“IN NEHARDEA WHERE THERE ARE NO HERETICS”:
THE PURPORTED JEWISH RESPONSE TO CHRISTIANITY
IN NEHARDEA (A RE-EXAMINATION OF THE
TALMUDIC EVIDENCE)*
Barak S. Cohen
Historians of the rabbinic period have identiied some remarks made
by prominent Babylonian Nehardean rabbis from the Sasanian period,
among them Shmuel, Rav Sheshet, Rav Nahman and Amemar, as being
aimed at Christians currently active in their region. Such claims were
advanced by scholars such as Solomon Funk, Adolf Neubauer, Isaac
Halevy, Jacob Obermeyer and E. E. Urbach. In contrast, my analysis
of the passages in which these remarks are embedded raises doubts as
to the accuracy of these claims. I argue that there is no evidence in the
Bavli that Nehardean sages had any direct contact with Christians or
were familiar with Christian daily practice.
he conclusion that in these talmudic traditions rabbis are not responding to Christians correlates with the data provided in Christian
chronicles as to the spread, or failure to spread, of Christianity in
Nehardea, Pumbedita and the surrounding areas during the talmudic
period (third–ith centuries C.E.) he absence of Christians in this
region during the talmudic period is further corroborated by a statement in BT Pesahim 56a, according to which there were no heretics,
Christians or otherwise, in Nehardea during the amoraic period.
his study also corroborates a historical inding which I have
demonstrated elsewhere, namely the dependence of Babylonian Amoraim from this region on Palestinian Halakhah found in the Mishnah
and other tannaitic sources. Many of the passages in which Amoraim
are supposedly responding to Christians in their own region are better
understood in light of the Palestinian traditions to which the Babylonian Amoraim are more likely responding. his study demonstrates that a combination of talmudic analysis and historical research is
* I wish to express my gratitude to Prof. Sebastian Brock of the Faculty of Oriental
Studies at Oxford University for reading an earlier version of this article and providing
me with his pertinent comments. Since the preparation of this paper, I have beneited
immensely from the help and encouragement of my colleague at Bar-Ilan University,
Dr. Dan Jafé, who has fostered this study in every way possible.
30
barak s. cohen
essential for constructing a coherent intellectual history of the Amoraim and their interaction with others.
II
Before we analyze these talmudic texts, it is necessary to address
directly some problematic assumptions broadly shared by historians
who posited the existence of a Jewish-Christian debate in Nehardea
during the talmudic period. Resting on faulty assumptions and preconceived notions, many of these arguments are weak and we shall
challenge and refute them one at a time.
II.a
he texts which we will deal with below employ the term “minim,”
identiied by many scholars as Christians. However, these “minim,”
who are certainly judged to be heretical by rabbis, are not necessarily Christians. Judging by the content of these speciic sources, the
“minim” could be identiied as Hellenistic Jews, Zoroastrians, or members of various Gnostic sects. he term may even be a general reference directed at various sectarian groups and their members, and it
is certainly not used exclusively in connection with Christians.1 Concerning the term, Jacob Sussman writes:
he term “minim” is used to refer to heretics in a very broad sense of
the word. . . . whether he is merely a denier or an member of an actual
sect . . . such as the Sadducees or Boethusians . . . Samaritans . . . and similarly Christians . . . Christian Jews . . . various types of Gnostics . . . It is even
used in reference to idol worshipers and members of other religions in
all of their various manifestations. he term’s usage is dictated by the
1
he literature on this question is enormous. See, most recently: D. Jafé, Le
judaïsme et l’avènement du christianisme. Orthodoxie et hétérodoxie dans la littérature
talmudique Ier–IIe siècle, Paris 2005, pp. 88–91; idem, Le Talmud et les origines juives
du christianisme. Jésus, Paul et les judéo-chrétiens dans la littérature talmudique, Paris
2007, pp. 132–135. To the literature cited in these recent studies, we can add the following studies that speciically deal with the issues discussed here: W. Bacher, “Travers
Herford’s ‘Christianity in the Talmud and Midrash’”, JQR, Old Series, 17 (1905), pp.
178–179; J. Sussman, “he History of Halakha and the Dead Sea Scrolls—Preliminary
Observations on Miqsat Ma’ase Ha-Torah (4QMMT)” [Heb], Tarbiz 59 (1990), p. 54,
n. 176; E. Ahdut, “Jewish-Zoroastrian Polemics in the Babylonian Talmud” [Heb],
Irano-Judaica, 4 (2000), pp. 29–30.
“in nehardea where there are no heretics”
31
historical era in which it is used, and it is likely that the term takes on a
more general meaning in later periods.2
More speciically concerning the issue which I will address in this
paper, in a study on Jewish-Christian polemics in rabbinic literature,
Richard Kalmin came to the following conclusion:
. . . Palestinian rabbis had frequent interactions with Bible-reading nonJews (for example, Christians and Gnostics) and Minim (heretics), but
Babylonian rabbis did not . . . he urgency and persistence with which
Palestinian sources forbid contact between Palestinian rabbis on one
hand and Minim and Christians on the other suggest strongly that such
contact took place and was probably routine . . . Babylonian sources, in
contrast, have nothing to say on the subject of the danger of rabbinic
contact with Minim and Christians, apparently because such contact was
too rare to be considered a problem. hat contact was rare in Babylonia
and relatively common in Palestine was in part because of the relative
scarcity of Bible-reading non-Jews and heretics in the Persian Empire.3
2
Sussman (above, n. 1), p. 54, n. 176. A similar problem occurs with regard to
the phrase “Bei-Nizrefe” found three times in the Babylonian Talmud (Shabbat 116a;
Eruvin 80a; Avoda Zara 48a). According to Shabbat 116a, “Bei-Nizrefe” was a place
where discussions of speciically religious questions took place. From this source it
seems that “Bei-Nizrefe” was in Samuel’s geographical location in Nehardea. Many
suggestions were made in scholarly literature as to the identiication of Bei-Nizrefe.
he most tempting of them was that “Nizrefe” is related to the word “Nazarene” and
that therefore “Bei-Nizrefe” was connected with Christians. his is how the word
was understood by J. Neusner, who even concluded from Shabbat 116a, that Samuel
“abhorred Christians” (J. Neusner, A History of the Jews in Babylonia, vol. 2, Leiden
1970, p. 74). he same etymology was also ofered by L. Lef, “Bei Avidan u-bei Nizrefe”, Hehaluz, 2 (1853), pp. 100–101; S. Funk, Die Juden in Babylonien 200–500, vol.
2, Berlin 1902, p. 53; J. Levy, Wörterbuch Über die Talmudim und Midraschim, vol.
3, Darmstadt 1963, p. 432. In contrast, S. Krauss, Synagogale Altertümer, Berlin 1922,
p. 31 interpreted “Be-Nizrefe” as referring to a “special Persian Temple.” I. Kuhot
Aruch haShalem, vol. 2, New-York 1955, p. 47, interpreted the word in connection
with Gnosticism. R. T. Herford, Christianity in Talmud and Midrash, New-Jersey
1966, p. 167, identiied it as a place connected with Jewish-Christians. It seems that
at the present a determination of the exact identity of this place and the group with
whom the rabbis would have debated there must remain uncertain. In any case, any
connection of the place with Christians or Jewish Christians seems highly unlikely
since the presence of Christians in southern parts of Mesopotamia is known only
80–100 years ater the death of Samuel (see below, n. 9).
3
R. Kalmin, he Sage in Jewish Society of Late Antiquity, London & New-York
1999, pp. 68–70. See also: R. Kalmin, “Christians and Heretics in Rabbinic Literature
of Late Antiquity”, HTR, 87 (1994), pp. 155–169.
32
barak s. cohen
he infrequency of Jewish-Christian confrontations among Babylonian sages in general,4 casts doubt as to any blanket identiication of
“minim” as Christians in the Babylonian Talmud.5
II.b
Even if we assume that in these texts “minim” might include Christians, there is no certainty that a comment made by a Nehardean sage
was directed at Christians living in his own geographical setting. A
polemic can be against a theoretical opponent, in our case against
Christian theological views in general. Its setting is not necessarily that
of a live confrontation.6 As we shall see below, in many cases in which
an Amora might be seen as addressing Christianity, he is simply quoting a Palestinian tannaitic source, a source which does not necessarily
have any bearing on the presence of Christians living in the sage’s
immediate environment. Ties between Nehardea and Palestinian traditions are already mentioned in tannaitic sources,7 and elsewhere I have
demonstrated the strong dependence of Babylonian rabbis on Palestinian tradition already in the early talmudic period.8 his dependence
is manifested in the tannaitic literary collections of Nehardean sages,
which are provided with appellations such as “Tanna D’Bei Shmuel,”
“Tanna D’Bei Levi”, the traditions of Abuha D’Shmuel. his study will
further heighten our awareness and appreciation of the inluence that
Palestinian tannaitic traditions had on Babylonian rabbinic study, as
4
Most cases of rabbinic confrontations with Christians (or other Bible-reading
non-Jews) recorded in the Babylonian Talmud involve Palestinian Amoraim. See:
Kalmin, he Sage (above, n. 3), pp. 73–74.
5
See also: M. Simon, Verus Israel, Oxford 1986, p. 183, who writes, “he texts in
which the minim are explicitly connected with Christianity are in fact very few”.
6
See: I. M. Gafni, he Jews of Babylonia in the Talmudic Era: A Social and Cultural
History [Heb.], Jerusalem 1990, p. 150. Gafni demonstrated this point in regard to
Jewish-Zoroastrian debates in Babylonia.
7
See, for instance: Mishnah, Yevamot 16: 7. Ties between the Jewish communities
in Nehardea and Palestine are already mentioned by Josephus, see: Antiquities, 18: 312.
For further analysis of these traditions, see: A. Berliner, Geographie und Ethnographie
Babyloniens im Talmud und Midrasch, Berlin 1884, pp. 47–48; S. Funk, Monumenta
Talmudica: Bibel und Babel, Wien und Leipzig 1913, pp. 295–296; A. Oppenheimer,
Babylonia Judaica in the Talmudic Period, Wiesbaden 1983, pp. 287–288; idem, “Bettei Midrash in Babylon Prior to the Completion of the Mishnah” [Heb.], In: Yeshivot
and Battei Midrash (ed. I. Etkes), Jerusalem 2006, pp. 23–27.
8
B. S. Cohen, “In Quest of Babylonian Tannaitic Traditions: he Case of ‘Tanna
D’bei Shmuel”, AJS Review, 33 (2009), pp. 271–303.
“in nehardea where there are no heretics”
33
early as the irst half of the third century. he irst two cases which will
be analyzed below are an integral part of this phenomenon.
II.c
he historians who concluded from talmudic sources that Nehardea
had a Christian community in the early talmudic period did not pay
enough attention to data found in Christian sources. Our knowledge
concerning the spread of the Syrian Church in southern Mesopotamia
during the third century is sketchy, due to the paucity of the data provided in Syriac chronicles.9 Nevertheless, the evidence seems to lead
to the conclusion that Christians were not active there in the early
talmudic period, before the ith century. A similar picture emerges
in later rabbinic sources. According to the Epistle of R. Sherira Gaon
(written in the tenth century10), Nehardea was in the vicinity of Fīrūz
9
he presence of Christian communities in southern Mesopotamia during the
Sasanian period is known only from the irst half of the fourth century onwards. See
mainly: J. Labourt, Le Christianisme dans L’Empire Perse sous la dynastie Sassanide
225–632, Paris 1904, p. 18 f.; A. Christensen, L’Iran Sous les Sassanides, Copenhagen
1936, pp. 261–262; J. Neusner, Aphrahat and Judaism: he Christian-Jewish Argument
in Fourth-Century Iran, Leiden 1971, p. 2; S. Brock, “Christians in the Sasanid Empire:
A Case of Divided Loyalties”, Religion and National Identity: Studies in Church History
XVIII (ed. S. Mews), Oxford 1982, p. 3; J. P. Asmussen, “Christians in Iran”, CHI, 3
(2), Cambridge, 1983, p. 925, 931; R. N. Frye, he History of Ancient Iran, Munich
1984, p. 309; N. Koltun-Fromm, “A Jewish-Christian Conversation in Fourth-Century
Mesopotamia”, JJS, 47 (1996) 45–63. For a detailed (although not suiciently critical)
geographical survey based on the Syrian chronicles, see: W. A. Wigram, An Introduction to the History of the Assyrian Church (he Church of the Sasssanid Empire 100–
640), London 1910, p. 7 f. For an overview of the spread of Christianity in northern
Mesopotamia, see: R. L. Mullen, he Expansion of Christianity: A Gazetteer of its First
hree Centuries, Leiden 2004, pp. 55–59; F. Trombley, “Overview: the Geographical
Spread of Christianity”, he Cambridge History of Christianity (ed. M. M. Mitchell,
F. M. Young), vol. 1, pp. 309, 311; S. A. Harvey, “Syria and Mesopotamia”, he Cambridge History of Christianity (above), pp. 351–365. As for Jewish-Christian interaction in these localities, see mainly: J. B. Segal, “he Jews of North Mesopotamia Before
the Rise of Islam”, Studies in the Bible Presented to Professor M. H. Segal (ed. J. M.
Grints, J. Liver), Jerusalem 1964, pp. 32–63; H. J. W. Drijvers, “Jews and Christians
at Edessa”, JJS 36 (1985), pp. 88–102; idem, “Syrian Christianity and Judaism”, he
Jews Among Pagans and Christians in the Roman Empire (ed. J. Lieu, J. North and
T. Rajak), London 1992, pp. 124–146.
10
On the nature and reliability of this source concerning the history of the talmudic period, see: M. Beer, “Iyyun B’Iggeret R. Sherira Gaon,” Bar-Ilan 4–5 (1967), pp.
181–197; Gafni (above, n. 6), pp. 239–265; R. Brody, “Berur Hamekorot Lechronologiyah shel Tekufat Hatalmud,” Tarbiz 70 (2001), pp. 92–95; A. Cohen, Ravina and
Contemporary Sages: Studies in the Chronology of Late Babylonian Amoraim [Heb.],
Ramat-Gan 2001, pp. 181–182.
34
barak s. cohen
Šāpūr (situated near modern al-Fallūğa),11 and a rabbinic academy was
founded there by rabbis who abandoned Pumbedita during the persecutions of Hormizd IV (588), at the end of the Sasanian period.12
According to J. M. Fiey, the irst Christian Bishop whom we can identify from Fīrūz Šāpūr lived during the irst half of the ith century
(around the year 420).13 Even J. Obermeyer, who concluded that there
was a Christian community in Nehardea and Pumbeditha during the
third century (based on BT Berakhot 12a—see below), was aware that
only from the ith century and onward is a Christian presence in the
district of Fīrūz Šāpūr irmly attested.14
hus the information gleaned from non-rabbinic sources corroborates the statement in Babylonian Talmud Pesahim 56a, which states
explicitly that there were no minim in Nehardea during the amoraic
period.15 his source reads, “in Nehardea where there are no heretics
(minim) until now (ad hashta), they recite it quietly.” Since this state-
11
For the location of Fīrūz Šāpūr and its possible identiication with the city
al-Anbār or Pumbeditha, see: Oppenheimer, Babylonia Judaica, pp. 362–364. In addition to the literature cited by Oppenheimer, see: J. M. Fiey, Assyrie Chrétienne, vol. 3,
Beirut 1968, pp. 230–231.
12
R. Sherira describes this rabbinic academy (founded by Rav Mari the son of Rav
Dimi) as being near Fīrūz Šāpūr using the following words: “. . . our Rabbis came from
Pumbeditha to the vicinity of Nehardea, [which is located] in the Fīrūz Šāpūr district”
(R. Sherira Gaon, Epistle of R. Sherira Gaon, B. M. Lewin, ed., Jerusalem, 1972, p. 99).
For further analysis of the founding of this academy, see: N. Brüll, “Toldot Yissudo
shel ha-Talmud ha-Bavli Keyetzirah Sifrutit”, Netuim 11–12 (2004), pp. 210; Kaplan,
Redaction, pp. 337–342. Based on this text, I. Halevy proposed to identify Nehardea
as Fīrūz Šāpūr (Halevy, dorot hrishonim, vol. 6, p. 38). However, Kaplan noted that
the identiication of the two is problematic: “To identify . . . Nehardea as Fīrūz Šāpūr is
to disregard the very careful and exact writing of R. Sherira, who in no other instance
designates Fīrūz Šāpūr as Nehardea” (Kaplan, Redaction, p. 341). Nevertheless, for
the purpose of our argument, whether Fīrūz Šāpūr is indeed al-Anbār, Nehardea or
Pumbeditha, has no efect on the conclusion presented below.
13
Fiey (above, n. 11), p. 232, referring to the bishop Moīse, mentioned in the 486
Synod. For a further historical and theological discussion concerning the Christian
synods of the eastern church, see: S. Brock, “he Christology of the Church of the
East in the Synods of the Fith to Early Seventh Centuries: Preliminary Considerations and Materials”, in: Aksum-hyateira: a Festschrit for Archbishop Methodios (ed.
G. Dragas), London 1985, p. 126
14
See: J. Obermeyer, Die Landschat Babylonien, Frankfurt 1929, pp. 264–265.
15
See: A. Berliner, Beiträge zur Geographie und Ethnographie Babyloniens im Talmud und Midrasch, Berlin 1884, p. 49; S. Funk, Die Juden in Babylonien 200–500,
Berlin 1902, p. 96; idem, Monumenta Talmudica: Bibel und Babel, Vienna & Leipzig
1913, p. 296; Obermeyer (above, n. 14), p. 264; S, Kraus, Paras ve-Romi ba-Talmud
uva-Midrashim, Jerusalem 1947, p. 87; I. H. Weis, Dor Dor ve-Dorshav, vol. 1, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv 1964, p. 221; A. Neubauer, La Géographie du Talmud, Hildesheim 1967,
p. 351; Urbach, Sages, p. 401.
“in nehardea where there are no heretics”
35
ment in the text is to be attributed to the “stamaim”16—the post-amoraic stratum of the Talmud17—then it indeed matches the information
found in Christian sources. And even if the minim referred to in this
source are not exclusively Christians, at the least the source would
include Christians,18 and by implication it would testify to the absence
of Christians in Nehardea during the talmudic period. In summary,
neither Christian nor Jewish sources support the thesis that Nehardea
(or its surroundings) had a Christian community during the third and
fourth century.19 Methodologically speaking, it is important to note
that the burden of proof for the existence of a Christian-Jewish live
contact or debate rests on those who make such a claim.
III
We now turn our attention to the talmudic passages most commonly
used by scholars as proof of Christian-Jewish contact and even debate
in Nehardea during the amoraic period. he irst such passage is
BT Berakhot 12a, which A. Berliner, Solomon Funk, Isaac Halevy,
Adolf Neubauer and Jacob Obermeyer all used as an indication that
16
Concerning the identiication of this statement as “stammaitic”, see: Z. Fraenkel,
Mavo, p. 59b; Halivni, Sources and Traditions: Tractates Erubin and Pesahim, Jerusalem 1982, pp. 440–441.
17
On the dating of the anonymous stratum (stammaim) of the Babylonian Talmud as post-amoraic literature, see: S. Friedman, Talmud Arukh: BT Bava Metzi’a
VI (Critical Edition with Comprehensive Commentary) [Heb.], New-York 1996, pp.
21–23; D. Halivni, Midrash, Mishnah, and Gemara, Cambridge, MA 1986, pp. 76–104;
idem, “Aspects of the Formation of the Talmud”, In: Creation and Composition: he
Contribution of the Bavli Redactors (Stammaim) to the Aggada (J. L. Rubenstein, ed.),
Tübingen 2005, pp. 339–360; R. Kalmin, “he Formation and Character of the Babylonian Talmud”, he Cambridge History of Judaism, vol. IV, Cambridge 2006, pp.
840–876; A. Cohen, “he Saboraic Halakhah in Light of bKiddushin 2a–3b and the
Geonic Tradition”, Diné Israel, 24 (2007) [Heb.], pp. 161–214.
18
he term “minim” in later periods had a more general meaning and referred
to all kinds of heretics (including Christians). See, for instance: Simon (above, n. 5),
p. 183; Zussman (above adj. to n. 2; R. Kimelman, “Birkat Ha-Minim and the Lack
evidence for an Anti-Christian Jewish Prayer in Late Antiquity”. In: Jewish and Christian Self-Deinition (ed. E. P. Sanders; A. I. Baumgarten; A. Mendelson), Philadelphia
1981, 230–232. Similarly, our passage in Pesahim 56a from the post-amoraic era (see
above) might have a general meaning, which includes Christians as well.
19
It is important to emphasize that some scholars question whether Babylonian
Jews would have felt threatened by Christians and in response would have needed
to debate theological matters with them. See, for instance: Kaplan, Redaction, pp.
342–343; E. Urbach, he World of the Sages: Collected Studies [Heb.], Jerusalem 2002,
p. 559; Ahdut (above, n. 1), p. 39.
36
barak s. cohen
mid-fourth century Nehardea had a large Christian community. his
source reads:
And they recite the Ten Commandments and the Shema . . . [hey would
bless the people with the following three blessings:) “emet veyatziv,” [the
blessing of the] Temple service, and the blessings of the priests. [= Mishnah Tamid 5:1]
R. Judah said in the name of Samuel: Outside the Temple they also
wanted to do the same (to say the Ten Commandments before the
Shema), but they were stopped from doing so because of the arguments
of the heretics (minim).
Similarly it has been taught in a baraiata (Tanya Nami Hakhi): R.
Nathan says: Outside the Temple they also wanted to do the same but
they were stopped from doing so because of the arguments of the heretics (minim). . . . .
Amemar attempted to institute it (the recitation of Ten Commandments before the Shema) in Nehardea, but Rav Ashi said to him: they
were stopped from doing so because of the arguments of the heretics
(minim).20
In this source Amemar, a prominent Nehardean sage who lived in
the second half of the fourth century and the beginning of the ith,21
attempts to reinstitute the recitation of the Ten Commandments before
the Shema, but Rav Ashi prevents him from doing so. he academic
scholars mentioned above assumed that Rav Ashi’s negative response
had to do with his fear of the potential response of Christians living
in Nehardea during the fourth century.22
However, this interpretation is doubtful for several reasons. First of
all, as I stated in my introduction above, the identiication of minim
as Christians is far from certain. E. Urbach,23 G. Vermes24 and M.
Benowitz25 all reject this identiication, mainly because Christians were
20
he last section, “Amemar—heretics,” is absent in Paris 671 and Oxford Opp.
Add. Fol. 23, almost certainly as a result of a homioteleuton.
21
See recently: A. Shahak, Amemar and his Methods of Halachic Decisions [Heb.],
Master’s hesis, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 2002, pp. 3–5.
22
See: Berliner (above, n. 15), p. 49; Funk, Die Juden (above, n. 15), p. 96; idem,
Monumenta (above, n. 15), p. 296; Obermeyer (above, n. 14), 264, n. 4; Neubauer
(above, n. 15), p. 351; Halevy, Dorot, vol. 6, p. 38.
23
E. E. Urbach, “he Place of the Ten Commandments in Ritual and Prayer”
[Heb.], he Ten Commandments as Relected in Tradition and Literature hroughout
the Ages, (ed. B. Segal ), Jerusalem 1985, pp. 132–133.
24
G. Vermes, “he Decalogue and the Minim”, In Memoriam Paul Kahle (ed.
M. Black, G. Fohrer), Berlin 1968, pp. 232–240.
25
M. Benovitz, BT Berakhot, Chapter I: With Comprehensive Commentary [Heb.],
Jerusalem 2006, p. 566.
“in nehardea where there are no heretics”
37
never known to have claimed that only the Ten Commandments were
divinely given. Indeed, the rabbis had originally forbidden the recitation of the Ten Commandments because, as Vermes and Benowitz
have argued,26 the minim referred to here were Hellenistic Jews, who
interpreted the Bible literally and claimed that only the Ten Commandments were binding, since only they were given by God. Furthermore, Rav Ashi is not referring to actual heretics living in his own
time. Rather he is echoing a Palestinian tradition quoted in the above
source by Rabbi Nathan and in the following parallel tradition from
the Palestinian Talmud, Berakhot 1:5, 3c:
It would be right to recite the Ten Commandments every day. Why then
do they not recite them? Because of the claim of the minim: so that they
may not say, “only these were given to Moses on Sinai.”
In anticipation of potential theological claims, which could have been
advanced by minim, the rabbis of Palestine omitted the recital of the
Ten Commandments, which, in Temple times, was part of the prayer
service. Rav Ashi, quoting this tradition, disagreed with Amemar’s
attempt to reinstitute the practice in Nehardea.27 here is no reason,
therefore, to interpret Rav Ashi’s objection as directed against a Christian community that existed in Nehardea in his time.28 Indeed, the
very fact that Amemar wanted to restore the recitation of the Ten
See above, n. 24–25.
his interpretation accords with Amemar’s typical methodology and manner
of halakhic ruling. Amemar is known for his daring halakhic rulings, rulings which
at times deviate from biblical or tannaitic law. His lexible approach to Halakhah is
attested to in more than 90% of the cases (20 cases) in which he issues a ruling. All
of these are lenient, exhibiting a tendency to take into consideration the conditions
and circumstances of the speciic case under discussion. In nine cases he even rejects
the conventional law by replying to his pupil, Rav Ashi: לא שמיעא לי כלומר לא
“ סבירא ליI have not heard of it; meaning, I do not ind it reasonable” (Ketubbot 83b;
Ketubbot 97a; Baba Batra 13b; Hullin 53b; Hullin 62a). Concerning this expression
see: A. Cohen, “On the Phrase ‘ ’לא שמיעא לי כלומר לא סבירא ליin the Babylonian
Talmud” [Heb.], Tarbiz, 53 (1984), pp. 467–472. In three other occasions Amemar
rules contrary to a local Nehardean tradition by saying: אנא נהרדעא אנא וסבירא לי
“[in spite of the fact that] I am a Nehardean, I hold [an opinion which is contrary to
Nehardean sages]” (Baba Mezia 16b: Baba Mezia 35a: Baba Batra 31a). his approach
to halakhah is unique to Amemar among late amoraim. For further analysis of
Amemar’s halakhic methodology, see: B. S. Cohen, “Contrasting Study Methods of the
Latter Nehardeans in the Babylonian Talmud’ [Heb.], Hebrew Union College Annual,
78 (2007) [in print].
28
Similarly uncertain is the identiication of the minim in BT Sanhedrin 38b. In
this source, Rav Nahman, a Nehardean sage from the second half of the third century, praises Rav Idit’s personal skill in arguing with the “minim”. Although many
26
27
38
barak s. cohen
Commandments might imply that the heretics found in Palestine were
absent from Nehardea. In other words, instead of proving the existence
of a strong Christian community in Nehardea, this text actually shows
that Amemer was not threatened by any Christian presence at all.29
IV
he following passage from Babylonian Talmud Bava Batra 25a has
been frequently used by scholars as a basis for the conclusion that Rav
Sheshet, who headed a local academy in Nehardea during the third
century,30 had personal contact with Christians and reacted to one of
their daily practices:
R. Ishmael taught: From where do we know that the Shechinah is in all
places? Because it says: “And behold, the angel that talked with me went
forth, and another angel went out to meet him” (Zechariah 2:7). It does
not say: “[went out] ater him”, but “went out to meet him”. his teaches
that the Shechinah is in all places.
So too R. Sheshet held that the Shechinah is in all places, because
[before beginning to pray] he used to say to his attendant: set me facing
in any direction except the east. And this was not because the Shechinah
is not there, but because the minim31 instruct [people to pray] in that
direction.
R. Sheshet was blind and hence when praying he would instruct his
attendant to direct him in any direction except to the east because
“the minim instruct to that side.” In printed editions of the Talmud
this line appears as an addendum to the sugya and not as R. Sheshet’s
actual words. However, Oxford 249 (369) and Paris 1337 read: “he
[= R. Sheshet] used to say to his attendant: Set me facing any direction
except for the east because the minim instruct to that side”. his verscholars identiied these “minim” with Christians, Ahdut has argued recently that
these ‘minim” were Zoroastrians. See: Ahdut (above, n. 1), pp. 32–34.
29
See E. E. Urbach, he Sages: heir Concepts and Beliefs, Massachusetts & London
2001, p. 402.
30
See: B. S. Cohen, “Local Academies in Talmudic Babylonia” [Heb.], Zion, 70
(2005), pp. 448–458.
31
In the Venice printed edition the word “minim” is replaced by “talmidey Yeshu
(= the pupils of Jesus). Rashi, ibid., s.v. demoru ba miney identiies the “minim” as the
following: “the pupils of Jesus instruct to pray facing the east”. It is quite possible that
the printers used Rashi’s very wording to emend the original text. his phenomena (in
general) was well demonstrated by A. Ahrend, see: A. Ahrend, Rashi’s Commentary
on Tractate Megilah [Heb.], Jerusalem 2008, pp. 80–82.
“in nehardea where there are no heretics”
39
sion is also attested in the commentary of R. Hannanel, and it is found
in the Pesaro (1511 A.D.) and Venice (1520 A.D.) printed editions
of the Talmud. In this version, which seems to be the original one,
the phrase, “because the minim instruct to that side,” is part of Rav
Sheshet’s words to his attendant, and not a later editorial addition.
Wilhelm Bacher identiied these “minim” as Manichaeans32 and
argued that this tradition teaches us about the “controversial relations”
between Rav Sheshet and the members of this religion:
Schescheth scheint zu den Menichäern in polemischen Beziehungen
gestanden zu haben.33
It does indeed seem that the Manichaean church was well established
in the eastern parts of Mesopotamia during the second half of the third
century, especially by the time of king Šābur’s death (C.E. 276).34 However, there are two main problems with Bacher’s suggestion. First of
all, we must note that Manichaeans did not pray to the east, but rather
towards the sun, whatever its position in the sky at the time of day
they were praying.35 Second, even if we assume that Rav Sheshet was
referring to the direction in which Manichaeans would have prayed
in the morning, the same practice is also found among Zoroastrians.36
here is no reason to assume that Rav Sheshet was referring speciically to the Manichaean church and not to the Zoroastrianism, which
was, ater all, the state religion of the Sasanian Empire.37
See: W. Bacher, Die Agada der Babylonischen Amoräer, Hildesheim 1967, p. 78,
n. 12.
33
Bacher, ibid.
34
See mainly: M. Boyce, A Reader in Manichaean Middle Persian and Parthian
(Texts with Notes), Leiden 1975, pp. 1–2; M. Hutter, ‘Manichaeism in the Early Sasanian Empire’, Numen, 40 (1993), pp. 2–12; S. N. C. Lieu, Manichaeism in Mesopotamia and the Roman East, Leiden 1994, p. 22; S. A. Harvey, ‘Syria and Mesopotamia’,
pp. 360–361. On the spread of Manichaeism in eastern regions see: S. N. C. Lieu,
Manichaeism in the Late Roman Empire and Medieval China, Tübingen 1992, pp.
219–230.
35
See: F. J. Dölger, Sol Salutis, Münster 1925, p. 28; Boyce (above, n. 34), p. 12. See
also: Urbach, Sages, p. 709, n. 99.
36
See for instance: M. Boyce, A Persian Stronghold of Zoroastrianism, Oxford
1977, p. 29; idem, Textual Sources for the Study of Zoroastrianism, Chicago 1990, p. 3;
A. De-Jong, Traditions of the Magi: Zoroastrianism in Greek and Latin Literature,
Leiden 1998, p. 99.
37
L. Ginzberg, Perushim we-Hidushim ba-Yerushalmi, vol. 3, N.Y. 1941, p. 375,
followed by U. Erlich, he Non-Verbal Language of Jewish Prayer [Heb.], Jerusalem
1999, p. 92, doubt the very possibility of arriving at a speciic identiication of the
“minim” in this tradition.
32
40
barak s. cohen
E. E. Urbach identiied the “minim” in this passage as Christians:
Christianity in Egypt and in Western countries accepted in the second
century a prayer-orientation to the east, taking into account the widespread practice in prayer among the Gentiles who had become Christians, and in the third century it became universal in the Christian world
even in eastern countries . . . Rav Sheshet . . . told his servant to position
him for prayer facing whichever direction he pleased, but he excluded
the east, ‘because the sectarians teach this’. In light of the observations
that we made above, there can be no doubt as to who the sectarians were
that gave such instructions.38
As indicated by Urbach, already from the mid third century, the
Assyrian church indeed had a ixed prayer orientation towards the
east.39 Nevertheless, in spite of the similarity between Christian practice and that of the “minim” according to Rav Sheshet, it is far from
certain that Rav Sheshet was referring to actual Christians living in
geographical proximity to him. Again, we face the methodological
problem of not knowing whether a rabbi is referring to actual heretics,
with whom he is personally familiar, or whether he is echoing sources
from other places and other times. he prohibition of directing one’s
prayer towards the east is well attested in Palestinian sources, and was
widely known throughout Babylonia as well. he following tradition
from Palestinian Talmud Berakhot 4:5 (8b) demonstrates this point:
R. Jacob bar Aha said: hey teach there (tannei taman): One may face
any direction (to recite a prayer), except the east. R. Yose bar Abun said:
at irst [in ancient times they prayed]: “With their backs to the Temple
of the lord and their faces eastward, and they bowed eastward toward
the sun” (Ezekiel, 8:16).
R. Jacob bar Aha was a Palestinian sage40 of Babylonian origin41 who
lived at the end of the third and the beginning of the fourth centuries.
In this source, he cites a tannaitic tradition which he claims to be
taught “there,” meaning in Babylonia. R. Jacob is well-known in the
Palestinian Talmud for transmitting other baraitot which are “taught
in Babylonia.”42 It can be assumed that he was familiar with these
Urbach, Sages, pp. 62–63.
See: R. H. Connolly (ed.), Didascalia Apostolatum (he Syriac Version Translated
and Accompanied by the Verona Latin Fragments), Oxford 1969, pp. 119–120.
40
See: Hyman, Toldot, 2, p. 774; Albeck, Mavo, p. 249.
41
See: Epstein, Introduction to the Mishnaic Text, vol. 2, Jerusalem 2000, p. 891.
42
See: Epstein (above, n. 41), pp. 891–892.
38
39
“in nehardea where there are no heretics”
41
baraitot by virtue of coming from Babylonia.43 Rav Sheshet, the bearer
of the tradition in the Bavli, was well recognized for his mastery of
tannaitic literature, and in my comprehensive study of sage, I have
argued that Rav Sheshet’s methodology features a conservative and
formal approach, which is consistently based on tannaitic sources.44
his reinforces the presumptionthat Rav Sheshet’s instruction to his
servant was based on a tannaitic tradition—the same tradition cited
by R. Jacob bar Aha. If so, we cannot assume with certainty that Rav
Sheshet was responding to the presence of a Christian community in
Nehardea.
Furthermore, from this Palestinian source we can see that whether
the prohibition against praying toward the east stems from Babylonian,45
or Palestine,46 it is likely that the “minim” in Rav Sheshet’s statement
are the biblical “heretics” mentioned in the book of Ezekiel.47 As is
sometimes the case, we should understand rabbis here as responding
to the literary reality of biblical history and characters, and not necessarily to actual people, in this case Christians, living in their own time
and region.
Finally and perhaps most importantly, according to Christian sources, Christianity did not reach Nehardea until more than one hundred
years ater Rav Sheshet. Hence, it seems quite improbable that there
was a Christian community in Nehardea in Rav Sheshet’s time (the
second half of the third century).48 with which he could have had personal contact.
43
Most of the baraitot in the Palestinian Talmud which are introduced by this term
(‘tannei taman’) are cited by amoraim of Babylonian origin. For a full analysis of these
traditions, see: Epstein (above, n. 41), pp. 891–897.
44
See: B. S. Cohen, “Rav Naman and Rav Sheshet: Conlicting Methods of Exegesis
of Tannaitic Sources” [Heb.], HUCA, 76 (2005), pp. 11–32.
45
See: Epstein (above, n. 41), p H. Albeck, Mehkarim Babraita UbaToseta Veyahsan LaTalmud, Jerusalem 1970, pp. 86–87
46
See Toseta Megilah 3: 22 (ed. Lieberman, p. 360): “he doors of synagogues open
only eastward, for so we ind concerning the sanctuary that it was open eastward . . .”
his is also conirmed by archaeological evidence, see S. Safrai, ‘he Synagogues South
of MT. Judah’, Immanuel, 3 (1973–1974), pp. 44–56; G. Praster, ‘Batei ha-Knesset baGalil’, Artzot ha-Galil (ed. A. Shmueli, A. Sofer, N. Cliot), Haifa 1983, p. 237.
47
Sun worship existed in Judea in late neo-Assyrian times, as well as in the ancient
near east in general. See, for instance: M. Greenberg, Ezekiel: A New Translation with
Introduction and Commentary, vol. 1, Doubleday 1983, p. 172; R. Kasher, Ezekiel:
Introduction and Commentary [Heb.], vol. 1, Jerusalem-Tel Aviv, 2004, p. 253.
48
See above, adj. to n. 9.
42
barak s. cohen
IV
he following source from BT Avodah Zarah 4a dealing with Rav
Safra—a Babylonian Amora who lived in Nehardea and Pumbedita
(see below)—has been presented by some scholars as evidence for
Christian presence in Babylonia:
Rabbi Abbahu used to praise Rav Safra to the minim [saying] that he
was a great man. hey released him from paying taxes for thirteen years.
One day they met him. hey said to him: “It is written: Only you have
I known from all of the families of the earth; therefore I will visit upon
you all your sins” (Amos 3:2). One who is enraged, does he punish his
lover? He was silent, and did not say anything to them. hey drew a scarf
around him and were mocking him. Rabbi Abbahu came and found
them. He said to them: “Why are you mocking him?” hey said to him:
“Did you not say that he is a great man, yet he could not even tell us the
interpretation of this verse!” He said to them: “hat which I said to you
has to do with tannaitic literature, but with respect to Scripture, I did
not say anything.” hey said to him: “What is the diference with respect
to you that you know [Scripture also]?” He said to them: “We who are
located in your midst, take it upon ourselves and we study [Scripture],
but they who are not located in your midst—do not study”.
his story contradicts the general assumption in scholarly literature
that Christianity was well established in all parts of Babylonia as early
as the fourth century, and that Babylonian Jews and Christians engaged
in religious polemics on a daily basis. Aware of this contradiction,
A. Schremer cast doubt as to the historical accuracy of this source.49
D. Boyarin went even further, reaching the following conclusion:
We ind the Talmud here explicitly denying that in Babylonia the Rabbis were “located in the midst” of Christians. In general, in the scholarly
tradition this has been taken as straightforward evidence that the rabbis
of Babylonia had no Christians with whom to contend, but now I would
see its rhetorical function as quite diferent from that straightforward
reading, indeed almost as evidence for the opposite conclusion.50
Contrary to Schremer and Boyarim, in my opinion this tradition is
indeed rooted in actual history. Rav Safra was a Babylonian Amora
49
A. Schremer, “Stammaitic Historiography”, in Creation and Composition (above
n. 19), p. 224.
50
D. Boyarin, “Hellenism in Jewish Babylonian”, he Cambridge Companion to
the Talmud and Rabbinic Literature (ed. C. E. Fonrobert and M. S. Jafe), Cambridge
2007, p. 357.
“in nehardea where there are no heretics”
43
who lived during the second half of the third and beginning of the
fourth centuries51 in both Nehardea and Pumbedita.52 Rav Safra is
depicted in the Babylonian Talmud as maintaining personal contacts
mainly with Nehardean and Pumbeditan Sages—Rav Joseph,53 Rav
Nahman,54 Rabbah and Abaye.55 he fact that Rav Safra was centered
in Nehardea and Pumbedita, and in those areas he did not come into
contact with Christians, matches my conclusion as presented above
with regard to the absence of Christians from those regions. In other
words, rather than assume that all of Babylonia was a center of Christianity in this period, an assumption that subsequently forces us to
question the historicity of this source, we can acknowledge that the
source relects the scarcity of Christians in certain areas of Babylonia.56 he Bavli states speciically that R. Safra, who was active in both
Pumbedita and Nehardea, was not an expert in Scripture, because he
had little contact with Christians. his fact correlates well both with
the talmudic evidence in Pesahim 56a and the evidence in the Christian chronicles.
IV
Scholars tend to understand amoraic sayings and homiletics against a
background of daily contact and disputation with Christians, and at
times this approach is indeed justiied. However, the conclusion that
Concerning dating Rav Safra’s activity in Babylonia, see: Hyman, Toldot, vol. 3,
pp. 966–969; Albeck, Mavo, p. 302.
52
Rav Sheshet referred to Rav Safra in Rav Nahman’s presence as “Safra your colleague (Safra haverkha)” (BT Bekhorot 10b). Rav Nahman headed an academy in
Nehardea during the second half of the third century (see mainly: Albeck, Mavo, pp.
298–299; Cohen, “Local Academies”, pp. 470–471, n. 168). Similarly, Rabbah, head of
the academy in Pumbedita (Seder Tanaim veAmoraim, p. 5: Iggeret Rav Sherira Gaon,
p. 86) refers to Rav Safra as “our colleague (Safra Havrin)” (BT Shabbat 70a).
53
BT Hullin 133a.
54
BT Shabat 70a.
55
BT Eruvin 45b; 103a; Betzah 38b; Yoma 11a; Sanhedrin 41b; Hullin 51a; Bekhorot 4a. It seems likely that Rav Safra died in Pumbedita, see Hyman, Toldot, vol. 3,
p. 969 (based on BT Moed Katan 25a).
56
In general, not all of the rabbis in Babylonia were familiar with Biblical verses.
his phenomenon was already noted by the Tosaists who wrote: “Sometimes they
[= the rabbis] were not familiar with Biblical verses” (Tosaists, BT Baba Batra 113a,
s.v. “Teravaihu”). It was further documented by D. Rosenthal, “Al Derekh Tipulam
shel Hazal beHilufey Nosah baMikra”, Sefer Izhak Aryeh Zeligman (ed. Y. Zakovich
and A. Rofe), Jerusalem 1983, pp. 396–397. To Rosenthal’s list of cases add BT Sukkah 52b.
51
44
barak s. cohen
Nehardean sages argued with Christians or even co-existed with them
in the same geographical region has no textual justiication. Many of
the texts that have been adduced to support this conclusion are better
understood in light of the tremendous impact of Palestinian rabbinic
traditions upon Babylonian rabbinic study. Furthermore, in estimating the degree of contact Jews and Christians in Babylonia, we should
not treat Babylonia as one uniform region; rather we would do best to
examine each geographical location separately and to avoid generalizing on the basis of information relevant to only one place and time.
In conclusion, the detailed evidence that I have analysed here seems to
support and leads to the acceptance of Asmussen’s proposal that, “One
should be cautious . . . in assessing the extent and inluence of these irst
[= Christian—B.S.C.] communities, and even more so in evaluating
the missionary activities in the Euphrates-Tigris area”.57
57
Asmussen (above, n. 9), p. 924.