daf bit: Avodah Zarah 18
Sep. 2nd, 2010 09:10 amUnder Roman rule the study of torah was forbidden. Rabbi
Chanina ben Teradion was arrested for publicly teaching torah. They
sentenced him to death by burning, and also sentenced his wife to
death and his daughter to be consigned to a brothel. Why was he
condemned by Heaven? Because he pronounced the divine name of God.
Why was his wife condemned? Because she did not stop him; from this
we learn that anyone who has the power to prevent one from doing wrong
and does not prevent it is punished for him. (The g'mara seems to take
it as given that she had the power to stop him but doesn't say how.)
Why was his daughter sentenced? Rabbi Yochanan said that she was once
walking in front of some great men of Rome and they ogled her, and she
responded to tempt them. (I am summarizing.) But all three, after being
sentenced, declared their submission to divine justice and were thus
deemed righteous. (18a)
(no subject)
Date: 2010-09-02 04:03 pm (UTC)However, and this is the flippant part, what does that say about the Picts? If the Roman Legions were God's justice upon someone else, then the Picts must have been God's justice upon the Romans.
And I have a problem with the idea of Justice coming in the form of a screaming naked smurf with a spear.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-09-02 04:28 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-09-02 10:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-09-03 12:15 am (UTC)I don't agree with everything I quote from the talmud, just to be clear.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-09-03 12:23 am (UTC)And how does this interact with the season now upon us? By one form of reckoning we all merit death; who among us has never transgressed Shabbat or some other death-penalty offense? But we aren't all struck down because t'shuva (repentance) is possible, and we particularly focus on it now. So (to go back to the talmudic passage), did R. Chanina get a chance to do t'shuva? Did he have the chance and reject it for some reason? What made that transgression the one that sealed his fate, among the others he must surely have committed?
I find the rabbinic view of reward and punishment challenging because of questions like these. I hope that little by little I can increase my understanding of it.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-09-03 01:18 am (UTC)Are you being attacked by Romans? Yes No Are you Yes Trial Justice Righteous? No Justice MercyI'm not really a fan of using it directly, because reality often seems to be skewed too far toward squares 1 and 4.