이사야 5:12의 Halakhah
וְהָיָ֨ה כִנּ֜וֹר וָנֶ֗בֶל תֹּ֧ף וְחָלִ֛יל וָיַ֖יִן מִשְׁתֵּיהֶ֑ם וְאֵ֨ת פֹּ֤עַל יְהוָה֙ לֹ֣א יַבִּ֔יטוּ וּמַעֲשֵׂ֥ה יָדָ֖יו לֹ֥א רָאֽוּ׃
그들이 연회에는 수금과 비파와 소고와 저와 포도주를 갖추었어도 여호와의 행하심을 관심치 아니하며 그의 손으로 하신 일을 생각지 아니하는도다
Contemporary Halakhic Problems, Vol VI
The Sages expanded upon this relatively simple motif. The Gemara, Shabbat 75a, declares, "Any person who is capable of calculating the equinoxes and the solstices, to plot and chart the movement of the celestial bodies comprising the zodiac but fails to engage in such calculations, of him the verse says, 'but the work of the Lord they do not regard and the work of His hands they do not see' (Isaiah 5:12)."8Indeed, R. Moshe of Coucy, Sefer Miẓvot Gadol, miẓvot aseh, no. 46, enumerates an obligation to engage in those calculations as one of the 613 commandments. That is also the position of Sefer Yere’im (Vilna, 5659), no. 260. That position is based upon the interpretation presented by the Gemara, Shabbat 75a, of the verse “You shall observe and fulfill, for it is your wisdom and understanding in the eyes of the nations” (Deuteronomy 4:6). “Which wisdom is it that [is regarded as such] in the eyes of the nations?” queries the Gemara. The immediate answer of the Gemara is: “That is, calculation of tekufot and mazalot.” The Gemara’s statement is formulated in support of the dictum of R. Samuel bar Naḥmani in the name of R. Yoḥanan: “Whence [is it derived] that it is incumbent upon a person to calculate tekufot and mazalot? As it is said ‘and you shall observe and perform etc.’” The talmudic interpretation establishing an obligation is based upon employment of the phrase “and you shall observe and perform” in the biblical verse, a term that connotes a binding imperative.
Rambam also considers the exhortation rooted in this verse to be a mandatory obligation but does not include it in his enumeration of the 613 commandments. In the introduction to his Sefer ha-Miẓvot, shoresh bet, Rambam formulates the principle that the number 613 includes only commandments that are explicitly formulated in the Pentateuch. Excluded from that catalogue of miẓvot, asserts Rambam, are all commandments derived on the basis of rabbinic hermeneutics for, declares Rambam, were these also to be included, “the number of miẓvot would equal many thousands.”
In his responsa collection, Pe’er ha-Dor, ed. R. Abraham Chaim Freimann (Jerusalem, 5694), no. 347, Rambam responds to a query regarding the purpose of the commandment with a citation of a dictum of R. Meir, “Ponder His works for from that you will recognize He who spoke and the universe came into being.” Rambam also cites that statement in Hilkhot Yesodei ha-Torah 2:2 and in Sefer ha-Miẓvot, miẓvot aseh, no. 3. The source of the dictum is probably Sifri, Deuteronomy 6:6. Cf., editor’s note, Pe’er ha-Dor, no. 347.
Ramban, in his glosses on Rambam’s Sefer ha-Miẓvot, shoresh alef, s.v. ve-hateshuvah ha-revi’i, understands that, for Rambam, the commandment is rabbinic in nature. That position is also espoused by R. Betzalel Ze’ev Shafran, Teshuvot Ravaz, Oraḥ Ḥayyim, no. 32, who asserts that Rambam omits this commandment from his list of the 613 miẓvot because he regarded it to be rabbinic in nature. That understanding of Rambam is contradicted by the comments of Rambam both in his Sefer ha-Miẓvot and in his Pe’er ha-Dor. See also R. Moshe Sofer, Teshuvot Ḥatam Sofer, VIII, Koveẓ Teshuvot (Jerusalem, 5742), no. 26.
Ramban himself asserts that the study of tekufot and mazalot is not mandatory even as a rabbinic command. Nevertheless, he regards such activity as a desideratum and explains that the statement of the Gemara is hortatory in nature urging those who are capable of doing so to engage in those calculations and to announce forthcoming astronomical occurrences to the nations of the world. A person who is conversant with the fundamentals of astronomy but who fails to explore the ordered nature of the universe is remiss. This verse, as interpreted by the Sages, censures him for not engaging in that enterprise. What is it that the Sages are underscoring in this dictum? What halakhic obligation has this individual failed to fulfill?
Rambam also considers the exhortation rooted in this verse to be a mandatory obligation but does not include it in his enumeration of the 613 commandments. In the introduction to his Sefer ha-Miẓvot, shoresh bet, Rambam formulates the principle that the number 613 includes only commandments that are explicitly formulated in the Pentateuch. Excluded from that catalogue of miẓvot, asserts Rambam, are all commandments derived on the basis of rabbinic hermeneutics for, declares Rambam, were these also to be included, “the number of miẓvot would equal many thousands.”
In his responsa collection, Pe’er ha-Dor, ed. R. Abraham Chaim Freimann (Jerusalem, 5694), no. 347, Rambam responds to a query regarding the purpose of the commandment with a citation of a dictum of R. Meir, “Ponder His works for from that you will recognize He who spoke and the universe came into being.” Rambam also cites that statement in Hilkhot Yesodei ha-Torah 2:2 and in Sefer ha-Miẓvot, miẓvot aseh, no. 3. The source of the dictum is probably Sifri, Deuteronomy 6:6. Cf., editor’s note, Pe’er ha-Dor, no. 347.
Ramban, in his glosses on Rambam’s Sefer ha-Miẓvot, shoresh alef, s.v. ve-hateshuvah ha-revi’i, understands that, for Rambam, the commandment is rabbinic in nature. That position is also espoused by R. Betzalel Ze’ev Shafran, Teshuvot Ravaz, Oraḥ Ḥayyim, no. 32, who asserts that Rambam omits this commandment from his list of the 613 miẓvot because he regarded it to be rabbinic in nature. That understanding of Rambam is contradicted by the comments of Rambam both in his Sefer ha-Miẓvot and in his Pe’er ha-Dor. See also R. Moshe Sofer, Teshuvot Ḥatam Sofer, VIII, Koveẓ Teshuvot (Jerusalem, 5742), no. 26.
Ramban himself asserts that the study of tekufot and mazalot is not mandatory even as a rabbinic command. Nevertheless, he regards such activity as a desideratum and explains that the statement of the Gemara is hortatory in nature urging those who are capable of doing so to engage in those calculations and to announce forthcoming astronomical occurrences to the nations of the world. A person who is conversant with the fundamentals of astronomy but who fails to explore the ordered nature of the universe is remiss. This verse, as interpreted by the Sages, censures him for not engaging in that enterprise. What is it that the Sages are underscoring in this dictum? What halakhic obligation has this individual failed to fulfill?
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