‘Zionist-Messianic Halakha’

Aviad Hollander’s chapter “Zionist-Messianic Halakha” reconstructs Rabbi Shlomo Goren (1917-1994) as a theorist of sovereign Jewish existence. Hollander shows that Goren’s halakhic rulings emerge from a theology of history. The establishment of the State of Israel constitutes for Goren a redemptive rupture that alters the conditions under which halakha operates.
Hollander’s analysis pushes past the standard binaries that dominate scholarship on Religious Zionism. Discussions of modern halakha often oscillate between two explanatory models. The apologetic account holds that halakha possesses timeless flexibility capable of accommodating modernity without conceptual disruption. The reductionist sociological account treats rabbinic rulings as rationalizations of prior ideological commitments. Hollander’s portrait of Goren reveals a jurist whose theological vision reshapes his jurisprudential imagination. Goren believes Jewish history has entered a new covenantal phase. The restoration of sovereignty is not another circumstance to which halakha must react. It transforms the horizon where halakhic reasoning unfolds.
The conceptual center of the chapter is the idea that Goren develops a form of sovereign jurisprudence. The phrase captures the distinctive nature of his project more accurately than broader labels such as “Religious Zionist halakha” or “messianic nationalism.” Many Orthodox rabbis accept the state pragmatically while operating within an exilic legal consciousness. They view the state as instrumentally useful for protecting Jews, facilitating religious life, or preventing persecution. They do not regard sovereignty as a theological category capable of altering halakhic method. Goren does.
For Goren, the establishment of the state represents atchalta de’geulah, the beginning of redemption. The state is not yet redemption. It remains open to criticism. But it constitutes a stage within the messianic process. Goren does not collapse contemporary Israel into eschatological fulfillment. He views sovereignty as the engine through which redemption progressively unfolds in history. The state becomes a “State on the way to the Messiah,” a vessel carrying unrealized redemptive potential.
Hollander shows that this conviction operates as a jurisprudential principle. Goren acknowledges that legal rulings concerning state ceremonies, Independence Day, and national institutions depend on one’s “whole approach” to whether the state represents the beginning of redemption. The admission is striking. It makes visible a premise usually left implicit within legal reasoning. Goren recognizes that jurisprudence is inseparable from historical interpretation. A posek’s understanding of where the Jewish people stand within sacred history shapes the legal process.
The insight destabilizes the common assumption that halakhic adjudication functions through purely internal doctrinal channels detached from historical consciousness. Goren treats theology as an operational variable within jurisprudence. Whether the state possesses redemptive significance alters the legal meaning of sovereignty, military service, public ritual, and national legislation. Ideological consciousness becomes a legitimate component of judicial reasoning.
Hollander’s treatment of Goren’s biography reinforces the argument by situating his jurisprudence within the broader transformation from exile to sovereignty. Goren’s formative experiences extend well beyond the study hall. His military service before and after the establishment of the state proves decisive. As chief rabbi of the IDF, he confronts problems for which classical halakha possesses no stable institutional precedent. Diasporic Jewish law contains discussions of kingship, warfare, public authority, and collective obligation. These categories remained theoretical under centuries of statelessness. The creation of the Israeli state turns them into practical realities requiring operational jurisprudence.
The institutional novelty produces immense interpretive pressure. Military ethics, battlefield conduct, public mourning, chain of command, wartime ritual, and national legislation all demand legal articulation. Hollander emphasizes that Goren enters a legal terrain without settled precedents. Within this vacuum, his theology of redemption acquires jurisprudential force.
A central contribution of the chapter is its demonstration that Goren’s messianism shapes not only the content of his rulings but the selection of legal questions themselves. Jurisprudence does not merely answer preexisting questions. It also determines which questions appear historically urgent. Goren’s theology directs his attention toward sovereignty, military ethics, territorial control, public ritual, conversion policy, and the integration of secular Israelis into the halakhic framework. He believes the Jewish people have reentered political history as a collective sovereign actor.
Goren attempts to reconstruct halakha as the legal architecture of a sovereign civilization rather than the normative system of a dispersed minority community. Classical exile halakha evolves under conditions of vulnerability and dependence. It concentrates on ritual life, family law, communal organization, and personal observance. Goren seeks to reactivate dormant biblical and talmudic categories relating to statecraft, warfare, and collective destiny. His project is not conservative preservation. It is civilizational reconstruction.
The distinction between active and passive redemption deepens the analysis. Hollander highlights how Goren associates passivity with exile and activism with redemption. This is not political temperament. It is theological anthropology. Exile produces a defensive Jewish consciousness structured around endurance, caution, and withdrawal from history. Redemption demands agency. The redeemed Jew acts, builds, legislates, fights, heals, and governs.
The anthropological transformation helps explain the institutional activism of Goren’s career. He does not merely write responsa. He builds frameworks: the military rabbinate, national ceremonies, legal doctrines for sovereignty, wartime ethics, and medical jurisprudence. Activity becomes a redemptive category. Sovereignty demands halakhic kinetic energy.
The IDF occupies a central place within this worldview. Goren describes the Israeli army not as an ordinary military institution but as an instrument of sacred historical purpose. In a 1956 statement Hollander cites, Goren insists the IDF differs from the armies of the nations because its mission ties to the prophetic realization of redemption. The army therefore becomes military, national, and theological at once. War enters sacred history.
The fusion of military necessity and redemptive mission explains why Goren invests such effort in constructing a halakhic framework for sovereignty. Exile-era jurisprudence cannot simply be repeated unchanged under sovereign conditions. A people without political power and a people exercising power inhabit different moral and legal worlds.
The result is a dramatic expansion of halakhic ambition. Goren seeks not merely to preserve religious observance within the state but to transform the state into a redemptive instrument. Hollander notes Goren’s insistence that the laws of the state should eventually harmonize with Torah through public internalization rather than coercive imposition. Here one sees the synthesis at the heart of his thought. The state is neither secular-neutral nor immediately theocratic. It is transitional, a polity moving toward covenantal fulfillment.
The transitional conception generates tensions. Because redemption unfolds through historical institutions, political developments acquire theological significance. Military victories confirm redemptive momentum. National crises threaten theological coherence. Hollander’s discussion of the post-1973 period therefore carries particular weight.
The Yom Kippur War represents not merely a military shock but a spiritual rupture within Religious Zionism. Goren’s earlier confidence that the concrete state transparently embodies redemptive ascent becomes harder to sustain amid military failure, political fragmentation, and later territorial compromise. The Oslo process intensifies the crisis. Goren expresses alarm at state policy, particularly regarding territorial concessions.
The evolution exposes a structural vulnerability of messianic jurisprudence. Once political history is read as sacred history, political setbacks become theological crises. A jurisprudence grounded in sovereign redemption depends on maintaining confidence that history possesses discernible covenantal direction. The post-1973 disillusionment shows the fragility of attempts to identify the state too closely with redemption.
Hollander’s treatment of Goren’s medical rulings broadens the analysis. Most discussions of Goren focus on war, settlement, or national ritual. His positions on autopsies, organ transplantation, and medical education reveal the same underlying logic.
Here Goren’s concern is national self-reliance. He rejects the earlier proposal of Rabbi Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook (1865-1935) that Jewish medical schools use non-Jewish cadavers to preserve Jewish sanctity. Goren regards such dependence as incompatible with sovereign Jewish existence. A redeemed polity cannot construct its scientific infrastructure on permanent reliance on outsiders. Medical modernity must become internalized within Jewish sovereignty.
The position represents a major conceptual expansion of halakhic responsibility. Goren transforms v’chai ba’hem from a principle of individual survival into a civilizational mandate. Torah must sustain the viability of a modern technological society capable of defending and reproducing itself through its own institutions. Halakha becomes responsible not merely for ritual fidelity but for the operational functioning of sovereign civilization.
The move widens the scope of halakhic concern. Scientific infrastructure, military organization, public administration, and national integration all become halakhically relevant because sovereignty possesses theological meaning. Goren no longer simply preserves tradition within modernity. He attempts to generate the jurisprudence of a technologically advanced redeemed nation.
A fascinating dimension of the chapter is the paradoxical relationship between messianism and leniency in Goren’s legal method. Popular portrayals often assume that nationalist or messianic jurisprudence produces rigidity. Many of Goren’s controversial interventions are lenient. His rulings concerning mamzerut, annulment, conversion, and Ethiopian Jewry often stretch traditional boundaries toward inclusion.
The contradiction becomes intelligible once one understands Goren’s overriding concern with national cohesion. He views the state as a redemptive collective enterprise. Preserving the attachment of secular Jews to halakha therefore becomes a supreme value. He fears that excessive rigidity might produce a permanent rupture between the Jewish public and the Torah.
The “Brother and Sister” affair illustrates the point. Goren’s intervention is not humanitarian sentiment alone. It reflects a strategic and theological determination to keep halakha from appearing morally archaic or socially impossible. If the rabbinate cannot solve painful human problems, secular Israelis might increasingly seek to dismantle religious authority altogether.
The same logic shapes his evolving approach to Beta Israel. Hollander notes Goren’s movement from initially requiring conversion to later waiving it under growing public and political pressure. The shift is not simple opportunism. Goren fears that stringent exclusion might strengthen secular demands for separating religion from the state. National integration becomes a halakhic imperative.
This aspect of Goren’s jurisprudence deserves emphasis. Collective unity shapes his legal imagination at a deep level. The preservation of Jewish solidarity within sovereignty often outweighs procedural rigidity. His leniencies are not signs of secularization. They are expressions of sovereign theology. Halakha must remain attached to the national collective if redemption is to continue unfolding through history.
Hollander’s discussion of ethics and “purity of arms” adds another layer. Goren’s messianism does not merely sacralize power. It generates a theory of moral superiority. Jewish sovereignty guided by halakha is supposed to produce a more humane civilization than secular nationalism alone.
The Beirut siege episode exemplifies the synthesis. Goren defends allowing an escape route for enemy fighters by invoking the halakhic principle requiring an “open side” during siege warfare. He frames the decision not as technical legal compliance but as evidence of the humanitarian superiority of Jewish law. The IDF embodies both national sovereignty and prophetic ethics.
The move carries enormous symbolic weight. Religious Zionism inherits a profound theological problem. Classical Jewish memory associates sovereignty with covenantal justice and prophetic morality, but modern nationalism emerges amid the catastrophes of twentieth-century warfare. Goren attempts to resolve the tension by arguing that halakha can generate an ethically elevated form of sovereign power.
His fascination with ancient military categories reflects this ambition. Goren repeatedly seeks to show that Jewish law already contains sophisticated humanitarian principles long before modern international law. He fuses the secular Zionist ethos of “purity of arms” with classical rabbinic jurisprudence. The Israeli soldier becomes linked at once to modern nationalism and biblical covenant.
The synthesis illuminates Goren’s larger historical project. He works to overcome the split between sacred and secular that characterizes modern Jewish existence. The state, army, medical system, and public institutions are not to remain secular domains merely tolerated by religion. They are to become sanctified instruments of redemption.
Hollander’s achievement is showing how systematic the vision is. Goren does not issue disconnected rulings responding ad hoc to contemporary events. He attempts to construct an integrated theology of redeemed sovereignty. Every domain of public life becomes potentially halakhic because every domain participates in the national return to history.
The chapter therefore contributes not only to Jewish studies but to the broader study of political theology. Goren’s jurisprudence shows how underlying metaphysical narratives about history, collective destiny, and sacred time shape legal systems. Modern liberal legalism often presents itself as procedurally neutral. All jurisprudence presupposes some conception of the human person, political order, and historical purpose. Goren has an analytical advantage. He articulates his assumptions openly.
Hollander neither romanticizes Goren as a prophetic genius nor dismisses him as an ideologue cloaking nationalism in theology. He reconstructs the internal coherence of the worldview while tracing its institutional and political consequences.
The balance is important because Goren’s legacy remains contested. His attempt to build a jurisprudence adequate to sovereignty produces immense institutional creativity. It also weakens certain traditional restraints. Once political developments become signs of redemption, opposition risks appearing not merely mistaken but spiritually obstructive. The same theological apparatus capable of energizing national renewal can intensify absolutism and political polarization.
Hollander suggests that one cannot understand contemporary Religious Zionism without understanding Goren’s transformation of halakha into sovereign jurisprudence. He represents an early major rabbinic figure to confront the implications of Jewish political restoration after centuries of exile. His project is civilizational. He seeks to reconstruct halakha as the operating system of a redeemed nation-state.
The enduring significance of “Zionist-Messianic Halakha” lies in its portrayal of Goren as a jurist standing at the threshold between two Jewish worlds. Behind him stands the diasporic civilization of exile, caution, and political weakness. Before him stands the uncertain experiment of sovereign Jewish modernity. Goren believes the transition demands not merely new rulings but a new jurisprudential imagination. The state is not another circumstance requiring accommodation. It is the arena through which redemption advances into history.
Hollander’s chapter shows that Goren’s halakhic project cannot be reduced to nationalism, activism, or messianic enthusiasm alone. It is an attempt to answer one of the larger questions in modern Jewish thought: what happens to Torah when the Jews return from history’s margins to history’s center?

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Halachic Multiculturalism and the Crisis of the People’s Army: Women’s Singing, Sovereignty, and Jurisprudential Transformation in the IDF

Aviad Yehiel Hollander’s 2014 article, “Halachic Multiculturalism in the IDF: Rulings of Official Religious Authorities in Israel Concerning ‘Women’s Singing,’” remains an indispensable analysis of the evolving relationship among halacha, military sovereignty, and multicultural governance in the State of Israel. Many observers first read the 2011 walkout as a narrow dispute over religious sensitivities during military ceremonies. Hollander shows it differently. Beneath the surface lies a conflict over jurisprudential method, institutional authority, national identity, and the sociological future of the Israel Defense Forces. The episode of religious officer cadets leaving a ceremony featuring female vocalists was never about music alone. It exposed competing theories of how halacha engages transformed social conditions and competing visions of what the IDF ought to become.
Hollander’s central achievement is his refusal of the binary frame through which most journalists read such controversies. Press coverage reduced the affair to liberal egalitarianism versus religious conservatism, women’s rights versus clerical patriarchy, secular modernity versus reactionary Orthodoxy. Hollander instead reconstructs the internal logic of the halachic debate. He shows that the disagreement between Rabbi Yonah Metzger (b. 1953) and Rabbi Eyal Krim (b. 1957) is not a quarrel over whether the classical prohibition of kol isha exists. Both rabbis accept the Talmudic and halachic prohibition on women’s singing. Both accept that the issue imposes legal constraints. Both support exemptions for religious soldiers under at least some conditions. The dispute concerns something deeper. It asks whether transformed sociological conditions count as legitimate halachic data, whether state institutions carry independent religious significance, and whether military cohesion can become a substantive halachic value capable of reshaping the practical application of inherited categories.
More than a decade later, the article reads almost as prophecy. The tensions Hollander identifies have only intensified amid the rise of Hardal influence, expanding Haredi integration debates, controversies over gender-integrated service, and the constitutional crisis around military burden-sharing after October 7. The IDF increasingly serves as the primary arena through which Israeli society negotiates the meaning of “Jewish and democratic.” The women’s singing controversy now appears not as an isolated episode but as an early sign of a much larger struggle over the sociological constitution of the Israeli state.
The dispute begins with a halachic question rooted in classical Jewish sources. The Talmudic assertion that “a woman’s voice is ervah” had long generated debate over the permissibility of men hearing women sing. The modern military context introduces complications absent from classical discussions. Military ceremonies are not nightclubs or theaters. They are state rituals carrying mourning, memory, hierarchy, cohesion, and collective symbolism. The question becomes whether these contextual features alter the halachic application of the prohibition.
Rabbi Metzger answers largely in the negative. His jurisprudence operates through what one might call preservationist formalism. Metzger relies on narrow interpretations of canonical legal authorities such as the Shulhan Arukh of Rabbi Yosef Karo (1488–1575). He acknowledges minority leniencies developed across the halachic tradition, including distinctions between solo and group singing, or between intentional and incidental hearing, but he rejects their practical applicability. For Metzger, these leniencies remain marginal academic possibilities, not operative norms. The military ceremony does not differ from other settings where the prohibition applies. Soldiers attend on purpose. The singing forms part of the central event. The prohibition holds.
Underneath Metzger’s method lies a broader theory of religious integrity. His focus stays directed at the inner spiritual condition of the observant soldier. The primary question is whether religious subjects can preserve fidelity to halachic norms within potentially compromising environments. Institutional cohesion, social symbolism, and secular perceptions remain secondary. Hollander observes that Metzger reads ceremonies as cultural performances rather than as socially constitutive rituals. He sees little reason to modify inherited prohibitions because the setting is military rather than civilian.
Rabbi Krim approaches the problem through a different jurisprudential orientation. He is not simply more lenient. He operates with a different account of how halacha interacts with social reality. One might call his approach sovereignty-oriented jurisprudence. Unlike preservationist formalism, this method treats transformed sociological conditions as legally relevant facts capable of reshaping the application of inherited categories.
Krim revives obscure minority opinions, including the writings of Rabbi Aharon de Toledo, who argued in Divrei Hefetz that the prohibition depends primarily on the listener’s intention to derive sexual enjoyment from the singing voice. Krim distinguishes between aesthetic appreciation and erotic stimulation, between solemn ceremonies and atmospheres of levity, between intentional sensual enjoyment and incidental participation in collective ritual. He reinterprets earlier decisors such as Rabbi Yehiel Yaakov Weinberg (1884–1966), arguing that permissive rulings on mixed singing in Sridei Aish reflect not a narrow technical exception but a broader sensitivity to social context and institutional necessity.
Most important, Krim incorporates modern sociological transformation into halachic reasoning. Hollander highlights Krim’s argument that women’s increased public visibility has altered the experiential and psychological assumptions underlying earlier prohibitions. In a society where women routinely occupy public space alongside men, hearing female voices no longer automatically produces the erotic charge presumed by prior generations. The prohibition’s practical application can be reconsidered without formally abolishing the prohibition.
The move represents a jurisprudential innovation. The real divide between Metzger and Krim is not over legal conclusions but over whether sociology counts as halachic data. Metzger treats the inherited legal category as insulated from changing social perception. Krim treats social transformation as relevant to the category’s operative meaning. Krim introduces a form of halachic legal realism. Law cannot apply mechanically apart from the social world its subjects inhabit.
Such reasoning places Krim within a broader Religious Zionist transformation of halachic consciousness associated with figures like Rabbi Shlomo Goren (1917–1994). In classical diaspora halacha, the surrounding state existed largely outside covenantal religious life. Sovereignty-oriented Religious Zionism alters the framework. Once the Jewish state becomes partially sacralized, state institutions acquire independent religious significance. The army stops functioning as an external framework where religious individuals operate. It becomes an expression of Jewish collective destiny and national holiness.
Hollander recognizes this when he discusses Rabbi Rafi Peretz’s (b. 1956) claim that “the honor of the IDF” and “the honor of the Torah” are interconnected. The phrase is not rhetorical flourish. It reflects a theological anthropology of sovereignty. Military cohesion, national unity, and institutional legitimacy become substantive religious values rather than pragmatic concerns. For Krim and Peretz, preserving army solidarity is part of the halachic enterprise.
This distinction reveals the institutional character of Krim’s jurisprudence. Metzger’s concern centers on the integrity of the individual religious subject. Krim’s concern centers on the integrity of the sovereign collective institution. Metzger asks how observant soldiers can preserve spiritual purity within secular environments. Krim asks what interpretation might let a diverse citizen army keep functioning as a shared national framework.
These questions produce different conceptions of multiculturalism. Metzger’s model leans toward accommodation through separation. Religious soldiers should be excused from participation in problematic events even if visible differences emerge between groups. The army can tolerate behavioral pluralism because preserving religious integrity outweighs symbolic uniformity. Krim’s model leans toward accommodation through reinterpretation. Halachic elasticity should be deployed wherever legitimately possible to minimize visible fragmentation and preserve collective participation. Unity becomes a religious good capable of justifying interpretive creativity.
Hollander identifies the dispute as part of the IDF’s larger transformation away from the classical Zionist “melting pot” paradigm. Early Zionist ideology cast the military as an engine of national homogenization. Jews from radically different diasporic cultures might be forged into a unified Hebrew collective through shared labor, language, ritual, and sacrifice. The army served as a civic religion generating common identity.
By the early twenty-first century, the ideal had eroded. Israeli society had segmented into distinct subcultures with divergent moral vocabularies, educational systems, media ecosystems, and religious commitments. The IDF increasingly operated not as a homogenizing institution but as a negotiated coalition structure attempting to preserve minimal solidarity across deep internal differences.
The women’s singing controversy reveals the fragility of this arrangement because military ceremonies occupy a uniquely symbolic role within national life. Shared songs, memorial rituals, and public commemorations are not peripheral activities. They are the rites that reproduce collective identity. When groups begin leaving ceremonies, requesting exemptions, or operating under differentiated rules, the symbolic unity of the institution comes under strain.
This is why the controversy generates such emotional intensity relative to its surface content. The argument was never about whether a female soloist might sing at a memorial event. It concerned whether the IDF would remain a common civil religion or evolve into a federation of semi-autonomous tribes sharing a chain of command while operating under increasingly divergent normative systems.
Hollander grasps that the military rabbinate’s categorization of ceremonies already reflected a de facto multicultural settlement. “Official ceremonies” required participation. “Other ceremonies” allowed partial accommodation. “Social activities” mandated broader exemptions. This bureaucratic differentiation tried to balance competing goods: institutional unity, religious conscience, women’s dignity, and operational function.
Over time, the differentiation has expanded. Dedicated Haredi military tracks now operate under highly specialized conditions including gender segregation, religious supervision, modified training environments, and reduced female presence. Religious Zionist combat units possess distinctive internal cultures and rabbinic influences. Secular units operate by different social assumptions. The IDF resembles a multicultural federation more than a culturally unified republic in uniform.
The post–October 7 environment intensified these forces. The war temporarily revived rhetoric of collective solidarity and shared sacrifice. It also magnified tensions over military burden-sharing, especially regarding Haredi conscription. As the Israeli state attempts to integrate larger numbers of ultra-Orthodox recruits, questions once considered marginal now become constitutional in scope. Can a liberal-democratic military sustain deeply illiberal subcultures within its ranks? Can a sovereign institution maintain symbolic unity while operating under increasingly differentiated moral regimes?
Hollander’s concluding questions therefore appear prescient. He asks whether liberal Israeli society might prove as willing to reinterpret its own values as Krim is willing to reinterpret halachic categories. The question remains the central unresolved dilemma.
Krim’s jurisprudence shows remarkable elasticity. He revives minority opinions, reinterprets precedents, contextualizes prohibitions, and incorporates sociological change into legal reasoning. Many secular Israeli actors approach liberal equality norms with greater rigidity. Every accommodation granted to religious sensibilities risks appearing as symbolic exclusion of women or capitulation to illiberalism. Every assertion of universal egalitarian norms appears to many religious communities as coercive secularization.
The symmetry is often missed. Public discourse portrays religious actors as uniquely inflexible. Hollander’s analysis complicates that picture. Krim’s willingness to reformulate halachic application in response to institutional and sociological realities might exceed the willingness of some secular liberals to reconsider universalist assumptions for the sake of coexistence.
The tensions cannot dissolve through rhetoric. Full accommodation of strict Haredi norms might affect women’s participation, visibility, and authority within military spaces. Hollander acknowledges this. The question is not whether friction exists but what type of friction a democratic state can absorb without fragmenting into parallel societies or coercively assimilating minority subcultures.
The women’s singing controversy belongs within a larger global crisis confronting liberal democracies. Modern states contain communities operating by incompatible moral anthropologies. Liberal universalism assumes common civic norms applicable across all groups. Multicultural accommodation assumes differentiated practices and institutional flexibility. Militaries pose special difficulties because they depend on hierarchy, solidarity, and shared symbolic legitimacy in ways other institutions do not.
A university tolerates extensive cultural segmentation because participation remains voluntary and decentralized. A military based on conscription cannot easily function if groups reject common rituals, shared spaces, or mutual symbolic recognition. The IDF therefore becomes an unusually charged arena for negotiating questions that confront liberal democracies everywhere. How much differentiation can sovereign institutions tolerate before collective identity dissolves?
Hollander’s article treats these issues with methodological seriousness rather than ideological reduction. He approaches halachic reasoning as a sophisticated jurisprudential discourse shaped by institutional incentives, sociological conditions, theological commitments, and competing theories of statehood. He recognizes the dispute over kol isha as a contest among competing visions of sovereignty, multiculturalism, and collective identity within the Jewish state.
More than a decade on, the trajectory he identified has become unmistakable. The IDF operates through negotiated accommodations among divergent subcultures rather than through classical Zionist homogenization. Religious Zionist jurisprudence keeps trying to preserve institutional unity through interpretive elasticity. Haredi integration pressures keep expanding demands for differentiated environments. Liberal universalism keeps struggling to determine how much accommodation it can absorb without undermining its own normative foundations.
The women’s singing controversy endures because it condensed all these tensions into one symbolic dispute. It exposed the unstable intersection of halacha, sovereignty, gender, nationalism, and multicultural governance inside the last great integrative institution of Israeli civic life. Hollander saw earlier than most that the argument was never about songs. It was about the future sociological architecture of the Israeli state.

* Rabbi Eyal Moshe Krim (b. February 8, 1957) heads the Military Rabbinate of the Israel Defense Forces and holds the rank of brigadier general. He grew up in Givatayim in a family with Karlin Hasidic roots and studied at Yeshivat Bnei Akiva.
His path to the chief rabbi post runs through combat, not just the study hall. He entered the IDF as a paratrooper in 1975, became an infantry officer in 1985, and served as a platoon leader and company commander in the 202nd Paratroop Battalion. He took leave in 1981 to study at Mercaz HaRav. After the First Lebanon War, he commanded a detachment in Sayeret Matkal, the elite special forces unit. He continued reserve command duties as a lieutenant colonel from 1985 to 2005. From 1985 to 1994 he studied at Ateret Cohanim, where he received rabbinic ordination.
In 2006 he returned to active service at the request of Rabbi Avichai Rontzki, then IDF chief rabbi. He chaired the Shiluv HaRa’uy committee charged with implementing the 2002 IDF integration order on sexes and religions, then headed the Halacha department of the Military Rabbinate. That is the post he held when he wrote the responsum on women’s singing that Hollander analyzes.
In 2016 he was nominated to lead the Military Rabbinate. The nomination drew sharp opposition over remarks he had made in a 2002 “Ask the Rabbi” column suggesting that biblical permissions for wartime conduct might allow Israeli soldiers to rape non-Jewish women, along with statements opposing women in combat. The High Court froze the appointment until he submitted a written affidavit clarifying that he had never said, written, or thought that wartime rape was permitted for IDF soldiers, and apologizing for the way the earlier comments had been understood. He was sworn in as Chief Rabbi of the IDF in December 2016 and remains in the role.
He is regarded as a halachic authority on military matters and has continued to issue rulings on questions arising from the post-October 7 war, including body identification and burial under mass-casualty conditions.

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‘Danger, Slippery Slope!’

R. Aviad Hollander’s essay “סכנה, מדרון חלקלק!” (“Danger, Slippery Slope!”) exposes the structural tensions the return of Jewish sovereignty generates. At first glance, the essay seems to address a familiar controversy inside contemporary Religious Zionism: the integration of women into combat frameworks in the Israel Defense Forces and the resulting anxiety over modesty, military culture, and traditional religious norms. That framing, while accurate, understates the essay’s jurisprudential and sociological reach. Hollander’s real subject is not gender integration. It is the instability of halakhic categories under sovereignty and institutional modernity. The essay shows how “morale,” psychological need, emotional stability, and collective cohesion become formal legal catalysts inside military Halakha, forcing rabbis to negotiate the boundaries between military necessity, bureaucratic expansion, and covenantal restraint.
The article is therefore a study in the sociology of sovereign Halakha. It examines what happens when a legal tradition forged under diasporic, non-sovereign conditions has to govern a modern army, a centralized bureaucracy, and a technologically advanced nation-state. For close to two thousand years, rabbinic Judaism did not possess a sovereign military apparatus. Classical Halakha developed under conditions where Jews exercised limited political and coercive power. Questions of large-scale mobilization, battlefield logistics, military morale, strategic deterrence, psychological warfare, and institutional command structures sat at the periphery of the halakhic imagination. The rebirth of Jewish sovereignty in the twentieth century produced a jurisprudential vacuum. Modern military rabbis had to improvise legal frameworks for phenomena that lacked precedent in the classical canon.
This sovereign vacuum produced a central paradox of Religious Zionism. The rabbis most committed to preserving traditional Halakha often became its most innovative interpreters, because sovereignty demanded improvisation. Shlomo Goren (1917–1994), the architect of much of modern military Halakha, faced unprecedented dilemmas. Could the bodies of fallen soldiers be evacuated on the Sabbath to preserve troop morale? Could military chaplains travel on the Sabbath to comfort soldiers near combat zones? Could emotional stabilization become a form of operational necessity? Once such questions emerged, Halakha could no longer remain confined to ritual observance. It became entangled with institutional psychology, military administration, and theories of collective morale.
Hollander’s central insight is that “morale” became a halakhic category. This shift transformed the structure of military jurisprudence because morale is elastic. Unlike clear operational necessities such as defending a position or treating a wounded soldier, morale runs along a continuum of subjective and institutional interpretation. The danger Hollander identifies is therefore not moral decline or liberalization in the abstract. It is category expansion. Once psychological well-being becomes legally actionable inside military Halakha, the boundary between existential necessity and administrative convenience erodes.
A sophisticated dimension of the essay is its triangulation of morale into three legal and sociological forms. Hollander shows that military rabbis confront at least three psychological economies operating inside the army at the same time: combat spirit, general emotional stabilization, and religious morale.
Combat spirit names the psychological condition required for battlefield performance. This category links to pikuach nefesh, the preservation of life, the supreme halakhic principle that overrides almost all ritual prohibitions. When soldiers collapse after catastrophic casualties or traumatic events, operational effectiveness erodes and lives stand at risk. Under such conditions, morale acquires the status of a life-preserving necessity. Evacuating fallen comrades on the Sabbath becomes permissible not from respect for the dead alone, but because leaving bodies exposed might destroy the fighting spirit of the survivors.
Once morale enters the halakhic system through this doorway, it becomes hard to confine. The second category, general emotional stabilization, introduces a more ambiguous logic. Here the issue is no longer direct battlefield survival but the diffuse enhancement of military effectiveness through comfort, entertainment, or emotional uplift. If soldiers perform better when emotionally encouraged, does that justify entertainment programs on the Sabbath? May military bands travel to front lines to raise spirits? May commanders authorize ever-broader activities under the language of morale enhancement?
At this stage the “slippery slope” emerges not as rhetorical flourish but as a theory of institutional drift. The fear is that the logic of necessity absorbs the logic of preference. Once emotional satisfaction becomes operationally valuable, bureaucracies widen the category, because organizations seek elasticity. Modern institutions reward functional expansion. Exceptions introduced under extreme conditions migrate into ordinary administrative practice.
The third category, religious morale, may prove the most revealing because it exposes the civilizational stakes of military Halakha. Religious morale names the spiritual and psychological distress observant soldiers feel when military life becomes incompatible with covenantal norms. The Military Rabbinate cares not only about operational effectiveness but about preserving the long-term alliance between Religious Zionism and the sovereign Jewish state.
This point is crucial because Religious Zionism occupies a structurally singular position inside modern Judaism. Unlike Haredi communities, which can withdraw partly from the institutions of the secular state, Religious Zionism is invested in sovereignty. The army is not a state institution alone. It serves as a sacred instrument of Jewish redemption, national restoration, and covenantal responsibility. Military service therefore acquires quasi-theological significance. Yet that very integration creates acute tensions once state institutions absorb liberal norms that conflict with traditional religious anthropology.
The debate over women in combat illustrates the conflict because it forces competing anthropologies into direct institutional collision. Liberal egalitarian frameworks read military integration through the language of rights, equality, and individual capability. The soldier appears as an autonomous rights-bearing actor whose opportunities should not be restricted by inherited communal distinctions. Religious Zionist critics often work from a different anthropology. Human beings are creatures formed through embodied communal practices, disciplined boundaries, and moral habituation, not autonomous selves choosing freely.
Inside that framework, mixed-gender combat environments are not morally neutral spaces. Armies are total institutions in the sense Erving Goffman (1922–1982) gave the term. They regulate sleep, clothing, bodily exposure, hierarchy, emotional intimacy, language, and daily routine. They immerse men in comprehensive symbolic worlds. Once gender integration becomes normalized inside such a frame, critics fear the military turns into an engine of anthropological transformation. The issue does not reduce to isolated acts of impropriety. It concerns the gradual restructuring of the tacit moral ecology that sustains observant religious life.
This explains why slippery-slope reasoning plays such a central role in Orthodox discourse. Liberal critics often dismiss slippery-slope arguments as speculative or irrational because liberal individualism assumes reforms can remain compartmentalized. Orthodox halakhic reasoning, by contrast, assumes practices are cumulative and habituative. Men adapt psychologically to institutional norms. Once symbolic boundaries weaken, future transformations grow easier to justify. The concern is civilizational rather than narrowly logical.
Hollander’s essay shows the same logic at work across military Halakha as a whole, not only in gender questions. The Rabbinate repeatedly faces pressure to expand categories of necessity to accommodate the operational demands of a modern military machine. Every successful leniency generates precedential pressure for the next expansion.
The examples in the essay illustrate the point sharply. Goren’s original permission to evacuate bodies on the Sabbath arose from extreme battlefield conditions and catastrophic psychological trauma. Later authorities extended a similar logic to indirect forms of morale maintenance. Entertainment troupes might “warm the hearts” of soldiers. Chaplains might travel not to perform rituals but to provide emotional presence. The concept of operational necessity widens from concrete survival to generalized psychological stabilization.
This is the engine of bureaucratic normalization that slippery-slope arguments fear. The concern is not that one exception exists, but that institutional systems learn from exceptions and convert them into templates for future practice. Modern bureaucracies possess strong expansionary tendencies because operational flexibility improves institutional functioning. Once commanders find that activities can be justified under morale-related categories, incentives appear to widen those categories further.
Hollander’s analysis grows sharper still when he introduces what one might call the “counter-slope.” The slope does not always run toward leniency. Sometimes the Military Rabbinate adopts anticipatory stringency precisely to keep the military system from absorbing sacred categories into administrative logic.
The example involving food delivery to remote outposts is revealing. Technically, if a military vehicle is already operating for operational reasons on the Sabbath, delivering additional hot food might not constitute a substantial increase in prohibition. The Rabbinate prohibited the practice anyway because it feared institutional learning. Once commanders grow accustomed to receiving comfort-oriented services under operational cover, the line between necessity and luxury dissolves. The fear is not individual violation but organizational habituation.
The pattern resembles broader theories of administrative creep inside political and constitutional systems. Legal scholars have long observed that exceptional powers granted during emergencies often become normalized over time. Temporary measures harden into permanent institutional expectations. Hollander shows that military Halakha confronts analogous pressures. Sovereignty produces continual incentives toward elastic interpretation because modern states prize functionality, efficiency, and psychological optimization.
Halakha derives its authority not from flexibility but from boundedness. Sacred law depends on distinctions that resist absorption into instrumental rationality. The Sabbath functions as a symbolic barrier against the total colonization of life by institutional demands. If every emotional or administrative benefit can be reframed as operational necessity, the Sabbath loses its transcendental separateness.
This tension exposes one of the deepest contradictions of Religious Zionism. The movement sought to sacralize sovereignty by integrating Torah with military power, statecraft, and national revival. Yet sovereignty exerts continuous pressure toward institutional pragmatism. The military machine rewards elasticity, adaptation, and managerial efficiency. Halakha rewards caution, boundedness, and continuity. The friction between these imperatives defines much of modern military jurisprudence.
Hollander’s treatment of rabbinic authority deepens the analysis further. The essay suggests that slippery-slope arguments often turn less on formal logic than on trust, character, and spiritual legitimacy. Critics who accuse younger military rabbis of “sliding down the slope” express distrust not only of particular rulings but of the moral formation of the decision-makers themselves.
The insight aligns with the sociology of tacit knowledge developed by Stephen Turner (b. 1951). Turner argues that many institutional systems depend on forms of discretionary judgment that cannot be fully codified into explicit rules. Halakhic reasoning often functions the same way. Formal texts alone cannot determine where legitimate necessity ends and opportunistic elasticity begins. The system therefore depends heavily on trusted elites capable of disciplined judgment.
Inside this frame, accusations of slippery-slope reasoning become sociological claims about elite degradation. The fear is that military rabbis embedded inside state institutions gradually internalize the priorities of bureaucratic management. The Rabbinate risks turning into a functional arm of the military system rather than an independent covenantal authority capable of restraining that system.
This anxiety reflects a broader historical problem confronting religious institutions inside modern states. Once religious authorities become integrated into administrative systems, they often face pressures toward professionalization, technocracy, and managerial adaptation. Over time, spiritual authority shifts from prophetic resistance toward institutional maintenance. Hollander’s essay reveals how acute the problem grows inside Religious Zionism, because the movement’s entire theological project depends on the sanctification rather than rejection of sovereignty.
The essay also illuminates the transformation of Israeli religious scholarship. Contemporary Religious Zionist writing increasingly combines classical halakhic reasoning with sociological, psychological, and institutional analysis. Earlier rabbinic discourse often focused on textual prohibitions concerning modesty or ritual conduct. Hollander treats morale, emotional stability, organizational learning, and institutional culture as central legal variables. The shift reflects the broader intellectual environment of modern Israel, where rabbis, military officers, educators, and academics inhabit overlapping social worlds.
Military Halakha now resembles a form of applied civilizational governance. The Rabbinate does not issue isolated ritual rulings. It manages the symbolic boundaries of a sovereign Jewish society operating under modern bureaucratic conditions.
The controversy over women in combat thus becomes one visible symptom of a much larger struggle over the future character of Jewish sovereignty. Can a covenantal moral order survive full immersion inside liberal-national institutions? Can a military function at once as a modern egalitarian bureaucracy and as a vessel for thick halakhic culture? Can sacred boundaries remain stable once operational logic continually rewards flexibility?
Hollander offers no simple answers. What makes the essay important is that he refuses to reduce the conflict to crude binaries such as “religion versus modernity” or “tradition versus equality.” The real issue concerns the relationship between sacred boundedness and sovereign expansion. Modern states tend toward administrative elasticity. Religious traditions tend toward symbolic limitation. Military Halakha is the site where these opposing logics collide hardest, because armies are institutions of existential necessity operating under conditions of perpetual emergency.
The “slippery slope,” in this reading, is not a conservative fear. It is a theory of how institutions transform moral categories under pressure from sovereignty. The IDF becomes the laboratory in which Religious Zionism tests whether a modern Jewish state can preserve covenantal restraint while operating as a technologically advanced military power.
Hollander’s essay therefore deserves to be read not as a narrow intervention in Israeli culture wars but as a contribution to the sociology of law, sovereignty, and religion. It exposes the hidden jurisprudential drama beneath modern Jewish statehood: the attempt to preserve transcendence inside institutions structurally oriented toward operational expansion.

Posted in IDF, R. Aviad Hollander, R. Shlomo Goren | Comments Off on ‘Danger, Slippery Slope!’

Rabbi Eliezer and the Governance of Reproduction: Sexual Discipline, Porous Anthropology, and Covenantal Survival in Late Antique Rabbinic Judaism

A review essay on Yitzchak Roness and Aviad Yehiel Hollander, “How Shall the Children Be Beautiful: Rabbi Eliezer and Eugenics in the Eyes of the Sages,” Jewish Studies, an Internet Journal 10 (2012): 25–44.

The testimony of Imma Shalom (fl. late 1st–early 2nd c. CE) regarding the sexual practices of her husband Rabbi Eliezer ben Hyrcanus (c. late 1st–early 2nd c. CE) has long held an unusual place in the study of rabbinic sexuality. The passage is at once intimate and cryptic, psychologically revealing and rhetorically guarded. Medieval commentators read the narrative as a paradigmatic expression of Pharisaic asceticism. Rabbi Eliezer engaged in intercourse only at midnight. He uncovered a handbreadth and covered a handbreadth. He appeared as though compelled by a demon, since he sought to minimize sensual pleasure and avoid fantasizing about other women. The story became a textual witness to rabbinic suspicion of bodily indulgence and to the idealization of disciplined modesty.
Yitzchak Roness and Aviad Yehiel Hollander complicate this inherited reading. Their essay argues that the passage cannot be understood through the categories of ascetic restraint and tzniut alone (Roness and Hollander, pp. 25–26). Beneath the pietistic surface lies a discourse on the optimization of offspring, the physiological weight of female desire, and the relation among consciousness, embodiment, and reproduction.
Their argument runs deeper than a refined reading of one sugya. It uncovers an anthropological framework embedded within late antique rabbinic culture. Rabbi Eliezer emerges not as a sexual ascetic but as a theorist of managed reproduction. His discipline concerns not the suppression of appetite but the governance of generativity. Sexual conduct becomes reproductive technology. Mental focus becomes biological hygiene. Consent becomes physiologically consequential. The household becomes the site of civilizational survival.

Disciplined Embodiment Rather Than Anti-Bodily Asceticism

Modern readers often assume that asceticism entails hostility toward embodiment. The more spiritually rigorous the religious figure, the less investment he supposedly has in physicality, sexuality, pleasure, or reproduction. Rabbi Eliezer’s conduct reflects a different logic. He does not reject sexuality. He ritualizes it. The body is not abandoned but subjected to extraordinary regulation.
This relocation places Rabbi Eliezer within a broader ancient tradition of disciplined embodiment rather than anti-bodily spirituality. Across the late antique Mediterranean world, sexuality came under careful governance because it was understood as consequential. Greek physicians, Roman moralists, early Christian ascetics, Zoroastrian purity systems, and rabbinic sages all assumed that sexual behavior shaped the quality of offspring and influenced the moral health of society. Rabbi Eliezer belongs squarely within this world.
The act of intercourse therefore is not private pleasure. It is an event of biological, moral, and covenantal production. It generates future members of the community and so falls under intense ethical scrutiny. The sexual act carries civilizational weight.
Roness and Hollander insist that the eugenic dimension of Rabbi Eliezer’s thought must be understood in the broad ancient sense rather than through the lens of twentieth-century racial pseudoscience. They are explicit that their use of the term “eugenics” carries no genealogical link to Nazi-era programs and refers solely to ancient practices aimed at producing superior offspring through parental conduct (Roness and Hollander, p. 25, n. 1). Once this broader meaning is restored, many otherwise puzzling elements of rabbinic sexual discourse become intelligible. The rabbis ask repeatedly how one produces beautiful children, righteous children, wealthy children, male children, or healthy children. They assume that reproductive outcomes are partly shaped by parental conduct during conception. Ancient Judaism lacked genetics. It did not assume that heredity ran random.

The Redactional Contrast: From Modesty to Relational Anthropology

The decisive contribution of Roness and Hollander lies in their comparison between the Bavli’s version of the story and the parallel traditions preserved in Massekhet Kallah. In Bavli Nedarim 20a–b, Imma Shalom’s testimony follows the teaching of Rabbi Yohanan ben Dehavay, who attributes congenital defects to improper sexual behaviors: speaking during intercourse, gazing at the genital area, kissing certain body parts, or engaging in unconventional positions. Placed in this context, Rabbi Eliezer appears as part of the same ascetic project. His disciplined behavior confirms Rabbi Yohanan ben Dehavay’s larger thesis that improper erotic conduct damages offspring (Roness and Hollander, pp. 26–27).
Massekhet Kallah reframes the material. There the testimony appears after the sages declare that whatever a man wishes to do with his wife, he may do. More importantly, Rabbi Eliezer himself is quoted elsewhere in the tractate as teaching that congenital defects result not from immodest acts but from coerced intercourse (Roness and Hollander, pp. 30–32, citing Massekhet Kallah 1:8, 1:10).
This editorial relocation changes the conceptual structure of the passage.
The central issue is no longer bodily modesty. It becomes the emotional and psychological quality of the relationship between husband and wife. The determining variable is the woman’s willing participation. Defective offspring emerge when intercourse occurs against her desire. Rabbi Eliezer’s view that coerced intercourse produces malformed children appears in a teaching distinct from the position of Rabbi Yehoshua, who attributes defects to a wife’s verbal protest during the act, and from Rabbi Akiva (c. 50–c. 135 CE), who attributes them to mutual hatred between the spouses (Roness and Hollander, pp. 32–33).
This is a remarkable cluster of positions. The woman’s emotional condition is treated not as morally relevant but as physiologically generative. Consent becomes biologically consequential. The child embodies the relational state of the parents during conception.
A relational anthropology surfaces here. The rabbis do not operate with a purely mechanical model of reproduction. Emotional harmony, coercion, attentiveness, resentment, and desire all function as biologically productive or destructive forces. Psychology and physiology cannot be separated.
Modern discussions of consent frame it in juridical or moral terms. In Rabbi Eliezer’s framework, consent enters directly into the biology of reproduction. Coercion damages not only the ethical legitimacy of the act but the quality of the resulting child. The wife therefore ceases to be a passive reproductive vessel. Her physiological and emotional participation becomes causally indispensable.

Situating the Argument: Boyarin, Satlow, and the Question of Rabbinic Sexuality

The argument advanced by Roness and Hollander stands in productive tension with the two dominant accounts of rabbinic sexuality in late twentieth-century scholarship: Daniel Boyarin’s Carnal Israel: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (1993) and Michael L. Satlow’s Tasting the Dish: Rabbinic Rhetorics of Sexuality (1995).
Boyarin (b. 1946) reads the Imma Shalom passage as among the strongest pieces of evidence for what he calls the rabbinic ambivalence toward sexual pleasure. He treats Rabbi Eliezer as an extreme figure who embodies a negative attitude toward eros, even as Boyarin argues that mainstream rabbinic tradition affirmed sexuality far more than its Christian counterparts. For Boyarin, Rabbi Eliezer represents the asymptote of rabbinic discomfort with the body, and the reward of beautiful children operates as a kind of spiritualized payment for sexual restriction (cf. Boyarin, Carnal Israel, pp. 46–57; Hebrew edition, pp. 114–126).
Roness and Hollander accept the basic Boyarinian point that Rabbi Eliezer holds an ascetic position. They reject the framing that reduces his conduct to suspicion of pleasure. The eugenic dimension reorients the entire interpretation. What Boyarin reads as sexual restriction, Roness and Hollander read as sexual engineering. Rabbi Eliezer’s conduct emerges as a calibrated method of erotic management aimed at the production of superior offspring rather than as an avoidance of bodily satisfaction (Roness and Hollander, pp. 38–39). Boyarin’s reading is not refuted; it is deepened. The asceticism is real, but the asceticism serves a generative goal that Boyarin’s framework cannot accommodate.
The earlier work of Yitzhak D. Gilat (1928–2007) on the halakhic system of Rabbi Eliezer ben Hyrcanus retains its force in this picture. Gilat established that Rabbi Eliezer consistently held positions reflecting an ethos of pious stringency, and Roness and Hollander accept that characterization as a starting point (Roness and Hollander, p. 29 n. 13). What they add is the recognition that pious stringency in this case includes a productive aim. The figure Gilat described as a hasid in the rabbinic register turns out to be a reproductive theorist as well.
The position of Dalia Hoshen offers a more direct alternative. Hoshen reads Rabbi Eliezer’s practices as expressions of a theology of intimate union, in which the absence of distracting thoughts allows for total spousal communion (Roness and Hollander, pp. 28–29 nn. 12, 15). Roness and Hollander accept the relational dimension of Hoshen’s reading but locate the relational ethic in a different conceptual register. The husband must attend to the wife not because intimacy is the highest spiritual achievement of married life but because her physiological participation conditions the quality of offspring. Hoshen reads the relational ethic as theological. Roness and Hollander read it as bio-theological.
The challenge to Satlow runs along different lines. Satlow’s Tasting the Dish showed that rabbinic sexual rhetoric drew on broader Mediterranean medical and philosophical sources. His geographic argument distinguishes Palestinian from Babylonian rabbis, suggesting that the Palestinians absorbed Greco-Roman medical theory while the Babylonians treated sexuality through a more theological idiom (Satlow, Tasting the Dish, pp. 303–331). Roness and Hollander challenge this geographic mapping. They show that Palestinian Amoraim such as Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi and Rabbi Yohanan held eugenic views with no clear medical grounding, while Rabbi Eliezer (a tanna) held positions that closely track the Hippocratic corpus (Roness and Hollander, pp. 41–42, p. 43 n. 51). Geography proves less clean than Satlow proposed. The medical-mystical mixture cuts across communities. Some Palestinian sages reasoned in theological terms about the reward of male children. Some Palestinian sages reasoned in proto-medical terms about female arousal. Both modes coexisted within a single rabbinic culture.
The methodological gain is substantial. Rabbinic culture did not divide cleanly into rationalists and mystics, nor did it sort cleanly along the Palestine-Babylonia axis. The rabbis held views on reproduction that integrated naturalistic observation, moral demand, ritual purity, and theological reward. The integration is the point. Where Boyarin saw a tension between sexual permission and sexual anxiety, and where Satlow saw a sociology of borrowing from Greco-Roman discourse, Roness and Hollander see a unified anthropology in which moral conduct shapes biological outcomes through divinely structured natural processes.
The work of David Brodsky on Massekhet Kallah offers a complementary frame. Brodsky argues that the central theme of the tractate is sanctity and the danger of its desecration through improper use of sacred objects, including the female body (Brodsky, A Bride Without a Blessing, pp. 87–117). Roness and Hollander engage Brodsky’s framework but redirect it. Sanctity remains relevant, but the operative logic of Rabbi Eliezer’s conduct in Massekhet Kallah is not primarily the avoidance of desecration. It is the active cultivation of conditions favorable to generativity (Roness and Hollander, p. 32 n. 22). The sacred body produces sacred offspring when treated rightly.

The Porous Self and the Mechanics of Consciousness

The logic underlying Rabbi Eliezer’s practices becomes coherent only when situated within the porous anthropology of late antiquity. Modernity tends to assume a buffered self, to use the terminology of Charles Taylor (b. 1931), where thoughts remain interior psychological events sealed off from the material world. Rabbi Eliezer inhabits a different ontology. In the rabbinic worldview, consciousness leaks. Thoughts penetrate bodies. Mental states become biologically generative. Desire, imagination, and intention possess physiological consequences. The boundary between inner life and external reality remains fluid and permeable.
Under such conditions, mental discipline becomes reproductive necessity.
This framework transforms Rabbi Eliezer’s fear of fantasizing about other women during intercourse. Medieval commentators read the concern as a matter of moral modesty. Within porous anthropology the intrusive fantasy becomes more than a sin. It becomes contamination. Divided consciousness threatens genealogical integrity.
The fear that children might emerge as mamzerim if the husband mentally wanders toward another woman should not be read as literal biological transmission of halakhic illegitimacy. Mamzerut remains a juridical category. Symbolically, the language reveals anxiety that psychic infidelity contaminates covenantal lineage. Fantasy introduces disorder into generational continuity. Mental focus operates as biological hygiene.
This logic clarifies why Rabbi Eliezer’s conduct appears so intense. Imma Shalom describes him as behaving as though compelled by a demon. Traditional commentators read this image as fearfulness, haste, or suppression of pleasure. Symbolically it suggests something larger. Appetite gives way to intentionality. Rabbi Eliezer performs intercourse with priestly seriousness. The sexual act becomes quasi-liturgical labor. It demands concentration, precision, and disciplined consciousness. Wandering appetite threatens the integrity of reproduction.
Rabbi Eliezer transfers priestly logic into the marital chamber. Ancient Temple ritual demanded purity, concentration, regulated movement, and controlled consciousness. Rabbi Eliezer applies the same logic to conception. The home becomes a micro-Temple. Reproduction becomes sacred ritual.

The Female Body as Generative Agent

A striking aspect of the rabbinic material is the causal weight given to female desire and arousal. Ancient Mediterranean societies often imagined women as passive matter shaped by active male seed. Aristotle (384–322 BCE) held a version of this view. Rabbinic discussions assume otherwise. The woman’s physiological condition affects reproductive outcomes directly.
This becomes explicit in the discussion in Bavli Niddah 31a–b on whether the woman or the man emits seed first. The rabbis assume that female arousal influences the sex and quality of the child (Roness and Hollander, pp. 36–37). Male techniques of prolonged or repeated intercourse are recommended to increase the likelihood of female climax preceding male ejaculation. Rava’s later proposal in the same sugya (the husband should “perform and repeat”) offers a technique that achieves the same end through a different method.
Within this framework, Rabbi Eliezer’s practices acquire new coherence. His instruction that a husband should entice or persuade his wife during intercourse belongs to the same reproductive logic (Roness and Hollander, pp. 33–35, citing Massekhet Kallah 1:21–22). The husband must cultivate the wife’s emotional and physiological participation because her arousal contributes to the optimization of offspring.
This transforms the enigmatic phrase about uncovering a handbreadth and covering a handbreadth. Read traditionally as pure modesty or anti-pleasure asceticism, the phrase might better describe calibrated erotic management. Rabbi Eliezer seeks sufficient stimulation to arouse the wife while maintaining enough restraint to avoid his own psychic diffusion (Roness and Hollander, pp. 38–39). The handbreadth covered and uncovered names a tactile method of inducing female arousal that does not require the husband’s prolonged participation in pleasure.
This creates the central paradox of Rabbi Eliezer’s sexual ethic. The husband must be attentive enough to maximize the wife’s participation while detached enough to preserve concentrated intentionality. He cultivates intimacy and resists sensory surrender at the same moment. Rabbi Eliezer represents not anti-sexuality but disciplined sexuality. His conduct is not the negation of erotic life. It is its governance.
The parallel to the Hippocratic corpus reinforces this reading. In the treatise On Generation, attributed to the school of Hippocrates (c. 460–c. 370 BCE), the author observes that female arousal preceding male emission produces favorable reproductive outcomes (Roness and Hollander, p. 44, n. 54, citing Lonie’s edition). Roness and Hollander stop short of asserting direct dependence between Rabbi Eliezer and the Hippocratic position. They note the structural correspondence and leave the question of historical transmission open. The convergence may reflect shared Mediterranean folk medical knowledge, parallel theological reflection on a common biological observation, or some combination of both.

Managed Reproduction and Minority Survival

The broader historical context deepens the significance of these ideas. After the destruction of the Second Temple, Jewish continuity shifted from centralized political and sacrificial institutions toward decentralized household structures. Without sovereignty, monarchy, or Temple ritual, the family became the primary site of covenantal survival.
Reproduction acquired heightened civilizational importance. The household became the place at which Judaism reproduced itself biologically, morally, intellectually, and ritually. Marriage and child-rearing ceased to be private matters. They became instruments of collective endurance.
This explains why rabbinic literature links seemingly unrelated behaviors to offspring quality. Charity, emotional harmony, sexual timing, consent, modesty, and concentration all function as reproductive variables because the child is the embodied crystallization of the household’s moral condition.
The logic forms a coherent system rather than disconnected superstition. Charity and the fulfillment of the desires of Heaven produce wealthy and successful children. Emotional attentiveness to the wife produces beautiful and flourishing children. Mental discipline and the avoidance of fantasy produce legitimate and uncorrupted lineage. Mutual consent and the absence of coercion produce healthy offspring free from defects. Controlled erotic stimulation produces male children and reproductive optimization.
The more politically fragile the community becomes, the more intensely it regulates reproduction. Minority civilizations turn toward family discipline, demographic continuity, and intergenerational transmission under conditions of insecurity. Rabbi Eliezer’s rigor reflects this post-catastrophic demographic consciousness. The rabbis under occupation translate the lost institutions of Temple and state into the household, the marital bed, and the conscious regulation of conception.
This historical reading clarifies one of the more puzzling features of the relevant teachings. The same sage who held strict positions on bodily modesty also taught that a husband should give his wife the desires of her heart at the time of intercourse and that charity to the poor produces wealthy children. The diversity of teachings is not internal contradiction. It reflects the integration of multiple variables under a single covenantal framework. The household’s relation to God (charity, fulfillment of the desires of Heaven) produces one set of reproductive outcomes. The household’s internal relations (consent, attention, harmony) produce another set. The husband’s interior life (mental focus, freedom from intrusive fantasy) produces a third. All three operate in concert because all three condition the moral structure of the conceiving union.

Medicine, Mysticism, and Moral Naturalism

Modern readers struggle to classify rabbinic reproductive theories because they oscillate between what seem to be naturalistic and supernatural explanations. At times the rabbis sound proto-medical. At other moments they sound mystical or magical. The distinction is largely a modern import.
Late antique thought assumed that divine law operated through natural channels. God structured reality such that moral conduct generated beneficial biological outcomes. Ethical and physiological order formed a unified system. Rabbi Eliezer’s worldview belongs to this moral naturalism. Seeking the wife’s consent, disciplining one’s imagination, regulating timing, and controlling desire produce superior offspring because creation is morally structured. Divine order manifests biologically.
Roness and Hollander offer a tripartite typology for sorting rabbinic eugenic claims (Roness and Hollander, pp. 39–40). One type rests on a realistic-medical assumption: a physiological process inside the parents’ bodies translates conduct into outcome. A second type rests on a mystical assumption: human action shapes metaphysical realities, and the metaphysical alteration produces the biological result. A third type treats the eugenic claim as an esoteric overlay on a moral or spiritual instruction, where the speaker uses the listeners’ desire for excellent offspring to motivate behavior the speaker considers virtuous on independent grounds.
The typology has the virtue of openness. Roness and Hollander concede that the available material does not permit confident assignment of every individual teaching to a single category, and they acknowledge that some teachings might combine more than one logic. Rabbi Hama bar Hanina, for instance, recasts the old proto-medical claim that the husband should delay so that the wife emits first as a moral teaching about divine reward. The biological observation persists, but its causal warrant shifts from physiology to providence. Rabbi Yohanan’s reported practice of sitting at the gates of the mikveh so that women emerging from immersion might see him and bear children resembling him operates in the proto-medical register, with the maternal imagination as the operative cause (Roness and Hollander, pp. 41–42, citing Bavli Bava Metzia 84a).
The case for assigning Rabbi Eliezer to the realistic-medical type rests on the structural correspondence between his teachings and the Hippocratic corpus. The case for assigning him to the mystical type rests on the absence of any explicit appeal to non-Jewish medical knowledge in his recorded statements. Roness and Hollander prefer a third option: Rabbi Eliezer might not have distinguished the natural from the providential in the way modern interpreters do. The conduct that produces excellent offspring through natural channels also pleases God, and the providential reward is mediated through the physiological process rather than added to it (Roness and Hollander, pp. 43–44). Nature serves grace, and grace expresses itself through nature.
This integrated reading places Rabbi Eliezer near the position Yohanan Silman has called religious realism, in which the moral demand and the natural order coincide because the natural order is itself the work of a moral God (Roness and Hollander, p. 44 n. 55). The position differs from nominalism, in which divine law operates by sheer command without reference to underlying natural structures.
The result is a portrait of rabbinic Judaism more psychologically sophisticated and biologically invested than many modern caricatures allow. The rabbis participated in a broader Mediterranean discourse on female seed, conception timing, emotional states, and heredity. Greek physicians sought healthy aristocratic heirs. Rabbi Eliezer sought covenantally optimized descendants. Both projects converge on certain biological observations. They diverge on the meaning and goal of the practice.

Conclusion: Editorial Framing and Unresolved Tensions

Roness and Hollander expose something methodologically crucial about rabbinic literature. The placement of traditions inside different editorial frameworks changes their meaning. In Bavli Nedarim, Rabbi Eliezer appears primarily as an ascetic obsessed with modesty. In Massekhet Kallah, he emerges as a theorist of mutuality, consent, and reproductive optimization. The Bavli’s editor placed Imma Shalom’s testimony adjacent to Rabbi Yohanan ben Dehavay’s list of sexual prohibitions. The Kallah editor placed it after the permissive declaration that a man may do as he wishes with his wife and after Rabbi Eliezer’s own teaching that coerced intercourse produces malformed children. The two arrangements yield two different anthropologies (Roness and Hollander, pp. 30–32, 39–40).
This is not a redactional curiosity. Sugya arrangement performs interpretation. Rabbinic editors shape anthropological meaning through contextual placement without erasing competing traditions. The methodological observation extends beyond the case at hand. The same teaching, placed differently, generates a different rabbi. The same rabbi, framed differently, generates a different ethic. Recovery of the material requires attention to redactional choice, not only to the content of individual statements.
The methodological gain reinforces the work of Shamma Friedman (b. 1937) on the layered analysis of Talmudic sugyot and complements the broader trend in rabbinics scholarship that treats redaction as an interpretive act rather than a passive compilation. Roness and Hollander demonstrate the consequences of taking that methodological commitment seriously. The question is no longer what Rabbi Eliezer thought. It is which Rabbi Eliezer one is reading and which editorial hand has shaped the encounter.
Roness and Hollander uncover far more than a neglected eugenic layer in one rabbinic anecdote. They reveal a late antique theory of reproduction where consciousness, morality, consent, embodiment, and civilizational continuity form a single integrated structure. Multiple rabbinic theories of sexuality coexist within the canon: sexuality as dangerous appetite, sexuality as covenantal obligation, sexuality as reproductive technology, sexuality as emotional union, and sexuality as ritualized discipline. The canon preserves these tensions rather than resolving them.
Rabbi Eliezer emerges not as a repressed ascetic but as a rigorously disciplined architect of generativity. His sexual severity reflects neither hatred of the body nor indifference to pleasure. It reflects a conviction that reproductive acts carry immense covenantal consequence. Thoughts shape bodies. Relationships shape offspring. Desire submits to precise governance.
The portrait that emerges in the work of Roness and Hollander corrects Boyarin’s reading of Rabbi Eliezer as a figure of sexual negativity, qualifies Satlow’s geographic mapping of medical and mystical rabbinic strands, and refines Hoshen’s account of the relational ethic of the Imma Shalom passage. The household becomes a site of managed covenantal reproduction. The marital chamber becomes quasi-priestly space. The child becomes the embodied outcome of emotional, moral, and physiological order.
In Rabbi Eliezer’s world, sexuality is never private appetite. It is civilizational labor.

Works Cited

Boyarin, Daniel. Carnal Israel: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993. Hebrew edition: HaBasar SheBaRuach: Siach HaMiniyut BaTalmud. Tel Aviv: Am Oved, 2002.
Brodsky, David. A Bride Without a Blessing: A Study in the Redaction and Content of Massekhet Kallah and Its Gemara. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2006.
Gilat, Yitzhak D. Mishnato Shel Rabbi Eliezer ben Hyrcanus U-Mekomah BeToldot HaHalakhah. Tel Aviv: Devir, 1968.
Roness, Yitzchak, and Aviad Yehiel Hollander. “How Shall the Children Be Beautiful: Rabbi Eliezer and Eugenics in the Eyes of the Sages.” Jewish Studies, an Internet Journal 10 (2012): 25–44.
Satlow, Michael L. Tasting the Dish: Rabbinic Rhetorics of Sexuality. Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1995.

Posted in R. Aviad Hollander, Talmud | Comments Off on Rabbi Eliezer and the Governance of Reproduction: Sexual Discipline, Porous Anthropology, and Covenantal Survival in Late Antique Rabbinic Judaism

The Bounded Sovereign: Eglah Arufah and the Architecture of Delegated Responsibility

Few of the Torah’s legal and ritual institutions rival eglah arufah for conceptual strangeness or political suggestion. Deuteronomy 21 describes the rite. A corpse turns up in an open field. The murderer is unknown. The elders of the nearest city measure the distance from the body to the surrounding settlements, bring a heifer to a barren valley, break its neck, wash their hands, and proclaim publicly: “Our hands did not shed this blood, nor did our eyes see.” The rite ends not in punishment but in atonement: “Forgive Your people Israel.”
The institution appears at once juridical, theological, political, and symbolic. It concerns murder, yet no murderer stands convicted. It concerns responsibility, yet no individual actor faces direct accusation. It concerns political authority, yet political authority distributes responsibility in layered and indirect fashion across local and national institutions. The rite seems designed to force reflection on the relations among sovereignty, jurisdiction, moral obligation, and institutional failure.
Rabbi Aviad Yechiel Hollander’s essay on eglah arufah recognizes this dimension of the text. His analysis transforms what might otherwise appear to modern readers as an archaic sacrificial rite into a sophisticated constitutional theory of delegated authority, bounded governmental liability, and moral accountability within a sovereign polity. Writing not merely as a scholar but as an officer in the IDF Rabbinate’s Torah and Policy branch, Hollander approaches the rite as a living framework for thinking about governance, command responsibility, and the ethics of state power.
What emerges is an intellectually serious attempt in contemporary religious-Zionist thought to derive a theory of political order from halachic sources without collapsing into apologetics or abstraction. Hollander neither romanticizes halacha nor treats it as irrelevant to modern governance. Instead he asks a hard question: what does the Torah’s treatment of unsolved murder reveal about the structure and limits of public responsibility?
At the center of the essay stands a striking interpretive move drawn from Rabbi Jacob Ettlinger (1798-1871), the German halachist known as the Aruch LaNer. Classical discussions of eglah arufah assume that the “nearest city” is determined comparatively. The city geographically closest to the corpse bears responsibility for the rite. Ettlinger proposes something more radical. The term “near” carries both a relative meaning and an absolute one. A city counts as “near” only if it lies within roughly one mil, the boundary associated with techum Shabbat. Beyond that radius, no eglah arufah rite occurs at all.
This technical interpretation carries large political implications. It introduces into halacha a doctrine of bounded institutional responsibility. Local authorities are not metaphysical guarantors for every act of violence occurring under the abstract umbrella of their existence. Responsibility attaches only where the city can supervise, host, police, and protect.
Hollander sees that the issue is not merely distance but capacity, foreseeability, and jurisdiction. The Torah does not impose impossible obligations. Local leadership bears responsibility only where a plausible nexus connects institutional authority to the conditions that produced vulnerability.
Hollander arrives at a theory close to modern jurisprudential concepts: duty of care, proximate cause, institutional competence. The murder implicates the elders not because it occurred in some abstract cosmic sense but because it may reveal a failure of the civic order under their supervision. The rabbinic interpretation of the elders’ declaration therefore focuses not on literal homicide but on neglect: “Did we send him away without food? Did we fail to escort him?”
The problem is not simply criminal violence. The problem is abandonment.
Eglah arufah functions as a ritualized repudiation of bureaucratic indifference. The murdered traveler represents the man who disappeared into the gaps of institutional care. The elders must therefore appear publicly and deny that the social order under their authority permitted such neglect.
Hollander’s analysis sharpens when he asks why members of the Sanhedrin, the king, and the High Priest must take part in the measurement at all. If the task is merely technical, why require the highest national authorities? Why not send ordinary officials, surveyors, or emissaries?
This question pivots the essay.
The measurement is not merely geographic. It is juridical and allocative. The Sanhedrin does not participate because the task is difficult. It participates because the task constitutes an authoritative attribution of responsibility. The measurement determines which local jurisdiction bears the burden of accountability. The central authority is a sovereign arbiter between potentially responsible local polities.
The implications run deep. The national authority neither absorbs all operational liability nor abandons the periphery to autonomy. It reserves the right to identify which delegated jurisdiction failed in its obligations. The Sanhedrin operates as a constitutional court that allocates responsibility across subordinate governmental units.
This clarifies Hollander’s emphasis on delegation. Local authorities are not free-floating entities. Their authority derives from the center, and the center retains supervisory legitimacy even after delegating operational responsibility downward. Hollander avoids collapsing delegated authority back into centralized absolutism. The local elders bear the operational burden. The central authority identifies and supervises responsibility but does not erase the autonomy of local governance. What emerges is a layered and federative conception of political order rather than a purely hierarchical one.
Hollander’s invocation of Daniel Elazar (1934-1999) sharpens the point. Jewish political tradition, Elazar argued, differs from the centralized European conception of sovereignty. The Jewish covenantal framework distributes authority horizontally and vertically among multiple institutions: courts, elders, kings, priests, local communities. These institutions share power rather than monopolize it.
Eglah arufah, in Hollander’s reading, becomes a ritual expression of this covenantal constitutionalism. The center authorizes the periphery, supervises it, and symbolically participates in moments of breakdown, but it does not absorb the subordinate institutions. Delegation is real. Local responsibility is real. National moral participation remains.
Hollander sharpens the distinction further by contrasting the Torah’s framework with Hittite law. Hittite law assigns responsibility for a corpse discovered in the field to the owner of the land, often through monetary compensation. Hittite law treats the issue primarily as a proprietary and economic disruption.
The Torah rejects this framework.
Financial ransom cannot balance murder because the issue is not merely social disruption or property liability. Bloodshed pollutes the covenantal and moral order of the nation. The rite therefore concerns atonement rather than compensation. The heifer is not payment but public moral acknowledgment that anonymous violence tears the fabric of communal life.
This distinction reveals something fundamental about the Torah’s political anthropology. The polity is not merely an instrument for securing order or protecting property. The polity is a moral community bound by covenantal obligations. Yet because the polity consists of finite human institutions rather than divine omnipotence, responsibility must remain bounded.
That is the deeper significance of Ettlinger’s one-mil limitation. Hollander’s argument resists the inflationary logic of limitless blame. Beyond a certain point, causation becomes too diffuse for institutional attribution. Some events remain tragic without constituting actionable negligence. The rite guards against two opposite distortions: atomistic denial of communal responsibility and totalizing theories of institutional guilt.
A symmetry runs through Hollander’s reading. As central authority diminishes, so does the reach of local authority. Hollander cites Rabbi Aharon Lichtenstein (1933-2015) on the Jerusalem Talmud’s striking statement that at Yavneh “the strap was loosened.” Mutual responsibility for hidden sins ended when sovereignty ended. Authority and responsibility move together. Diminished sovereignty means diminished collective accountability. The polity cannot demand of itself what its bounded power cannot deliver.
These themes culminate in Hollander’s discussion of military ethics and command responsibility, especially his treatment of the Sabra and Shatila massacre and the Kahan Commission’s notion of “indirect responsibility.”
Here Hollander writes with care. He does not claim that eglah arufah applies as halacha to the events in Lebanon. As Rabbi Avraham Shapira (1914-2007) noted, eglah arufah is hilkhata tzerufa, pure law with technical conditions that the Lebanon case does not satisfy. The connection runs through analogy, not direct application. The question is whether something resembling grama in capital matters, indirect causation, applies. If Israeli commanders did not know the character of the Phalangists and trusted them in good faith as disciplined troops, no culpability attaches. If they suspected the Phalangists were undisciplined and violent and still admitted them to neighborhoods of women and children, the moral problem is severe.
The framework’s conceptual power becomes clear. The Phalangist militias were the direct perpetrators. Israeli authorities might still bear indirect responsibility if they reasonably should have foreseen the danger and failed to act. The broader national leadership carried symbolic responsibility because the violence occurred within a security structure Israel had established and supervised.
This tripartite distinction between direct, indirect, and symbolic responsibility ranks among the essay’s chief achievements. Modern political culture often collapses all responsibility into a single undifferentiated category. Either leaders earn full guilt or complete innocence. Hollander rejects this flattening.
A man may bear moral responsibility without criminal culpability. A man may carry symbolic responsibility without direct operational control. A man may delegate authority without severing all moral connection to the consequences of delegation.
The ritual declaration “our hands did not shed this blood” is therefore not a mere acquittal formula. It is not a denial of concern. It is a public confrontation with the possibility that the governing order failed in ways hard to quantify juridically.
Rabbi Immanuel Jakobovits (1921-1999) drew this point even more sharply with respect to the First Lebanon War. In modern combat conducted by aircraft and heavy artillery, even the men firing the weapons cannot say with certainty whom they killed. Only God knows, and Yom Kippur cannot atone for what no man can identify. If guilt attaches to such killing, no ordinary atonement reaches it. The whole nation, whose soldiers are its agents, must therefore say “atone for Your people Israel.” Without that, “the land cannot be atoned for.”
The essay thus offers a meditation on the psychology of bureaucracy and sovereignty. Large institutions diffuse responsibility through layers of hierarchy and procedure. Every actor points elsewhere. Field commanders blame policy. Political leaders blame operational autonomy. Intelligence officials blame uncertainty. Responsibility dissolves into structure.
Eglah arufah interrupts this process. The rite forces the highest representatives of the polity to gather in person around an anonymous corpse. They must stop, measure, wash, speak, and atone. Abstraction cannot absorb the dead man.
The anti-bureaucratic dimension comes into focus in Hollander’s concluding discussion of war. Citing Rabbi Eliyahu Bakshi-Doron (1941-2020), he notes that the Torah places eglah arufah adjacent to the laws of warfare because war habituates societies to statistical thinking. Casualties become aggregates, logistics problems, operational calculations. Human beings disappear into numbers.
The rite functions as a moral stop-sign for sovereignty. Even amid national emergency, the state must pause before the death of one anonymous man.
Hollander’s essay presents a theology of sovereignty under conditions of finitude. The state is neither omnipotent nor morally irrelevant. It carries real responsibility because it holds real authority. Yet because authority is bounded, responsibility must also be bounded.
This balance gives the essay its intellectual maturity. Hollander avoids both sovereign absolutism and sovereign evasion. The political order cannot deny responsibility where it possesses authority, supervision, and foreseeable control. Yet metaphysical liability cannot fall upon it for every tragedy beyond the realistic reach of governance.
The result is a constitutional vision rooted in covenant, delegation, and moral seriousness. Authority can be distributed. Responsibility can be limited. Jurisdiction can be delegated. Yet nothing can fully dissolve the burden of sovereignty.
That is the enduring power of eglah arufah. Its enemy is not merely murder. Its enemy is the bureaucratic shrug.

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The Halachic Anthropology of Self-Harm: Sanctity, Stewardship, and the Limits of Bodily Autonomy in the Bar-Ilan Monograph on חבלה עצמית

The Bar-Ilan University Institute for Advanced Torah Studies monograph “חבלה עצמית – מקורות והכוונה ללימוד עצמי” by Rabbi Yitzchak Roness and Rabbi Aviead Yechiel Hollander presents itself as a halachic study of the prohibition against self-injury. Beneath its technical handling of suicide, blood draws, cosmetic procedures, eating disorders, excessive fasting, and bodily modification sits something larger. The text develops a comprehensive anthropology of embodiment within the halachic imagination. The essay does not merely ask whether a man may wound himself. It asks what kind of thing the human body is within covenantal life. Property? Instrument? Vessel? Trust? Divine possession? Bearer of the divine image? Site of sanctity? The monograph treats these not as abstract philosophical questions but as operational legal realities.
The pedagogical structure already signals the work’s ambition. The subtitle, “מקורות והכוונה ללימוד עצמי,” reveals that the authors do not simply issue rulings or compile precedents. They train the learner in a jurisprudential method. The recurring “שאלות עיוניות” sections force the reader to reconstruct conceptual distinctions from the sources rather than consume conclusions without engagement. The result reads less as a conventional article than as a guided apprenticeship in halachic reasoning. The subject resists slogans. The prohibition against self-harm appears simple until one confronts the bewildering range of cases halacha must classify. Surgery wounds the body, yet halacha permits it. Blood draws remove life-force, yet may carry obligation. Fasting may carry holiness or destroy it. Pain may heal or degrade. Suicide may emerge from rebellion, despair, psychosis, coercion, or illness. The monograph therefore constructs a coherent anthropology capable of navigating these distinctions.
At the center stands a challenge to modern assumptions about bodily autonomy. Contemporary liberal consciousness treats the body as the sovereign property of the self. Moral legitimacy flows from consent and individual will. The halachic framework reconstructed in this monograph moves in a different direction. The man holds agency over his body but not unrestricted dominion. The body is entrusted, not owned. Human beings are custodians of embodiment rather than sovereign proprietors.
This stewardship model rests on the classical sources surveyed throughout the essay. Bereishit 9:5, “ואך את דמכם לנפשותיכם אדרוש,” anchors divine concern over self-directed violence. The talmudic discussions in Bava Kama concerning one who wounds himself generate the central legal framework. The authors show that the prohibition against self-harm holds no single conceptual shape across the tradition. Some authorities frame the prohibition through divine ownership. Others through fiduciary obligations toward life. Others through analogies to murder or theft. Yet the concept that does the heaviest load-bearing work across the tradition is Tzelem Elokim, the divine image stamped on the human body. Most other framings turn out to be downstream of it. Divine ownership presupposes that the body bears something of God. Analogies to murder presuppose that destruction of the self injures something sacred. The duty to preserve life presupposes that the life preserved carries inherent worth. Tzelem Elokim supplies that worth. It is the metaphysical anchor on which the rest of halachic anthropology hangs, and it is the concept that allows the monograph to move between suicide, blood draws, fasting, and cosmetic surgery without fragmenting into a series of unrelated case studies.
Halacha rejects both radical bodily autonomy and pure bodily instrumentalization. The body is neither infinitely disposable nor merely biological machinery. It carries covenantal weight.
This covenantal dimension deserves emphasis because it carries the essay’s implications beyond theology into social structure. The body in halachic thought is not merely sacred matter. It is the working architecture of mitzvah life. Human beings serve God, sustain families, study Torah, perform acts of kindness, build communities, earn livelihoods, reproduce covenantal continuity, and enact moral obligations through bodies. The body is therefore not simply personal property but a communal and covenantal instrument.
This reframes the prohibition against self-harm. Self-injury is not merely a private act against the self, nor solely a metaphysical offense against divine ownership. It also constitutes a partial withdrawal from covenantal participation. A damaged body may become incapable of carrying obligations that bind the man to God and community alike. Halachic anthropology therefore treats self-harm not only as theological misuse but as functional desertion from the communal apparatus of mitzvah life.
This relational conception of embodiment also illuminates a striking feature of the sugya: the symmetry between harming others and harming the self. Rabbi Akiva’s framework suggests that just as others may not humiliate or injure a man, the man may not humiliate or injure himself. Modern liberal thought assumes that prohibitions on violence flow from the sovereignty of personal will. Halacha operates on a different logic. The man carries inherent sanctity independent of preference. That sanctity is the Tzelem Elokim he bears. Consequently, the self owes duties to itself. The man becomes both guardian and guarded. In a profound sense, halacha externalizes the self in part. One stands toward the self juridically, not psychologically.
The monograph’s treatment of pain is sophisticated because it shows that halacha evaluates suffering teleologically rather than phenomenologically. The crucial distinction concerns not whether pain occurs but what moral structure gives it meaning. A surgical incision and an act of self-cutting may produce similar physical injuries while belonging to opposite moral universes.
Here the category of derech nitzayon becomes critical. The prohibition against self-harm appears strongest when bodily damage takes the shape of degradation, humiliation, antagonism, purposeless destruction, or conflict directed toward the self. Surgery, blood draws, and therapeutic pain differ because their telos is healing rather than negation. Halacha therefore distinguishes constructive pain from destructive pain. The standard of judgment, again, is the Tzelem Elokim. Pain that restores or preserves the image carries no taint. Pain that degrades or attacks the image becomes prohibited regardless of who inflicts it.
This distinction also explains the monograph’s implicit resistance to ascetic romanticism. Religious cultures often drift toward the sacralization of suffering. Pain acquires prestige because it appears spiritually serious. The halachic tradition reconstructed here subjects asceticism to rigorous scrutiny. Excessive fasting, self-mortification, and bodily degradation do not become holy because they hurt. Judaism developed not as a monastic civilization but as a civilization of embodied obligation: marriage, family, labor, law, eating, sexuality, and communal continuity. The body is not an obstacle to covenantal life but one of its primary arenas. Religious self-destruction therefore becomes suspect.
The monograph reads as compelling when confronting modern psychiatric realities. The authors recognize that contemporary self-harm often emerges not from ideological rebellion but from mental illness, trauma, compulsion, depression, dissociation, or distorted self-perception. This shifts the jurisprudential posture of the halachic system. Here Tzelem Elokim does its heaviest contemporary work. Once the tradition reads self-harm not as rebellion against divine ownership but as fracture within the Tzelem Elokim, the response moves from condemnation toward rescue. The damaged self remains a bearer of the divine image. The image cannot be discarded because its bearer mistreats it. If anything, the duty toward the image intensifies precisely when its bearer can no longer protect it himself.
Halacha’s seriousness regarding self-harm therefore does not entail punitive moralism. The reverse holds. The gravity of the prohibition intensifies the obligation to intervene with compassion. The system’s orientation becomes preservational and restorative. The man engaging in self-harm may no longer appear as a violator but as a man requiring protection, treatment, and reintegration into covenantal life.
This framework also explains why contemporary poskim integrate psychiatric and medical knowledge into halachic reasoning. Mental illness destabilizes assumptions about agency, intention, and volition. The legal question becomes not simply whether bodily harm occurred but what kind of self acted. A self operating under despair, psychosis, addiction, compulsion, or severe depression occupies a different moral and legal space than a self acting מתוך ביזיון or מתוך מרד. The halachic system therefore cannot remain indifferent to empirical psychology because the anthropology underlying the law depends partly on the integrity of the acting subject. The Tzelem Elokim remains, but the volitional structure built on top of it varies.
A revealing section concerns debates over blood draws and medical testing. At first glance these discussions appear technical, even trivial. They expose fissures within halachic anthropology.
Rabbi Israel Rosen’s position reflects what might be called a pragmatic covenantal anthropology. Human beings live as finite organisms under conditions of approximation and uncertainty. The Torah, in the classical rabbinic phrase, “לא ניתנה למלאכי השרת,” was not given to ministering angels. The body is sacred, but halacha governs ordinary embodied life rather than impossible perfection. A certain margin of biological imprecision sits within covenantal existence.
Rabbi Menashe Klein’s orientation reflects a different instinct. His approach treats every quantity of blood as metaphysically charged because “דם הוא הנפש.” Stewardship therefore requires maximal precision and restraint. The body becomes almost sacramental in structure. Every fragment of life-force carries theological weight.
The disagreement is not finally about temperament or stringency. It concerns the underlying jurisprudential question of whether halacha is a system built for fallen creatures or a system built for ideal subjects. Rosen treats halacha as legislation for human beings as they exist: imperfect, embodied, finite, living under approximation. Klein treats halacha as a system that holds the human being to the metaphysical standard the Tzelem Elokim demands, even when the standard exceeds ordinary human capacity. One orientation reads halacha down toward the creature. The other reads the creature up toward halacha. The same split surfaces throughout halachic discourse on medicine, sexuality, ritual purity, risk, and bodily practice. It is one of the deepest fault lines in the tradition, and the blood-draw discussion compresses the whole argument into a quantitative register where the stakes become unusually visible.
The monograph’s brilliance lies in its refusal to flatten these tensions into simple formulas. Halachic anthropology emerges through the accumulated weight of the sources. The body becomes visible as sacred and functional, personal and communal, vulnerable and obligatory.
The deepest achievement of “חבלה עצמית – מקורות והכוונה ללימוד עצמי” is its transformation of the prohibition against self-harm into a window onto the Jewish conception of the human person. The halachic body emerges as non-sovereign, purpose-driven, relational, and covenantal. All four properties trace back to the Tzelem Elokim.
The body is non-sovereign because it bears an image its possessor did not author. The man may use the body but not destroy it arbitrarily.
The body is purpose-driven because the image orients embodiment toward divine service. Halacha evaluates bodily damage through teleology rather than mere physical description. The decisive question concerns not whether pain occurs but whether the act serves healing, dignity, preservation, or covenantal flourishing.
The body is relational because the image binds its bearer to other bearers and to the One whose image it reflects. The body is the medium through which the man stands in obligation toward God, family, and community.
The body is covenantal because the image is the precondition for any covenantal claim on the human at all. Embodiment is the site where mitzvot become historical reality. The body is where divine service happens. It is where holiness becomes social fact.
Self-harm therefore carries gravity within halacha. To damage the body is not merely to damage tissue. It is to impair a covenantal instrument through which learning, prayer, labor, love, obligation, continuity, and sanctification become possible. It is to assault, in miniature, the divine image one carries. In an age defined by radical bodily autonomy on one side and technological manipulation of embodiment on the other, the Bar-Ilan monograph offers a different vision: the human body as entrusted rather than possessed, sacred rather than sovereign, and indispensable to the moral architecture of covenantal life.

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‘An Introduction to Life: The Educational Home of the Religious-Zionist Householder’

Rabbi Dr. Aviad Y. Hollander’s essay looks at first like an article on pedagogy within the Religious-Zionist world. In substance it is a meditation on the conditions under which a covenantal civilization survives inside modernity. Beneath its discussions of curriculum, mentorship, moral development, university education, and family life sits a deeper sociological anxiety. How does a religious community reproduce psychologically integrated human beings under conditions that encourage fragmentation?
Hollander’s answer carries weight because it shifts attention away from the institutions usually treated as central within religious discourse. The decisive arena is not the yeshiva alone, nor the synagogue, nor ideological activism, nor even formal religious scholarship. The decisive institution is the home. It is the religious-Zionist bourgeois household led by the ba’al ha-bayit: the ordinary observant family man who tries to hold Torah, labor, marriage, citizenship, professional life, military service, and modern culture within a coherent personality.
This focus separates Hollander from much contemporary religious writing. Modern religious discourse gravitates toward extremes. One encounters the heroic scholar, the charismatic rabbi, the ideological activist, the settler-pioneer, or the spiritually elevated elite. Hollander instead directs attention toward the middle strata of religious life: the accountant, physician, engineer, lawyer, teacher, military officer, or businessman who tries to sustain religious seriousness amid the pressures of bourgeois modern existence. The shift in focus is not accidental. Hollander recognizes that civilizations reproduce themselves not through elites but through ordinary families who transmit stable habits, loyalties, moral intuitions, and emotional atmospheres across generations.
The essay therefore belongs as much to sociology as to educational theory.
Its central insight is that formal institutions cannot by themselves produce integrated personalities. Schools transmit information, discipline, literacy, and ideological commitments. The deepest forms of formation occur tacitly through embodied domestic life. The child learns Judaism not through instruction alone but through immersion in patterns of conduct. The tone surrounding Shabbat, the way parents argue, the handling of money, the emotional quality of prayer, the relation between work and family, the treatment of secular knowledge, the moral atmosphere surrounding professional ambition, and the visible integration or fragmentation of the parents themselves all become formative forces more powerful than any curriculum. Hollander insists that chinuch happens through the lived texture of ordinary family life rather than through abstract exhortation.
This emphasis on tacit transmission gives the essay conceptual depth. Hollander offers a concrete answer to a question Stephen Turner (b. 1951) raises repeatedly. How do traditions reproduce themselves across generations? Religious communities speak vaguely about “mesorah,” “culture,” or “practice” passing between generations, yet the process remains underspecified. Hollander grounds transmission not in mystical communal essence but in repeated interpersonal exposure. The child absorbs not an abstraction called “Religious Zionism” but a sequence of embodied experiences. A father who learns Torah before work. A mother who keeps her dignity amid exhaustion. Dinner-table conversations about ethics and politics. The integration of Torah with ordinary obligations. The emotional handling of success and disappointment. These carry civilizational continuity.
The task grows acute within the Religious-Zionist world because Religious Zionism attempts a demanding synthesis. The haredi world resolves many tensions through partial insulation from secular institutions. Secular liberalism resolves tension by privatizing religion and subordinating it to autonomous individual choice. Religious Zionism instead insists that the Jew remain at once committed to Torah, nationalism, military service, economic productivity, civic responsibility, higher education, and engagement with modernity.
The dati-leumi Jew inhabits multiple institutional worlds at once: the beit midrash, the university, the military, the corporation, the state bureaucracy, the technological economy, and the bourgeois family. Each sphere operates by partly contradictory moral assumptions and prestige systems. The result is not merely intellectual tension but existential fragmentation. Hollander recognizes that the challenge of modernity is not atheism in the abstract but compartmentalization. The modern man risks becoming one person in the synagogue, another in the workplace, another in the university, another online, and another within the private sphere of desire and ambition.
The essay therefore concerns the production of internally unified personalities under differentiated modern conditions.
Charles Taylor’s (b. 1931) distinction between the buffered and porous self illuminates Hollander’s project. Modern life favors the buffered self: a sealed interior that filters meaning out of the external world and assigns sacred value to private choice alone. Hollander’s householder needs a self porous to covenant. Torah must continue to operate across professional, domestic, and civic spheres rather than retreating into a sealed religious zone. The sociological burden of Hollander’s pedagogy falls on resisting the buffering pressure of modern institutions, which insist that religion remain sealed off from work, science, citizenship, and public reason.
This concern explains why Hollander returns repeatedly to the transition from the protected yeshiva environment into the fragmented reality of university and professional life. He observes that many students suffer destabilization on contact with secular Israeli culture, academic pluralism, professional ambition, and competing prestige systems. Hollander understands that the destabilization is not merely doctrinal. The student confronts not only arguments but atmospheres. Universities educate through socialization as much as through information. The secular campus presents alternative hierarchies of admiration, sexuality, status, achievement, and intellectual legitimacy. For many students, this produces either collapse of confidence or collapse of faith.
Hollander’s realism stands out. Much religious discourse assumes that strong ideological commitment alone withstands modern pressures. Hollander instead recognizes that identity disintegration often happens through immersion rather than persuasion. One does not necessarily lose faith on encountering a superior argument. One loses faith because one slowly internalizes an alternative social world.
This recognition leads Hollander toward a pedagogy of ambiguity. Traditional yeshiva education functions through moral clarity and boundedness. The student encounters relatively coherent norms within a structured environment. Hollander suggests this model fails the modern Religious-Zionist householder because the student will inhabit environments defined by pluralism, contradiction, and institutional complexity. The goal cannot be insulation alone. The student must learn to survive ambiguity without dissolving into relativism.
This explains why Hollander insists on cognitive flexibility and multi-vocal learning. Rather than reducing Torah to a rigid singular method, he advocates broad exposure to diverse modes of thought and interpretation. Oversimplified moral universes produce brittle certainty. Students raised within them may collapse on contact with the complexity of modern intellectual life. The student who believes reality divides neatly into “truth” and “falsehood” panics on encountering legitimate ambiguity, competing values, or morally mixed institutions.
The educational task therefore grows more sophisticated. Not elimination of ambiguity but disciplined navigation of it. Too much rigidity produces fragility. Too much pluralism produces dissolution. Hollander cultivates bounded flexibility: a personality capable of engaging complexity while anchored in covenant.
This logic surfaces clearly in his discussion of simulations and practical ethical training. Hollander proposes that students confront hypothetical moral and professional dilemmas before entering the adult world. These simulations function as rehearsals for covenantal endurance within bureaucratic modernity. Torah ceases to function as idealized discourse and becomes navigational equipment for moving through ethically compromised institutional environments.
The shift carries weight. In the classical yeshiva model, learning often functions as an end in itself. Hollander worries that under modern conditions Torah learning might become what he calls an “island of safety,” disconnected from the pressures of lived existence. The danger is not only irrelevance but bifurcation: personalities capable of intellectual sophistication yet incapable of integrating learning into conduct.
Hollander therefore reattaches Torah to ordinary life. The workplace, the clinic, the courtroom, the military unit, and the family become arenas of avodat Hashem rather than secular zones external to religious meaning. In Weberian terms, Hollander resists the disenchantment produced by bureaucratic modernity by re-sanctifying mundane existence through moral preparation.
The role of the rabbi changes accordingly. Traditional rabbinic authority centered on legal expertise and formal instruction. Hollander redefines the rabbi as an architect of personality. He rejects the notion that students should seek guidance only during crises. Instead he advocates initiated and structured conversations integrated into the educational process. The rabbi becomes less a technical decisor and more a guide who helps students bridge the gap between aspiration and lived reality.
The change reflects broader shifts within modern religious authority. Traditional societies relied on dense communal structures that stabilized identity almost automatically. Modernity weakens these structures, raising the burden placed on intentional mentorship and psychological integration. Hollander understands that fragmentation begins long before visible collapse. Regular reflective guidance therefore becomes necessary not for emotional support alone but for covenantal continuity.
Hollander does not reduce religious education to therapeutic introspection. His project remains covenantal rather than expressive. The goal is not autonomous self-actualization but integrated avodat Hashem within the world.
Embodied models therefore carry weight in the essay. Hollander suggests students require visible examples of successful synthesis: the observant physician, the ethical businessman, the intellectually serious academic, the religious military officer, the psychologically stable working parent. These figures serve not only as inspirational symbols but as proofs of possibility. Religious Zionism depends on exemplary personalities because its balancing act remains unstable. If students repeatedly encounter hypocrisy, burnout, corruption, family collapse, or spiritual exhaustion among the bourgeois religious class, confidence in the synthesis weakens.
Ernest Becker’s (1924–1974) work on hero systems clarifies the stakes. A hero system is a cultural project that grants its participants a path to cosmic significance through meaningful action. Religious Zionism functions as such a system. Its claim is that an observant Jew can serve God through every domain of modern life and thereby participate in covenantal heroism. The exemplary householder is the visible proof that the system delivers what it promises. When the proofs disappear, the hero system loses its purchase on the next generation.
The ba’al ha-bayit thus functions not only as educator but as existential evidence that integration remains achievable.
Hollander’s educational institution becomes a microcosm of the broader public square. By treating politics, media, warfare, secular culture, and public controversy within the framework of Torah learning, the institution asserts that nothing lies beyond the interpretive reach of covenantal thought. The exposure serves a protective function. Students who encounter complexity within guided religious frameworks suffer less overwhelming disorientation later.
The strategy resembles immunological exposure. Controlled encounter prevents later collapse. Hollander understands that delayed exposure to secular complexity grants it exaggerated power. Students raised within over-insulated environments may encounter the university or professional world as a totalizing revelation. Hollander instead seeks gradual confrontation paired with interpretive tools.
This realism gives the essay its enduring strength.
At a deeper level, the essay reveals the difficulty of sustaining covenantal bourgeois life under late modern conditions. The contemporary ba’al ha-bayit faces pressures earlier religious societies did not face: digital distraction, consumer individualism, professional exhaustion, status competition, bureaucratic depersonalization, technological saturation, and the weakening of authority structures across the board. Modern capitalism destabilizes domestic cohesion by fragmenting time, attention, and emotional energy. Smartphones and algorithmic entertainment displace parents as primary shapers of consciousness. The modern bourgeois family must therefore compete against entire systems engineered to dissolve inherited loyalties and redirect attention toward consumption, self-display, and perpetual stimulation.
The essay reads as a defense of the home as the final institution of reintegration.
Modernity fragments work from meaning, religion from economics, public identity from private identity, sexuality from covenant, knowledge from wisdom, and achievement from transcendence. The household becomes the last location where these fragments still gather into a coherent form of life.
Hollander’s essay reaches beyond pedagogy. It meditates on whether a covenantal civilization survives within bourgeois modernity without either retreating from the world or dissolving into it.
The answer, Hollander suggests, depends less on ideology than on formation. Not on what Jews believe alone. But on who they become.
That formation happens not in manifestos or institutions alone but in homes where Torah lives.

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‘Dual Loyalty to Halakha and the State: Rabbi Goren’s Ruling as a Test Case’ (2015)

Aviad Hollander’s essay about halakhic decision-making in the Religious Zionist world is also an inquiry into the constitutional and theological crises generated by modern Jewish sovereignty: can Halakha function as the governing moral and legal language of a modern democratic state without either losing its internal integrity or rendering itself socially unworkable? Hollander approaches this problem through the jurisprudence and public career of Rabbi Shlomo Goren, especially through the explosive “brother-and-sister” Langer mamzerut affair of 1972, yet the implications of his analysis extend far beyond any single ruling. What emerges is not merely the portrait of a controversial rabbi, but the anatomy of a broader struggle over sovereignty, legitimacy, and the transformation of rabbinic authority under conditions of Jewish statehood.
The central achievement of Hollander’s essay lies in his refusal to reduce Goren either to heroic visionary or reckless ideologue. Instead, he reconstructs the internal logic of Goren’s worldview while also exposing its institutional dangers and jurisprudential tensions. Hollander’s key insight is that Goren did not experience loyalty to Halakha and loyalty to the State of Israel as competing allegiances requiring compromise between sacred law and secular necessity. Under the influence of Religious Zionist theology, especially the legacy of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, Goren understood the Jewish state itself as part of the redemptive unfolding of Jewish history. The state was not external to sacred history. It was one of its instruments. Once this premise is accepted, rulings that appear to critics as “politicized” or “state-serving” become, from within Goren’s framework, entirely authentic expressions of Halakha operating under transformed historical conditions.
This point is decisive because it distinguishes Goren from both conventional pragmatists and secular nationalists. He believed sovereignty altered the conditions under which Torah must be interpreted. In exile, Halakha had functioned primarily as the legal and ethical system of dispersed minority communities living under foreign rule. Its institutional orientation was communal continuity, ritual discipline, and boundary preservation under conditions of political weakness. Goren believed the restoration of Jewish sovereignty fundamentally changed the historical situation. A sovereign Jewish state required Halakha to govern not merely ritual life, but armies, borders, warfare, citizenship, public legitimacy, and collective destiny. The old diasporic posture of juridical caution and communal defensiveness could no longer suffice.
Hollander’s biographical material therefore carries enormous interpretive importance. Goren was not simply a yeshiva scholar commenting on sovereignty from afar. He was formed by the state physically and emotionally. Hollander traces his journey from Poland and Jerusalem through elite yeshivot, military service, and eventually the highest religious institutions of the Israeli state. Unlike many Haredi rabbinic authorities, Goren inhabited sovereignty existentially. He served alongside combat forces, participated in Israel’s wars, entered the Old City in 1967 carrying a Torah scroll and shofar, and interpreted military victory through openly messianic language. The state, for Goren, was not merely an administrative framework for Jewish survival. It was a sacred national project through which Jewish history itself was reawakening.
Hollander cites Goren’s repeated insistence that the defining challenge facing modern rabbinic authorities was proving the compatibility of Halakha with democratic Jewish sovereignty. Here Goren articulated one of the central assumptions of Religious Zionism: Torah must demonstrate that it can govern actual Jewish collective life under conditions of power. A Halakha incapable of sustaining sovereign national existence would become historically marginal and spiritually alienating.
For this reason, Hollander’s discussion of Goren’s concept of “the eternity of Halakha” becomes foundational to understanding his method. Goren argued that the permanence of Torah lies in its interpretive elasticity. He invoked the rabbinic tradition that Torah was intentionally not given “cut and dried,” but with multiple interpretive pathways because rigid legal immobility would render Jewish life impossible across changing historical conditions. The task of the posek was therefore not mechanical obedience to precedent, but discerning which possibilities latent within Torah corresponded to the needs of the historical moment.
Hollander provides a taxonomy of Goren’s jurisprudential method.
The first mechanism was expansion of source range. Goren did not openly reject the authority of the Babylonian Talmud or classical halakhic precedent. Instead, he widened the operative canon by incorporating sources often treated as secondary in mainstream decisional culture: the Jerusalem Talmud, aggadic literature, Tosefta, Geonic writings, and minority precedents. The significance of this move was subtle but profound. Goren would rarely rule directly against dominant precedent. Rather, he surrounded dominant precedent with a dense field of alternative ancient voices until a different pathway became visible within the tradition itself. In effect, he redistributed interpretive authority within the canon. The result was not abolition of precedent but pluralization of precedent.
The second mechanism was purposive interpretation. Goren repeatedly sought to uncover the underlying aims or moral telos of halakhic institutions and then interpreted sources in light of those larger purposes. This allowed him to argue that rulings which appeared formally innovative were in fact preserving the deeper objectives of Torah under transformed social conditions.
The third mechanism was selective decision-making. Hollander’s analysis here is particularly important because it moves beyond accusations of arbitrary leniency. Goren often faced situations in which multiple legitimate halakhic pathways existed simultaneously. The controversy was therefore not usually over whether a lenient opinion existed somewhere within the literature. The controversy was over which opinions deserved elevation to governing norm. Hollander emphasizes that when confronted with competing principles such as “the lenient has someone to rely upon” versus “the stringent shall be blessed,” Goren consistently selected the path most compatible with the needs of sovereign Jewish life. These were not accidental choices. They reflected a conscious jurisprudential orientation.
Yet Hollander also introduces a critical corrective often missed by admirers and critics alike. Goren’s creativity operated within invisible traditionalist restraints. Hollander notes the internal brake captured in the phrase “me-heyot tov al tehi ra,” roughly “better to be good than bad.” Goren did not believe he was revising Torah in response to modernity. He believed he was uncovering dormant capacities already embedded within Torah itself. This distinction matters enormously. Goren was not a proto-Reform rabbi or liberal religious modernizer disguising innovation as continuity. His self-understanding was restorative rather than revisionist. He believed diasporic conditions had artificially narrowed the operational range of Halakha, and that sovereignty permitted suppressed dimensions of the tradition to reemerge.
Goren’s solution to dual loyalty was not compromise between state and Halakha. It was denial that authentic contradiction truly existed. If Torah appeared incompatible with the needs of Jewish sovereignty, then the interpreter had failed to excavate Torah deeply enough. The problem lay not in Halakha but in excessively frozen interpretive habits. The “forty-nine faces” of Torah meant that the tradition already contained the resources necessary for sovereign national life.
The Langer affair became the great public test case for this worldview. Hollander reconstructs the episode in considerable detail. Brother and sister Hanoch and Miriam Langer had been declared mamzerim by rabbinic courts because their mother had allegedly remarried without receiving a valid divorce from her first husband. As mamzerim, they would be permanently barred from marrying most Jews under halakhic law. The case became a national scandal because the siblings were ordinary patriotic Israelis, including military personnel, whose exclusion appeared morally intolerable to much of the Israeli public.
For Goren, the issue was not merely compassion for two individuals. The deeper issue was whether Halakha could absorb the pressures generated by sovereignty without fracturing. A democratic nation-state cannot easily sustain hereditary categories of permanently excluded citizens who participate fully in national life yet remain barred from the communal marriage structure. Goren understood instinctively that unresolved cases like the Langers threatened the legitimacy of religious marriage law itself.
This explains why Goren repeatedly linked the case to the danger of civil marriage legislation and fragmentation of Jewish identity. Hollander quotes Goren’s explicit concern that rigid handling of such crises would strengthen anti-religious movements and create competing systems of marriage and Jewish status. In his mind, the stakes were civilizational. Excessive rigidity risked severing masses of Israeli Jews from Torah altogether.
Haredi leaders did not merely criticize Goren’s legal conclusions. They described his actions as “burning the Torah,” staged symbolic mourning ceremonies, and declared his rulings void. Such rhetoric reflected an awareness that something larger than mamzerut doctrine was at stake. The real issue was the nature of rabbinic authority under sovereignty.
Stephen Turner’s work on tacit knowledge and institutional legitimacy helps illuminate this dimension of the controversy. Much of the outrage surrounding the Langer ruling stemmed not only from substantive disagreement but from procedural and cultural norm violations. Goren bypassed ordinary institutional pathways by assembling a special court whose composition initially remained undisclosed. To critics, this resembled an executive intervention or “commando raid” into the rabbinic legal system rather than the slow consensual process characteristic of diasporic rabbinic culture. Uri Avnery’s mocking description of the ruling as resembling an elite military operation unintentionally captured something real about Goren’s style. He approached jurisprudence with the decisiveness, urgency, and state-centered mentality of a sovereign actor rather than the incrementalism of traditional rabbinic procedure.
This procedural style reflected a deeper transformation in authority structures. Diasporic rabbinic legitimacy evolved under conditions of fragmentation and political weakness. It depended heavily on tacit norms of deference, gradual consensus formation, and decentralized scholarly authority. Goren implicitly advanced a different model: a sovereign Jewish polity requiring decisive national religious leadership capable of responding to political emergencies and collective needs. The Haredi world experienced this not merely as a bad ruling but as an alien model of authority invading the rabbinic sphere itself.
Hollander’s discussion of the Temple Mount reveals Goren operating with an implicit theory of emergency sovereignty. Goren’s positions regarding Jewish ascent to the Temple Mount shifted depending on historical conditions and perceived threats to sovereignty. During moments of existential conflict or territorial uncertainty, he emphasized the overriding importance of conquest, possession, and national control, even at the cost of relaxing traditional restrictions. In more stable periods, however, he adopted more cautious positions emphasizing ritual boundaries, precise measurements, and purity concerns.
This distinction reveals a remarkably sophisticated jurisprudential instinct. Goren treated sovereignty as activating different halakhic priorities under different historical conditions. Emergency circumstances expanded the legitimacy of assertive national action. Routine conditions restored stronger restraints. In this respect, his thought resembles broader traditions of constitutional emergency theory in which exceptional historical moments temporarily reorder legal priorities.
Goren’s later Temple Mount writings functioned as a restraining mechanism against messianic extremism. By publishing a limited, scholarly treatment of the Mount in the early 1990s, Goren appears to have sought to provide a moderate halakhic framework capable of channeling nationalist-religious energies away from violent radicalism and underground activism. This complicates simplistic portrayals of him as merely a maximalist ideologue. Goren understood that uncontrolled messianic activism could alienate the broader Israeli public and delegitimize Religious Zionism itself.
The tragedy of Goren’s career is therefore inseparable from its ambition. He sought to prove that Halakha could sustain sovereign Jewish modernity without surrendering its integrity. Yet the very boldness required for that project destabilized inherited structures of rabbinic legitimacy. The Langer ruling solved the immediate political and human crisis, but at immense institutional cost. Trust between major sectors of Orthodoxy and the Chief Rabbinate deteriorated sharply. The institution Goren hoped to strengthen emerged weakened and contested.
Many of the dilemmas Goren identified remain unresolved precisely because his opponents never produced a compelling alternative capable of reconciling traditional Halakha with democratic sovereignty. Questions surrounding conversion, military service, marriage law, judicial authority, and the role of religion in Israeli public life continue to revolve around the same underlying issue: can Halakha govern a sovereign Jewish state without either becoming rigidly sectarian or dissolving into nationalism and political expediency?
Hollander’s essay demonstrates that Rabbi Shlomo Goren was not merely a controversial rabbi but one of the first major constitutional thinkers of Jewish sovereignty. His jurisprudence represented an attempt to answer a question scarcely confronted for nearly two thousand years: what becomes of Halakha when Jews cease being merely a dispersed religious community and once again become a nation exercising political power over territory, law, military force, and collective destiny?
Goren answered that sovereignty did not diminish Torah but demanded its fuller activation. His critics feared that this activation would transform sacred law into an instrument of political ideology. The enduring significance of Hollander’s essay lies in showing that both sides recognized real dangers and that the conflict between them was not merely political or legal, but civilizational. At stake was whether Judaism could survive sovereignty.

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‘National Movements and International Law: Rabbi Shlomo Goren’s Understanding of International Law’ (2014)

The intellectual significance of Rabbi Shlomo Goren lies not simply in his attempt to reconcile Halacha with modern international law, but in the much larger civilizational problem his work confronted: the reconstruction of a sovereign Jewish jurisprudence after nearly two millennia in which Judaism functioned as the legal and ethical system of a dispersed minority community rather than as the governing framework of a state. The 2014 article by Ilan Fuchs and Aviad Yehiel Hollander, “National Movements and International Law: Rabbi Shlomo Goren’s Understanding of International Law,” is therefore best understood not merely as a study in religion and law, but as an examination of the deeper crisis generated when an exilic legal tradition suddenly reacquires political sovereignty and must once again address armies, borders, diplomacy, occupation, minority populations, and participation within a universal international order.
The central achievement of the article is its recognition that Goren neither rejected international law outright nor simply absorbed it into a liberal framework. Rather, he attempted to construct what the authors aptly describe as a “critical dialogue” between Halacha and international legal norms. Yet the full depth of Goren’s project emerges only when one recognizes that he was attempting to rebuild the sources and structure of halachic authority under conditions of renewed sovereignty. His jurisprudence therefore represents one of the earliest and most ambitious efforts to formulate a theory of Jewish statehood adequate to the realities of modern politics while preserving the covenantal and particularistic foundations of Jewish tradition.
The historical rupture confronting Goren was immense. Rabbinic Judaism after the destruction of the Second Temple evolved overwhelmingly under conditions of political exile. Jewish law became extraordinarily sophisticated in the governance of ritual life, communal institutions, commerce, contracts, family relations, and minority survival within larger imperial systems. Yet the practical jurisprudence of sovereignty largely receded from lived experience. Questions concerning constitutional order, military ethics, territorial annexation, civilian immunity, treatment of prisoners, diplomacy, and relations with foreign powers remained largely theoretical after the collapse of Jewish political independence in antiquity. Consequently, when the State of Israel emerged in 1948, Religious Zionist thinkers faced not merely a political challenge but a jurisprudential vacuum. Classical halachic literature had never developed a fully modern public law tradition because the historical conditions necessary for such a development had not existed for centuries.
Goren occupied a uniquely consequential position within this transformation. As the first Chief Rabbi of the Israel Defense Forces and later Chief Rabbi of Israel, he was a halachic architect. The formation of the Israeli military, the integration of religious observance within a modern army, the treatment of enemy combatants, the handling of occupied territory, and the status of minorities within a Jewish state were no longer abstract theological questions. They had become immediate administrative and moral realities. Goren’s task was therefore unprecedented in post-biblical Jewish history: to formulate a halachic framework capable of governing sovereign Jewish power.
This required not merely new rulings but a transformation in legal methodology. One of the most important aspects of Goren’s jurisprudence, and one only partially developed in the Fuchs and Hollander article, is that he effectively expanded the halachic toolkit by partially bypassing the dominant interpretive structure of diaspora-era rabbinic legalism. In classical post-Talmudic jurisprudence, biblical texts are ordinarily mediated through centuries of rabbinic commentary, decisional precedent, and legal formalization. Goren, however, repeatedly returned directly to biblical narratives, ethical motifs, and pre-exilic political categories in order to reconstruct a sovereign Jewish legal consciousness.
This move was radical precisely because it implicitly acknowledged that the inherited halachic canon lacked sufficient sovereign content for the realities confronting a modern state. The kings of Israel, biblical warfare, covenantal territory, and narratives of national power became jurisprudential resources once again because sovereignty had returned as a lived condition. Goren therefore did not merely interpret texts under conditions of sovereignty. Sovereignty transformed the interpretive architecture of Halacha.
The significance of this methodological shift cannot be overstated. Diaspora Judaism developed through layers of rabbinic mediation precisely because Jews lacked direct political authority. Under conditions of exile, legal reasoning naturally gravitated toward communal administration, ritual discipline, and minority survival. Biblical political categories remained authoritative but largely dormant. Goren effectively reversed that historical process by retrieving the Bible as a living constitutional source for modern Jewish statehood. His repeated appeals to biblical kings, military narratives, and covenantal claims were not rhetorical flourishes but part of an attempt to reconstruct the jurisprudence of sovereign Jewish existence.
This reconstruction also explains the unusual interpretive flexibility visible throughout his work. Goren frequently elevated aggadic, narrative, and ethical materials into quasi-normative status because conventional halachic precedent alone could not fully address the moral dilemmas generated by sovereign power. The concept of lifnim mishurat hadin, conduct beyond strict legal obligation, became especially important in this regard. Through such concepts, Goren created a broader category of legal-moral reasoning that allowed humanitarian and universal ethical concerns to become internal religious obligations rather than external secular impositions.
This point becomes especially clear in his reconstruction of Jewish military ethics. One of the central challenges confronting Goren was the relationship between Halacha and modern humanitarian law. The conduct of warfare in the twentieth century had become increasingly governed by international conventions concerning civilians, prisoners of war, enemy dead, and proportionality. Yet Jewish law lacked a continuous sovereign military tradition comparable to the Christian just war tradition that had developed from Augustine of Hippo through Thomas Aquinas into modern international humanitarian law.
Goren’s solution was neither simple accommodation nor rejection. Instead, he sought to demonstrate that the ethical principles underlying modern humanitarian law were already latent within Jewish sources themselves. His interpretation of Ben Azzai’s reading of Genesis is especially revealing. By emphasizing the shared ancestry of all humanity through Adam, Goren constructed a theological basis for universal human dignity extending beyond ethnic or national boundaries. Enemy combatants retained dignity because all human beings participated in a common divine origin.
At the same time, Goren’s approach was not merely derivative of liberal humanitarianism. He insisted that the moral foundations of humane warfare arose internally from Torah rather than externally from international conventions. This was crucial to his broader intellectual project. Goren feared that if Halacha could not produce doctrines analogous to equality, minority protections, and humanitarian ethics, it would become irrelevant to the Zionist project and vulnerable to accusations of moral primitivism. The emerging postwar international order increasingly defined legitimacy through what nineteenth- and early twentieth-century jurists had termed the “standard of civilization.” States were expected to uphold norms of equality, minority protection, and civilized conduct if they wished to participate fully in international society.
Goren clearly understood that a Jewish state detached from such norms would face not only diplomatic isolation but civilizational delegitimation. Yet his response was not secularization. Rather, he attempted to invert the moral hierarchy implicit within the discourse of civilization. Because the Jewish people had endured centuries of minority vulnerability and exile, they were uniquely positioned, in his view, to model ethical sovereignty. The humanitarian achievements of modern civilization were therefore not foreign imports into Judaism but partial reflections of moral truths already embedded within Torah.
This concern with legitimacy explains Goren’s remarkable engagement with constitutional equality and minority rights during the formative years of the Israeli state. In his early constitutional writings, he explicitly insisted that the future Jewish state would not conflict with international law. He supported guarantees for minority populations and, in some contexts, abolition of the death penalty, not merely as pragmatic concessions but as evidence that Jewish sovereignty could embody a morally advanced civilization. The Jewish people, having suffered as minorities throughout history, possessed a special obligation to model just treatment of minorities within their own state.
Yet Goren’s universalism always remained bounded by covenantal sovereignty. This limitation appears most clearly in his treatment of Judea and Samaria following the Six-Day War. Although he acknowledged the practical force of international law and the de facto commitments incurred by Israeli participation within the international order, he nevertheless insisted that Jewish sovereignty over the biblical Land of Israel ultimately derived from divine covenant rather than from international recognition. International law could regulate administrative arrangements and practical governance, but it could not nullify the eternal relationship between the Jewish people and their ancestral land.
Here one sees most clearly the layered structure of Goren’s jurisprudence. International law possesses genuine authority, but only within boundaries established by Torah and covenant. The doctrine of Dina Demalchuta Dina, traditionally meaning “the law of the land is law,” became central to this framework. Goren extended the concept beyond domestic governance into the international sphere. Because the Knesset had accepted participation within the international legal order, international law acquired a degree of halachic validity. Yet this validity remained procedural and contingent rather than metaphysically ultimate. International law governed participation within the international system, but it could not override divine covenant or negate Jewish sovereignty over the Land of Israel.
This distinction clarifies the apparent inconsistency in Goren’s treatment of international law. At times he speaks in strikingly universalist terms, emphasizing civilian immunity, humanitarian obligations, and universal human dignity. At other moments he treats international law primarily as an instrument of geopolitical force. The contradiction is not accidental. Goren simultaneously occupied two different conceptual worlds.
In the first, international law represented genuine moral achievement and the ethical maturation of civilization. In the second, it functioned as an operational system of power regulating participation within global politics. This explains his remarkable argument that diplomatic pressure could be treated analogously to military pressure in halachic reasoning during the Sinai withdrawal. International law became not merely a moral language but a structure of coercive realities through which sovereign states were compelled to navigate.
In this respect, Goren’s jurisprudence displays a surprisingly modern realism. He implicitly recognized that legal systems derive authority not solely from abstract moral truth but from embedded structures of power and recognition. International law mattered because Israel existed within an international order capable of exerting practical consequences. Yet that order never acquired ultimate theological authority. Covenantal sovereignty remained prior.
The sociological implications of Goren’s work are profound. Viewed through the lens of Stephen P. Turner’s analysis of tacit knowledge and expertise, Goren appears as a jurist operating within a zone where inherited rules proved insufficient for unprecedented historical conditions. There existed no settled halachic framework governing aerial warfare, occupation, democratic constitutionalism, or international diplomacy. Consequently, Goren relied heavily upon institutional intuition, historical analogy, practical judgment, and interpretive improvisation, all while presenting his conclusions as continuous with tradition. His jurisprudence therefore illustrates the extent to which sovereignty transforms legal consciousness.
Indeed, one might say that Goren’s deepest contribution was his recognition that Jewish morality under sovereignty could not simply replicate Jewish morality under exile. Exilic Judaism conceptualized ethics largely from the standpoint of vulnerability and minority survival. Sovereign Judaism, by contrast, was forced to confront the moral responsibilities generated by coercive power. Questions that had remained theoretical for centuries became immediate and concrete: What constrains national violence? How should enemies be treated? What obligations exist toward civilians? How can a covenantal people wield military power without moral corruption?
Goren did not fully resolve these dilemmas because they are not fully resolvable. Rather, his importance lies in the seriousness with which he confronted them. He understood more clearly than many later religious-nationalist figures that a Jewish state could neither survive as a purely secular liberal entity detached from covenantal identity nor function as a purely theological polity indifferent to international legitimacy and universal norms. His life’s work therefore became an attempt to mediate between two legal civilizations whose foundational assumptions often remained fundamentally in tension: the universalist order of modern international law and the particularistic covenantal logic of Jewish sovereignty.
The enduring significance of Goren lies precisely in this unresolved mediation. He was among the first major rabbinic thinkers compelled to grapple with the full moral and jurisprudential consequences of Jewish power after exile. Sovereignty, he understood, changes not merely politics but law, ethics, interpretation, and theology. His work therefore remains one of the foundational attempts to articulate what a sovereign Halacha might look like in the modern world: neither wholly absorbed into liberal universalism nor sealed within uncompromising particularism, but existing uneasily and creatively between them.

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‘The Relationship Between Halakhic Decisors and their Peers as a Determining Factor in the Acceptance of their Decisions – A Step in Understanding Interpeer Effects in Halakhic Discourse’ (2010)

Aviad Hollander’s paper is ostensibly a contribution to the sociology of halakhic decision-making, yet the essay’s true significance extends well beyond the relatively narrow problem it formally addresses. Beneath its careful comparison of two twentieth-century rabbinic controversies lies a broader theory of legitimacy within decentralized interpretive civilizations, one that speaks not only to the internal history of halakhah but also to enduring questions concerning institutional continuity, the regulation of innovation, the social production of authority, and the fragile relationship between substantive truth and collective recognition. Hollander’s central argument is that the acceptance or rejection of halakhic rulings cannot be explained adequately through reference to formal legal reasoning alone, since even highly sophisticated and normatively legitimate arguments may fail if they are perceived as threatening the authority structure of the interpretive community itself. The decisive variable, therefore, is not simply the intrinsic strength of the legal analysis but the relationship between the decisor and the collective body of peers whose recognition ultimately determines whether an innovation will be incorporated into the living stream of accepted halakhah. In this respect, Hollander’s article belongs as much to the sociology of expertise, the anthropology of institutional trust, and the study of tacit authority structures as it does to Jewish legal history properly understood.

What makes the paper particularly important is that it quietly destabilizes two opposing but equally simplistic conceptions of halakhic life. On the one hand, traditional apologetic accounts often describe halakhic decision-making as the near-mechanical extraction of divine truth from canonical texts through rigorous legal analysis, thereby minimizing the extent to which social dynamics shape the reception of legal innovation. On the other hand, secular reductionist accounts frequently depict halakhic discourse as little more than politics cloaked in theological language, thereby dissolving legal reasoning into naked struggles for institutional power. Hollander avoids both errors. His analysis instead reveals halakhah as a living interpretive civilization in which substantive legal reasoning, institutional legitimacy, symbolic capital, political context, communal trust, inherited status, and tacit norms of collegial behavior operate simultaneously and inseparably. The issue, therefore, is not whether halakhic decision-making is “really” legal or “really” sociological, but rather how legal reasoning becomes authoritative only through its successful incorporation into a preexisting social and institutional ecology.

The epigraph Hollander selects for the paper already gestures toward this deeper concern: “The Torah is acquired by forty-eight qualifications… [a person who] knows his place.” That brief citation from Pirkei Avot functions as more than a decorative rabbinic flourish. It encapsulates the entire theoretical architecture of the essay. The halakhic decisor is not conceived merely as an autonomous jurist whose responsibility is exhausted by fidelity to textual truth. Rather, he exists within a transgenerational collective whose coherence depends upon innumerable tacit expectations concerning deference, collegiality, institutional restraint, procedural legitimacy, and sensitivity to the limits of communal tolerance. A posek who fails to “know his place” within this ecology may discover that even compelling legal arguments are insufficient to secure legitimacy if the broader interpretive community comes to perceive his conduct as destabilizing or jurisdictionally threatening.

Hollander develops this thesis through an elegantly constructed comparison between Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Auerbach and Rabbi Shlomo Goren, two figures whose contrasting responses to peer opposition illuminate radically different conceptions of halakhic authority itself. The first case concerns Rabbi Auerbach’s proposed solution to the problem of “halakhic infertility,” a situation in which the timing of ovulation relative to the laws of niddah renders conception effectively impossible for observant couples. Drawing upon talmudic discussions concerning menstrual blood passing through a tube rather than contacting the vaginal canal directly, Rabbi Auerbach proposed the use of a flexible device that would prevent the blood from triggering the ordinary prohibition on marital relations. The proposal was unquestionably innovative, indeed startlingly so, since it addressed a longstanding and painful human problem through an unusually creative extension of existing halakhic categories. Yet Hollander emphasizes that Auerbach’s substantive arguments remained entirely recognizable within normative halakhic discourse and drew upon legitimate legal precedents rather than extraneous ideological commitments.

Nevertheless, the truly decisive aspect of Auerbach’s intervention was not the legal reasoning itself but the rhetorical and institutional posture through which it was presented. Again and again, Auerbach framed his proposal with striking humility, repeatedly emphasizing that it should be understood merely as a “proposal” submitted for review by the gedolei Torah. He explicitly requested scrutiny from greater authorities, avoided the language of sovereign decisional authority, and carefully refrained from presenting the innovation as a binding practical ruling. These gestures were not incidental acts of politeness. They constituted the sociological mechanism through which the innovation remained intelligible as an internal contribution to the collective halakhic enterprise rather than a challenge to the legitimacy of the enterprise itself. Auerbach’s rhetorical humility effectively communicated that his innovation emerged from within the covenantal structure of rabbinic continuity and remained subordinate to the collective authority of his peers.

The response of the Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah is especially revealing in this regard. Their primary objection was not that Auerbach’s legal reasoning was technically absurd or formally illegitimate. Rather, according to Hollander, the decisive claim was that the present generation simply lacked the authority to implement so far-reaching a leniency. This point is extraordinarily important because it reveals that the dispute was not fundamentally about textual interpretation alone. The rabbinic leadership was not merely evaluating whether the tube proposal was legally ingenious or legally defective. It was evaluating the civilizational risks associated with absorbing such an innovation into the normative structure of halakhic life. Even when substantive critiques later appeared, such as those advanced by Rabbi Menachem Kasher, the peer group did not center its opposition on those technical arguments. The decisive issue remained sociological and institutional rather than narrowly analytical. The question confronting the rabbinic establishment was whether this generation could absorb so dramatic an innovation without destabilizing the legitimacy structure that sustained the broader authority of halakhic tradition itself.

Equally significant is Hollander’s observation that Rabbi Auerbach was threatened with ostracism should the proposal be implemented. This detail matters because it demonstrates that both Auerbach and Goren encountered the same coercive institutional pressures. The crucial difference lay entirely in how each interpreted and responded to those pressures. Rabbi Auerbach immediately retracted the proposal publicly, despite remaining unconvinced that his substantive reasoning was technically mistaken. In doing so, he effectively subordinated his own legal judgment to the collective authority of the rabbinic peer group. The consequences were paradoxical but sociologically predictable: rather than diminishing his stature, the retraction enhanced it. Auerbach emerged as perhaps the single most universally trusted halakhic authority of his generation across otherwise competing Orthodox subcultures. His willingness to yield demonstrated that he understood halakhic authority not as an expression of individual sovereignty but as participation in a transgenerational interpretive organism whose continuity superseded even deeply held personal convictions.

The contrast with Rabbi Shlomo Goren could scarcely have been sharper. The Langer affair, which forms the second major case study in Hollander’s paper, revolved around the status of two siblings considered mamzerim because their mother had remarried without receiving a valid divorce from her prior husband, a Polish convert named Bolak Borkovski. Rabbi Goren assembled an extensive and substantively plausible halakhic argument that Borkovski’s conversion had never been adequately established and may have been invalid altogether. Hollander repeatedly emphasizes that Goren’s legal reasoning fell well within the boundaries of recognizable halakhic discourse and that opponents largely avoided direct engagement with his substantive evidentiary claims. The controversy therefore cannot be reduced simply to a clash between legal rigor and legal laxity. The real conflict concerned legitimacy, jurisdiction, and the location of sovereign authority within modern Jewish life.

At first glance, Goren appears to fit the archetype of the charismatic innovator confronting a conservative establishment. Yet Hollander’s analysis, especially in its footnotes, complicates that picture substantially. Goren was not acting merely as an isolated prophetic truth-seeker defiantly asserting personal conviction against communal conformity. He was also engaged in institutional statecraft under conditions of acute political pressure. During this period, proposals for civil marriage in Israel were gaining traction, driven in part by public frustration with the Rabbinate’s inability to resolve humanitarian crises such as the Langer case. Goren appears to have understood that the Chief Rabbinate’s monopoly over Jewish personal status law was increasingly vulnerable. By resolving the Langer affair internally through halakhic means, he hoped to demonstrate that the Rabbinate remained capable of humane and flexible governance, thereby preventing secular authorities from using the case to justify transferring jurisdiction over marriage and personal status away from rabbinic control altogether.

This context transforms the meaning of the controversy. Goren was not attempting to destroy institutional authority. He was attempting to preserve one institutional order, namely the sovereign authority of the state Chief Rabbinate, by overriding another authority structure consisting of decentralized peer consensus among transnational rabbinic elites. The conflict was therefore not simply one between individual and collective authority, but rather a constitutional struggle between competing models of collective authority. One model located legitimacy within diffuse peer recognition accumulated organically across generations and communities. The other sought to consolidate legitimacy within official state-backed institutions capable of decisive action under modern political conditions.

The political urgency of the situation also helps explain Goren’s procedural haste. Hollander notes that Goren failed to secure broad support from major international rabbinic authorities before implementing his ruling. Under ordinary circumstances, such consultation would have been indispensable for preserving institutional legitimacy. Yet Goren appears to have believed that delay itself threatened the survival of the Rabbinate’s jurisdictional authority. The political window was narrow. Public pressure was mounting. Civil marriage proposals were advancing. In effect, Goren compressed the ordinary peer-review mechanisms of halakhic legitimacy because he believed the institutional survival of the Rabbinate required rapid and decisive action.

From the standpoint of symbolic capital, however, this strategy proved catastrophic. Rabbi Auerbach accumulated legitimacy through procedural patience, restraint, and visible submission to collective authority. Goren, by contrast, spent legitimacy rapidly in pursuit of institutional victory. The Haredi rabbinic establishment interpreted his actions not merely as a mistaken ruling but as an attempt to relocate halakhic sovereignty from the decentralized authority structure of the rabbinic peer network into the institutions of the modern state. The reaction was therefore immediate and ferocious. Leading rabbis across Israel, Europe, and the United States declared his rulings “null and void,” while some refused even to address him with the title “rabbi.” These responses were not merely punitive. They represented an attempt at institutional self-defense against what was perceived as a jurisdictional threat to the distributed structure of halakhic legitimacy itself.

Hollander’s discussion of Goren’s “outsider” status further deepens the analysis. Rabbi Auerbach occupied the position of a quintessential insider, emerging from an established Jerusalem Haredi family, avoiding politics almost entirely, and remaining fully embedded within the traditional rabbinic ecosystem. His demeanor, biography, and social location all signaled continuity with the inherited structure of rabbinic life. Goren, despite extraordinary brilliance and early recognition, never fully possessed this type of embedded legitimacy. His military rank, public visibility, and close relationships with secular political elites rendered him permanently liminal in the eyes of many Haredi authorities. Hollander’s observation that Goren “rubbed shoulders” with secular military and political leaders is especially significant. In elite interpretive communities, proximity to external power centers frequently generates suspicion that judgment has become contaminated by alien institutional incentives. The issue is not crude corruption but rather fear that external political commitments subtly reshape one’s instincts, priorities, and interpretive orientation. Such suspicions already surrounded Goren long before the Langer affair. His refusal to defer to peer consensus transformed latent distrust into open institutional antagonism.

The deepest insight of Hollander’s paper emerges in his concluding contrast between Auerbach and Goren’s underlying conceptions of authority itself. For Auerbach, the halakhic decisor existed fundamentally as part of a collective extending across generations. A legal ruling became authoritative only through its successful absorption into the communal interpretive organism. Goren, by contrast, appears to have believed that the decisor’s responsibility was fidelity to halakhic truth even when peers resisted or refused to recognize that truth. If the collective rejected the ruling, this might indicate not the decisor’s illegitimacy but the collective’s inability or unwillingness to perceive the truth correctly.

This distinction is not merely sociological. It is epistemological. It concerns the very mechanism through which truth becomes binding within halakhic civilization. Does authority emerge only through collective recognition and institutional incorporation, or does substantive correctness possess authority prior to consensus? The tension between these models lies at the center of modern halakhic politics.

Ultimately, Hollander’s paper suggests that halakhah functions not merely as a mechanism for generating formally correct legal conclusions, but as a civilizational system for regulating the pace, legitimacy, and absorptive capacity of institutional change. Innovation is not prohibited. Indeed, it is often necessary. But innovation must remain embedded within recognizable forms of collegial trust, procedural continuity, and covenantal solidarity. The decisive question is therefore never simply whether a legal argument is technically persuasive. The deeper question is whether the interpretive civilization can absorb the innovation without destabilizing the authority structure upon which the civilization itself depends.

For this reason, Hollander’s essay possesses significance far beyond the immediate cases it discusses. Scientific communities, constitutional courts, academic disciplines, and professional guilds all confront analogous tensions between creativity and coherence, reform and continuity, substantive truth and institutional legitimacy. Every decentralized interpretive order must determine how innovation can occur without dissolving the trust networks that sustain collective authority.

Hollander’s achievement is to demonstrate this dynamic with exceptional clarity inside the world of modern halakhic life. The conflict between Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Auerbach and Rabbi Shlomo Goren was not merely a disagreement about fertility technology or the status of two siblings. It was a constitutional struggle over the location of sovereignty within contemporary Judaism itself. The unresolved question exposed by the controversy remains profoundly alive today: does halakhic legitimacy reside primarily in dispersed peer consensus accumulated organically across generations, or in authoritative institutions capable of decisive action under the pressures of modern political life?

That question, as Hollander’s paper quietly reveals, remains one of the defining tensions of modern Orthodoxy.

Posted in R. Aviad Hollander, R. Shlomo Goren | Comments Off on ‘The Relationship Between Halakhic Decisors and their Peers as a Determining Factor in the Acceptance of their Decisions – A Step in Understanding Interpeer Effects in Halakhic Discourse’ (2010)