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Chesed

Chesed (Hebrew: חֶסֶד, also Romanized: Ḥeseḏ) is a Hebrew word that means 'kindness or love between people', specifically of the devotional piety of people towards God as well as of love or mercy of God towards humanity. It is frequently used in Psalms in the latter sense, where it is traditionally translated "loving kindness" in English translations.

In Jewish theology it is likewise used of God's love for the Children of Israel, and in Jewish ethics it is used for love or charity between people.[1] Chesed in this latter sense of 'charity' is considered a virtue on its own, and also for its contribution to tikkun olam (repairing the world). It is also considered the foundation of many religious commandments practiced by traditional Jews, especially interpersonal commandments.

Chesed is also one of the ten Sephirot on the Kabbalistic Tree of Life. It is given the association of kindness and love, and is the first of the emotive attributes of the sephirot.

Etymology and translations

The root chasad has a primary meaning of 'eager and ardent desire', used both in the sense 'good, kind' and 'shame, contempt'.[2] The noun chesed inherits both senses, on one hand 'zeal, love, kindness towards someone' and on the other 'zeal, ardour against someone; envy, reproach'. In its positive is used of mutual benevolence, mercy or pity between people, of devotional piety of people towards God, as well as the grace, favour or mercy of God towards people.[3]

It occurs 248 times in the Hebrew Bible. In the majority of cases (149 times), the King James Bible (KJV) translation is mercy, following the Septuagint (LXX) eleos. Less frequent translations are: kindness (40 times), lovingkindness (30 times), goodness (12 times), kindly (five times), merciful (four times), favour (three times) and good, goodliness, pity (once each). Only two instances of the noun in its negative sense are in the text, translated reproach in Proverbs 14:34, and wicked thing in Leviticus 20:17.[3]

The translation of loving kindness in KJV is derived from the Coverdale Bible of 1535. This particular translation is used exclusively of chesed used of the benign attitude of YHWH ("the LORD") or Elohim ("God") towards his chosen, primarily invoked in Psalms (23 times), but also in the prophets, four times in Jeremiah, twice in Isaiah 63:7 and once in Hosea 2:19. While lovingkindness is now considered somewhat archaic, it is part of the traditional rendition of Psalms in English Bible translations.[4][5] Some more recent translations use steadfast love where KJV has lovingkindness.

The Septuagint has mega eleos 'great mercy', rendered as Latin misericordia. As an example of the use of chesed in Psalms, consider its notable occurrence at the beginning of Psalm 51 (חָנֵּנִי אֱלֹהִים כְּחַסְדֶּךָ, lit. 'be favourable to me, Elohim, as your chesed'):

ἐλέησόν με ὁ θεός κατὰ τὸ μέγα ἔλεός σου (LXX)
Miserere mei, Deus, secundum misericordiam tuam (Vulgate)
"God, haue thou merci on me; bi thi greet merci." (Wycliffe 1388)
"Haue mercy vpon me (o God) after thy goodnes" (Coverdale Bible 1535)
"Haue mercie vpon mee, O God, according to thy louing kindnesse" (KJV 1611)
"Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy lovingkindness" (KJV 1769, RV 1885, ASV 1901)
"Favour me, O God, according to Thy kindness" (YLT 1862)
"Have mercy on me, O God, according to thy steadfast love" (RSV 1952)
"Have mercy on me, O God, according to your steadfast love" (NRSV 1989)

In Judaism, love is often used as a shorter English translation.[6][7][8] Political theorist Daniel Elazar has suggested that chesed cannot easily be translated into English, but that it means something like 'loving covenant obligation'.[9] Other suggestions include grace[10] and compassion.[11]

Jewish ethics

In traditional musar literature (ethical literature), chesed is one of the primary virtues. The tannaic rabbi Simon the Just taught: "The world rests upon three things: Torah, service to God, and bestowing kindness" (Pirkei Avot 1:2). Chesed is here the core ethical virtue.

A statement by Rabbi Simlai in the Talmud claims that "The Torah begins with chesed and ends with chesed." This may be understood to mean that "the entire Torah is characterized by chesed, i.e. it sets forth a vision of the ideal life whose goals are behavior characterized by mercy and compassion. Alternatively, it may allude to the idea that the giving of the Torah itself is the quintessential act of chesed.[12]

In Moses ben Jacob Cordovero's kabbalistic treatise Tomer Devorah, the following are actions undertaken in imitation of the qualities of chesed:[13]

  • love God so completely that one will never forsake his service for any reason
  • provide a child with all the necessities of their sustenance and love the child
  • circumcise a child
  • visiting and healing the sick
  • giving charity to the poor
  • offering hospitality to strangers
  • attending to the dead
  • bringing a bride to the chuppah marriage ceremony
  • making peace between a person and another human being.

A person who embodies chesed is known as a chasid (hasid, חסיד), one who is faithful to the covenant and who goes "above and beyond that which is normally required"[14] and a number of groups throughout Jewish history which focus on going "above and beyond" have called themselves chasidim. These groups include the Hasideans of the Second Temple period, the Maimonidean Hasidim of medieval Egypt and Palestine, the Chassidei Ashkenaz in medieval Europe, and the Hasidic movement which emerged in eighteenth century Eastern Europe.[14]

Charitable organizations

In Modern Hebrew, חסד can take the generic meaning of 'charity', and a "chesed institution"[15] in modern Judaism may refer to any charitable organization run by religious Jewish groups or individuals. Charitable organizations described as "chesed institutions" include:

  • Bikur cholim organizations, dedicated to visiting and caring for the sick and their relatives
  • Gemach – an institution dedicated to gemilut chasadim ('providing kindness'), often with free loan funds or by lending or giving away particular types of items (toys, clothes, medical equipment, etc.). Such organizations are often named with an acronym of Gemilas chasadim such as Gemach or GM"CH. A community may have dozens of unique (and sometimes overlapping) Gemach organizations
  • Kiruv organizations – organizations designed to increase Jewish awareness among unaffiliated Jews, which is considered a form of kindness
  • Hatzolah – organizations by this name typically provide free services for emergency medical dispatch and ambulance transport (EMTs and paramedics)
  • Chevra kadisha – organizations that perform religious care for the deceased, and often provide logistical help to their families relating to autopsies, transport of the body, emergency family travel, burial, running a Shiva home, and caring for mourners
  • Chaverim (literally 'friends') – organizations going by this name typically provide free roadside assistance and emergency help with mechanical or structural problems in private homes
  • Shomrim (guardians) groups – community watch groups

In the former USSR member republics there are Jewish charities, each one often called a Hesed [ru] plus a Jewish given name, usually of a Jewish history character like Hesed Avraam in Saint Petersburg, Russia, a member of Association of Heseds of Russia.[15] They run multiple programs: daycare centres and health visitors/carers for the elderly and disabled (the latter equally available to people of non-Jewish ancestry with local government subsidies), crafts and arts societies, concerts, medical equipment rental for registered patients free or on small fees calculated from the size of the patient's pension, delivery of meals and grocery items to home stay patients, shopping subsidies for the poor, volunteer medical consulting, volunteer small repair of household items, assistance with documents processing to apply for compensation from Germany for Holocaust survivors.[16][15]

Kabbalah

The first three of the ten sephirot are the attributes of the intellect, while chesed is the first sephira of the attribute of action. In the kabbalistic Tree of life, its position is below Chokhmah, across from Gevurah and above Netzach. It is usually given four paths: to chokhmah, gevurah, tiphereth, and netzach (some Kabbalists place a path from chesed to binah as well.)

The Bahir[17] states, "What is the fourth (utterance): The fourth is the righteousness of God, His mercies and kindness with the entire world. This is the right hand of God."[18] Chesed manifests God's absolute, unlimited benevolence and kindness.[13]

The angelic order of this sphere is the Hashmallim, ruled by the Archangel Zadkiel. The opposing Qliphah is represented by the demonic order Gamchicoth (or Gha'agsheblah), ruled by the Archdemon Astaroth.

See also

References

  1. ^ Berlin, Adele; Brettler, Marc Zvi (2004). "Introduction and Annotations (Psalms)". The Jewish Study Bible. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1280-1446. ISBN 9780195297515. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  2. ^ "Strong's H2616 - chacad". Blue Letter Bible. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  3. ^ a b "Strong's H2617 - checed". Blue Letter Bible. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  4. ^ Harris, R. Laird; Archer Jr., Gleason L.; Waltke, Bruce K. "hesed". Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament. Vol. 1. p. 307. [Although] The word 'lovingkindness'…is archaic, [it is] not far from the fullness of meaning of the word [chesed or hesed].
  5. ^ Greenberg, Yudit Kornberg. Encyclopedia of Love in World Religions. Vol. 1. p. 268. The Hebrew hesed (plural hasadim) is usually translated as "grace" or "loving-kindness", but sometimes also as "mercy" or "love".
  6. ^ Adin Steinsaltz, In the beginning: discourses on Chasidic thought p. 140. My People's Prayer Book: Welcoming the night: Minchah and Ma'ariv ed. Lawrence Hoffman – Page 169
  7. ^ Miriyam Glazer, Dancing on the edge of the world: Jewish stories of faith, inspiration, and love, p. 80. "Sefer Yetzirah", trans. Aryeh Kaplan, p. 86.
  8. ^ "The Rabbinic Understanding of the Covenant", in Kinship & consent: the Jewish political tradition and its contemporary uses by Daniel Judah Elazar, p. 89
  9. ^ Chesed "is the antidote to the narrow legalism that can be a problem for covenantal systems and would render them contractual rather than covenantal" Daniel Elazar, HaBrit V'HaHesed: Foundations of the Jewish System 2010-06-21 at the Wayback Machine. Covenant and the Federal Constitution" by Neal Riemer in Publius vol. 10, No. 4 (Autumn, 1980), pp. 135–148.
  10. ^ A Rabbinic anthology, World Pub. Co., 1963
  11. ^ Schwarz, Rabbi Sidney (2008). Judaism and Justice: The Jewish Passion to Repair the World. Jewish Lights Publishing. p. 64. ISBN 9781580233538. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  12. ^ Korn, Eugene (2002). "Legal Floors and Moral Ceilings: A Jewish Understanding Of Law and Ethics" (PDF). Edah Journal. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  13. ^ a b Cordovero, Rabbi Moshe (1993). תומר דבורה [The Palm Tree of Devorah]. Targum. p. 84. ISBN 9781568710273. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  14. ^ a b Elazar, Daniel J. "Covenant as the Basis of the Jewish Political Tradition". Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  15. ^ a b c "Межрегиональная ассоциация по оказанию благотворительной помощи «Идуд Хасадим»". hesed.ru. Retrieved 2021-10-03.
  16. ^ "Главная". Хэсэд Авраам (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-10-03.
  17. ^ The Bahir: Illumination. Translated by Kaplan, Aryeh. Weiser Books. 2001. ISBN 9781609254933. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  18. ^ Green, Arthur (2004). A Guide to the Zohar. Stanford University Press. p. 30. ISBN 9780804749084.

External links

chesed, hebrew, also, romanized, Ḥeseḏ, hebrew, word, that, means, kindness, love, between, people, specifically, devotional, piety, people, towards, well, love, mercy, towards, humanity, frequently, used, psalms, latter, sense, where, traditionally, translate. Chesed Hebrew ח ס ד also Romanized Ḥeseḏ is a Hebrew word that means kindness or love between people specifically of the devotional piety of people towards God as well as of love or mercy of God towards humanity It is frequently used in Psalms in the latter sense where it is traditionally translated loving kindness in English translations In Jewish theology it is likewise used of God s love for the Children of Israel and in Jewish ethics it is used for love or charity between people 1 Chesed in this latter sense of charity is considered a virtue on its own and also for its contribution to tikkun olam repairing the world It is also considered the foundation of many religious commandments practiced by traditional Jews especially interpersonal commandments Chesed is also one of the ten Sephirot on the Kabbalistic Tree of Life It is given the association of kindness and love and is the first of the emotive attributes of the sephirot Contents 1 Etymology and translations 2 Jewish ethics 2 1 Charitable organizations 3 Kabbalah 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEtymology and translations EditThe root chasad has a primary meaning of eager and ardent desire used both in the sense good kind and shame contempt 2 The noun chesed inherits both senses on one hand zeal love kindness towards someone and on the other zeal ardour against someone envy reproach In its positive is used of mutual benevolence mercy or pity between people of devotional piety of people towards God as well as the grace favour or mercy of God towards people 3 It occurs 248 times in the Hebrew Bible In the majority of cases 149 times the King James Bible KJV translation is mercy following the Septuagint LXX eleos Less frequent translations are kindness 40 times lovingkindness 30 times goodness 12 times kindly five times merciful four times favour three times and good goodliness pity once each Only two instances of the noun in its negative sense are in the text translated reproach in Proverbs 14 34 and wicked thing in Leviticus 20 17 3 The translation of loving kindness in KJV is derived from the Coverdale Bible of 1535 This particular translation is used exclusively of chesed used of the benign attitude of YHWH the LORD or Elohim God towards his chosen primarily invoked in Psalms 23 times but also in the prophets four times in Jeremiah twice in Isaiah 63 7 and once in Hosea 2 19 While lovingkindness is now considered somewhat archaic it is part of the traditional rendition of Psalms in English Bible translations 4 5 Some more recent translations use steadfast love where KJV has lovingkindness The Septuagint has mega eleos great mercy rendered as Latin misericordia As an example of the use of chesed in Psalms consider its notable occurrence at the beginning of Psalm 51 ח נ נ י א ל ה ים כ ח ס ד ך lit be favourable to me Elohim as your chesed ἐlehson me ὁ 8eos katὰ tὸ mega ἔleos soy LXX Miserere mei Deus secundum misericordiam tuam Vulgate God haue thou merci on me bi thi greet merci Wycliffe 1388 Haue mercy vpon me o God after thy goodnes Coverdale Bible 1535 Haue mercie vpon mee O God according to thy louing kindnesse KJV 1611 Have mercy upon me O God according to thy lovingkindness KJV 1769 RV 1885 ASV 1901 Favour me O God according to Thy kindness YLT 1862 Have mercy on me O God according to thy steadfast love RSV 1952 Have mercy on me O God according to your steadfast love NRSV 1989 In Judaism love is often used as a shorter English translation 6 7 8 Political theorist Daniel Elazar has suggested that chesed cannot easily be translated into English but that it means something like loving covenant obligation 9 Other suggestions include grace 10 and compassion 11 Jewish ethics EditFurther information Jewish ethics In traditional musar literature ethical literature chesed is one of the primary virtues The tannaic rabbi Simon the Just taught The world rests upon three things Torah service to God and bestowing kindness Pirkei Avot 1 2 Chesed is here the core ethical virtue A statement by Rabbi Simlai in the Talmud claims that The Torah begins with chesed and ends with chesed This may be understood to mean that the entire Torah is characterized by chesed i e it sets forth a vision of the ideal life whose goals are behavior characterized by mercy and compassion Alternatively it may allude to the idea that the giving of the Torah itself is the quintessential act of chesed 12 In Moses ben Jacob Cordovero s kabbalistic treatise Tomer Devorah the following are actions undertaken in imitation of the qualities of chesed 13 love God so completely that one will never forsake his service for any reason provide a child with all the necessities of their sustenance and love the child circumcise a child visiting and healing the sick giving charity to the poor offering hospitality to strangers attending to the dead bringing a bride to the chuppah marriage ceremony making peace between a person and another human being A person who embodies chesed is known as a chasid hasid חסיד one who is faithful to the covenant and who goes above and beyond that which is normally required 14 and a number of groups throughout Jewish history which focus on going above and beyond have called themselves chasidim These groups include the Hasideans of the Second Temple period the Maimonidean Hasidim of medieval Egypt and Palestine the Chassidei Ashkenaz in medieval Europe and the Hasidic movement which emerged in eighteenth century Eastern Europe 14 Charitable organizations Edit In Modern Hebrew חסד can take the generic meaning of charity and a chesed institution 15 in modern Judaism may refer to any charitable organization run by religious Jewish groups or individuals Charitable organizations described as chesed institutions include Bikur cholim organizations dedicated to visiting and caring for the sick and their relatives Gemach an institution dedicated to gemilut chasadim providing kindness often with free loan funds or by lending or giving away particular types of items toys clothes medical equipment etc Such organizations are often named with an acronym of Gemilas chasadim such as Gemach or GM CH A community may have dozens of unique and sometimes overlapping Gemach organizations Kiruv organizations organizations designed to increase Jewish awareness among unaffiliated Jews which is considered a form of kindness Hatzolah organizations by this name typically provide free services for emergency medical dispatch and ambulance transport EMTs and paramedics Chevra kadisha organizations that perform religious care for the deceased and often provide logistical help to their families relating to autopsies transport of the body emergency family travel burial running a Shiva home and caring for mourners Chaverim literally friends organizations going by this name typically provide free roadside assistance and emergency help with mechanical or structural problems in private homes Shomrim guardians groups community watch groupsIn the former USSR member republics there are Jewish charities each one often called a Hesed ru plus a Jewish given name usually of a Jewish history character like Hesed Avraam in Saint Petersburg Russia a member of Association of Heseds of Russia 15 They run multiple programs daycare centres and health visitors carers for the elderly and disabled the latter equally available to people of non Jewish ancestry with local government subsidies crafts and arts societies concerts medical equipment rental for registered patients free or on small fees calculated from the size of the patient s pension delivery of meals and grocery items to home stay patients shopping subsidies for the poor volunteer medical consulting volunteer small repair of household items assistance with documents processing to apply for compensation from Germany for Holocaust survivors 16 15 Kabbalah EditMain article Sephirot The Sefirot in Kabbalah Category Sephirot vteThe first three of the ten sephirot are the attributes of the intellect while chesed is the first sephira of the attribute of action In the kabbalistic Tree of life its position is below Chokhmah across from Gevurah and above Netzach It is usually given four paths to chokhmah gevurah tiphereth and netzach some Kabbalists place a path from chesed to binah as well The Bahir 17 states What is the fourth utterance The fourth is the righteousness of God His mercies and kindness with the entire world This is the right hand of God 18 Chesed manifests God s absolute unlimited benevolence and kindness 13 The angelic order of this sphere is the Hashmallim ruled by the Archangel Zadkiel The opposing Qliphah is represented by the demonic order Gamchicoth or Gha agsheblah ruled by the Archdemon Astaroth See also EditAgape Greek Christianity Divine love Hasid Ishq Arabic Islam Jewish views on love Metta Pali Buddhism References Edit Berlin Adele Brettler Marc Zvi 2004 Introduction and Annotations Psalms The Jewish Study Bible New York Oxford University Press pp 1280 1446 ISBN 9780195297515 Retrieved 25 October 2018 Strong s H2616 chacad Blue Letter Bible Retrieved 25 October 2018 a b Strong s H2617 checed Blue Letter Bible Retrieved 25 October 2018 Harris R Laird Archer Jr Gleason L Waltke Bruce K hesed Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament Vol 1 p 307 Although The word lovingkindness is archaic it is not far from the fullness of meaning of the word chesed or hesed Greenberg Yudit Kornberg Encyclopedia of Love in World Religions Vol 1 p 268 The Hebrew hesed plural hasadim is usually translated as grace or loving kindness but sometimes also as mercy or love Adin Steinsaltz In the beginning discourses on Chasidic thought p 140 My People s Prayer Book Welcoming the night Minchah and Ma ariv ed Lawrence Hoffman Page 169 Miriyam Glazer Dancing on the edge of the world Jewish stories of faith inspiration and love p 80 Sefer Yetzirah trans Aryeh Kaplan p 86 The Rabbinic Understanding of the Covenant in Kinship amp consent the Jewish political tradition and its contemporary uses by Daniel Judah Elazar p 89 Chesed is the antidote to the narrow legalism that can be a problem for covenantal systems and would render them contractual rather than covenantal Daniel Elazar HaBrit V HaHesed Foundations of the Jewish System Archived 2010 06 21 at the Wayback Machine Covenant and the Federal Constitution by Neal Riemer in Publius vol 10 No 4 Autumn 1980 pp 135 148 A Rabbinic anthology World Pub Co 1963 Schwarz Rabbi Sidney 2008 Judaism and Justice The Jewish Passion to Repair the World Jewish Lights Publishing p 64 ISBN 9781580233538 Retrieved 25 October 2018 Korn Eugene 2002 Legal Floors and Moral Ceilings A Jewish Understanding Of Law and Ethics PDF Edah Journal Retrieved 25 October 2018 a b Cordovero Rabbi Moshe 1993 תומר דבורה The Palm Tree of Devorah Targum p 84 ISBN 9781568710273 Retrieved 25 October 2018 a b Elazar Daniel J Covenant as the Basis of the Jewish Political Tradition Retrieved 25 October 2018 a b c Mezhregionalnaya associaciya po okazaniyu blagotvoritelnoj pomoshi Idud Hasadim hesed ru Retrieved 2021 10 03 Glavnaya Hesed Avraam in Russian Retrieved 2021 10 03 The Bahir Illumination Translated by Kaplan Aryeh Weiser Books 2001 ISBN 9781609254933 Retrieved 25 October 2018 Green Arthur 2004 A Guide to the Zohar Stanford University Press p 30 ISBN 9780804749084 External links Edit Look up חסד in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Chesed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chesed amp oldid 1141225815 Kabbalah, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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