fbpx
Wikipedia

Capital punishment in Judaism

Capital punishment in traditional Jewish law has been defined in Codes of Jewish law dating back to medieval times, based on a system of oral laws contained in the Babylonian and Jerusalem Talmud, the primary source being the Hebrew Bible. In traditional Jewish law there are four types of capital punishment: a) stoning, b) burning by ingesting molten lead, c) strangling, and d) beheading, each being the punishment for specific offenses. Except in special cases where a king can issue the death penalty, capital punishment in Jewish law cannot be decreed upon a person unless there were a minimum of twenty-three judges (Sanhedrin) adjudicating in that person's trial who, by a majority vote, gave the death sentence, and where there had been at least two competent witnesses who testified before the court that they had seen the litigant commit the offense. Even so, capital punishment does not begin in Jewish law until the court adjudicating in this case had issued the death sentence from a specific place (formerly, the Chamber of Hewn Stone) on the Temple Mount in the city of Jerusalem.[1]

History edit

Capital and corporal punishment in Judaism have a complex history which has been a subject of extensive debate. The Bible and the Talmud specify capital punishment by the "Four Executions of the Court," — stoning, burning, decapitation, and strangulation — for the most severe transgressions,[2] and the corporal punishment of flagellation for intentional transgressions of negative commandments that do not incur one of the Four Executions. According to Talmudic law, the authority to apply capital punishment ceased with the destruction of the Second Temple.[2][3] The Mishnah states that a Sanhedrin that executes one person in seven years — or seventy years, according to Eleazar ben Azariah — is considered bloodthirsty.[4][5] During the Late Antiquity, the tendency of not applying the death penalty at all became predominant in Jewish courts.[6] In practice, where medieval Jewish courts had the power to pass and execute death sentences, they continued to do so for particularly grave offenses, although not necessarily the ones defined by the law.[2] While it was recognized that the use of capital punishment in the post-Second Temple era went beyond the biblical warrant, the rabbis who supported it believed that it could be justified by other considerations of Jewish law.[7][8] Whether Jewish communities ever practiced capital punishment according to rabbinical law, and whether the rabbis of the Talmudic era ever supported its use even in theory, has been a subject of historical and ideological debate.[9]

The 12th-century Jewish legal scholar Maimonides stated that "It is better and more satisfactory to acquit a thousand guilty persons than to put a single innocent one to death."[10] Maimonides argued that executing a defendant on anything less than absolute certainty would lead to a slippery slope of decreasing burdens of proof, until convictions would be mere "according to the judge's caprice". Maimonides was concerned about the need for the law to guard itself in public perception, to preserve its majesty, and to retain the people's respect.[11]

The position of Jewish Law on capital punishment often formed the basis of deliberations by Israel's Supreme Court. It has been carried out by Israel's judicial system only twice, in the cases of Adolf Eichmann[8] and Meir Tobianski.

Capital punishment in classical sources edit

In the Pentateuch edit

 
Sefer Torah

The institution of capital punishment in Jewish law is defined in the Law of Moses (Torah) in multiple places. The Mosaic Law provides for the death penalty to be inflicted upon those persons convicted of the following offenses:

In Rabbinic Judaism edit

 
Illustration in 1883 encyclopaedia of the ancient Jewish Sanhedrin council

The principal tractate in the Talmud that deals with such cases is Tractate Sanhedrin.

Cases concerning offenses punishable by death are decided by 23 judges.[34] The reason for this odd number is that the early rabbis had learnt that it takes at least 10 judges to convict a man, and another 10 judges to acquit a man, and the court being unequal will result in a verdict rendered by majority vote.[35] Strict regulations were in place as to how these judges were to be selected, based on their sex, age and family standing. For example, they could not appoint a judge who did not have children of his own, for he was thought to be less merciful towards other men's children.[36] Neither could they select a judge who was not a male, by way of an edict,[37][38] and which others say was because of the levity and temerity of the other sex.[39] Nor could they admit the testimony of women in a court of Jewish law where the death-penalty hinged over the accused.[40][41][42][43]

The harshness of the death penalty indicated the seriousness of the crime. Jewish philosophers argue that the whole point of corporal punishment was to serve as a reminder to the community of the severe nature of certain acts. This is why, in Jewish law, the death penalty is more of a principle than a practice. The numerous references to the death penalty in the Torah underscore the severity of the sin, rather than the expectation of death. This is bolstered by the standards of proof required for application of the death penalty, which were extremely stringent.[44] The Mishnah outlines the views of several prominent first-century CE rabbis on the subject:

"A Sanhedrin that puts a man to death once in seven years is called a murderous one. Rabbi Eliezer ben Azariah said, 'Or even once in 70 years.' Rabbi Tarfon and Rabbi Akiba said, 'If we had been in the Sanhedrin, no death sentence would ever have been passed'; Rabban Simeon ben Gamaliel said, 'If so, they would have multiplied murderers in Israel.'"[45][46]

The Talmud notes that "forty years before the destruction of the [Second] Temple, capital punishment ceased in Israel."[47] This date is traditionally put at 28 CE, a time that corresponds with the 18th year of Tiberius' reign. At this time, the Sanhedrin required the approbation of the Roman procurator of Judea before they could punish any malefactor by death. Other sources, such as Josephus, disagree. The issue is highly debated because of its relevance to the New Testament trial of Jesus.[48][49] Ancient rabbis did not like the idea of capital punishment, and interpreted the texts in a way that made the death penalty virtually non-existent.

Legal proceedings involving capital punishment were to be handled with extreme caution. In all cases of capital punishment in Jewish law, the judges are required to open their deliberations by pointing out the good qualities of the litigant and to bring up arguments about why he should be acquitted.[50][51] Only later did they hear the incriminating evidence. It was almost impossible to inflict the death penalty because the standards of proof were so high. As a result, convictions for capital offenses were rare, but did happen in Judaism.[52][53][54] The standards of evidence in capital cases include:

  • Two witnesses were required. Acceptability was limited to:
    • Adult Jewish men who were known to keep the commandments knew the written and oral law, and had legitimate professions;
    • The witnesses had to see each other at the time of the sin;
    • The witnesses had to be able to speak clearly, without any speech impediment or hearing deficit (to ensure that the warning and the response were done);
    • The witnesses could not be related to each other, or to the accused.
  • The witnesses had to see each other, and both of them had to give a warning (hatra'ah) to the person that the sin they were about to commit was a capital offense;[55]
  • This warning had to be delivered within seconds of the performance of the sin (in the time it took to say, "Peace unto you, my Rabbi and my Master");
  • In the same amount of time, the person about to sin had to both respond that s/he was familiar with the punishment, but they were going to sin anyway; and begin to commit the sin/crime;
  • However, if the accused has already committed the crime, the accused would have been given a chance to repent (i.e. Ezekiel 18:27), and if they repeated the same crime, or any other, it would lead to a death sentence. If witnesses were caught lying about the crime, they would be executed.
  • The Beth Din (rabbinical court) had to examine each witness separately; and if even one minor point of their evidence, such as eye color, was contradictory the evidence was considered contradictory, and the evidence was not heeded;
  • The Beth Din had to consist of a minimum of 23 judges;
  • The majority could not be a simple majority - the split verdict that would allow conviction had to be at least 13 to 10 in favor of conviction;
  • If Beth Din arrived at a unanimous verdict of guilty, the person was let go - the idea being that if no judge could find anything exculpatory about the accused, there was something wrong with the court.[56]
  • The witnesses were appointed by the court to be the executioners.

Where the death sentence was warranted but the court did not the jurisdiction to mete out the death sentence, such as when there were not two or more witnesses, the court had the authority to lock up the convicted individual within a cupola, or similar confined structure, and to feed them meager portions of bread and water until they died.[57]

Megillat Taanit edit

According to an oral teaching appearing in Megillat Taanit, the four modes of execution formerly used in Jewish law were mostly orally transmitted practices not explicitly stated in the Written Law of Moses, although some modes of punishment are explicitly stated. Megillat Taanit records that "On the fourth[a] [day] of [the lunar month] Tammuz, the book of decrees had been purged (עדא ספר גזרתא‎)". The Hebrew commentary (scholion) on this line brings two different explanations of this event; according to one of the explanations, the "book of decrees" was composed by the Sadducees and used by them as proof concerning the four modes of capital punishment; the Pharisees and rabbis preferred to determine the punishments via orally transmitted interpretation of scripture.[58]

Modes of punishment edit

 
Monument to Maimonides in Córdoba, Spain

The court had the power to inflict four kinds of death penalty: stoning, burning, beheading, and strangling.[59]

 
The Ten Commandments

For some crimes, the Bible specifies which form of execution is to be used. Blasphemy, idolatry, Sabbath-breaking, witchcraft, prostitution by a betrothed virgin, or deceiving her husband at marriage as to her chastity (Deut. 22:21), and the rebellious son are punished with death by stoning; bigamous marriage with a wife's mother and the prostitution of a priest's daughter is punished by burning; communal apostasy is punished by the sword.

With reference to all other capital offenses, the law ordains that the perpetrator shall die a violent death, occasionally adding the expression, "His (their) blood shall be upon him (them)." This expression applies to death by stoning.

The Bible speaks also of hanging (Deut. 21:22), but (according to the rabbinical interpretation) not as a mode of execution, but rather of exposure after death.[60][61]

The following is a list by Maimonides of the crimes punished by each form of capital punishment:[62]

Punishment by stoning edit

 
The Sabbath-breaker Stoned. Artistic impression of episode narrated in Numbers 15. James Tissot c. 1900

Death by stoning (סקילה, skila) was issued for the transgression of one of eighteen crimes, among which being those who wantonly transgressed the Sabbath-day by breaking its laws (excluding those who may have broken the Sabbath laws unintentionally), as well as a male who had a licentious connection with another male.[63] Stoning was administered by pushing the bound, convicted criminal over the side of a building, so that he fell down and died upon impact with the ground.

  • Intercourse between a man and his mother.
  • Intercourse between a man and his father's wife (not necessarily his mother).
  • Intercourse between a man and his daughter-in-law.
  • Intercourse with another man's wife from the first stage of marriage.
  • Intercourse between two men.
  • Bestiality.
  • Cursing the name of God in God's name.
  • Idol worship.
  • Giving one's progeny to Molech (child sacrifice).
  • Necromancy sorcery.
  • Pythonic sorcery.
  • Attempting to convince another to worship idols.
  • Instigating a community to worship idols.
  • Witchcraft.
  • Violating the Sabbath.
  • Cursing one's own parent.
  • Ben sorer umoreh, a stubborn and rebellious son.

Punishment by burning edit

Death by burning (שריפה, serefah) was issued for ten offenses, including prostitution and bigamous relations with one's wife and their mother.[63] Perpetrators were not burnt at the stake, but rather molten lead was poured down the perpetrator's esophagus. Alternatively, the burning was inflicted after the perpetrator had been stoned, a precedent that was established in Achan's stoning.[64]

According to Halakha, this punishment is conducted by pouring molten metal (lead, or a mixture of lead and tin) into one's throat, rather than burning at the stake.

  • The daughter of a priest who completed the second stage of marriage commits adultery.
  • Intercourse between a man and his daughter.
  • Intercourse between a man and his daughter's daughter.
  • Intercourse between a man and his son's daughter.
  • Intercourse between a man and his wife's daughter (not necessarily his own daughter).
  • Intercourse between a man and his wife's daughter's daughter.
  • Intercourse between a man and his wife's son's daughter.
  • Intercourse between a man and his mother-in-law.
  • Intercourse between a man and his mother-in-law's mother.
  • Intercourse between a man and his father-in-law's mother.

Punishment by the sword edit

Death by the sword (הרג, hereg) was issued in two cases: for wanton murder and for communal apostasy (idolatry). The perpetrators of these crimes were beheaded.[63]

  • Unlawful premeditated murder.
  • Being a citizen of an Ir nidachat, a "city that has gone astray".

Punishment by strangulation edit

Death by strangulation (חנק, chenek) was issued for six crimes, among which being a man who had a forbidden connection with another man's wife (adultery), and a person who willfully caused injury (bruise) to one of his/her parents.[61]

Contemporary attitudes towards capital punishment edit

Rabbinical courts have given up the ability to inflict any kind of physical punishment, and such punishments are left to the civil court system to administer. The modern institution of the death penalty, at least as practiced in the United States, is opposed by the major rabbinical organizations of Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform Judaism.[65][66] In a 2014 poll, 57 percent of Jews surveyed said they supported life in prison without the chance of parole over the death penalty for people convicted of murder.[67]

Orthodox Judaism edit

Orthodox Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan wrote:

"In practice, ... these punishments were almost never invoked, and existed mainly as a deterrent and to indicate the seriousness of the sins for which they were prescribed. The rules of evidence and other safeguards that the Torah provides to protect the accused made it all but impossible to actually invoke these penalties ... the system of judicial punishments could become brutal and barbaric unless administered in an atmosphere of the highest morality and piety. When these standards declined among the Jewish people, the Sanhedrin ... voluntarily abolished this system of penalties.[68]

On the other hand, Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, in a letter to then-New York Governor Hugh Carey, states: "One who murders because the prohibition to kill is meaningless to him, and he is especially cruel, and so too when murderers and evil people proliferate, they [the courts] would [should?] judge [capital punishment] to repair the issue [and] to prevent murder – for this [action of the court] saves the state."[69]

According to Yaakov Elman, imprisonment of criminals was impractically expensive under the material conditions of ancient society, which meant that the death penalty and other corporal punishments were the only available options for severe crimes. Thus, use of the death penalty in ancient society would not necessarily imply that the Jewish tradition prefers it in wealthy modern society.[70]

Conservative Judaism edit

In Conservative Judaism, the death penalty was the subject of a responsum by its Committee on Jewish Law and Standards, which has gone on record as opposing the modern institution of the death penalty:

"The Talmud ruled out the admissibility of circumstantial evidence in cases which involved a capital crime. Two witnesses were required to testify that they saw the action with their own eyes. A man could not be found guilty of a capital crime through his own confession or through the testimony of immediate members of his family. The rabbis demanded a condition of cool premeditation in the act of crime before they would sanction the death penalty; the specific test on which they insisted was that the criminal be warned prior to the crime, and that the criminal indicate by responding to the warning, that he is fully aware of his deed, but that he is determined to go through with it. In effect, this did away with the application of the death penalty. The rabbis were aware of this, and they declared openly that they found capital punishment repugnant to them… There is another reason which argues for the abolition of capital punishment. It is the fact of human fallibility. Too often, we learn of people who were convicted of crimes, and only later are new facts uncovered by which their innocence is established. The doors of the jail can be opened; in such cases, we can partially undo the injustice. But the dead cannot be brought back to life again. We regard all forms of capital punishment as barbaric and obsolete."[71]

Reform Judaism edit

Since 1959, the Central Conference of American Rabbis and the Union for Reform Judaism have formally opposed the death penalty. The Central Conference also resolved in 1979 that "both in concept and in practice, Jewish tradition found capital punishment repugnant", and there is no persuasive evidence "that capital punishment serves as a deterrent to crime".[72]

Humanistic Judaism edit

Humanistic Judaism has no policy on the use of the death penalty.[73]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Following Vered Noam, ; variant manuscripts say 10th or 14th day

References edit

  1. ^ Jerusalem Talmud (Horayot 2a): "They do not make a person liable until such instruction comes forth from the Chamber of Hewn Stone. Said Rabbi Yohanan: The reason being is that there is a teaching that [explicitly] states, 'From that place which the Lord shall choose' (Deuteronomy 17:10)." Cf. Babylonian Talmud (Rosh Hashanah 31a–b; Avodah Zarah 8b), where the Sanhedrin intentionally removed themselves from the Chamber of Hewn Stone (לשכת הגזית‎) on the Temple Mount and sat in the Hanuth, and thence removed themselves to other places (known as the ten migratory journeys of the Sanhedrin) so that the court could not execute an offending Jew, since the 23 judges needed to condemn a man to die would formerly convene in the Temple Mount to decide on capital cases.
  2. ^ a b c Haim Hermann Cohn (2008). "Capital Punishment. In the Bible & Talmudic Law". Encyclopedia Judaica. The Gale Group.
  3. ^ "[A]t a time when there is no priest [serving in the Temple], there is no judgment [of capital cases]." Sanh. 52b.
  4. ^ Louis Isaac Rabinowitz (2008). "Capital Punishment. In Practice in the Talmud". Encyclopedia Judaica. The Gale Group. Similarly, the passage in Mishnah Makkot 1:10: "A Sanhedrin that puts a man to death once in seven years is called a murderous one. R. Eleazar ben Azariah says, 'Or even once in 70 years.' R. Tarfon and R. Akiva said, 'If we had been in the Sanhedrin, no death sentence would ever have been passed'; Rabban Simeon b. Gamaliel said: 'If so, they would have multiplied murderers in Israel.'
  5. ^ Menachem Elon (2008). "Capital Punishment. In the State of Israel". Encyclopedia Judaica. The Gale Group. This refers to the statement in the Mishnah (Mak. 1:10; Mak. 7a) that a Sanhedrin that kills (gives the death penalty) once in seven years (R. Eleazer b. Azariah said: once in 70 years) is called "bloody" (ḥovlanit, the term "ḥovel" generally implying a type of injury in which there is blood).
  6. ^ Glen Warren Bowersock; Peter Brown; Oleg Grabar (1999). Late Antiquity: A Guide to the Postclassical World. Harvard University Press. p. 400. ISBN 978-0-674-51173-6.
  7. ^ Dale S. Recinella (2015). The Biblical Truth about America's Death Penalty. Northeastern University Press. p. 93. ISBN 978-1-55553-862-0.
  8. ^ a b Menachem Elon (2008). "Capital Punishment. In the State of Israel". Encyclopedia Judaica. The Gale Group.
  9. ^ Jacobs, Jill (2009). There Shall Be No Needy: Pursuing Social Justice Through Jewish Law & Tradition. Woodstock, Vt: Jewish Lights. p. 200. ISBN 978-1-58023-425-2.
  10. ^ Goldstein, Warren (2006). Defending the human spirit: Jewish law's vision for a moral society. Feldheim Publishers. p. 269. ISBN 978-1-58330-732-8. Retrieved 22 October 2010.
  11. ^ Moses Maimonides, The Commandments, Neg. Comm. 290, at 269-271 (Charles B. Chavel trans., 1967).
  12. ^ Leviticus 20:10;Deuteronomy 22:22
  13. ^ a b Weren, Wim J. C. (2012). "The Use of Violence in Punishing Adultery in Biblical Texts (Deuteronomy 22:13-29 and John 7:53-8:11)". In Villiers, Pieter G. R. de; Henten, Jan Willem van (eds.). Coping with Violence in the New Testament. BRILL. pp. 134–139. ISBN 978-90-04-22104-8.
  14. ^ Exodus 22:18; Leviticus 20:15
  15. ^ Leviticus 24:16
  16. ^ Leviticus 20:1–3
  17. ^ Deuteronomy 19:16–19
  18. ^ Deuteronomy 13:6, Deuteronomy 18:20
  19. ^ Deuteronomy 13:7–12
  20. ^ Leviticus 18:22, Leviticus 20:13
  21. ^ Leviticus 20:2, Deuteronomy 13:7–19, Deuteronomy 17:2–7
  22. ^ Leviticus 18:22, Leviticus 20:11–14
  23. ^ Deuteronomy 17:12
  24. ^ Gane, Roy (2001). "Old Testament Principles Relating to Divorce and Remarriage". Journal of the Adventist Theological Society: 44–45.
  25. ^ Exodus 21:16, Deuteronomy 24:7
  26. ^ Leviticus 21:9
  27. ^ Exodus 21:12, Leviticus 24:17, Numbers 35:16, et seq.
  28. ^ Deuteronomy 22:25–27
  29. ^ Exodus 21:15, 17, Leviticus 20:9,Deuteronomy 21:18–21
  30. ^ Exodus 31:14, Exodus 35:2, Numbers 15:32–36
  31. ^ Exodus 19:13
  32. ^ Exodus 22:17, Leviticus 20:27
  33. ^ Marcus Jastrow, Jewish Encyclopedia, s.v. Capital Punishment
  34. ^ Mishnah Sanhedrin 1:4
  35. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Sanhedrin 2a-b)
  36. ^ Maimonides, Mishne Torah (Hil. Sanhedrin 2:3)
  37. ^ Maimonides, Mishne Torah (Hil. Melakhim u'milḥamot 1:6 [5])
  38. ^ Philo of Alexandria, Special Laws (Book III, chapter XXXI (169–170)
  39. ^ Josephus (Antiquities IV.219; Against Apion 2.201)
  40. ^ Sifrei on Deuteronomy 19:15
  41. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Shevu'ot 30a, Rashi, s.v. בעדים הכתוב מדבר‎); Jerusalem Talmud (Sanhedrin 3:9)
  42. ^ Maimonides, Mishneh Torah (Hil. 'Edut 9:2)
  43. ^ Joseph Karo, Shulhan Arukh (Hoshen Mishpat, Hil. Edut 7:4; 35:14)
  44. ^ Babylonian Talmud Makkoth 7b
  45. ^ Mishna, Makkoth 1:10
  46. ^ Encyclopaedia Judaica. "Capital Punishment". The Gale Group. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  47. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Avodah Zarah 8b; Shabbat 15a); Jerusalem Talmud (Sanhedrin 1:1 [1b])
  48. ^ "Capital Punishment". www. Jewish virtual library. org.
  49. ^ Watson E. Mills; Roger Aubrey Bullard, eds. (1990). Mercer Dictionary of the Bible. Mercer University Press. p. 795. ISBN 978-0-86554-373-7.
  50. ^ Meiri (2006). Daniel Bitton (ed.). Beit HaBechirah (Chiddushei ha-Meiri) (in Hebrew). Vol. 7. Jerusalem: Hamaor Institute. p. 62. OCLC 181631040., s.v. Sanhedrin 32b, explaining Mishnah Sanhedrin 4:1
  51. ^ Maimonides (1974). Sefer Mishneh Torah - HaYad Ha-Chazakah (Maimonides' Code of Jewish Law) (in Hebrew). Vol. 7. Jerusalem: Pe'er HaTorah. pp. 26 [13b], 32 [16b] (Hil. Sanhedrin 9:1, 12:3). OCLC 122758200.
  52. ^ Mishnah Maccot, 1:10
  53. ^ "讚讬谞讬 谞驻砖讜转". cet.ac.il.
  54. ^ |Source= ENCYCLOPAEDIA JUDAICA, Second Edition, Volume 4 |Section= capital punishment | Author=[Louis Isaac Rabinowitz | Page=447
  55. ^ Maimonides (1974). Sefer Mishneh Torah - HaYad Ha-Chazakah (Maimonides' Code of Jewish Law) (in Hebrew). Vol. 7. Jerusalem: Pe'er HaTorah. p. 31 [16a] (Hil. Sanhedrin 12:2). OCLC 122758200.
  56. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Sanhedrin, page 17a. Also Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Sanhedrin, Chapter 9.
  57. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Sanhedrin 81b)
  58. ^ "מגילת תענית". www.data.ac.il.
  59. ^ Mishnah Sanhedrin 7:1
  60. ^ Sanhedrin 6:4, 75b
  61. ^ a b Marcus Jastrow, S. Mendelsohn (1906). "Capital punishment". Jewish Encyclopedia.
  62. ^ Mishneh Torah Hilchot Sanhedrin 15:10
  63. ^ a b c Marcus Jastrow, S. Mendelsohn, Jewish Encyclopedia, s.v. Capital Punishment
  64. ^ Bar, Shaul (2012). "The Punishment of Burning in the Hebrew Bible" (PDF). The University of Memphis. (PDF) from the original on 2018-12-22.
  65. ^ "The Death Penalty in Jewish Tradition." My Jewish Learning. 20 January 2018
  66. ^ Biale, Rachel. Bend the Arc. 4 October 2012. 2 November 2017.
  67. ^ "Opinion Polls: Death Penalty Support and Religion". Death Penalty Information Center. Retrieved 2021-07-19.
  68. ^ Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan. Handbook of Jewish Thought, Volume II, pp. 170-71
  69. ^ Responsa Iggerot Moshe, Choshen Mishpat 2:68
  70. ^ Shalom Carmy, Progress and Punishment
  71. ^ Bokser, Ben Zion. "Statement on capital punishment, 1960." Proceedings of the Committee on Jewish Law and Standards 1927-1970, Volume III, pp. 1537-1538.
  72. ^ . Religious Action Center. Archived from the original on 2013-10-07. Retrieved 2010-09-27.
  73. ^ https://shj.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Volume-XLV-2016-Number-2-Change-Fear-and-Hope-in-the-Twenty-First-Century.pdf [bare URL PDF]

Further reading edit

  • Capital Punishment, Jewish Virtual Library
  • The Death Penalty in Jewish Tradition
  • Jewish Law Legal Briefs
  • Berkowitz, Beth A. (2002). "Decapitation and the discourse of antisyncretism in the Babylonian Talmud". Journal of the American Academy of Religion. 70 (2): 743–770. doi:10.1093/jaar/70.4.743.

capital, punishment, judaism, capital, punishment, traditional, jewish, been, defined, codes, jewish, dating, back, medieval, times, based, system, oral, laws, contained, babylonian, jerusalem, talmud, primary, source, being, hebrew, bible, traditional, jewish. Capital punishment in traditional Jewish law has been defined in Codes of Jewish law dating back to medieval times based on a system of oral laws contained in the Babylonian and Jerusalem Talmud the primary source being the Hebrew Bible In traditional Jewish law there are four types of capital punishment a stoning b burning by ingesting molten lead c strangling and d beheading each being the punishment for specific offenses Except in special cases where a king can issue the death penalty capital punishment in Jewish law cannot be decreed upon a person unless there were a minimum of twenty three judges Sanhedrin adjudicating in that person s trial who by a majority vote gave the death sentence and where there had been at least two competent witnesses who testified before the court that they had seen the litigant commit the offense Even so capital punishment does not begin in Jewish law until the court adjudicating in this case had issued the death sentence from a specific place formerly the Chamber of Hewn Stone on the Temple Mount in the city of Jerusalem 1 Contents 1 History 2 Capital punishment in classical sources 2 1 In the Pentateuch 2 2 In Rabbinic Judaism 2 3 Megillat Taanit 3 Modes of punishment 3 1 Punishment by stoning 3 2 Punishment by burning 3 3 Punishment by the sword 3 4 Punishment by strangulation 4 Contemporary attitudes towards capital punishment 4 1 Orthodox Judaism 4 2 Conservative Judaism 4 3 Reform Judaism 4 4 Humanistic Judaism 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further readingHistory editCapital and corporal punishment in Judaism have a complex history which has been a subject of extensive debate The Bible and the Talmud specify capital punishment by the Four Executions of the Court stoning burning decapitation and strangulation for the most severe transgressions 2 and the corporal punishment of flagellation for intentional transgressions of negative commandments that do not incur one of the Four Executions According to Talmudic law the authority to apply capital punishment ceased with the destruction of the Second Temple 2 3 The Mishnah states that a Sanhedrin that executes one person in seven years or seventy years according to Eleazar ben Azariah is considered bloodthirsty 4 5 During the Late Antiquity the tendency of not applying the death penalty at all became predominant in Jewish courts 6 In practice where medieval Jewish courts had the power to pass and execute death sentences they continued to do so for particularly grave offenses although not necessarily the ones defined by the law 2 While it was recognized that the use of capital punishment in the post Second Temple era went beyond the biblical warrant the rabbis who supported it believed that it could be justified by other considerations of Jewish law 7 8 Whether Jewish communities ever practiced capital punishment according to rabbinical law and whether the rabbis of the Talmudic era ever supported its use even in theory has been a subject of historical and ideological debate 9 The 12th century Jewish legal scholar Maimonides stated that It is better and more satisfactory to acquit a thousand guilty persons than to put a single innocent one to death 10 Maimonides argued that executing a defendant on anything less than absolute certainty would lead to a slippery slope of decreasing burdens of proof until convictions would be mere according to the judge s caprice Maimonides was concerned about the need for the law to guard itself in public perception to preserve its majesty and to retain the people s respect 11 The position of Jewish Law on capital punishment often formed the basis of deliberations by Israel s Supreme Court It has been carried out by Israel s judicial system only twice in the cases of Adolf Eichmann 8 and Meir Tobianski Capital punishment in classical sources editIn the Pentateuch edit nbsp Sefer Torah The institution of capital punishment in Jewish law is defined in the Law of Moses Torah in multiple places The Mosaic Law provides for the death penalty to be inflicted upon those persons convicted of the following offenses adultery for a married woman and her lover 12 13 bestiality 14 blasphemy 15 child sacrifice 16 false testimony in capital cases 17 false prophecy 18 proselytizing and promoting other religions 19 male homosexual relations 20 idolatry actual or virtual 21 incestuous relations 22 insubordination to supreme authority 23 lying about one s virginity upon marrying a spouse Deuteronomy 22 13 21 13 24 kidnapping 25 licentiousness of a priest s daughter 26 murder 27 rape committed against a betrothed woman 28 striking cursing or otherwise rebelling against parental authority 29 Sabbath breaking 30 touching Mount Sinai while God was giving Moses the Ten Commandments 31 witchcraft divination necromancy sorcery etc 32 33 In Rabbinic Judaism edit nbsp Illustration in 1883 encyclopaedia of the ancient Jewish Sanhedrin council The principal tractate in the Talmud that deals with such cases is Tractate Sanhedrin Cases concerning offenses punishable by death are decided by 23 judges 34 The reason for this odd number is that the early rabbis had learnt that it takes at least 10 judges to convict a man and another 10 judges to acquit a man and the court being unequal will result in a verdict rendered by majority vote 35 Strict regulations were in place as to how these judges were to be selected based on their sex age and family standing For example they could not appoint a judge who did not have children of his own for he was thought to be less merciful towards other men s children 36 Neither could they select a judge who was not a male by way of an edict 37 38 and which others say was because of the levity and temerity of the other sex 39 Nor could they admit the testimony of women in a court of Jewish law where the death penalty hinged over the accused 40 41 42 43 The harshness of the death penalty indicated the seriousness of the crime Jewish philosophers argue that the whole point of corporal punishment was to serve as a reminder to the community of the severe nature of certain acts This is why in Jewish law the death penalty is more of a principle than a practice The numerous references to the death penalty in the Torah underscore the severity of the sin rather than the expectation of death This is bolstered by the standards of proof required for application of the death penalty which were extremely stringent 44 The Mishnah outlines the views of several prominent first century CE rabbis on the subject A Sanhedrin that puts a man to death once in seven years is called a murderous one Rabbi Eliezer ben Azariah said Or even once in 70 years Rabbi Tarfon and Rabbi Akiba said If we had been in the Sanhedrin no death sentence would ever have been passed Rabban Simeon ben Gamaliel said If so they would have multiplied murderers in Israel 45 46 The Talmud notes that forty years before the destruction of the Second Temple capital punishment ceased in Israel 47 This date is traditionally put at 28 CE a time that corresponds with the 18th year of Tiberius reign At this time the Sanhedrin required the approbation of the Roman procurator of Judea before they could punish any malefactor by death Other sources such as Josephus disagree The issue is highly debated because of its relevance to the New Testament trial of Jesus 48 49 Ancient rabbis did not like the idea of capital punishment and interpreted the texts in a way that made the death penalty virtually non existent Legal proceedings involving capital punishment were to be handled with extreme caution In all cases of capital punishment in Jewish law the judges are required to open their deliberations by pointing out the good qualities of the litigant and to bring up arguments about why he should be acquitted 50 51 Only later did they hear the incriminating evidence It was almost impossible to inflict the death penalty because the standards of proof were so high As a result convictions for capital offenses were rare but did happen in Judaism 52 53 54 The standards of evidence in capital cases include Two witnesses were required Acceptability was limited to Adult Jewish men who were known to keep the commandments knew the written and oral law and had legitimate professions The witnesses had to see each other at the time of the sin The witnesses had to be able to speak clearly without any speech impediment or hearing deficit to ensure that the warning and the response were done The witnesses could not be related to each other or to the accused The witnesses had to see each other and both of them had to give a warning hatra ah to the person that the sin they were about to commit was a capital offense 55 This warning had to be delivered within seconds of the performance of the sin in the time it took to say Peace unto you my Rabbi and my Master In the same amount of time the person about to sin had to both respond that s he was familiar with the punishment but they were going to sin anyway and begin to commit the sin crime However if the accused has already committed the crime the accused would have been given a chance to repent i e Ezekiel 18 27 and if they repeated the same crime or any other it would lead to a death sentence If witnesses were caught lying about the crime they would be executed The Beth Din rabbinical court had to examine each witness separately and if even one minor point of their evidence such as eye color was contradictory the evidence was considered contradictory and the evidence was not heeded The Beth Din had to consist of a minimum of 23 judges The majority could not be a simple majority the split verdict that would allow conviction had to be at least 13 to 10 in favor of conviction If Beth Din arrived at a unanimous verdict of guilty the person was let go the idea being that if no judge could find anything exculpatory about the accused there was something wrong with the court 56 The witnesses were appointed by the court to be the executioners Where the death sentence was warranted but the court did not the jurisdiction to mete out the death sentence such as when there were not two or more witnesses the court had the authority to lock up the convicted individual within a cupola or similar confined structure and to feed them meager portions of bread and water until they died 57 Megillat Taanit edit According to an oral teaching appearing in Megillat Taanit the four modes of execution formerly used in Jewish law were mostly orally transmitted practices not explicitly stated in the Written Law of Moses although some modes of punishment are explicitly stated Megillat Taanit records that On the fourth a day of the lunar month Tammuz the book of decrees had been purged עדא ספר גזרתא The Hebrew commentary scholion on this line brings two different explanations of this event according to one of the explanations the book of decrees was composed by the Sadducees and used by them as proof concerning the four modes of capital punishment the Pharisees and rabbis preferred to determine the punishments via orally transmitted interpretation of scripture 58 Modes of punishment edit nbsp Monument to Maimonides in Cordoba Spain The court had the power to inflict four kinds of death penalty stoning burning beheading and strangling 59 nbsp The Ten Commandments For some crimes the Bible specifies which form of execution is to be used Blasphemy idolatry Sabbath breaking witchcraft prostitution by a betrothed virgin or deceiving her husband at marriage as to her chastity Deut 22 21 and the rebellious son are punished with death by stoning bigamous marriage with a wife s mother and the prostitution of a priest s daughter is punished by burning communal apostasy is punished by the sword With reference to all other capital offenses the law ordains that the perpetrator shall die a violent death occasionally adding the expression His their blood shall be upon him them This expression applies to death by stoning The Bible speaks also of hanging Deut 21 22 but according to the rabbinical interpretation not as a mode of execution but rather of exposure after death 60 61 The following is a list by Maimonides of the crimes punished by each form of capital punishment 62 Punishment by stoning edit See also Stoning Judaism nbsp The Sabbath breaker Stoned Artistic impression of episode narrated in Numbers 15 James Tissot c 1900 Death by stoning סקילה skila was issued for the transgression of one of eighteen crimes among which being those who wantonly transgressed the Sabbath day by breaking its laws excluding those who may have broken the Sabbath laws unintentionally as well as a male who had a licentious connection with another male 63 Stoning was administered by pushing the bound convicted criminal over the side of a building so that he fell down and died upon impact with the ground Intercourse between a man and his mother Intercourse between a man and his father s wife not necessarily his mother Intercourse between a man and his daughter in law Intercourse with another man s wife from the first stage of marriage Intercourse between two men Bestiality Cursing the name of God in God s name Idol worship Giving one s progeny to Molech child sacrifice Necromancy sorcery Pythonic sorcery Attempting to convince another to worship idols Instigating a community to worship idols Witchcraft Violating the Sabbath Cursing one s own parent Ben sorer umoreh a stubborn and rebellious son Punishment by burning edit Death by burning שריפה serefah was issued for ten offenses including prostitution and bigamous relations with one s wife and their mother 63 Perpetrators were not burnt at the stake but rather molten lead was poured down the perpetrator s esophagus Alternatively the burning was inflicted after the perpetrator had been stoned a precedent that was established in Achan s stoning 64 According to Halakha this punishment is conducted by pouring molten metal lead or a mixture of lead and tin into one s throat rather than burning at the stake The daughter of a priest who completed the second stage of marriage commits adultery Intercourse between a man and his daughter Intercourse between a man and his daughter s daughter Intercourse between a man and his son s daughter Intercourse between a man and his wife s daughter not necessarily his own daughter Intercourse between a man and his wife s daughter s daughter Intercourse between a man and his wife s son s daughter Intercourse between a man and his mother in law Intercourse between a man and his mother in law s mother Intercourse between a man and his father in law s mother Punishment by the sword edit Death by the sword הרג hereg was issued in two cases for wanton murder and for communal apostasy idolatry The perpetrators of these crimes were beheaded 63 Unlawful premeditated murder Being a citizen of an Ir nidachat a city that has gone astray Punishment by strangulation edit Death by strangulation חנק chenek was issued for six crimes among which being a man who had a forbidden connection with another man s wife adultery and a person who willfully caused injury bruise to one of his her parents 61 Committing adultery with another man s wife when it does not fall under the above criteria Wounding one s own parent Kidnapping another Israelite Prophesying falsely Prophesying in the name of other deities A sage who is guilty of insubordination in front of the grand court in the Chamber of the Hewn Stone Contemporary attitudes towards capital punishment editRabbinical courts have given up the ability to inflict any kind of physical punishment and such punishments are left to the civil court system to administer The modern institution of the death penalty at least as practiced in the United States is opposed by the major rabbinical organizations of Orthodox Conservative and Reform Judaism 65 66 In a 2014 poll 57 percent of Jews surveyed said they supported life in prison without the chance of parole over the death penalty for people convicted of murder 67 Orthodox Judaism editOrthodox Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan wrote In practice these punishments were almost never invoked and existed mainly as a deterrent and to indicate the seriousness of the sins for which they were prescribed The rules of evidence and other safeguards that the Torah provides to protect the accused made it all but impossible to actually invoke these penalties the system of judicial punishments could become brutal and barbaric unless administered in an atmosphere of the highest morality and piety When these standards declined among the Jewish people the Sanhedrin voluntarily abolished this system of penalties 68 On the other hand Rabbi Moshe Feinstein in a letter to then New York Governor Hugh Carey states One who murders because the prohibition to kill is meaningless to him and he is especially cruel and so too when murderers and evil people proliferate they the courts would should judge capital punishment to repair the issue and to prevent murder for this action of the court saves the state 69 According to Yaakov Elman imprisonment of criminals was impractically expensive under the material conditions of ancient society which meant that the death penalty and other corporal punishments were the only available options for severe crimes Thus use of the death penalty in ancient society would not necessarily imply that the Jewish tradition prefers it in wealthy modern society 70 Conservative Judaism editIn Conservative Judaism the death penalty was the subject of a responsum by its Committee on Jewish Law and Standards which has gone on record as opposing the modern institution of the death penalty The Talmud ruled out the admissibility of circumstantial evidence in cases which involved a capital crime Two witnesses were required to testify that they saw the action with their own eyes A man could not be found guilty of a capital crime through his own confession or through the testimony of immediate members of his family The rabbis demanded a condition of cool premeditation in the act of crime before they would sanction the death penalty the specific test on which they insisted was that the criminal be warned prior to the crime and that the criminal indicate by responding to the warning that he is fully aware of his deed but that he is determined to go through with it In effect this did away with the application of the death penalty The rabbis were aware of this and they declared openly that they found capital punishment repugnant to them There is another reason which argues for the abolition of capital punishment It is the fact of human fallibility Too often we learn of people who were convicted of crimes and only later are new facts uncovered by which their innocence is established The doors of the jail can be opened in such cases we can partially undo the injustice But the dead cannot be brought back to life again We regard all forms of capital punishment as barbaric and obsolete 71 Reform Judaism edit Since 1959 the Central Conference of American Rabbis and the Union for Reform Judaism have formally opposed the death penalty The Central Conference also resolved in 1979 that both in concept and in practice Jewish tradition found capital punishment repugnant and there is no persuasive evidence that capital punishment serves as a deterrent to crime 72 Humanistic Judaism edit Humanistic Judaism has no policy on the use of the death penalty 73 See also edit nbsp Judaism portal nbsp Law portal Capital punishment in Israel Death penalty in the Bible List of capital crimes in the Torah Religion and capital punishment Testimony in Jewish lawNotes edit Following Vered Noam Megillat Taanit The Scroll of Fasting variant manuscripts say 10th or 14th dayReferences edit Jerusalem Talmud Horayot 2a They do not make a person liable until such instruction comes forth from the Chamber of Hewn Stone Said Rabbi Yohanan The reason being is that there is a teaching that explicitly states From that place which the Lord shall choose Deuteronomy 17 10 Cf Babylonian Talmud Rosh Hashanah 31a b Avodah Zarah 8b where the Sanhedrin intentionally removed themselves from the Chamber of Hewn Stone לשכת הגזית on the Temple Mount and sat in the Hanuth and thence removed themselves to other places known as the ten migratory journeys of the Sanhedrin so that the court could not execute an offending Jew since the 23 judges needed to condemn a man to die would formerly convene in the Temple Mount to decide on capital cases a b c Haim Hermann Cohn 2008 Capital Punishment In the Bible amp Talmudic Law Encyclopedia Judaica The Gale Group A t a time when there is no priest serving in the Temple there is no judgment of capital cases Sanh 52b Louis Isaac Rabinowitz 2008 Capital Punishment In Practice in the Talmud Encyclopedia Judaica The Gale Group Similarly the passage in Mishnah Makkot 1 10 A Sanhedrin that puts a man to death once in seven years is called a murderous one R Eleazar ben Azariah says Or even once in 70 years R Tarfon and R Akiva said If we had been in the Sanhedrin no death sentence would ever have been passed Rabban Simeon b Gamaliel said If so they would have multiplied murderers in Israel Menachem Elon 2008 Capital Punishment In the State of Israel Encyclopedia Judaica The Gale Group This refers to the statement in the Mishnah Mak 1 10 Mak 7a that a Sanhedrin that kills gives the death penalty once in seven years R Eleazer b Azariah said once in 70 years is called bloody ḥovlanit the term ḥovel generally implying a type of injury in which there is blood Glen Warren Bowersock Peter Brown Oleg Grabar 1999 Late Antiquity A Guide to the Postclassical World Harvard University Press p 400 ISBN 978 0 674 51173 6 Dale S Recinella 2015 The Biblical Truth about America s Death Penalty Northeastern University Press p 93 ISBN 978 1 55553 862 0 a b Menachem Elon 2008 Capital Punishment In the State of Israel Encyclopedia Judaica The Gale Group Jacobs Jill 2009 There Shall Be No Needy Pursuing Social Justice Through Jewish Law amp Tradition Woodstock Vt Jewish Lights p 200 ISBN 978 1 58023 425 2 Goldstein Warren 2006 Defending the human spirit Jewish law s vision for a moral society Feldheim Publishers p 269 ISBN 978 1 58330 732 8 Retrieved 22 October 2010 Moses Maimonides The Commandments Neg Comm 290 at 269 271 Charles B Chavel trans 1967 Leviticus 20 10 Deuteronomy 22 22 a b Weren Wim J C 2012 The Use of Violence in Punishing Adultery in Biblical Texts Deuteronomy 22 13 29 and John 7 53 8 11 In Villiers Pieter G R de Henten Jan Willem van eds Coping with Violence in the New Testament BRILL pp 134 139 ISBN 978 90 04 22104 8 Exodus 22 18 Leviticus 20 15 Leviticus 24 16 Leviticus 20 1 3 Deuteronomy 19 16 19 Deuteronomy 13 6 Deuteronomy 18 20 Deuteronomy 13 7 12 Leviticus 18 22 Leviticus 20 13 Leviticus 20 2 Deuteronomy 13 7 19 Deuteronomy 17 2 7 Leviticus 18 22 Leviticus 20 11 14 Deuteronomy 17 12 Gane Roy 2001 Old Testament Principles Relating to Divorce and Remarriage Journal of the Adventist Theological Society 44 45 Exodus 21 16 Deuteronomy 24 7 Leviticus 21 9 Exodus 21 12 Leviticus 24 17 Numbers 35 16 et seq Deuteronomy 22 25 27 Exodus 21 15 17 Leviticus 20 9 Deuteronomy 21 18 21 Exodus 31 14 Exodus 35 2 Numbers 15 32 36 Exodus 19 13 Exodus 22 17 Leviticus 20 27 Marcus Jastrow Jewish Encyclopedia s v Capital Punishment Mishnah Sanhedrin 1 4 Babylonian Talmud Sanhedrin 2a b Maimonides Mishne Torah Hil Sanhedrin 2 3 Maimonides Mishne Torah Hil Melakhim u milḥamot 1 6 5 Philo of Alexandria Special Laws Book III chapter XXXI 169 170 Josephus Antiquities IV 219 Against Apion 2 201 Sifrei on Deuteronomy 19 15 Babylonian Talmud Shevu ot 30a Rashi s v בעדים הכתוב מדבר Jerusalem Talmud Sanhedrin 3 9 Maimonides Mishneh Torah Hil Edut 9 2 Joseph Karo Shulhan Arukh Hoshen Mishpat Hil Edut 7 4 35 14 Babylonian Talmud Makkoth 7b Mishna Makkoth 1 10 Encyclopaedia Judaica Capital Punishment The Gale Group Retrieved 9 August 2016 Babylonian Talmud Avodah Zarah 8b Shabbat 15a Jerusalem Talmud Sanhedrin 1 1 1b Capital Punishment www Jewish virtual library org Watson E Mills Roger Aubrey Bullard eds 1990 Mercer Dictionary of the Bible Mercer University Press p 795 ISBN 978 0 86554 373 7 Meiri 2006 Daniel Bitton ed Beit HaBechirah Chiddushei ha Meiri in Hebrew Vol 7 Jerusalem Hamaor Institute p 62 OCLC 181631040 s v Sanhedrin 32b explaining Mishnah Sanhedrin 4 1 Maimonides 1974 Sefer Mishneh Torah HaYad Ha Chazakah Maimonides Code of Jewish Law in Hebrew Vol 7 Jerusalem Pe er HaTorah pp 26 13b 32 16b Hil Sanhedrin 9 1 12 3 OCLC 122758200 Mishnah Maccot 1 10 讚讬谞讬 谞驻砖讜转 cet ac il Source ENCYCLOPAEDIA JUDAICA Second Edition Volume 4 Section capital punishment Author Louis Isaac Rabinowitz Page 447 Maimonides 1974 Sefer Mishneh Torah HaYad Ha Chazakah Maimonides Code of Jewish Law in Hebrew Vol 7 Jerusalem Pe er HaTorah p 31 16a Hil Sanhedrin 12 2 OCLC 122758200 Babylonian Talmud Tractate Sanhedrin page 17a Also Maimonides Mishneh Torah Sanhedrin Chapter 9 Babylonian Talmud Sanhedrin 81b מגילת תענית www data ac il Mishnah Sanhedrin 7 1 Sanhedrin 6 4 75b a b Marcus Jastrow S Mendelsohn 1906 Capital punishment Jewish Encyclopedia Mishneh Torah Hilchot Sanhedrin 15 10 a b c Marcus Jastrow S Mendelsohn Jewish Encyclopedia s v Capital Punishment Bar Shaul 2012 The Punishment of Burning in the Hebrew Bible PDF The University of Memphis Archived PDF from the original on 2018 12 22 The Death Penalty in Jewish Tradition My Jewish Learning 20 January 2018 Biale Rachel The Death Penalty in Jewish Teachings Bend the Arc 4 October 2012 2 November 2017 Opinion Polls Death Penalty Support and Religion Death Penalty Information Center Retrieved 2021 07 19 Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan Handbook of Jewish Thought Volume II pp 170 71 Responsa Iggerot Moshe Choshen Mishpat 2 68 Shalom Carmy Progress and Punishment Bokser Ben Zion Statement on capital punishment 1960 Proceedings of the Committee on Jewish Law and Standards 1927 1970 Volume III pp 1537 1538 Position of the Reform Movement on the Death Penalty Religious Action Center Archived from the original on 2013 10 07 Retrieved 2010 09 27 https shj org wp content uploads 2018 09 Volume XLV 2016 Number 2 Change Fear and Hope in the Twenty First Century pdf bare URL PDF Further reading editCapital Punishment Jewish Virtual Library The Death Penalty in Jewish Tradition Jewish Law Legal Briefs Berkowitz Beth A 2002 Decapitation and the discourse of antisyncretism in the Babylonian Talmud Journal of the American Academy of Religion 70 2 743 770 doi 10 1093 jaar 70 4 743 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capital punishment in Judaism amp oldid 1214897196, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.