Law, Hierarchy, and Gender

Why do the tannaim exempt women from time-bound commandments (m. Qiddushin 1:7)? In this paper it is argued that the unequal levels of obligation for men and women in rabbinic Judaism creates a hierarchy of mitzvot between them that mimics and virtually replaces the earlier biblical hierarchy of mi...

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Main Author: Valérie Rhein
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2020-09-01
Series:Judaica
Online Access:https://judaica.ch/article/view/6215
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author Valérie Rhein
author_facet Valérie Rhein
author_sort Valérie Rhein
collection DOAJ
description Why do the tannaim exempt women from time-bound commandments (m. Qiddushin 1:7)? In this paper it is argued that the unequal levels of obligation for men and women in rabbinic Judaism creates a hierarchy of mitzvot between them that mimics and virtually replaces the earlier biblical hierarchy of mitzvot between priests and Israel. In both constellations the rabbis consider the obligation to fulfill more commandments to be a privilege. The similarity between the hierarchies priests–Israel and men–women becomes apparent when the selection of commandments from which the tannaim and the amoraim explicitly exempt women are examined more closely: Many of them – the time-bound commandments shofar, lulav, tzitzit, tefillin, and shema as well as the non-time-bound mitzvah of Torah study – share a common feature, namely, their function as “ersatz Temple rituals.” During the transition from a Temple-oriented, priest-based Judaism to a study-oriented rabbinic Judaism, rituals such as these played a crucial role.
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spelling doaj.art-38de8d5be8d24bdb9ea616ee612809b22023-10-05T08:24:51ZdeuBern Open PublishingJudaica2673-42732020-09-01110.36950/jndf.1.4Law, Hierarchy, and GenderValérie Rhein Why do the tannaim exempt women from time-bound commandments (m. Qiddushin 1:7)? In this paper it is argued that the unequal levels of obligation for men and women in rabbinic Judaism creates a hierarchy of mitzvot between them that mimics and virtually replaces the earlier biblical hierarchy of mitzvot between priests and Israel. In both constellations the rabbis consider the obligation to fulfill more commandments to be a privilege. The similarity between the hierarchies priests–Israel and men–women becomes apparent when the selection of commandments from which the tannaim and the amoraim explicitly exempt women are examined more closely: Many of them – the time-bound commandments shofar, lulav, tzitzit, tefillin, and shema as well as the non-time-bound mitzvah of Torah study – share a common feature, namely, their function as “ersatz Temple rituals.” During the transition from a Temple-oriented, priest-based Judaism to a study-oriented rabbinic Judaism, rituals such as these played a crucial role. https://judaica.ch/article/view/6215
spellingShingle Valérie Rhein
Law, Hierarchy, and Gender
Judaica
title Law, Hierarchy, and Gender
title_full Law, Hierarchy, and Gender
title_fullStr Law, Hierarchy, and Gender
title_full_unstemmed Law, Hierarchy, and Gender
title_short Law, Hierarchy, and Gender
title_sort law hierarchy and gender
url https://judaica.ch/article/view/6215
work_keys_str_mv AT valerierhein lawhierarchyandgender