- Baraita of Rabbi Ishmael
The Baraita of Rabbi Ishmael (
Hebrew : ברייתא דרבי ישמאל) is abaraita which explains the 13 rules ofR. Ishmael , and their application, by means of illustrations from the Bible. The name is inaccurately given also to the first part of the Baraita, which only enumerates the thirteen rules. The Baraita constitutes the introduction to theSifra , and precedes it in all editions, containing principles which in the Sifra are given their application. The Baraita probably originated in the school of R. Ishmael, and in this regard the name is not wholly erroneous. The "Hekalot " are also called by some the "Baraita of R. Ishmael."The 13 Rules
The thirteen rules were compiled by Rabbi
Ishmael b. Elisha for the elucidation of the Torah and for makinghalakic deductions from it. They are, strictly speaking, mere amplifications of the seven Rules ofHillel , and are collected in the Baraita of R. Ishmael, forming the introduction to theSifra and reading a follows:# Ḳal wa-ḥomer: Identical with the first rule of Hillel.
# Gezerah shawah: Identical with the second rule of Hillel.
# Binyan ab: Rules deduced from a single passage of Scripture and rules deduced from two passages. This rule is a combination of the third and fourth rules of Hillel.
# Kelal u-Peraṭ: The general and the particular.
# u-Peraṭ u-kelal: The particular and the general.
# Kelal u-Peraṭ u-kelal: The general, the particular, and the general.
# The general which requires elucidation by the particular, and the particular which requires elucidation by the general.
# The particular implied in the general and excepted from it for pedagogic purposes elucidates the general as well as the particular.
# The particular implied in the general and excepted from it on account of the special regulation which corresponds in concept to the general, is thus isolated to decrease rather than to increase the rigidity of its application.
# The particular implied in the general and excepted from it on account of some other special regulation which does not correspond in concept to the general, is thus isolated either to decrease or to increase the rigidity of its application.
# The particular implied in the general and excepted from it on account of a new and reversed decision can be referred to the general only in case the passage under consideration makes an explicit reference to it.
# Deduction from the context.
# When two Biblical passages contradict each other the contradiction in question must be solved by reference to a third passage.Rules seven to eleven are formed by a subdivision of the fifth rule of
Hillel ; rule twelve corresponds to the seventh rule of Hillel, but is amplified in certain particulars; rule thirteen does not occur in Hillel, while, on the other hand, the sixth rule of Hillel is omitted by Ishmael. With regard to the rules and their application in general see alsoTalmud—Hermeneutics .Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography
* In addition to the works on Talmudic methodology. see "Œuvres Complètes de Saadia", ix. 73-83 (commentary of Saadia on the thirteen rules), xxiii.-xxxiii., Paris, 1897.
External links
* [http://66.92.232.225/view.jsp?artid=256&letter=B&search=Baraita%20Ishmael Jewish Encyclopedia for Baraita of Rabbi Ishmael] , by
Marcus Jastrow andLouis Ginzberg .
* [http://66.92.232.225/view.jsp?artid=473&letter=R&search=Baraita%20Ishmael Jewish Encyclopedia for Rules of Rabbi Ishmael] , byWilhelm Bacher andJacob Zallel Lauterbach .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.