leanings towards Torat Eretz Yisrael, nusach Eretz Yisrael, minhagei Eretz Yisrael in all the public psakim I have heard of?!

"The question of "biases" is simply not applicable to the discussion."
It absolutely is when the person in question is part of an organization that makes these biases almost explicit. Do you really think that the Chazon Ish would say that someone who is a radical feminist, and has claimed that classic halacha is traditionally unfair to women, who then continuously reinterprets gemaras in farfetched ways that overturn established halacha in favor of gender equality is NOT being biased by desired outcome?!

If the Chazon Ish would say that, I would say good for the Chazon Ish, but the Chazon Ish is wrong! I am going to use my seichel to see what is glaringly apparent!

With all due respect, someone part of an organization that *appears* to consistently favor Eretz Yisrael rulings in their conclusions, is overturning established halacha, and is not necessarily of the status of Rav Saadia Gaon -- well, I will certainly make note of the possibility of bias.

"So why don't we start asking if Rav Saadiah Gaon's opinion was based in the fact that he wanted to say it a certain day? Please."
Indeed, please. Besides being a part of the masorah, such that this falls under emunas chachamim, is there any reason to suspect Rav Saadia Gaon of this?

joshwaxman said...

"But while we're on the subject of bias, you make your own bias very clear by starting off your position with an ad hominem attack."
but I am a talmid chacham, with semicha. how could i have bias?

;)

no, certainly, i can have bias. (though not necessarily that particular one.) but i know i have bias. which is why self-reflection is important.

"you want to prevent or counteract their upholding of the Yerushalmi over the Bavli"
See these two posts, as examples:
http://parsha.blogspot.com/2007/08/ner-or-besamim-first.html
http://parsha.blogspot.com/2008/04/nine-who-look-like-ten-for-minyan.html
http://parsha.blogspot.com/2007/08/sitting-for-bentching.html

And then tell me again that I favor Bavli over Yerushalmi.

"by starting off your position with an ad hominem attack"
actually, this is the second post in at least a three-part series, so i am not starting off my position with such an attack.

read the comments on that first post, and you will see that there is a discussion of relative plausibility of two readings of the brayta. that is what actually sparked this ad hominem -- because I felt the need, at this point, to introduce the idea that plausibility judgements might well be influenced by bias.

"Let's focus on the issues at hand, namely, birchat hahama."
though i disagree that the ad hominem is irrelevant, indeed, let us do this. any comments on the plausibility of the readings of these rishonim and geonim, one way or another?

kol tuv,
josh

ps: i see you clarified a *bit* who you are. also, i apologize for the aggressive tone.

joshwaxman said...

fuddy-duddy:
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=fuddyduddy
A person, usually older, who is unwilling to accept up-to-date customs or value judgements...

joshwaxman said...

also, here is an article at Machon Shiloh which spells it out:
http://machonshilo.org/en/eng/list-articles/40-philosophy/348-harav-david-bar-hayim-a-his-torah

while you might not consider such an approach bias, i certainly would.

kt,
josh

Student V said...

"it is quite relevant. are you a cult-follower?"

A cult-follower of what? Judaism? I'm not a member of any cults.


" do you have inside knowledge into the position of Machon Shiloh, more than I do, by being a student?"

Yes. You are conjecturing about it based on ignorance and few things you saw in an article. I have asked for clarification in numerous settings. Therefore by definition I know more about it. Or are you claiming that you actually know for sure what Machon Shilo is all about and you weren't speculating here with how you described them? The impression you give with your writing is that you are rooting your "suspicions" in speculation and uncertainty. Was I supposed to interpret something else from the way you worded your "ad hominem attack?"

" if not, why should i give credence to the assertions of some pseudonymous commenter's reading of what they have presented, more than my own reading?"

It's not "a reading of what they have presented." And frankly I've already answered this question. I stated 3 categories of people who would have more information than your speculative ad hominem attack.

"I know this for a fact."
how, oh pseudonymous commenter?

Again, already answered.

It seems to me that you want the freedom to speculate but on the other hand if someone comes and clarifies by filling you in with some information, that is out of bounds and cannot be believed because that takes away your ability to speculate. And let's not forget that the speculation helps your argument due to your clearly stated bias and intention to unravel the Machon Shilo position due to its own "nationalistic bias." So to say I am not credible is simply laziness and intellectual bullying. Go ask Rabbi Bar Hayim for clarification about his position and then come back and tell me where I made a mistake if you are so confident I'm wrong. Maybe you will find out that you made a mistake.

Student V said...

"but I am a talmid chacham, with semicha. how could i have bias?"

That was said according to your own line of reasoning. Quite obviously. Even having done that according to your line of reasoning, I said how it was pointless to engage in this! Please read carefully.

"And then tell me again that I favor Bavli over Yerushalmi."

But I didn't say that you did.

Please read again: "I can easily see that you have your position because you want to prevent or counteract their upholding of the Yerushalmi over the Bavli."

In this particular case where you suspect they want to "promote Yerushalmi" your outwardly stated goal is to counteract their doing so because of your "holy caution." My statement was limited to this case. I did not accuse you of being a member of a Bavli-cult. (Or in realistic and respectful terms, 'always siding with Bavli').

Once again, I ended this particular part of the comment with a disclaimer pointing out how these types of discussions are pointless.

But you brought up something interesting with this.

Namely,
"See these two posts, as examples:
...And then tell me again that I favor Bavli over Yerushalmi."

Well, if that's a valid "proof" for you to add a "toupee" to my bald assertion or simply make it a validated assertion, then why don't you look at the fact that Rabbi Bar Hayim paskens like the Rambam on most issues? If so, how can that possibly coincide with being a "Yerushalmi-supremacist" ?

On to more pertinent things. I have a few questions and a comment.

If as you say in possibility one regarding the Rif, that he left off Abaye's statement to exclude it from the halacha, then why did he cite the preceding statement at all (ie the braita)? Or, if you are saying he does cite the preceding statement lehalacha, just not Abaye's, then what is the most logical explanation of how to carry out this deed encouraged by the Braita without any clarification offered by the Rif's psak? I wasn't entirely clear on your discussion about Shmuel.

My comment is regarding the second possibility in the Rif. " Alternatively -- much less likely -- perhaps he left it out as mere commentary." You call this "much less likely" but it seems this is not rational to pose as a possibility at all. If Abaye is describing when specifically, by definition it is not mere "commentary" and would have to be included.

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