[Avodah] The Ramban on the Ibn Ezra
Micha Berger
micha at aishdas.org
Fri Jun 1 03:28:46 PDT 2018
With discussed "Higher" Bible Criticism before, we've discussed the IE on
the topic before, RGS went the next step -- the Ramban on the IE on Bible
Criticism. I am includng the comment, and I would have written something
similar.
<https://www.torahmusings.com/2018/05/ramban-on-ibn-ezras-heresy>
:-)BBii!
-Micha
Ramban on Ibn Ezra's Heresy Posted by: Gil Student
R. Avraham Ibn Ezra has long been a controversial figure. R. Shlomo
Luria (Yam Shel Shlomo, intro to Bava Kamma) respectfully but strongly
rejects his entire approach to Torah commentary. What does the Ramban,
one of the classical commentaries whose work serves as a foundation
for modern Jewish thought, think of his predecessor, Ibn Ezra? He
certainly disagrees often with Ibn Ezra, sometimes sharply. But
there may be a more fundamental reason for opposition.
At the end of Ramban's commentary on Shir Ha-Shirim, he writes
that anyone who says that Ezra the scribe added to the Torah --
such as Gen. 13:6 or Deut. 3:11 -- is a heretic (Kisvei Ha-Ramban,
vol. 2 p. 548). Ibn Ezra famously suggests that four verses imply
post-Mosaic interpolations -- Gen. 12:6, 22:14, Deut. 3:11,
31:22. Ramban, who shows clear expertise in Ibn Ezra's Torah
commentaryn quotes two of these four verses in describing the
heretic! Coincidence? R. Betzalel Naor, in his annotated edition
of Rashba's Ma'amar Al Yishma'el (Orot: Spring Valley, NY, 2008,
pp. 25-27) finds this correspondence convincing. The author of the
commentary on Shir Ha-Shirim must have been condemning Ibn Ezra as
a heretic. Even though some supercommentaries and scholars dispute
the claim that Ibn Ezra ever intended anything other than that
Moshe wrote those verses prophetically, many believe he made the
more radical claim.[1] If so, this passage from the Shir Ha-Shirim
commentary condemns him as a heretic.
However, R. Naor points out that Ramban did not write that
commentary. R. Chaim Dov Chavel argues cogently in his introduction
to that work that it was written by the earlier, kabbalist R. Ezra
of Gerona (Kisvei Ha-Ramban, vol. 2 pp. 473-475). If so, we can ask
whether Ramban agreed with R. Ezra's evaluation. R. Naor (ibid.,
pp. 136-143) makes the following points and suggestions:
1- Even in his introduction to his Torah commentary, Ramban
expresses his mixed attitude toward Ibn Ezra, which he calls
"a public rebuke and private affection." This might be used to
describe a commentary that is both brilliant but occasionally
sacrilegious. However, Ramban calls him "Rabbi" Ezra, a term
of respect.
2- It could be that Ramban interpreted Ibn Ezra conservatively,
as some supercommentators and scholars have. If so, he could
agree with R. Ezra of Gerona generally but disagree with him
about Ibn Ezra.
3- Ramban unquestionably rejected any post-Mosaic interpolations
into the Torah, as seen in his general introduction to his
commentary. While hiss attitude toward the level of prophecy of
the Torah varies (commentary to Num. 16:5), that is nowhere near
the claim that any verse postdates Moshe.
4- Rabbeinu Tam wrote a poem in praise of Ibn Ezra. Perhaps this
influenced Ramban to judge him favorably as an inadvertent heretic,
which was a status that, according to the Ra'avad (Hilkhos Teshuvah
3:7), even great scholars fell into.
5- The Chida (Shem Ha-Gedolim, part 1, alef 89) quotes R. Binyamin
Spinoza, a late eighteenth century rabbi, who deduces from
Ramban's failure to argue against Ibn Ezra's radical suggestions
that those comments must be late forgeries (interpolations?). Had
Ramban seen them, he would surely have objected.
In the end, once we determine that the commentary to Shir Ha-Shirim is
misattributed, we can only speculate about Ramban's attitude toward
Ibn Ezra. Maybe he agreed with R. Ezra of Gerona's condemnation
or maybe he felt the belief was wrong but not heretical. Or maybe,
as R. Naor suggested, he rejected the belief as heretical but not
the person.
(Republished from May '13)
[1] On this disagreement, see R. Yonatan Kolatch, Masters of the Word,
vol. 2 pp. 310-318.
------------------
J. C. Salomon
May 31, 18 at 6:49 pm
Ibn Ezra to Gen. 36:31 strongly rejects and condemns the notion that
the verse "And these are the kings that reigned in the land of Edom,
before there reigned any king over the children of Israel" is a late
addition to the text.
I might add a sixth possibility to the list: that Ibn Ezra held that
certain verses were added by Yehoshua; and that while Ramban might
have disagreed with this view, he'd have seen it as a legitimate
extension of the similar Talmudic view regarding the last eight
verses in the Torah and therefore not heretical.
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