Rav Chaim: A Nebach Apikorus is also an Apikorus

Home Forums Inspiration / Mussar Rav Chaim: A Nebach Apikorus is also an Apikorus

Viewing 20 posts - 51 through 70 (of 70 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #900894
    Sam2
    Participant

    MediumThinker: I am not trying to think outside the box here. I would love to say that all of the Rishonim held the beliefs that we do today. It’s just not true. What do you think the words, “D’mus D’yokno” mean? What is the Rashbam saying there in Bava Basra (and that Gemara is clearly where this Rashi is from) that an Amora shouldn’t look at Adam Harishon because then he’ll know what HKBH looks like?

    Look up “Moses Taku” on Wikipedia. He lived too late, so I was wrong about the Rambam writing a letter directly against him. I will find the letter B”N where the Rambam mentions that some Gedolim from other parts of the world believed in corporeality of G-d.

    #900895
    mdd
    Member

    Sam2, there is a difference between the Dmus Ha’Odom al ha’kise from ma’ase merkavah and HKB”H himself. We are not going to go into deep Kabolah here, but you have to know about these things when discussing these matters.

    Btw, I did not see anything in that Rashi in Avos.

    #900896
    old man
    Participant

    The Wolf: “…Dr. Shapiro’s book…”

    Chapter 3, pages 45-70

    #900897
    old man
    Participant

    Sam2;

    Don’t be so quick to admit error. The Rambam died in 1204. R’ Moshe Taku died shortly before, and maybe years before 1234.See Auerbach’s Ba’alei Hatosafot, pages 424-425 where he proves 1234 as the latest possible date of R’ Moshe Taku’s death. According to Auerbach, Wikipedia (1290) is mistaken. I believe Auerbach, maybe the greatest authority on the ba’alei hatosafot. The overlap therefore with the Rambam is significant, and your theory has not been disproven by any means.

    #900898

    Sam2

    My statement still stands. Can you give me one source that says what you say, Not a source that you don’t understand, so you infer you pshat is true. Just one source that says that Hashem has a guf, chalila. I looked up the wikipedia article and there seems to be a debate as to what this single idividual held.

    #900899
    Sam2
    Participant

    MDD: The one where he says that Chibah Y’seirah means that we look like Hashem? I mean, if you want to ignore the Pashut reading of “Tzelem” like MT did, then fine. But I think Pashut P’shat is pretty M’vuar.

    #900900
    lebidik yankel
    Participant

    I looked carefully at the Rashi in Bereshis and the Machzor Vitri. I also examined other rishonim that talk about that pasuk in Bereshis. It seems there are two ways of reading the pasuk: 1. In G-d’s form Man was created. 2. Man was created with a form, or a mold. Some Rishonim explain the first way, others, the second (see Rashbam and Chizkuni) The Rashi can be read either way. The simple reading is like the former, the Mizrachi and Levush explain that he meant the latter.

    Rashi elsewhere – in avos, as quoted, and in devarim where he explains “killilas Elokim taluy” does say pretty clearly that man is created in G-d’s actual image. The Machzor Vitry seems to me to be underscoring that and saying that the previously quoted reading of the Rashbam and Chizkuni are wrong.

    Ok, so there are two readings of the text. Lets go with the one saying that man is created in G-d’s actual image. Does that mean that G-d has athlete’s foot, as man does? Of course not. All it means is that there is some correlation – physical or spiritual between man and G-d. For instance: Man is physically created in the same form as G-d takes spiritually.

    I see no indication – none at all – that G-d has any physical form.

    #900901

    lebidik yankel

    That’s exactly my point. There is no way to read Rashi that Hashem has a “body”, as Sam 2 put it.

    #900902

    old man It is not a theory. Either the Rambam mentioned him in a letter or he didn’t. We’ll wait to see if Sam2 can give us a source on that. I’m guessing he gave up on finding a source that says Hashem has a guf, chalila.

    #1440865
    Joseph
    Participant

    This is one of the many many threads that were mangled when the CR was upgraded.

    #1574894
    ChadGadya
    Participant

    Joseph, if it’s one of “many many” what made you decide to pick this one to bump?

    #1574946
    avreichamshlomo
    Participant

    Ridiculous. If you read kaballah and take it literally you will also be an apikorsus, because you will think “rosh” literally means a head. We know straight out pesukim, regarding Hashems “body parts,” especially in shir hashirim, are not literal. So why would you think that the words of a rishon are literal? Agadita also says things like this. It is usually not literal.
    Read nefesh hachaim.

    #1574871
    Joseph
    Participant

    The Reb Elchonon quoted in the OP got zapped.

    #1575011
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    The R’ Abarbanel on Moshiach says about Hilel not that he arrived already, but the forty years in between his coming and techiyas hamesim has been used up so one will come after another.

    #1576210
    K-cup
    Participant

    “G-d’s actual image. Does that mean that G-d has athlete’s foot, as man does?”
    Leibidik yankel, medium thinker
    The very first point Rambam makes in moreh nevuchim (chalek 1 perek 1), is that saying Hashem doesn’t have a guf (like you’re saying), but some spiritual idea of form (as I understand you’re saying in 2nd reading, zelem dmus), is kefirah. He then includes that position as saying Hashem has a form (uses words zelem and dmus).
    That being said, I can’t believe Rashi held guf mamash or anything close to that. It sounds insane.

    #1576288
    Takes2-2tango
    Participant

    Who decides if the apikores is a nebach or a non nebach

    #1576301
    Joseph
    Participant

    “Who decides if the apikores is a nebach or a non nebach”

    What’s the chilik. Like Rav Chaim said, both are apikorsum.

    #1576333
    YosefSebrow
    Participant

    A nebach apikoreis is still a nebach, and an apikoires besides. A nebach who’s on the derech is just a nebach.

    #1576393
    Takes2-2tango
    Participant

    Is it like saying a nebach kollel guy vs a non nebach yeshiva guy?

    #1576404
    Spr22
    Participant

    As Rav Yaakov Shapiro use to teach, a Nebach apikorus is just an unintentional apikorus–i.e. a tinok shensiba who wasn’t taught the 13 ikarim. A regular apikorus is an intentional denier of either the 13 ikarim or any other part of the torah. (An unintentional denier/mistake of any part of the torah outside the 13 ikarim would just make the persons ideas an apikorus without that person himself acquiring that status)

    Link removed

    As from my notes of his:

    1) Apikorsus (a.k.a. “meenus” a.k.a kefirah – the words are often used interchangibly) is anything that is contrary to the Torah’s opinion, regardless of whether it contradicts one of the 13 Ikarim or not.*

    2) Not everybody who says Apikorsus is himself an Apikores. As the Chazon Ish writes about a piece of apikorsus he saw in a certain sefer: “Even though the author was a Yorei Hashem, he worshipped Apikorsus unwittingly.”

    3) To be a full fledged Apikores yourself, which means we have no mitzvah to love you, – on the contrary, there is a Mitzvah to loathe you (“l’snoso”); we don’t return your lost items; your wine is yayin nesech; you lose your share in Olam Habah; you are, for all practical purposes, not part of klall yiaroel, and you have the status of a goy regarding all privileges (even though you are still obligated to fulfill all the Mitzvos) – for that, you have to disagree with one of the 13 Ikarim, regardless of whether you are doing so on purpose or out of ignorance. That is, even if you dont realize that you are disagreeing with them, you are still a full fledged Apikores, as Rav Chaim Brisker ZTL used to say: Nebach an apikores is oich an apikores “Someone who is an Apikores through no fault of his own is an Apikores nonetheless”. If you knowingly disagree with anything the Torah says, meaning, you know the Torah says such-and-such, and then you say “The Torah is wrong,” you are in this category as well.

    4) Even if you do not actually deny one of the 13 Principles, but merely are unsure about it, you are still a full fledged Apikores. You must be convinced of the absolute truth of these 13 Principles in order to get your share in Olam Habah and be considered part of Klall Yisroel, as per #3 above.

    5) There is a disagreement between the Rambam and the Raavad regarding someone who, in the course of his Torah learning, makes an honest mistake, misunderstands something he sees in the Torah, and erroneously derives from the Torah a belief that is actually Apikorsus. The Rambam holds this person is an Apikores and the Raavad holds that he is not. **

    5a) Even the Ravad, however, agrees that even though the person himself is not considered an Apikores, his mistaken belief is indeed considered Apikorsus.

    6) Rav Chaim’s rule of nebach a apikores is also an apikores. A nebach apikores is a like a tinok shenisba who is not cognizant of the 13 ikarim.

    7) Even Orthodox people who fulfill all of Torah and Mitzvos can be full-fledged Apikorsim. Said the Chazon Ish, “There are people whose homes are sufficiently kosher that you may eat the meat, the fish, and all of their food, but there’s only one food item you can’t eat: You can’t drink their wine, because their Hashkofos make it yayin nesech”. Even great Talmidei Chachamim can be Apikorsim. The Rambam states that even if a person has great wisdom and has great merits due to his Torah knowledge, he is still a full-fledged Apikores if he does not believe in the 13 Ikarim.

    8) There is a belief held by many people that you have to know the whole Torah, or at least some great measure of it, in order to be an Apikores. This is a myth. There is no such thing. As long as you deny one of the Yesodei Hadas, one of the Fundemntals of our Religion, you are an Apikores. There is also a myth, believed by many, that there is “no such thing” as an Apikores nowadays. This, like the “kol hatorah kulah” myth, is a fairy tale. (Historically, they both cropped up as baseless rationalizations of religious Zionists who befriended and sometimes even raised to the stature of heros, athiest Zionist Apikorsim. Through these wishful ideas, they attempted to remove those atheist enemies of G-d and Torah from the category or Apikorsim)

    8a) In order to preempt what I have heard on more than one occasion cited as “a source” for the above, the Chazom Ish does not say anywhere any such thing. On the contrary, on numerous occasions he declares people to be Apikorsim, including frum Jews , as per #7 above. What he did say is that the Halchacha of Moridin v’Lo Maalin – that you are allowed to kill an Apikores – does not apply nowadays, because we are not able to fulfill the prerequisite of properly giving them tochachah before hand, as well as the lack of open miracles nowadays.

    9) Even though usually we have a rule that we try to be melamed zechus (judge favorably) on Jews, where an Apikores is concerned, the contrary is true. We are not melamed zechus at all. On the contrary, someone who refuses to curse the Apikorsim, is halachicly suspect to be an Apikores himself.
    And here
    There is a Halachah that says you must have the right Hashkofos. “Lo sosuru acharei levavchem”, You may not follow your heart, meaning, you may not believe “meenus” (Apikursos). Th Mishna Brura rules (his source is Sefer Hachinuch almost word for word, but without attribution) Apikursos includes any opinion that is contrary to Daas Torah.
    Meaning, even if you follow all Halachos, if you have an opinion that conflicts with that of the Torah, you violate this laav.
    Halachic example: Responsa Divrei Chaim YD 105. The case was a rebbi in a cheder who expressed his opinion to his class that the commentary “Ohr Hachaim” on chumash was a great commentary, but it was not written with Ruach HaKodesh. This statement created a tremendous controversy, and they turned to the Divrei Chaim for a ruling.

    After explaining that he cannot rule on a specific incident without hearing both sides of the story, he writes that theoretically, if someone says such a thing, since it is clear that Chazal disagree, he would be guilty of Apikursus.

    So let’s say you’re a vegetarian. There is no Halachah that says you have to eat meat (at least not on the weekdays). But if the reason you don’t eat meat is because you believe shechitah is cruelty to animals and therefore wrong, you are guilty of Apikursos, since the Torah clearly disagrees.
    Two people can do the same act – here, refraining from eating meat – but one is a spiritual criminal and the other innocent, because of the attitude with which the action was taken.
    Or let’s say you are in favor of women’s torah education. The Chofetz Chaim was, too, for our times. But if you feel that women’s education is an advancement for women’s rights, essentially an improvement in the treatment of women over what we have been accustomed to in the past generations, when we did not teach Torah to women – and the Chofetz Chaim did not feel that way – you are guilty of Apikursus, since your belief collides with that of the Torah’s.
    If someone accepts ideas that are not in accordance with the Torah, in other words, Hashkofos, they violate this issurThere are different levels of Apikursos. Worst-case scenario, someone can become a full-fledged Apikores, which Halachicly is considered worse than in idol worshipper. Such a person is treated Halachicly like a non-Jew, yet retains the halachic obligations of all Jews. A full-fledged Apikores is the absolute bottom on the spiritual food chain.

Viewing 20 posts - 51 through 70 (of 70 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.