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Mitzvah

In its primary meaning, the Hebrew word mitzvah (/ˈmɪtsvə/; Hebrew: מִצְוָה, mīṣvā [mit͡sˈva], plural מִצְווֹת mīṣvōt [mit͡sˈvot]; "commandment") refers to a commandment commanded by God to be performed as a religious duty. Jewish law (halakha) in large part consists of discussion of these commandments. According to religious tradition, there are 613 such commandments.

In its secondary meaning, the word mitzvah refers to a deed performed in order to fulfill such a commandment. As such, the term mitzvah has also come to express an individual act of human kindness in keeping with the law. The expression includes a sense of heartfelt sentiment beyond mere legal duty, as "you shall love your neighbor as yourself" (Leviticus 19:18).[1]

The opinions of the Talmudic rabbis are divided between those who seek the purpose of the mitzvot and those who do not question them. The latter argue that if the reason for each mitzvah could be determined, people might try to achieve what they see as the purpose of the mitzvah, while rejecting the mitzvah itself. The former believe that if people were to understand the reason and the purpose for each mitzvah, it would actually help them to observe and perform the mitzvah. For some mitzvot, the reason is specified in the Torah.

Hebrew Bible

The feminine noun mitzvah (מִצְוָה) occurs over 180 times in the Masoretic Text of the Hebrew Bible. The first use is in Genesis 26:5 where God says that Abraham has "obeyed my voice, and kept my charge, my commandments (מִצְוֹתַי mitzvotai), my statutes, and my laws". In the Septuagint the word is usually translated with entolē (ἐντολή).[2] In Second Temple period funeral inscriptions the epithet phil-entolos, "lover of the commandments", was sometimes inscribed on Jewish tombs.[3] Other words are also used in Hebrew for commands and statutes; the Ten Commandments (עשרת הדיברות), for example, are the "Ten Words".[4]

Enumeration

Jewish tradition states that there exist 613 commandments. This number does not appear in the Hebrew Bible. The tradition that the number is 613 is first recorded in the 3rd century CE, when Rabbi Simlai claimed it in a sermon, perhaps to make the point that a person should observe the Torah every day with his whole body.[5]

Rabbi Simlai gave as a sermon (darash Rabi Simlai): 613 commandments were communicated to Moses, 365 negative commands, corresponding to the number of solar days [in a year], and 248 positive commands, corresponding to the number of the members [bones covered with flesh] of a man's body.[6]

However, this opinion was not universally accepted. Abraham ibn Ezra observed that there were over a thousand divine commandments in the Bible, but fewer than 300 applied to his time.[5] Nachmanides found that the number was in dispute and uncertain.[5] The number 613 is a rabbinical tradition rather than an exact count.[5]

In rabbinic literature there are a number of works, mainly by the Rishonim, that attempt to enumerate 613 commandments. Probably the most famous of these is Sefer Hamitzvot by Maimonides.

Rabbinic mitzvot

The Biblical mitzvot are referred to in the Talmud as mitzvot d'oraita, translated as commandments of the Law (Torah). In addition, rabbis of later generations decreed a number of additional laws, which are known as rabbinic laws (mitzvot derabbanan). Types of rabbinic laws include the takkanah and the gezeirah.

Medieval rabbis discussed the question of why a Jew should be required to follow rabbinic mitzvot, as they were not commanded by God, but rather by the rabbis. According to Maimonides, one who keeps rabbinic mitzvot is in fact following a Biblical commandment to obey the decisions of the Jewish religious authorities (Deut. 17:11, 32:7)[7] According to Nahmanides, there is no biblical source for the obligation to keep rabbinic mitzvot.[8]

In addition, many of the specific details of the Biblical mitzvot are only derived via rabbinical application of the Oral Torah (Mishna/Gemarah); for example, the three daily prayers in any language and the recitation of the Shema (Deuteronomy 6:4-7) twice a day in any language, the binding of the tefillin and the fixing of the mezuzah (Deuteronomy 6:8-9), and the saying of Grace After Meals (Deuteronomy 8:10).

The seven rabbinic mitzvot

Seven notable mitzvot d'rabbanan are as follows:[9]

These seven rabbinical commandments are treated like Biblical commandments insofar as, prior to the performance of each, a benediction is recited ("Blessed are You, O LORD our God, King of the universe, Who has commanded us ..."). In gematria, these seven, added to the 613 Biblical commandments, form a total of 620, corresponding to the numerical value of the phrase Keter Torah ("The Crown of the Torah").[10]

Categories of mitzvot

The commandments have been divided also into three general categories: mishpatim; edot; and chukim. Mishpatim ("laws") include commandments that are deemed to be self-evident, such as not to murder and not to steal. Edot ("testimonies") commemorate important events in Jewish history. For example, the Shabbat is said to testify to the story that Hashem created the world in six days and rested on the seventh day and declared it holy. Chukim ("decrees") are commandments with no known rationale, and are perceived as pure manifestations of the Divine will.[11]

The commandments are divided into positive ("thou shalt") and negative ("thou shalt not") commandments. According to Jewish tradition, the 613 commandments contain 365 negative commandments and 248 positive commandments.

Many commandments concern only special classes of people – such as kings, Kohanim (the priesthood), Levites, or Nazarites – or are conditioned by local or temporary circumstances of the Jewish nation, as, for instance, the agricultural, sacrificial, and Levitical laws. Some are sex-dependent: for example, women are exempt from certain time-related commandments (such as shofar, sukkah, lulav, tzitzit and tefillin).[12]

Three types of negative commandments fall under the self-sacrificial principle yehareg ve'al ya'avor, meaning "One should let oneself be killed rather than violate it". These are murder, idolatry, and forbidden sexual relations.[13] For all other commandments, one must violate the commandment if the only alternative is to be killed.

According to Rabbi Ishmael, only the principal commandments were given on Mount Sinai, the remainder having been given in the Tent of Meeting. Rabbi Akiva, on the other hand, was of the opinion that they were all given on Mount Sinai, repeated in the Tent of Meeting, and declared a third time by Moses before his death.[citation needed] According to the Midrash, all divine commandments were given on Mount Sinai, and no prophet could add any new ones.[14]

Six constant mitzvot

Out of the 613 Mitzvot mentioned in the Torah, there are six mitzvot which the Sefer Hachinuch calls "constant mitzvot": "We have six mitzvot which are perpetual and constant, applicable at all times, all the days of our lives".[15]

  1. To know God, and that God created all things.
  2. Not to have any god(s) beside God
  3. To know God's Oneness.
  4. To fear God.
  5. To love God.
  6. Not to pursue the passions of your heart and stray after your eyes.

Mitzvot and Jewish law

In rabbinic thought, the commandments are usually divided into two major groups, positive commandments (obligations) – mitzvot aseh [מצות עשה‎] and negative commandments (prohibitions) – mitzvot lo ta'aseh [מצות לא תעשה‎].

The system describing the practical application of the commandments is known as Halakha. Halakha is the development of the mitzvot as contained in the Written Law (Torah), via discussion and debate in the Oral Law, as recorded in the rabbinic literature of the classical era, especially the Mishnah and the Talmud. The halakha dictates and influences a wide variety of behavior of traditionalist Jews.

 
Thousands of people participate in the mitzvah of Petter Chamor in Toronto in 2017.

Applicability in the messianic age

The majority view of classical rabbis was that the commandments will still be applicable and in force during the Messianic Age. However, a significant minority of rabbis held that most of the commandments will be nullified by, or in, the messianic era. Examples of such rabbinic views include:[citation needed]

  • that the grain-offering of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasing to God as in the days of old, and as in ancient years (Malachi 3:4)
  • that today we should observe the commandments (Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Avodah Zarah 3a, 4b); because we will not observe them in the world to come (Rashi)
  • that in the future all sacrifices, with the exception of the Thanksgiving-sacrifice, will be discontinued (Midrash Vayikra Rabbah 9:7)
  • that all sacrifices will be annulled in the future (Tanchuma Emor 19, Vayikra Rabbah 9:7)
  • that God will permit what is now forbidden (Midrash Tehillim, Mizmor 146:5)
  • that most mitzvot will no longer be in force (Babylonian Talmud, Niddah 61b and Shabbat 151b).

There is no accepted authoritative answer within Judaism as to which mitzvot, if any, would be annulled in the Messianic era. This is a subject of theoretical debate and, not being viewed as an immediately practical question, is usually passed over in favor of answering questions of the practical halakha.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Definition of MITZVAH". www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 2019-12-17.
  2. ^ Philip Leroy Culbertson, A word fitly spoken, 1995, p. 73. "See also Lieberman, Texts and Studies, 212, where he shows that the Greek entolē is parallel to mitzvah, both coming to suggest a particular emphasis on charitable alms."
  3. ^ The Journal of Jewish studies Volume 51, 2000 "Note, however, by way of example, the funerary epithet philentolos (lover of the commandments), coined from the stock LXX word for commandment, entole (Heb. mitzvah), and the LXX allusions in that most favoured of all Romano-Jewish ..."
  4. ^ Mark Rooker, The Ten Commandments: Ethics for the Twenty-First Century, 2010, p. 3. "The Significance of the Ten Commandments in the Old Testament" The Ten Commandments are literally the “Ten Words” (aseret haddebarêm) in Hebrew. The use of the term dabar, “word”, in this phrase distinguishes these laws from the rest of ..."
  5. ^ a b c d Drazin, Israel (2009). "Chapter 31: Are There 613 Biblical Commandments?". Maimonides and the Biblical Prophets. Gefen Publishing House Ltd. ISBN 9789652294302.
  6. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Makkoth 23b
  7. ^ Sefer HaMitzvot, Shoresh 1; see also Shabbat 23a
  8. ^ Nahmanides, Hasagot to Sefer HaMitzvot
  9. ^ This list is first mentioned in Keter Torah by R' David Vital, and later in the Tanya.
  10. ^ Vital, Dovid bar Shlomo (1536). כתר תורה [Keser Torah] (in Hebrew). Istanbul. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  11. ^ . NSW Board of Jewish Education. New South Wales Board of Jewish Education. Archived from the original on 16 August 2010. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  12. ^ Talmud Kiddushin 29a
  13. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Sanhedrin 74a
  14. ^ Midrash Sifra to Leviticus 27:34
  15. ^ Sefer Hachinuch, introduction

mitzvah, this, article, about, beliefs, judaism, jewish, rites, passage, primary, meaning, hebrew, word, mitzvah, hebrew, mīṣvā, sˈva, plural, וו, mīṣvōt, sˈvot, commandment, refers, commandment, commanded, performed, religious, duty, jewish, halakha, large, p. This article is about beliefs in Judaism For the Jewish rites of passage see Bar and Bat Mitzvah In its primary meaning the Hebrew word mitzvah ˈ m ɪ t s v e Hebrew מ צ ו ה miṣva mit sˈva plural מ צ וו ת miṣvōt mit sˈvot commandment refers to a commandment commanded by God to be performed as a religious duty Jewish law halakha in large part consists of discussion of these commandments According to religious tradition there are 613 such commandments In its secondary meaning the word mitzvah refers to a deed performed in order to fulfill such a commandment As such the term mitzvah has also come to express an individual act of human kindness in keeping with the law The expression includes a sense of heartfelt sentiment beyond mere legal duty as you shall love your neighbor as yourself Leviticus 19 18 1 The opinions of the Talmudic rabbis are divided between those who seek the purpose of the mitzvot and those who do not question them The latter argue that if the reason for each mitzvah could be determined people might try to achieve what they see as the purpose of the mitzvah while rejecting the mitzvah itself The former believe that if people were to understand the reason and the purpose for each mitzvah it would actually help them to observe and perform the mitzvah For some mitzvot the reason is specified in the Torah Contents 1 Hebrew Bible 2 Enumeration 3 Rabbinic mitzvot 3 1 The seven rabbinic mitzvot 4 Categories of mitzvot 5 Six constant mitzvot 6 Mitzvot and Jewish law 6 1 Applicability in the messianic age 7 See also 8 ReferencesHebrew Bible EditThe feminine noun mitzvah מ צ ו ה occurs over 180 times in the Masoretic Text of the Hebrew Bible The first use is in Genesis 26 5 where God says that Abraham has obeyed my voice and kept my charge my commandments מ צ ו ת י mitzvotai my statutes and my laws In the Septuagint the word is usually translated with entole ἐntolh 2 In Second Temple period funeral inscriptions the epithet phil entolos lover of the commandments was sometimes inscribed on Jewish tombs 3 Other words are also used in Hebrew for commands and statutes the Ten Commandments עשרת הדיברות for example are the Ten Words 4 Enumeration EditMain article 613 commandments Jewish tradition states that there exist 613 commandments This number does not appear in the Hebrew Bible The tradition that the number is 613 is first recorded in the 3rd century CE when Rabbi Simlai claimed it in a sermon perhaps to make the point that a person should observe the Torah every day with his whole body 5 Rabbi Simlai gave as a sermon darash Rabi Simlai 613 commandments were communicated to Moses 365 negative commands corresponding to the number of solar days in a year and 248 positive commands corresponding to the number of the members bones covered with flesh of a man s body 6 However this opinion was not universally accepted Abraham ibn Ezra observed that there were over a thousand divine commandments in the Bible but fewer than 300 applied to his time 5 Nachmanides found that the number was in dispute and uncertain 5 The number 613 is a rabbinical tradition rather than an exact count 5 In rabbinic literature there are a number of works mainly by the Rishonim that attempt to enumerate 613 commandments Probably the most famous of these is Sefer Hamitzvot by Maimonides Rabbinic mitzvot EditMain article De oraita and derabanan The Biblical mitzvot are referred to in the Talmud as mitzvot d oraita translated as commandments of the Law Torah In addition rabbis of later generations decreed a number of additional laws which are known as rabbinic laws mitzvot derabbanan Types of rabbinic laws include the takkanah and the gezeirah Medieval rabbis discussed the question of why a Jew should be required to follow rabbinic mitzvot as they were not commanded by God but rather by the rabbis According to Maimonides one who keeps rabbinic mitzvot is in fact following a Biblical commandment to obey the decisions of the Jewish religious authorities Deut 17 11 32 7 7 According to Nahmanides there is no biblical source for the obligation to keep rabbinic mitzvot 8 In addition many of the specific details of the Biblical mitzvot are only derived via rabbinical application of the Oral Torah Mishna Gemarah for example the three daily prayers in any language and the recitation of the Shema Deuteronomy 6 4 7 twice a day in any language the binding of the tefillin and the fixing of the mezuzah Deuteronomy 6 8 9 and the saying of Grace After Meals Deuteronomy 8 10 The seven rabbinic mitzvot Edit Seven notable mitzvot d rabbanan are as follows 9 To recite a blessing for each enjoyment To ritually wash the hands before eating bread To prepare lights in advance of Shabbat to have peace in the home and to act in contradiction to customs of Karaite Judaism To construct an eruv to permit carrying to and within public areas on Shabbat To recite the Hallel psalms on holy days To light the Hanukkah lights To read the Scroll of Esther on PurimThese seven rabbinical commandments are treated like Biblical commandments insofar as prior to the performance of each a benediction is recited Blessed are You O LORD our God King of the universe Who has commanded us In gematria these seven added to the 613 Biblical commandments form a total of 620 corresponding to the numerical value of the phrase Keter Torah The Crown of the Torah 10 Categories of mitzvot EditThe commandments have been divided also into three general categories mishpatim edot and chukim Mishpatim laws include commandments that are deemed to be self evident such as not to murder and not to steal Edot testimonies commemorate important events in Jewish history For example the Shabbat is said to testify to the story that Hashem created the world in six days and rested on the seventh day and declared it holy Chukim decrees are commandments with no known rationale and are perceived as pure manifestations of the Divine will 11 The commandments are divided into positive thou shalt and negative thou shalt not commandments According to Jewish tradition the 613 commandments contain 365 negative commandments and 248 positive commandments Many commandments concern only special classes of people such as kings Kohanim the priesthood Levites or Nazarites or are conditioned by local or temporary circumstances of the Jewish nation as for instance the agricultural sacrificial and Levitical laws Some are sex dependent for example women are exempt from certain time related commandments such as shofar sukkah lulav tzitzit and tefillin 12 Three types of negative commandments fall under the self sacrificial principle yehareg ve al ya avor meaning One should let oneself be killed rather than violate it These are murder idolatry and forbidden sexual relations 13 For all other commandments one must violate the commandment if the only alternative is to be killed According to Rabbi Ishmael only the principal commandments were given on Mount Sinai the remainder having been given in the Tent of Meeting Rabbi Akiva on the other hand was of the opinion that they were all given on Mount Sinai repeated in the Tent of Meeting and declared a third time by Moses before his death citation needed According to the Midrash all divine commandments were given on Mount Sinai and no prophet could add any new ones 14 Six constant mitzvot EditOut of the 613 Mitzvot mentioned in the Torah there are six mitzvot which the Sefer Hachinuch calls constant mitzvot We have six mitzvot which are perpetual and constant applicable at all times all the days of our lives 15 To know God and that God created all things Not to have any god s beside God To know God s Oneness To fear God To love God Not to pursue the passions of your heart and stray after your eyes Mitzvot and Jewish law EditMain article Halakha In rabbinic thought the commandments are usually divided into two major groups positive commandments obligations mitzvot aseh מצות עשה and negative commandments prohibitions mitzvot lo ta aseh מצות לא תעשה The system describing the practical application of the commandments is known as Halakha Halakha is the development of the mitzvot as contained in the Written Law Torah via discussion and debate in the Oral Law as recorded in the rabbinic literature of the classical era especially the Mishnah and the Talmud The halakha dictates and influences a wide variety of behavior of traditionalist Jews Thousands of people participate in the mitzvah of Petter Chamor in Toronto in 2017 Applicability in the messianic age Edit The majority view of classical rabbis was that the commandments will still be applicable and in force during the Messianic Age However a significant minority of rabbis held that most of the commandments will be nullified by or in the messianic era Examples of such rabbinic views include citation needed that the grain offering of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasing to God as in the days of old and as in ancient years Malachi 3 4 that today we should observe the commandments Babylonian Talmud Tractate Avodah Zarah 3a 4b because we will not observe them in the world to come Rashi that in the future all sacrifices with the exception of the Thanksgiving sacrifice will be discontinued Midrash Vayikra Rabbah 9 7 that all sacrifices will be annulled in the future Tanchuma Emor 19 Vayikra Rabbah 9 7 that God will permit what is now forbidden Midrash Tehillim Mizmor 146 5 that most mitzvot will no longer be in force Babylonian Talmud Niddah 61b and Shabbat 151b There is no accepted authoritative answer within Judaism as to which mitzvot if any would be annulled in the Messianic era This is a subject of theoretical debate and not being viewed as an immediately practical question is usually passed over in favor of answering questions of the practical halakha See also EditAveira Transgression Dharma Hindu Buddhist Sikh Emil Fackenheim Fard Islamic Law given to Moses at Sinai Mitzvah goreret mitzvah Pay it forward Seven Laws of Noah Tao Chinese VolunteerismReferences Edit Definition of MITZVAH www merriam webster com Retrieved 2019 12 17 Philip Leroy Culbertson A word fitly spoken 1995 p 73 See also Lieberman Texts and Studies 212 where he shows that the Greek entole is parallel to mitzvah both coming to suggest a particular emphasis on charitable alms The Journal of Jewish studies Volume 51 2000 Note however by way of example the funerary epithet philentolos lover of the commandments coined from the stock LXX word for commandment entole Heb mitzvah and the LXX allusions in that most favoured of all Romano Jewish Mark Rooker The Ten Commandments Ethics for the Twenty First Century 2010 p 3 The Significance of the Ten Commandments in the Old Testament The Ten Commandments are literally the Ten Words aseret haddebarem in Hebrew The use of the term dabar word in this phrase distinguishes these laws from the rest of a b c d Drazin Israel 2009 Chapter 31 Are There 613 Biblical Commandments Maimonides and the Biblical Prophets Gefen Publishing House Ltd ISBN 9789652294302 Babylonian Talmud Makkoth 23b Sefer HaMitzvot Shoresh 1 see also Shabbat 23a Nahmanides Hasagot to Sefer HaMitzvot This list is first mentioned in Keter Torah by R David Vital and later in the Tanya Vital Dovid bar Shlomo 1536 כתר תורה Keser Torah in Hebrew Istanbul Retrieved January 15 2013 Mitzvot NSW Board of Jewish Education New South Wales Board of Jewish Education Archived from the original on 16 August 2010 Retrieved 29 September 2014 Talmud Kiddushin 29a Babylonian Talmud Sanhedrin 74a Midrash Sifra to Leviticus 27 34 Sefer Hachinuch introduction Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mitzvah amp oldid 1130478651, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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