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Judaism by Abrahams, Israel - CHAPTER III

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Judaism

CHAPTER III

AR­TI­CLES OF FAITH

It is of­ten said that Ju­daism left be­lief free while it put con­duct in­to fet­ters. Nei­ther half of this as­ser­tion is strict­ly true. Be­lief was not free al­to­geth­er; con­duct was not al­to­geth­er con­trolled. In the _Mish­nah_ (San­hedrin, x. 1) cer­tain class­es of un­be­liev­ers are pro­nounced por­tion­less in the world to come. Among those ex­clud­ed from Par­adise are men who de­ny the res­ur­rec­tion of the dead, and men who refuse as­sent to the doc­trine of the Di­vine ori­gin of the Torah, or Scrip­ture. Thus it can­not be said that be­lief was, in the Rab­binic sys­tem, per­fect­ly free. Equal­ly in­ac­cu­rate is the as­ser­tion that con­duct was en­tire­ly a mat­ter of pre­scrip­tion. Not on­ly were men praised for works of su­pereroga­tion, per­for­mance of more than the Law re­quired; not on­ly were there im­por­tant di­ver­gences in the prac­ti­cal rules of con­duct for­mu­lat­ed by the var­ious Rab­bis; but there was a whole class of ac­tions de­scribed as ‘mat­ters giv­en over to the heart,’ del­icate re­fine­ments of con­duct which the law left un­touched and were a con­cern ex­clu­sive­ly of the feel­ing, the pri­vate judg­ment of the in­di­vid­ual. The right of pri­vate judg­ment was pas­sion­ate­ly in­sist­ed on in mat­ters of con­duct, as when Rab­bi Joshua re­fused to be guid­ed as to his prac­ti­cal de­ci­sions by the Daugh­ter of the Voice, the su­per­nat­ural ut­ter­ance from on high. The Law, he con­tend­ed, is on earth, not in heav­en; and man must be his own judge in ap­ply­ing the Law to his own life and time. And, the Tal­mud adds, God Him­self an­nounced that Rab­bi Joshua was right.

Thus there was nei­ther com­plete flu­id­ity of doc­trine nor com­plete rigid­ity of con­duct. There was free­dom of con­duct with­in the law, and there was law with­in free­dom of doc­trine.

But Dr. Emil Hirsch puts the case fair­ly when he says: ‘In the same sense as Chris­tian­ity or Is­lam, Ju­daism can­not be cred­it­ed with Ar­ti­cles of Faith. Many at­tempts have in­deed been made at sys­tem­atis­ing and re­duc­ing to a fixed phrase­ol­ogy and se­quence the con­tents of the Jew­ish re­li­gion. But these have al­ways lacked the one es­sen­tial el­ement: au­thor­ita­tive sanc­tion on the part of a supreme ec­cle­si­as­ti­cal body’ (_Jew­ish En­cy­clo­pe­dia_, ii. 148).

Since the epoch of the Great San­hedrin, there has been no cen­tral au­thor­ity recog­nised through­out Jew­ry. The Jew­ish or­gan­isa­tion has long been con­gre­ga­tion­al. Since the fourth cen­tu­ry there has been no body with any ju­ris­dic­tion over the mass of Jews. At that date the Cal­en­dar was fixed by as­tro­nom­ical cal­cu­la­tions. The Pa­tri­arch, in Baby­lon, there­by vol­un­tar­ily aban­doned the hold he had pre­vi­ous­ly had over the scat­tered Jews, for it was no longer the fi­at of the Pa­tri­arch that set­tled the dates of the Fes­ti­vals. While there was some­thing like a cen­tral au­thor­ity, the Canon of Scrip­ture had been fixed by Syn­ods, but there is no record of any at­tempt to pro­mul­gate ar­ti­cles of faith. Dur­ing the re­volt against Hadri­an an As­sem­bly of Rab­bis was held at Ly­dda. It was then de­cid­ed that a Jew must yield his life rather than ac­cept safe­ty from the Ro­man pow­er, if such con­for­mi­ty in­volved one of the three of­fences: idol­atry, mur­der, and un­chasti­ty (in­clud­ing, in­cest and adul­tery). But while this de­ci­sion throws a favourable light on the Rab­binic the­ory of life, it can in no sense be called a fix­ation of a creed. There were nu­mer­ous syn­ods in the Mid­dle Ages, but they in­vari­ably dealt with prac­ti­cal morals or with the prob­lems which arose from time to time in re­gard to the re­la­tions be­tween Jews and their Chris­tian neigh­bours. It is true that we oc­ca­sion­al­ly read of ex­com­mu­ni­ca­tions for heresy. But in the case, for in­stance, of Spinoza, the Am­ster­dam Syn­agogue was much more anx­ious to dis­so­ci­ate it­self from the here­sies of Spinoza than to com­pel Spinoza to con­form to the be­liefs of the Syn­agogue. And though this pow­er of ex­com­mu­ni­ca­tion might have been em­ployed by the me­di­ae­val Rab­bis to en­force the ac­cep­tance of a creed, in point of fact no such step was ev­er tak­en.

Since the time of Moses Mendelssohn (1728-1786), the chief Jew­ish dog­ma has been that Ju­daism has no dog­mas. In the sense as­signed above this is clear­ly true. Dog­mas im­posed by an au­thor­ity able and will­ing to en­force con­for­mi­ty and pun­ish dis­sent are non-​ex­is­tent in Ju­daism. In old­en times mem­ber­ship of the re­li­gion of Ju­daism was al­most en­tire­ly a ques­tion of birth and race, not of con­fes­sion. Pros­elytes were ad­mit­ted by cir­cum­ci­sion and bap­tism, and noth­ing be­yond an ac­cep­tance of the Uni­ty of God and the ab­ju­ra­tion of idol­atry is even now re­quired by way of pro­fes­sion from a pros­elyte. At the same time the ear­li­est pas­sage put in­to the pub­lic litur­gy was the She­ma’ (Deuteron­omy vi. 4-9), in which the uni­ty of God and the du­ty to love God are ex­pressed. The Ten Com­mand­ments were al­so re­cit­ed dai­ly in the Tem­ple. It is in­struc­tive to note the rea­son giv­en for the sub­se­quent re­moval of the Deca­logue from the dai­ly litur­gy. It was feared that some might as­sume that the Deca­logue com­prised the whole of the bind­ing law. Hence the promi­nent po­si­tion giv­en to them in the Tem­ple ser­vice was no longer as­signed to the Ten Com­mand­ments in the rit­ual of the Syn­agogue. In mod­ern times, how­ev­er, there is a grow­ing prac­tice of read­ing the Deca­logue ev­ery Sab­bath day.

What we do find in Phar­isa­ic Ju­daism, and this is the re­al an­swer to Har­nack (_supra_, p. 15), is an at­tempt to re­duce the whole Law to cer­tain fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ples. When a would-​be pros­elyte ac­cost­ed Hil­lel, in the reign of Herod, with the de­mand that the Rab­bi should com­mu­ni­cate the whole of Ju­daism while the ques­tion­er stood on one foot, Hil­lel made the fa­mous re­ply: ‘What thou hat­est do un­to no man; that is the whole Law, the rest is com­men­tary.’ This re­calls an­oth­er fa­mous sum­mari­sa­tion, that giv­en by Je­sus lat­er on in the Gospel. A lit­tle more than a cen­tu­ry lat­er, Ak­iba said that the com­mand to love one’s neigh­bour is the fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ple of the Law. Ben Az­zai chose for this dis­tinc­tion an­oth­er sen­tence: ‘This is the book of the gen­er­ations of man,’ im­ply­ing the equal­ity of all men in re­gard to the love borne by God for His crea­tures. An­oth­er Rab­bi, Sim­lai (third cen­tu­ry), has this re­mark­able say­ing: ‘Six hun­dred and thir­teen pre­cepts were im­part­ed un­to Moses, three hun­dred and six­ty-​five neg­ative (in cor­re­spon­dence with the days of the so­lar year), and two hun­dred and forty-​eight pos­itive (in cor­re­spon­dence with the num­ber of a man’s limbs). David came and es­tab­lished them as eleven, as it is writ­ten: A psalm of David–Lord who shall so­journ in Thy tent, who shall dwell in Thy holy moun­tain? (i) He that walketh up­right­ly and (ii) wor­keth righ­teous­ness and (iii) speaketh the truth in his heart. (iv) He that back­biteth not with his tongue, (v) nor doeth evil to his neigh­bour, (vi) nor taketh up a re­proach against an­oth­er; (vii) in whose eyes a repro­bate is de­spised, (vi­ii) but who hon­oureth them that fear the Lord. (ix) He that sweareth to his own hurt, and changeth not; (x) He that put­teth not out his mon­ey to usury, (xi) nor taketh a bribe against the in­no­cent. He that doeth these things shall nev­er be moved. Thus David re­duced the Law to eleven prin­ci­ples. Then came Mic­ah and re­duced them to three, as it is writ­ten: ‘What doth the Lord re­quire of thee but (i) to do jus­tice, (ii) to love mer­cy, and (iii) to walk humbly with thy God? Then came Hab­bakuk and made the whole Law stand on one fun­da­men­tal idea, ‘The righ­teous man liveth by his faith’ (Makkoth, 23 b).

This de­sire to find one or a few gen­er­al fun­da­men­tal pas­sages on which the whole Scrip­ture might be seen to base it­self is, how­ev­er, far re­moved from any­thing of the na­ture of the Chris­tian Creeds or of the Mo­hammedan Kalimah. And when we re­mem­ber that the Phar­isees and Sad­ducees dif­fered on ques­tions of doc­trine (such as the be­lief in im­mor­tal­ity held by the for­mer and re­ject­ed by the lat­ter), it be­comes clear that the ab­sence of a for­mal dec­la­ra­tion of faith must have been de­lib­er­ate. The most that was done was to in­tro­duce in­to the Litur­gy a para­graph in which the as­sem­bled wor­ship­pers de­clared their as­sent to the truth and per­ma­nent va­lid­ity of the Word of God. Af­ter the She­ma’ (whose con­tents are sum­marised above), the as­sem­bled wor­ship­pers dai­ly re­cit­ed a pas­sage in which they said (and still say): ‘True and firm is this Thy word un­to us for ev­er…. True is it that Thou art in­deed our God … and there is none be­side Thee.’

Af­ter all, the dif­fer­ence be­tween Phar­isee and Sad­ducee was po­lit­ical rather than the­olog­ical. It was not till Ju­daism came in­to con­tact, con­tact alike of at­trac­tion and re­pul­sion, with oth­er sys­tems that a de­sire or a need for for­mu­lat­ing Ar­ti­cles of Faith was felt. Phi­lo, com­ing un­der the Hel­lenic spir­it, was thus the first to make the at­tempt. In the last chap­ter of the tract on the Cre­ation (_De Opi­fi­co_, lxi.), Phi­lo enu­mer­ates what he terms the five most beau­ti­ful lessons, su­pe­ri­or to all oth­ers. These are–(i) God is; (ii) God is One; (iii) the World was cre­at­ed (and is not eter­nal); (iv) the World is one, like un­to God in sin­gle­ness; and (v) God ex­er­cis­es a con­tin­ual prov­idence for the ben­efit of the world, car­ing for His crea­tures like a par­ent for his chil­dren.

Phi­lo’s lead found no im­ita­tors. It was not for many cen­turies that two caus­es led the Syn­agogue to for­mu­late a creed. And even then it was not the Syn­agogue as a body that act­ed, nor was it a creed that re­sult­ed. The first cause was the rise of sects with­in the Syn­agogue. Of these sects the most im­por­tant was that of the Karaites or Scrip­tural­ists. Re­ject­ing tra­di­tion, the Karaites ex­pound­ed their be­liefs both as a jus­ti­fi­ca­tion of them­selves against the Tra­di­tion­al­ists and pos­si­bly as a rem­edy against their own ten­den­cy to di­vide with­in their own or­der in­to small­er sects. In the mid­dle of the twelfth cen­tu­ry the Karaite Ju­dah Hadas­si of Con­stantino­ple ar­ranged the whole Pen­ta­teuch un­der the head­ings of the Deca­logue, much as Phi­lo had done long be­fore. And so he for­mu­lates ten dog­mas of Ju­daism. These are–(i) Cre­ation (as op­posed to the Aris­totelian doc­trine of the eter­ni­ty of the world); (ii) the ex­is­tence of God; (iii) God is one and in­cor­po­re­al; (iv) Moses and the oth­er canon­ical prophets were called by God; (v) the Law is the Word of God, it is com­plete, and the Oral Tra­di­tion was un­nec­es­sary; (vi) the Law must be read by the Jew in the orig­inal He­brew; (vii) the Tem­ple of Jerusalem was the place cho­sen by God for His man­ifes­ta­tion; (vi­ii) the Res­ur­rec­tion of the dead; (ix) the Com­ing of Mes­si­ah, son of David; (x) Fi­nal Judg­ment and Ret­ri­bu­tion.

With­in the main body of the Syn­agogue we have to wait for the same mo­ment for a for­mu­la­tion of Ar­ti­cles of Faith. Mai­monides (1135-1204) was a younger con­tem­po­rary of Hadas­si; he it was that drew up the one and on­ly set of prin­ci­ples which have ev­er en­joyed wide au­thor­ity in Ju­daism. Be­fore Mai­monides there had been some in­cli­na­tion to­wards a creed, but he is the first to put one in­to set terms. Mai­monides was much in­flu­enced by Aris­totelian­ism, and this gave him an im­pulse to­wards a log­ical state­ment of the tenets of Ju­daism. On the oth­er side, he was deeply con­cerned by the crit­icism of Ju­daism from the side of Mo­hammedan the­olo­gians. The lat­ter con­tend­ed, in par­tic­ular, that the bib­li­cal an­thro­po­mor­phisms were de­struc­tive of a be­lief in the pure spir­itu­al­ity of God. Hence Mai­monides de­vot­ed much of his great trea­tise, _Guide for the Per­plexed_, to a philo­soph­ical al­le­gori­sa­tion of the hu­man terms ap­plied to God in the He­brew Bible. In his Com­men­tary on the _Mish­nah_ (San­hedrin, In­tro­duc­tion to Chelek), Mai­monides de­clares ‘The roots of our law and its fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ples are thir­teen.’ These are–(i) Be­lief in the ex­is­tence of God, the Cre­ator; (ii) be­lief in the uni­ty of God; (iii) be­lief in the in­cor­po­re­al­ity of God; (iv) be­lief in the pri­or­ity and eter­ni­ty of God; (v) be­lief that to God and to God alone wor­ship must be of­fered; (vi) be­lief in prophe­cy; (vii) be­lief that Moses was the great­est of all prophets; (vi­ii) be­lief that the Law was re­vealed from heav­en; (ix) be­lief that the Law will nev­er be ab­ro­gat­ed, and that no oth­er Law will ev­er come from God; (x) be­lief that God knows the works of men; (xi) be­lief in re­ward and pun­ish­ment; (xii) be­lief in the com­ing of the Mes­si­ah; (xi­ii) be­lief in the res­ur­rec­tion of the dead.’

Now here we have for the first time a set of be­liefs which were a test of Ju­daism. Mai­monides leaves no doubt as to his mean­ing. For he con­clud­ed by say­ing: ‘When all these prin­ci­ples of faith are in the safe keep­ing of a man, and his con­vic­tion of them is well es­tab­lished, he then en­ters in­to the gen­er­al body of Is­rael’; and, on the oth­er hand: ‘When, how­ev­er, a man breaks away from any one of these fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ples of be­lief, then of him it is said that he has gone out of the gen­er­al body of Is­rael and he de­nies the root-​truths of Ju­daism.’ This for­mu­la­tion of a dog­mat­ic test was nev­er con­firmed by any body of Rab­bis. No Jew was ev­er ex­com­mu­ni­cat­ed for declar­ing his dis­sent from these ar­ti­cles. No Jew was ev­er called up­on for­mal­ly to ex­press his as­sent to them. But, as Pro­fes­sor Schechter just­ly writes: ‘Among the Mai­monists we may prob­ably in­clude the great ma­jor­ity of Jews, who ac­cept­ed the Thir­teen Ar­ti­cles with­out fur­ther ques­tion. Mai­monides must have filled up a great gap in Jew­ish the­ol­ogy, a gap, more­over, the ex­is­tence of which was very gen­er­al­ly per­ceived. A cen­tu­ry had hard­ly lapsed be­fore the Thir­teen Ar­ti­cles had be­come a theme for the po­ets of the Syn­agogue. And al­most ev­ery coun­try can show a po­em or a prayer found­ed on these Ar­ti­cles’ (_Stud­ies in Ju­daism_, p. 301).

Yet the op­po­si­tion to the Ar­ti­cles was both im­pres­sive and per­sis­tent. Some de­nied al­to­geth­er the ad­mis­si­bil­ity of Ar­ti­cles, claim­ing that the whole Law and noth­ing but the Law was the Char­ter of Ju­daism. Oth­ers crit­icised the Mai­monist Ar­ti­cles in de­tail. Cer­tain­ly they are far from log­ical­ly drawn up, some para­graphs be­ing dic­tat­ed by op­po­si­tion to Is­lam rather than by pos­itive needs of the Jew­ish po­si­tion. A favourite con­den­sa­tion was a small­er list of three Ar­ti­cles: (i) Ex­is­tence of God; (ii) Rev­ela­tion; and (iii) Ret­ri­bu­tion. These three Ar­ti­cles are usu­al­ly as­so­ci­at­ed with the name of Joseph Al­bo (1380-1444), though they are some­what old­er. There is no doubt but that these Ar­ti­cles found, in re­cent cen­turies, more ac­cep­tance than the Mai­monist Thir­teen, though the lat­ter still hold their place in the or­tho­dox Jew­ish Prayer Books. They may be found in the _Au­tho­rised Dai­ly Prayer Book_, ed. Singer, p. 89.

Moses Mendelssohn (1728-1786), who strong­ly main­tained that Ju­daism is a life, not a creed, made the prac­tice of for­mu­lat­ing Ar­ti­cles of Ju­daism un­fash­ion­able. But not for long. More and more, Ju­da­ic rit­ual has fall­en in­to dis­re­gard since the French Rev­olu­tion. Ju­daism has there­fore tend­ed to ex­press it­self as a sys­tem of doc­trines rather than as a body of prac­tices. And there was a spe­cial rea­son why the Mai­monist Ar­ti­cles could not re­main. Ref­er­ence is not meant to the fact that many Jews came to doubt the Mo­sa­ic ori­gin of the Pen­ta­teuch. But there were lack­ing in the Mai­monist Creed all emo­tion­al el­ements. On the one hand, Mai­monides, ra­tio­nal­ist and an­ti-​Mys­tic as he was, makes no al­lowance for the doc­trine of the Im­ma­nence of God. Then, ow­ing to his un­emo­tion­al na­ture, he laid no stress on all the af­fect­ing and mov­ing as­so­ci­ations of the be­lief in the Mis­sion of Is­rael as the Cho­sen Peo­ple. Be­fore Mai­monides, if there had been one dog­ma of Ju­daism at all, it was the Elec­tion of Is­rael. Je­hu­da Hale­vi, the great­est of the He­brew po­ets of the Mid­dle Ages, had at the be­gin­ning of the twelfth cen­tu­ry, some half cen­tu­ry be­fore Mai­monides, giv­en ex­pres­sion to this in the fa­mous epi­gram: ‘Is­rael is to the na­tions like the heart to the limbs.’

Though, how­ev­er, the Creed of Mai­monides has no po­si­tion of au­thor­ity in the Syn­agogue, mod­ern times have wit­nessed no suc­cess­ful in­tru­sion of a ri­val. Most writ­ers of trea­tis­es on Ju­daism pre­fer to de­scribe rather than to de­fine the re­li­gious tenets of the faith. In Amer­ica there have been sev­er­al sug­ges­tions of a Creed. Ar­ti­cles of faith have been there chiefly for­mu­lat­ed for the re­cep­tion of pros­elytes. This pur­pose is a nat­ural cause of pre­ci­sion in be­lief; for while one who al­ready stands with­in by birth or race is rarely called up­on to jus­ti­fy his faith, the new­com­er is un­der the ne­ces­si­ty to do so. In the pre-​Chris­tian Ju­daism it is prob­able that there was a Cat­echism or short man­ual of in­struc­tion called in Greek the _Di­dache_, in which the Gold­en Rule in Hil­lel’s neg­ative form and the Deca­logue oc­cu­pied a front place. Thus we find, too, mod­ern Amer­ican Jews for­mu­lat­ing Ar­ti­cles of Faith as a Pros­elyte Con­fes­sion. In 1896 the Cen­tral Con­fer­ence of Amer­ican Rab­bis adopt­ed the fol­low­ing five prin­ci­ples for such a Con­fes­sion: (i) God the On­ly One; (ii) Man His Im­age; (iii) Im­mor­tal­ity of the Soul; (iv) Ret­ri­bu­tion; (v) Is­rael’s Mis­sion. Dur­ing the past few months a tract, en­ti­tled ‘Es­sen­tials of Ju­daism,’ has been is­sued in Lon­don by the Jew­ish Re­li­gious Union. The au­thor, N. S. Joseph, is care­ful to ex­plain that he is not putting forth these prin­ci­ples as ‘dog­mat­ic Ar­ti­cles of Faith,’ and that they are sole­ly ’sug­ges­tive out­lines of be­lief which may be grad­ual­ly im­part­ed to chil­dren, the out­lines be­ing af­ter­wards filled up by the teach­er. But the eight para­graphs of these Es­sen­tials are at once so ably com­piled and so in­form­ing as to the mod­ern trend of Jew­ish be­lief that they will be here cit­ed with­out com­ment.

Ac­cord­ing then to this pre­sen­ta­tion, the Es­sen­tials of Ju­daism are: ‘(i) There is One Eter­nal God, who is the sole Ori­gin of all things and forces, and the Source of all liv­ing souls. He rules the uni­verse with jus­tice, righ­teous­ness, mer­cy, and love. (ii) Our souls, em­anat­ing from God, are im­mor­tal, and will re­turn to Him when our life on earth ceas­es. While we are here, our souls can hold di­rect com­mu­nion with God in prayer and praise, and in silent con­tem­pla­tion and ad­mi­ra­tion of His works. (iii) Our souls are di­rect­ly re­spon­si­ble to God for the work of our life on earth. God, be­ing All-​mer­ci­ful, will judge us with lov­ing-​kind­ness, and be­ing All-​just, will al­low for our im­per­fec­tions; and we, there­fore, need no me­di­ator and no vi­car­ious atone­ment to en­sure the fu­ture wel­fare of our souls. (iv) God is the One and on­ly God. He is Eter­nal and Om­nipresent. He not on­ly per­vades the en­tire world, but is al­so with­in us; and His Spir­it helps and leads us to­wards good­ness and truth. (v) Du­ty should be the mov­ing force of our life; and the thought that God is al­ways in us and about us should in­cite us to lead good and benef­icent lives, show­ing our love of God by lov­ing our fel­low-​crea­tures, and work­ing for their hap­pi­ness and bet­ter­ment with all our might. (vi) In var­ious by­gone times God has re­vealed, and even in our own days con­tin­ues to re­veal to us, some­thing of His na­ture and will, by in­spir­ing the best and wis­est minds with no­ble thoughts and new ideas, to be con­veyed to us in words, so that this world may con­stant­ly im­prove and grow hap­pi­er and bet­ter. (vii) Long ago some of our fore­fa­thers were thus in­spired, and they hand­ed down to us–and through us to the world at large–some of God’s choic­est gifts, the prin­ci­ples of Re­li­gion and Moral­ity, now record­ed in our Bible; and these spir­itu­al gifts of God have grad­ual­ly spread among our fel­low-​men, so that much of our re­li­gion and of its moral­ity has been adopt­ed by them. (vi­ii) Till the main re­li­gious and moral prin­ci­ples of Ju­daism have been ac­cept­ed by the world at large, the main­te­nance by the Jews of a sep­arate cor­po­rate ex­is­tence is a re­li­gious du­ty in­cum­bent up­on them. They are the “wit­ness­es” of God, and they must ad­here to their re­li­gion, show­ing forth its truth and ex­cel­lence to all mankind. This has been and is and will con­tin­ue to be their mis­sion. Their pub­lic wor­ship and pri­vate virtues must be the out­ward man­ifes­ta­tion of the ful­fil­ment of that mis­sion.’