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Impurity of the land of the nations

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Impurity of the land of the nations (Tumath eretz Ha'Amim טומאת ארץ העמים) is a rabbinic edict stipulating a specified degree of tumah (impurity) on all lands outside the Land of Israel.[1] The demarcation lines of foreign lands effectually included all those lands not settled by the people of Israel during their return from the Babylonian exile during the Second Temple period,[2] and was meant to dissuade the priests of Aaron's lineage from venturing beyond the Land of Israel where graves were unmarked,[3] and who may inadvertently contract corpse uncleanness and thereby eat their bread-offering (Terumah), unawares, in a state of ritual impurity and becoming liable thereby to kareth. The declaration with respect to foreign lands includes also the "virgin soil" of those lands,[4] and was, therefore, a safeguard meant to prevent the priests from inadvertently transgressing the Law of Moses.

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Jon: You've probably heard the word "holy" before or at least sang it in a church song once or twice. And for most people, this idea is really just connected to being a morally good person... So… God is 'holy' because he's morally perfect. Tim: Yeah, that is part of it... but in the Bible the idea of 'holiness' is even bigger and more rich. What it's really describing is how God is the creative force behind the whole universe. He's the one and only being with the power to make a world full of such beauty and life. And so all these abilities they may God utterly unique, which is the meaning of the word 'holy'. A helpful way to think about God's holiness is by using the sun as a metaphor. The sun is unique, at least within our solar system, And its really powerful. Its the source of all this beautiful life on our planet. And so you could say that the sun is 'holy'. And you can actually take this metaphor even further in that the whole area around the sun is also 'holy'. Jon: Yeah because the closer you get to the sun the more intense it gets. Tim: yeah, exactly. So that very power and goodness that generates all this life is also dangerous. I mean the sun, if you get too close, will annihilate you. And in the same way there's this paradox at the heart of God's own holiness because if you're impure his presence is dangerous to you and not because it's bad, but because its so good. And so the first time we see this paradox of God's holiness, it's in the story of Moses and the burning bush. Jon: So God tells Moses to take off his sandals because he's standing on holy ground. And Moses covers his face in fear and God says "hey don't come any closer". Its intense. likely that intensity of God's holiness Tim: It's actually that intensity of God's holiness that's explored even more in the stories of Israel's temple which was the main place where God's holy presence was located and at the center the temple was this room called the Most Holy Place it's the hotspot of God's presence. and whether you're an Israelite living in the land around the temple or a priest working right in the temple, you are in proximity to God's holy presence. which is dangerous. Jon: Yeah, this is a problem. So how is it supposed to work? Tim: Well in the Bible the solution is that you need to become "pure". Jon: So like being Morally Pure? Tim: Yeah, and that's easy enough to understand... ...but the Bible spends a lot of time talking about another kind of purity being Ritually Pure which is a state where you separate yourself from anything related to death like touching things like diseased skin, or dead bodies, or even certain bodily fluids. all these make you impure. And becoming ritually impure isn't necessarily sinful. What's wrong is waltzing into God's presence when you're in an impure state. And so that's why God gave the Israelites very clear instructions for knowing when they were impure... steps to become pure, so that they could go into the temple again. Jon: So that's what the book of Leviticus is about. Tim: Right. But it doesn't stop there. This idea keeps developing So later in the scriptures we find this really interesting story by a prophet named Isaiah. And he has this crazy vision where he's in the temple and he's right in God's presence. He's totally terrified. Jon: Yeah. He knows the rules. He shouldn't even be in there. And he's worried about being destroyed. Tim: And then this crazy creature called a Seraphim. Jon: Yeah, that is a crazy creature. Tim: Totally. So it flies over with a hot coal. And then it sears Isaiah's lips with the coal and says something really weird... "Your guilt is taken away and your sin is atoned for." Jon: So this burning coal somehow makes Isaiah pure. Tim: Yeah, its remarkable because normally if you touch something impure it transfers its impurity to you. But now here's this new idea where you have this coal, this very holy and pure object, and it touches Isaiah and it transfers its purity to him. Isaiah is not destroyed by God's holiness, he's transformed by it. I mean the implications of this are just huge. But there's one more development, this time from another prophet, Ezekiel. And he has this vision where he's standing at the temple and he sees water trickling out from it. And then that water turns into a stream and then a grows into a deep river that starts flowing through the desert leaving this trail of green trees behind it. And then it flows into the Dead Sea making everything fresh and alive. Jon: So, instead of becoming pure first and then going into the temple... ...here God's holiness comes out from the temple making things pure bringing them to life. What does it all mean? Tim: So, we don't know. Until we meet this man Jesus. And he claims that he's fulfilling all of these ancient visions but in surprising new ways. So Jesus, he went around touching people who are impure... ... people with skin diseases, a woman with chronic bleeding, or dead people... and when he touches them, their impurity should transfer over to Jesus ... ... but instead, Jesus' purity transfers to them and actually heals their bodies. Jon: Jesus is like that holy coal in Isaiah's vision. Tim: Right. And Jesus claimed that he was the human embodiment of God's own holiness. and that he and his followers were now God's temple so that through them God's holy presence would go out into the world and bring life and healing and hope. And so this is why Jesus described his followers as having streams of living water flowing out of them. Jon: So this is our part of the story where we find ourselves now, but where is it all heading? Tim: so the last pages of the Bible end with a final vision about God's holiness... This time it's by a guy named John. And in his vision we see the whole world made completely new. The entire earth has become God's temple. And Ezekiel's river is there flowing out of God's presence, immersing all of creation, removing all impurity and bringing everything back to life.

Decree of tumah

The decreed uncleanness in respect of the country of the heathens was first enacted by Jose b. Jo'ezer of Ẓeredah and Jose b. Joḥanan of Jerusalem, during the Hasmonean period.[5] Their decree concerned the earth of such places being capable of rendering a suspected defilement to the Terumah if touched by such earth, which Terumah could neither be eaten by the priests, nor burnt as something unclean.[6] Later, the rabbis who came after them in 12 BCE, some 80 years before the Temple's destruction, added further strictures, empowering the lands of the gentiles and their air-space to render suspected defilement to the bread-offering (Terumah) eaten by the priests, making it unfit for consumption by a priest had it merely passed through foreign lands, but not necessary for him to burn the Terumah.[6] During the beginning of the 2nd-century CE, the rabbis of Usha, under the leadership of Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel, further augmented the earlier rabbinic decrees, making the air-space of foreign lands capable of disqualifying the Terumah insofar that it cannot be eaten, but the earth from the same lands capable rendering a defilement to the Terumah, requiring it to be burnt.[6]

By rabbinic decree, the defilement of foreign lands was made to be tantamount to the defilement of a field where a grave had been ploughed (Beit ha-Peras), meaning, such lands suffer from a severe grade of uncleanness, or what is known as a "Father of uncleanness" (as if the land itself had the same defilement that comes with carrion, or with menstrual blood or with a seminal fluid), and, therefore, being capable of rendering defilement at a further remove unto persons who enter therein (i.e. a first-grade level of uncleanness), while the person himself who was defiled by such lands, if he touched Terumah, renders it defiled at a further remove (i.e. a second-grade level of uncleanness), which level is enough to prevent its being eaten by the priests and must be burnt.[7][3][8]

Although the priests of Aaron's lineage were discouraged from leaving the land of Israel because of the defilement of foreign lands, they were permitted to leave the land of Israel under certain circumstances, such as when they were needed to render a verdict or give evidence in cases involving monetary lawsuits or in cases involving the death penalty, or to sanctify the New moon, or to intercalate the year, or in cases of ejectment, by showing a deed of title to the land where a gentile had wrongly taken possession of the same field (because of its absent owner), and even if it only entailed presenting the deed of title in a gentile court of law, to show proof of ownership.[9] Likewise, priests were permitted to go abroad to study the Torah or to take a wife in marriage.[9] Since the proscription of leaving the land of Israel is only a rabbinic injunction, the rabbis were lenient in its observance in the above cases.

Rabbi Assi (Yessa), a man of the priestly stock, posed the question of whether or not the honour due to one's father and mother (Exodus 20:11) superseded the prohibition of a Kohen being defiled by the dead (Leviticus 21:1),[10] and if so, was he permitted to leave the land of Israel in order to escort his aged mother from Busra to Israel, even though he ran the risk of contracting corpse uncleanness. Rabbi Yohanan, though uncertain if one commandment took precedence over the other, still permitted him to do so if the journey (embarked on by his mother) was fraught with danger, and she needed protection from bandits along the route. When R. Assi was reluctant to do so, Rabbi Yohanan forthwith gave to him permission to take leave of the country in order to greet his mother. He therefore left the country, only to find out later that it was not his aging mother, but rather her coffin that was en route to Israel.[11] The Talmud concludes there that up to that time, the incident only involved a rabbinic prohibition, such as contracting a defilement declared by the rabbis (as in the impurity conveyed by setting foot in the land of the nations), but did not apply to any biblical prohibition.[12]

Jewish women who were of the priestly stock were not under the general prohibition of leaving the land of Israel, and could venture outside the land of Israel, even if they were to contract corpse uncleanness, since only the male descendants of Aaron the High Priest were commanded to abstain from defilement by the dead (Leviticus 21:1).[13]

The roads taken by Jewish pilgrims to the Land of Israel from places in Babylonia were made exempt from defilement decreed upon the lands of the nations, unless they deviated from those known roads.[14]

Historical review

The edict was enacted, at first in partiality, by Jose ben Joezer and Jose ben Jochanan of Jerusalem in either the 2nd century BCE or early 1st-century BCE.[15] The edict enacted at the time was limited to a clump of soil originating outside the land of Israel that made its way into Israel and effectively branded that clump a safek tumah (perhaps impure but not impure for certain). The edict at the time did not include an edict on the airspace outside Israel.

Eighty years prior to the destruction of the Second Temple, the Sanhedrin, while still stationed in Jerusalem, added an edict deeming the airspace outside Israel to be tamei (impure).

The Sanhedrin, after its move to Usha, further added the restriction of a clump of earth originating from outside Israel be labeled tamei for certain.[16]

Reasoning and logic

From the specifics recorded in Mishnaic and Talmudic text, the reasoning and logic behind the apparently strict enactments seems to stem from concern of the burial practices of the non-Jews during the Second Temple era. The concern was that non-Jews did not always bury their dead in established cemeteries, but instead sometimes opted for burial at any opportune site - and without erecting a fixed and element-proof tombstone to mark the burial site.[17] Jewish priests of Aaron's lineage who are required to eat their Terumah bread in a state of ritual cleanness were suspected of inadvertently making contact with such graves, and becoming defiled thereby unawares.

The Tosafists point out that another concern of the Sages was to discourage Israelites from leaving the Holy Land by pointing out its tahor ("pure") qualities and the merit of performing mitzvoth therein, as opposed to the lands outside Israel where not all the biblical commands (mitzvot) are mandatory or even applicable.[18] By making the prohibition a "general prohibition" effecting all Israelites, the priests would also abstain from leaving the country.

Application

The edict effectively limited the international travel of a Kohen (due to the Torah-law restriction of Kohen defiling himself to tumah of a corpse and paraphernalia). The rabbinic authorities of the era were somewhat lax on the edict if the purpose of the Kohen's trip was of notable purpose; such as marriage, Torah study (under tutelage of a renowned rabbi) or for certain mitzvah purposes.[19]

Helena of Adiabene

A notable occurrence of strict application of the edict is quoted in the Mishnah;

(There happened) a story with Hilni the Queen that her son went to war. She said "if he will return from war in peace I will become a Nazirite for seven years", her son subsequently came from the war and she became a Nazirite for seven years. and at the end (of her seven-year period), she went up to the land (Judea). And Beit Hillel instructed her that she must observe her vow for seven more years (due to the edict of tumah placed on lands outside Israel[20])

— Mishna, Nazir 3:6

Tumath Ohel

There is a Tannaic debate as to whether entry to lands outside Israel in a tent ("Ohel") - meaning the person exiting Israel would not physically touch the ground outside Israel - would render the person tamei (impure) or not.[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ Encyclopedia Talmudica, Shelomoh Yosef Zeṿin, 1992.
  2. ^ Mishna Oholoth 18:9, Tosefta thereof 18:14.
  3. ^ a b Maimonides (1967). Mishnah, with Maimonides' Commentary (in Hebrew). Vol. 3 (Ohelot 2:3). Translated by Yosef Qafih. Jerusalem: Mossad Harav Kook. p. 153. OCLC 13551391., Maimonides, s.v. וארץ העמים
  4. ^ Tosefta (Ohelot 18:1)
  5. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Shabbat 15a–b)
  6. ^ a b c Such is the conclusion of the Talmudic passage in BT Shabbat 15b
  7. ^ Maimonides (1967). Mishnah, with Maimonides' Commentary (in Hebrew). Vol. 3 (Foreword to Tractate Kelim). Translated by Yosef Qafih. Jerusalem: Mossad Harav Kook. p. 16. OCLC 13551391.
  8. ^ The basis for this teaching is taken from Mishnah Zavim 5:1: [...]"A general rule was laid down by R. Yehoshua: Anyone who during the moment of his making contact [with a Father of uncleanness], his clothes would thereby be defiled and he defiles foods and drinks as to make them suffer a first-grade level of uncleanness... After he has separated himself from that which defiles him, he continues to defile drinks as to make them suffer a first-grade level of uncleanness, but [defiles] foods and hands as to make them suffer a second-grade level of uncleanness, yet does not defile clothing." (See Commentary of Maimonides there).
  9. ^ a b Jerusalem Talmud (2010). Talmud Yerushalmi (in Hebrew). Vol. 1 (Tractate Berakhot 3:1) (Oz ve-Hadar ed.). Jerusalem: Friedman - Oz ve-Hadar. p. 34b. OCLC 695123759.; Jerusalem Talmud (Nazir 7:1 [33b])
  10. ^ Explained thus by R. Solomon Sirilio in the Jerusalem Talmud (Berakhot 3:1)
  11. ^ Jerusalem Talmud (Berakhot 3:1); Babylonian Talmud (Kiddushin 31b; Avodah Zarah 58b)
  12. ^ Jerusalem Talmud (Berakhot 3:1, Commentary P'nei Moshe)
  13. ^ Jerusalem Talmud (Sotah 3:7)
  14. ^ Tosefta (Ohelot 18:3)
  15. ^ Talmud Yerushalmi, Pesachim 6b.
  16. ^ Thus requiring kodesh flesh that comes into contact thereof to be burned - see talmud Shabbat 15b.
  17. ^ Thus, places not often chosen for burial were not included in the edict, for example the seashore - Mishnah Oholoth 18:6.
  18. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Nazir 54b, s.v. Tosefot "eretz ha'amim".
  19. ^ Talmud Yerushalmi, Nazir 7:1. Talmud Bavli, Avodah Zarah,13a, Mishnah Torah (Rambam) hilchot aveiluth 3:14.
  20. ^ i.e. her residence outside Israel invalidated her Nazirite status due to the edict of tumah placed thereof (as Nazirite laws demand a state of purity from tumath meith).
  21. ^ Talmud Bavli, Gittin 8b.
This page was last edited on 5 May 2024, at 09:35
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