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May 15, 2001
Transcript of the lecture delivered on May 15, 2001, at the Harmonie Club in
New York City.
My talk this afternoon was inspired by an earlier Morgenthau Lecture, Amartya
Sen's "Human Rights and Asian
Values" (PDF: 1.37 MB, 35 pages). Sen's subject is perhaps best described as
the universality of universalism itself, which has been called into question by
Asian traditionalists who claim that universal doctrines like "human rights" are
Western inventions and imperial impositions. Sen shows, in an admirably
convincing way, that similar doctrines can be defended from within the world of
Asian cultures. I want to make an argument of the same kind about the smaller
world of the Jewish tradition -- an argument that has, I think, both local and
general interest.
Throughout the enlightenment years, which in the case of the Jews extended
from the last decades of the 18th century to the end of the 19th, prodigious
efforts were made to discover a Jewish universalism or, better, to define
Judaism as a universal religion of ethical reason. These efforts were sometimes
philosophical, sometimes polemical, sometimes merely apologetic; they were in
any case convincing for one practical reason: the politics of ordinary Jews
during those same years (and ever since) seemed to confirm them. Everywhere,
Jews played a leading role in universalist political movements, liberal,
socialist, and, later on, communist too. Wasn't this politics, in some sense at
least, an expression of, or a secular continuation of, their Judaism?
But these were emancipated Jews, and even when the writers and activists
among them looked to Jewish sources for their universalism -- the creation of
men and women in God's image, the liberation from Egyptian bondage, the
prophetic critique of injustice, the vision of a general redemption -- the
actual creeds they espoused were more likely to derive from Kant or Marx than
from the Bible or Talmud. Indeed, they could find what they needed in the Bible
and Talmud to support a universalist politics and morality, but the discovery
was too easy: they simply picked the nicest passages and ignored everything
else. Their programmatic politics had little in common with the tradition as a
whole or with the traditional life of the scattered Jewish communities of the
exile.
Hence counter-enlightenment followed quickly upon enlightenment. Already in
the 19th century there were Jewish writers who defended the traditional way of
life and described enlightenment politics (and reformed religion) as a flight
from Judaism, an effort to assimilate into the gentile world. Similar arguments
are still being made today: "The Judaism of the last two centuries," writes
Michael Wyschogrod, perhaps the most interesting of American orthodox
intellectuals, "is the Judaism of self-liquidation." As Wyschogrod's brilliant
book, The Body of Faith, suggests, an anti-enlightenment traditionalism
can still be defended 200 years after the death of Moses
Mendelssohn -- and defended with what, from the other side, has to be
described as unexpected vigor.
This defense of tradition represents a Jewish version of the argument about
"Asian values." Orthodox Jews (not all of them, but many) uphold what they take
to be the true understanding of divine election and halakhic
[Jewish law] order against the ever-encroaching forces of Western culture. They
are resolutely opposed to universalism, at least in its secular philosophical
and political versions. They have little use for the idea of human rights or for
the claims that are made in its name. Like Asian traditionalists, they reject
feminist demands for equality and insist that their own familial life, with all
its hierarchies, is superior to anything available in the West. In Israel's
disputes about foreign policy, they are unwilling to recognize a universal right
of self-determination or to acknowledge the claims of Palestinians to land and
sovereignty.
Though I am a product of enlightenment and emancipation, I don't think that
it is enough today to respond to the traditionalist revival by reiterating 19th
century descriptions of Jewish universalism. Judaism is manifestly not a
religion of ethical reason; no one looking at contemporary orthodoxy and
ultra-orthodoxy can have any illusions about that. Like the other world
religions, it includes powerful rationalist and ethical doctrines -- and reform
Jews especially have made the most of these; but it includes much else besides.
At the most abstract level, monotheism, creation "in the image," and messianic
redemption can generate a powerful universalist commitment.
But the concrete life of the Jewish people for most of its history hasn't
been dominated by those abstractions, but rather by a God of history who not
only created the universe but who also chose the Jews, and who will one day
bring them a redeemer, the king messiah, son of David. Between the historical
moment of election and the promised but always postponed moment of redemption,
the life of religious Jews has been narrowly circumscribed, highly vulnerable,
and intensely parochial. Especially so during the long years of exile, before
emancipation and sovereignty: the scattered communities were everywhere
subordinate and, most of the time, beleaguered and oppressed.
We can readily imagine this experience as the basis for a "liberationist"
ethics and a liberal or leftist politics; it can also, however, produce an
inwardly turned traditionalism, hostile toward the outside world, resentful of
would-be intermediaries, and deeply suspicious of any kind of moral, political,
or social inclusiveness. Among religious men and women, this latter outcome
seems the more likely one. Wyschogrod, once again a useful example, describes
"ethics" as the Judaism of assimilated Jews.
Nonetheless, there are interesting universalist or universalizing arguments
that have been made within the Jewish tradition, in the classical texts and
commentaries that reflect what I've called the concrete life of the Jews --
which means, they are not philosophical or polemical or apologetic in character.
I don't want to deny the value of arguments that take these latter forms -- and
that figure in the work of major Jewish writers like Philo, Josephus, Judah Halevi,
Isaac
Cardoso, Hermann
Cohen; but I am looking for something else: for the concrete, inescapable
universalism of people who are not, so to speak, first-order universalists. And
the place to look is in what might be called the intellectual marchlands, the border
areas where practical encounters with "the others" ordinarily occur (and also
where they are imagined, worried about, anticipated, and reflected on). In
biblical history and prophecy there are repeated efforts to deal with, if not
quite to understand, the gentile nations, and the same efforts are continued or
renewed in rabbinic legal discussions.
These arguments are valuable and worth recovering precisely because the
universalist positions they sometimes defend differ from the standard versions
of philosophical universalism. They reflect the impact of a strongly
particularist creed, and they represent, most of the time, a voice from below.
Enlightenment universalism in its original French version was, after all, the
universalism of an elite class in the leading country of the Western world; and
though the Jewish maskilim (enlighteners) were from a different class and
country, they did the best they could to adapt and naturalize the original
version. Pre-emancipation Jewish universalism, by contrast, is the universalism
of the weak. I want to reclaim it now, without pretending that it dominates the
tradition; I claim only that it is a significant presence, which has been
repressed by most contemporary "traditionalists." Traditions should never be
left to their conservative defenders.
My account of this peculiarly Jewish universalism will focus, appropriately
for this occasion, on international politics. Once the Jews are a stateless
people, of course, international politics doesn't take conventional forms, but I
think that I can make it recognizable. I will begin before statelessness, with
two biblical examples. In thinking about these two, it is important to remember
that the Israelite kingdoms of the biblical age were themselves small and weak,
and that the local imperialisms -- Egyptian, Assyrian, and Babylonian -- were
violent and brutal and, in historical succession, triumphant. So there is a
significant sense in which the Bible is already the textual record of a
subordinate people, even though modern Zionists looked to it as a prooftext for
Jewish political independence and warrior heroism. After the biblical examples,
I will turn to two rabbinic arguments that are not discussed, as far as I know,
in secular or Zionist literature.
Consider first the following lines from the prophet Amos:
Thus said the Lord: For three transgressions of Damascus, For four, I
will not revoke it [the decree of punishment] Because they threshed Gilead
With threshing boards of iron....
Thus said the Lord: For three transgressions of Gaza For four, I will
not revoke it: Because they exiled an entire population....
Thus said the Lord, For three transgressions of Tyre, For four, I will
not revoke it: Because they handed over An entire population to Edom
Ignoring the covenant of brotherhood....
Thus said the Lord: For three transgressions of Edom, For four, I will
not revoke it: Because he pursued his brother with the sword And
repressed all pity....
Thus said the Lord: For three transgressions of the Ammonites, For
four, I will not revoke it: Because they ripped open the pregnant women of
Gilead In order to enlarge their own territory....
Thus said the Lord: For three transgressions of Moab, For four, I will
not revoke it: Because he burned the bones Of the king of Edom to
lime....(Amos 1:3-2:1)
In his Ancient
Judaism, Max Weber
describes the "transgressions" listed here as violations "of a form of
international religious law which was presupposed as valid among the Palestine
peoples." "Religious law" sounds right, given the commitment to divine
punishment with which each indictment begins. But whose religious law is this?
The acts described are not mentioned in any of the Israelite codes; they are not
the subject of any divine commands elsewhere in the Bible.
I suspect that this is in fact conventional law or, perhaps better, a kind of
moral custom, obviously violated in practice, but nonetheless the product of
informal, perhaps sometimes of formal, agreement. The prophet promises divine
enforcement; he doesn't speak of divine revelation, and the only covenant he
mentions is between two of the "Palestinian" kingdoms, not between Israel (or
any of the other nations) and God. Nor is anything said about the idolatrous
practices of the nations listed in the passages I have quoted; they are not
condemned for their idolatry; no specifically religious demands are made upon
them; they appear here as equal members of a society of states.
Note the substance of the transgressions: what is indicted here is extreme
cruelty, reaching, probably, to massacre; mass deportation and enslavement; the
violation of treaties; and the desecration of the dead -- all taking place in
time of war. In the verses that come immediately after the ones I've quoted,
Amos turns to Israel and Judah with equal fierceness, but in those cases he is
concerned with idolatry and domestic injustice ("they trample the heads of the
poor..."), not with foreign affairs, and he explicitly invokes divine law and
covenantal responsibility.
These last are familiar texts; they show the prophet at home, in his role as
social critic, and along with similar passages in other prophetic books, they
have undoubtedly played a part in shaping the liberal/left universalism of
emancipated Jews. But the earlier passages are at least equally interesting,
even though Amos shows no concern for social justice within the neighboring
nations. He is concerned only with what we call war crimes; the Amos text is a
very early example of the effort to set limits on the conduct of war.
It is revealing, I think, that the effort is made within the small
international society of what Weber calls "the Palestine peoples" -- that is,
the two Israelite kingdoms and their immediate neighbors. The limits that are
set, though apparently ineffective, are reciprocal: most of the crimes that Amos
describes were committed against Israel or Judah, but he also takes notice, as
Weber says, of "the injustice of a third people against another," Moab against Edom. The
promised divine punishments (omitted from the quotation above) don't quite fit
the customary code. Some of them seem to be directed only against what we would
call military targets: "I will set fire to the wall of Rabbah,/And...shall
devour its fortresses." But God also says: "I will wipe out the inhabitants of
Ashdod," which suggests that he too has "repressed all pity." The conventions
apparently don't apply to him.
Nonetheless, when prophets like Nahum condemn the cruelty of the Assyrians,
they are relying on understandings about legitimate warfare exactly like those
that underlie the Amos text. The understandings, then, are taken to have
universal extension; they apply to everyone's behavior. But they were first
worked out among the small peoples; there is no evidence that the Assyrians
accepted them, though even they understood the obligations of a treaty and,
despite their reputation for cruelty, may have believed themselves to be
fighting within some set of rules.
For my purposes here, I simply want to point to the Israelite acceptance of
conventional law alongside divine, revealed law and to the prophetic invocation
of the moral/legal conventions in arguments about military conduct in the
international arena. Statehood makes this sort of thing possible, and perhaps
necessary, even when the state structures are fairly rudimentary. In the long
years of statelessness, the laws of war were mostly ignored by Jewish writers
(they are obviously relevant again today). Weber is surely right in reading the
Amos text as the reflection of an actually existing "international law." But its
actuality goes deeper: the text also reflects an existing international
morality, underlying the law (as morality commonly does), which must have been
worked out in the course of a long series of cross-border encounters, for the
protection of the protagonists. God is, again, only the agent of enforcement;
the prophet doesn't claim any more creative role for him. The condemnation of
cruelty, exile, betrayal, and murder is, so Amos seems to assume, natural to
humankind--even if it is also natural for human beings to be cruel, murderous,
and so on.
One might also deduce from the international law of the small peoples a
condemnation of empire -- as Isaac Cardoso does in his Las
Excelencias de los Hebreos. According to Cardoso, the smallness of God's
promised land is meant "to show that great realms are great plunders, and that
the domination of foreign territories is more the result of violence and force
than of justice and equity..." But this is a seventeenth century argument.
Despite the critique of Assyria, I don't think that the prophetic texts reach as
far. Amos's indictments tell us more about the equal standing of the small
peoples than about the necessary illegitimacy of the great ones.
My second example is a famous text that appears in the books of Micah
and Isaiah, with only very minor word changes. A majority of contemporary
biblical scholars (though these majorities are highly volatile) regards the
source as unknown, probably from a third hand; this is a "floating" prophecy.
The date is contested, and pretty much irrelevant to my purposes here, but I
shall assume that it comes from the time of Micah and Isaiah, roughly, the last
several decades of the 8th century BCE.
In the days to come, The Mount of the Lord's House Shall stand firm
above the mountains And tower above the hills; And all the nations
Shall gaze on it with joy. And the many peoples shall go and
say: "Come, Let us go up to the Mount of the Lord, To the House of the
God of Jacob, That He may instruct us in His ways, And that we may walk in
His paths." For instruction shall come forth from Zion, The word of the
Lord from Jerusalem. Thus He will judge among the nations And arbitrate
for the many peoples, And they shall beat their swords into plowshares And
their spears into pruning hooks: Nation shall not take up Sword against
nation; They shall never again know war. (Isaiah 2:2-7)
This is clearly a messianic vision, though there is no king messiah mentioned
in the text. Partly for that reason, the last five lines have played an
especially important role in the literature and culture of the universalist
left. But the prophecy as a whole points toward a distinctive form of
universalism, which hasn't been imitated or adapted, or even discussed, in
modern times. The prophet's universe is not composed, like the world of
contemporary philosophers, of individual men and women who have somehow escaped
their parochial identities and transcended their differences; they have only
stopped fighting about identity and difference. Nations and peoples still exist
and, what is more telling, they still find themselves in conflict; they are
different, and they differ. They come to Jerusalem for divine judgement and
arbitration.
The vision is not imperialist (though there are imperial visions in other
prophetic texts): Israel neither encompasses the other nations nor rules over
them. A recent commentator on the parallel passage in Micah nicely describes
what happens when Zion "towers above the hills":
The result is not a religious empire or a world subject in humiliation to a
triumphant Israel. The nations bring their crises to YHWH, their disputes are
dealt with, and they depart. They are not dominated and incorporated in a power
structure, but helped and led to a new policy that makes for life. The vision is
not of some final stage in the struggle for power, but of its end. . . .
I want particularly to call attention to the commentator's perception that
this is a messianic age in
which there are still "crises." Crisis is a natural consequence of the continued
existence of national and ethnic pluralism. In the overwhelming majority of
religious milleniums and secular utopias, pluralism is rejected precisely in
order to avoid its natural consequence. In this "floating" prophecy, which was
sufficiently popular to be adopted by two prophetic schools, political pluralism
is made possible, and peaceful, by religious monotheism. But the common faith of
the nations or, at least, their common willingness to seek the judgement of
Israel's God, doesn't bring them into harmony, let alone into union. That "God's name is one," as the
prophet Zechariah says it will be in the days to come (14:9), doesn't mean that
humanity is one.
This is a vision that comes out of the same world as the Amos indictments, a
world of small nations, whose members are, so to speak, accustomed to one
another. They fight and they negotiate; they share a common law, which they are
often tempted to violate. Their vision of peace not only includes the others but
accepts their otherness. The prophets of an imperial power would be likely, I
think, to give an entirely different account of the days to come. Presumably
they would be critics of imperialism, but what they would yearn for is an empire
without domination, a world state of equal citizens, not a jumble of
heterogeneous and contentious nations.
Imperial intellectuals are commonly captured by the idea of a "pax Romana" even when they have
no illusions about the character of "Roman" power. They imagine the pax without
the power. The Israelite prophet solves the power problem by invoking a "pax
deii," but he then returns to the familiar jumble of nations. It's that return
that gives his vision its attractive modesty. If "swords into plowshares" is
utopian, the plural "nations" and "many peoples" is realistic.
The third argument that I want to examine develops around the legal maxim
with which the rabbis accommodated themselves, and the nation generally, to the
political conditions of the exile. Now statehood and sovereignty have been lost;
the Jews are scattered, ruled by alien kings. They no longer play a part in
international society. But they still need what we can think of as a foreign
policy: they have to deal with the alien kings. This can't be a single foreign
policy, conducted from a central ministry. It is highly localized, the work of
many intermediary figures (like the "intercessors" of the medieval period).
Nonetheless, it has remarkably similar features across the diaspora.
Everywhere it starts from the legal position first adopted in Babylonia: "The
law of the kingdom is law." Dina d'malkhuta dina. The function of this
maxim is not only to accept gentile rule, but to incorporate it into the
halakhic system. Now Jews who obey the law of the country in which they find
themselves are also, first of all, obeying a Jewish law that tells them to obey
the law of the country in which they find themselves. The law of the country is
domestic in character; the halakhic maxim is something like international law
for the diaspora -- and its extensions and qualifications, as we shall see, take
on universal meaning. Dina d'malkhuta dina is recognizably linked to the
international law of the small peoples of the biblical age: it is another
example of the universalism of the weak.
The maxim doesn't stand by itself; it can't be unqualified, else it would
leave no room at all for any Jewish law except this one self-immolating
principle. In practice, its effects are limited to civil law; it involves an
acceptance of the king's right to tax and of his regulation of the property
system. Religious law, by contrast, is not subordinated to the law of the
kingdom, and since religious law includes personal status (marriage, divorce,
conversion, and so on), there continues to be much work for the rabbinic courts.
But this important exception to the (gentile) king's authority, insisted upon
for the sake of religion, was not developed into a general demand for a
separation of religious and civil jurisdictions -- and certainly not into a
claim for religious freedom. Here a universalist moment is missed: the standard
argument isn't that people generally should be allowed to follow their
understandings of God's law, but only that Jews must obey the divine
commandments that were delivered to them at Sinai. The Jews in effect separated
the synagogue from the (gentile) state, but they did not argue that separation
was a good thing; it was just one more perverse but necessary feature of exilic
life. Even so, they might have recognized that it was necessary also for other
"exiles," that is, for minorities generally; but I know of no writers who made
that argument.
Still, the maxim about dina d'malkhuta was qualified in other ways
that are more readily universalized. For the rabbis did not mean to expose Jews
to arbitrary or unfair laws. From very early on, cases of confiscatory taxation
or tyrannical decree or discriminatory legislation were not taken to be
"covered" by the maxim. It might be necessary to pay the taxes or obey the
decrees, but it wasn't necessary to call them legitimate. And the standard way
of refusing to do that was to say, this isn't "law." The strategy was to
essentialize law and thereby to universalize it. What isn't law isn't legitimate
-- in principle, it isn't legitimate for anybody.
The strategy can be extended: if the king confiscates the property of one of
his subjects or gives arbitrary power to a tax farmer, setting no limits to what
he can extort, that isn't "taxation," it's robbery. Imagine, says Maimonides,
that the king "takes the courtyard or field of one of the citizens [as the
biblical King Ahab tried to do], contrary to the laws he has promulgated: he is
deemed a robber..." (Most Jewish burghers dealing with most gentile kings in the
years before emancipation thought, probably rightly, that they were being
robbed.)
But the most important demand of the Jews in exile was for equal treatment:
law must be general and nondiscriminatory in its application. The "general
rule," according to Maimonides, is that "any law promulgated by the king [must]
apply to everyone and not to one person alone..." This isn't quite the same
thing as a demand for full equality before the law; it doesn't reach, for
example to class differences. Ideally, however, it does reach to national
differences, as the Bible seems to require: "There shall be
one law for the citizen and for the stranger who dwells among you" (Exodus
12:49). There are other biblical commands, however, that require discrimination,
and this verse from Exodus was probably honored most often in the breach.
Still, it was what Jews hoped for in the lands of the exile. Their extreme
vulnerability sometimes forced them to concede that special laws might be
enacted for "strangers" like themselves -- and then they asked only that all
Jews be treated equally. It is worth noting that this concession was forced by
the harsh conditions of Jewish life in Christendom; rabbinic authorities in
Muslim lands claimed a more general equality (which is not to say that the claim
was accepted). Of course, the rule that law must be non-discriminatory was a
formal principle of both Christian and Muslim jursiprudence, even when
"strangers" were in fact discriminated against. But it was the strangers
themselves for whom the principle had practical value; it was worth insisting on
whenever they were able. "This is not a fair law," says a thirteenth century
rabbinic responsum, criticizing an act of royal discrimination, "and is not
law..." Here again is the universalism of the weak.
As in my other examples, it is a very modest universalism. It doesn't require
that the law be substantively just, only that it not be radically unjust. And,
at least in its Jewish version, it doesn't propose resistance or revolution in
the face of illegitimate law. In general, I think, the members of pariah
religious and ethnic groups can't be revolutionaries; emancipation is the
precondition of revolutionary politics. And resistance, in the
"internationalist" terms that I have adopted here, would have to take the form
of a war -- a just war, perhaps, but not a possible course of action for the
scattered and vulnerable Jewish communities.
What the rabbis propose instead is evasion: since this isn't a tax, you are
justified in looking for any possible way of not paying it. Since this isn't a
law, you are justified in disobeying it and also in lying about your
disobedience. There is no call for civil, that is public, disobedience in the
Jewish texts; that kind of behavior depends upon a significant degree of trust
in the overall justice of the political system, and the Jews had no such trust,
and no reason to have it, in pre-emancipation times. What they did have was a
minimalist sense of what justice might mean in a system that included small
peoples like themselves. The minimum requirements were all negative in
character: taxes should not be arbitrary or unlimited; the king should not rule
by decree (but only by public enactment or longstanding custom); the laws should
not discriminate among the individuals and/or nations subject to the king's
authority.
My last example is the Noahide Code, which
represents the Jewish tradition's closest approximation to a standard
universalism. The actual meaning and purpose of the Code is the subject of much
debate both in the classical texts and among contemporary scholars. I won't
provide an account of the debate here, though aspects of it will be reflected in
my own analysis. I am radically dependent in this section on two wonderfully
erudite and subtle books by David Novak
that analyze the Code as a kind of natural law.
These are the laws that, according to the Talmud, were given to Adam and
again to the sons of Noah -- that is, to humankind generally. The number varies
in different versions, but the standard number is seven, and six of these laws
are, again, negative in character: the Noahides are forbidden to practice
idolatry and blasphemy; they are forbidden to commit murder, robbery, and a set
of sexual acts that includes incest, adultery, and homosexual intercourse; and
they are forbidden to eat the flesh of a living animal (this last is read by
Maimonides as a ban on cruelty). The seventh law is positive: they are required
to establish a judicial system (presumably to enforce the first six laws).
These seven are derived exegetically from verses in the book of Genesis that,
with the exception of the bans on murder and the flesh of a living animal, do
not bear the interpretations they are given. The Noahide Code is a speculative
venture of the rabbis; it describes at once the obligations of all humanity
before the Sinai revelation and the obligations of non-Jews after -- the Jews
having been given a much larger set of laws, which includes the original seven.
The seven, however, are so generally stated that they invite elaboration, and in
some versions they pretty much cover the same ground as Jewish law except for
its ritual provisions: holidays, the dietary code, sacrifices, purity, and so
on.
It is easy to see how the Code could come to represent a Jewish version of
natural law. It incorporates the standard moral rules, which have in (some)
other traditions also been thought to include or require a commitment to
monotheism. And a number of Jewish writers have explicitly argued that it is
possible to arrive at the seven laws through reason alone or, more specifically,
through reflection on the human need for society. But in the original rabbinic
teaching, the laws of the Noahides are commandments, not rational deductions and
hence not, in the usual sense, "natural" to humankind; they are the first
example of revealed law; the Torah delivered at Sinai is only the second. This
is how gentiles are recognized by religious Jews as moral beings: they live,
like the Jews, "under the commandments." There is quite a bit of leeway for
interpreting the commandments, but all human beings start by being commanded.
The traditional Jewish view is that we do not create the moral universe; we only
inhabit it. What's important here is that we all inhabit it.
But it is also the traditional view that we inhabit it by choice. Human
beings are free to refuse the commandments and walk out of the moral universe.
It is wrong to do that, but not impossible. And the standard Jewish claim about
the idolatrous
nations is that they have done exactly that. It is virtually analytic to the
Jewish understanding of idolatry that idolators recognize no moral restraint. If
they violate the primary Noahide commandment, then they violate all the others.
Simple empiricism would lead observers of real-idolators-in-the-world to
question this analysis, and such questions do surface in rabbinic literature.
But the double standard with which early Jewish law treats Jews and gentiles
makes sense only if the idolatrous others are taken to be radically lawless.
(They have no sense of property, for example, hence the law about the return of
lost articles [Deuteronomy 23] doesn't apply to them...and so on.) One purpose
of the Noahide Code, then, is to mark out the people to whom the double standard
doesn't apply and with whom moral co-existence is possible.
It could do much more than this: the Code also provided the basis for a full
acceptance of the "other" as a religious equal. Thus Menachem Meiri, a
14th century halakhist and talmudic commentator living in Provence, writes that
"Every Noahide whom we
see, who accepts upon himself the seven commandments, is one of the saints of
the nations of the world, and is in the category of the religious, and has a
portion in the world-to-come."
In some sense, this is the standard view of the Noahides, though the meaning
of its various parts (above all the phrase "accepts upon himself") is disputed,
and Meiri's strong statement owes a great deal to the relatively benign
character of Jewish-Christian interaction in 14th century Provence. But the
central focus of the legal literature is not on individual Noahides, but rather
on the gentile nations. The Code is, again, a kind of international law; the
agents to whom it is chiefly addressed are organized groups of men and women,
imagined as accepting the Code or not, living with or without legal constraint.
At the same time, many of the rabbis, in both the talmudic and medieval
periods, regard the Code as if it was designed for resident aliens in the Land
of Israel, the subjects of a Jewish king. Since there was no continuous
tradition of gentile acknowledgement and observance of the Code from the days of
Noah forward, and since the Noahide Code was included in the Sinai
revelation (in effect, revealed again), these rabbis take the Code to be,
effectively, Jewish law for the gentiles. This is "our" universal law for
"them"--much like the earliest form of the jus gentium, which was simply
a form of Roman law for non-Romans.
Hence the Noahide Code is meaningful only when Jews exercise political power:
they take responsibility for the seventh commandment and set up a judicial
system to enforce the other six commandments on their non-Jewish subjects. In
this form, "natural law" is very much an imperial creation, and here, as in
other empires, it marks out a way of tolerating foreign nations. Or, at least,
it defines a limited toleration: resident aliens must give up idolatry; they
need not convert to Judaism.
If the Noahide Code is an imperial creation, then, so it is often said, it
must have been created in an empire. This belief has led some scholars to date
the Code from Hasmonean
times, when Jewish rule extended over a number of non-Jewish nations. But
some of these, like the Idumeans, were forcibly converted -- which suggests that
adherence to the Code was not yet available, or not yet acceptable, as an
alternative to conversion.
Probably, the Code is a later creation, the product of an imperial
imagination rather than an actual empire. The rabbis imagined a messianic age
when a Jewish king would rule, not over the world, but over the land of Israel,
and they imagined the land with its existing heterogeneous population. Given
their unhappiness with the Hasmoneans and with the policy of forced conversion,
they then had to work out a more minimalist set of rules for gentile residents.
These are conceived to be rules that all human beings must obey, but mostly
don't; so the rules are enforced by the Jews wherever they are able to enforce
them (but this is, again, a purely imaginary "ability").
Maimonides, the greatest of the medieval Jewish philosophers, seems to have
held this view of the Noahide Code. Isaac Cardoso argued from it, on the
principle of reciprocity, that Christians should give to Jews the same status as
Noahides would have or, as he thinks, once actually had in a Jewish kingdom --
"resident sojourners, who...were able to live among [the Israelites], although
they did not follow their Law."
But there is an alternative understanding, according to which the Code is
simply the law of the Noahides, and the Jews have no special responsibility for
its enforcement. This alternative is less the product of philosophical or
theological reflection than of experience. Exilic Jewry had no powers of
enforcement, and yet in all the countries of the exile the Code was more or less
effectively enforced by the Noahides -- that is, the gentiles -- themselves. So
here is a set of laws/commandments, revealed to humankind in the days of Adam
and Noah, knowable by reason, and visibly established in the world.
Taking the Noahide Code to be the actual law of the gentile nations is a way
of recognizing what Novak calls the "normativity" of the others. Not only do
non-Jews live "under the commandments," but they also live -- some of them, some
of the time -- according to the commandments. Anyone who wants to deny
non-Jews this status must also deny or minimize the meaning of the Code. Thus
Wyschogrod: "But the law is addressed only to Israel. It is not a universal law,
obedience to which is expected of all peoples. Apart from the Noahide
commandments, the Torah is addressed only to Israel..." Wyschogrod says nothing
more about the Noahides. But focusing on their "normativity," as Novak invites
us to do, has important and interesting consequences.
First of all, the Noahide Code provides a new grounding for dina
d'malkhuta dina, which appears now as something more than an exilic
accomodation to gentile power; it is also a recognition of the substantive
validity of gentile law. "The law of the kingdom" is based on revelation and/or
confirmed by reason, exactly as Jewish law is -- or, better, revelation and
reason provide critical standards for non-Jews as well as for Jews. Second, the
Code, and the gentile law that it validates, provide a comparative standard for
Jewish law: "they" are more strict here, "we" are more strict there; "they" do
things this way, "we" do things that way.
I don't want to suggest that comparative law was ever a central feature of
Jewish scholarship. Until very recently, at least, it wasn't. Indeed, curiosity
about the "others" is barely visible in the classical Jewish texts. There was no
Jewish Herodotus in ancient
times, and while writers like Philo and Josephus labored to explain Judaism to
the gentiles, they made no effort, nor did anyone else, to explain Hellenistic
culture to the Jews. With rare exceptions, that pattern persisted into medieval
and early modern times. But the complex engagement of exilic Jewry with gentile
law forced Jewish writers to think, sometimes, about legal practices in a
comparative way. And Noahide law provided a framework within which to do this.
If there was legitimate law and law enforcement among the gentile nations,
there were also, visibly, different versions of legitimate law among the
different gentile nations. The idea of Noahide law made for pluralism: the Code
could be realized in different ways. Jews believed, of course, that the Torah
was the ideal legal system, but it wasn't the only one. Whether founded on
revelation or reason, the law of the gentiles was "essentially independent." At
the same time, it was possible to recognize a minimalist version of the Code,
which it was incumbent on all nations to enact and enforce. And here "we" could
learn from "their" enactments. "The recognition and affirmation of the presence
of dinim (laws, legality) among the gentiles," writes Novak, "provided a
theoretical model for determining the necessary minimal moral standards to which
Jewish law must adhere."
I am unsure about the idea of a theoretical model, but the "recognition and
affirmation" certainly had a practical effect, which is reflected in another
legal maxim: "There is nothing permitted to Jews that is prohibited to gentiles"
(B. Sanhedrin 59a). It would have been a scandal and a discredit to God, so the
rabbis thought, if Jewish law on any subject was more permissive than gentile
law. A discredit in whose eyes? Obviously, in the eyes of the gentiles, whose
"normativity" is thus given extraordinary force. Of course, the reverse form of
the maxim is not accepted: "There is nothing prohibited to Jews that is
permitted to gentiles." The strictness of gentile law is controlling, not its
leniency. In traditional Judaism, strictness is more valued -- and yet,
sometimes, the gentile nations are more strict! The ability to acknowledge this
fact is the unexpected outcome of the revelation to the sons of Noah.
I have tried to describe a number of approaches to universalism from within
traditional Judaism. Think of these as moving toward, perhaps eventually
constituting, what might be called a "low-flying" universalism; that is, one
worked out in close contact with the political landscape. Its crucial moral
perception is the existence of other nations as moral and legal agents. This
acknowledgement of the others derives from Jewish particularism; it is, so to
speak, the turning outward of a particularist perspective. Sometimes the turn
can reach to what I have described elsewhere as a "reiterative universalism"--as
in the following passage from the prophet Amos:
To Me, O Israelites, you are Just like the Ethiopians
--declares the Lord. True, I brought Israel up From the land of
Egypt, But also the Philistines from Caphtor And the Arameans from Kir.
(Amos 9:7)
This suggests that there isn't one deliverance (and one election) but a
reiterated series, each engaging a different nation. The nations are fully equal
in God's eyes, and so they should be in each others'. Amos's argument was never
accepted (in fact, it is rarely mentioned) in later Jewish texts, but note that
his universalism is also worked out close to the ground--on which real
Philistines and real Arameans walked. In this sense, it fits nicely with my four
examples, in all of which the ongoing co-existence of Israel and the nations is
assumed.
Co-existence is necessarily rule-governed. That, at least, is the Jewish
assumption; there is no love of anarchy among traditional Jews; antinomianism appears
sometimes in mystical thought, but not here in the marchlands, where one
actually has to deal with the other nations. Here there are rules for the
conduct of war; divine arbitration; legal limits on taxation and on state action
generally; rules of adjudication; and, finally, a basic moral code. All these
apply across actually existing national and religious boundaries. Some of their
content is included in Halakhah, formally incorporated into Jewish law. But all
of them are first imagined and developed outside, and they are best understood
as constituting a Jewish universalism -- which takes the characteristic form of
a common law for the nations.
In fact, we should think of it as a common law in the making, as common law
commonly is. Amos's rules for war are not a code, but only a series of examples;
the argument invites more work, and the work is well worth doing. The wars of
modern Israel have led some contemporary rabbis to struggle with halakhic
precedents about military conduct, but these are meager (because there were no
Jewish armies whose conduct required regulation, and they are scarred by exilic
resentments.
Amos's customary law reflects, as I have already argued, a state-like posture
and a morally helpful commitment to ongoing relations with other states.
Similarly, the limits on dina d'malkhuta dina have to be figured out anew
in each "kingdom" -- and why not in Israel too, where the principle of
non-discrimination could play a useful critical role? And, again, the Noahide
Code is far too vague to serve as an actual set of laws; it has to be expanded
and interpreted -- and has been the subject of a wide range of expansions and
interpretations.
None of these examples are definitive, but the arguments themselves have
served as a useful background for everyday encounters with the "others." There
is no reason why these arguments cannot go on today, taking into account the
place of Jews in the modern world and of Israel in the society of nations. In
any case, they have gone on long enough so that it makes no sense to claim that
universalism depends on Greek philosophy or on Christianity (or on some
combination of the two), or that it is a secular liberal invention, or that it
must be philosophically grounded in Kantian ethics, or that it is uniquely
Western (or, for that matter, that it is the product of Jewish assimilation).
There are many different universalisms, many different idioms in which similar
universal values can be and have been expressed.
Among the Jews, one can find both high-flying (philosophical) and low-flying
(political/legal) versions of universalist argument. I have focused on the
second partly because it is less well understood, but also because it is more
realistic and perhaps more useful on the ground. But does this second version
reach as far as many Jews today want to go? Does it reach to an account of human
rights? Does it allow for feminist claims to equality? There is no reason why
Amos's ban on the exile and enslavement of "an entire population" cannot be
expressed in the language of rights (as the condemnation of "ethnic cleansing"
is expressed today), and no reason why the Noahide Code's ban on murder and
robbery can't be taken to rest on rights to life and property. What is today
called "rights talk" could easily be introduced into the common law of the Jews.
Feminism is harder, given the overwhelmingly patriarchal character of
rabbinic Judaism. But the comparative perspective opened up by the Noahide Code
offers interesting possibilities. For if gentile men are now prohibited from
ruling tyrannically over their wives and daughters, how can this be permitted to
Jewish men? It would be a scandal and a discredit to God.
I don't say this to mock the tradition. In fact, I am being true to it.
Polygamy was finally ruled out as a Jewish practice, sometime around the year
1000, with arguments of exactly this kind. When Rabbi Gershom and his colleagues
forbade marriage to more than one woman, they acted, writes Robert
Gordis, because "they found it intolerable for Jews to maintain an attitude
toward marriage...that set women on a lower social and ethical plane than did
their monogamous Christian neighbors." That is a good argument, and it is no
sign of progress that contemporary orthodox writers would probably find it
incomprehensible or repugnant -- a call for assimilation. This way of
recognizing the possible moral value of what the "others" think and do is a key
feature of low-flying universalism, and low-flying universalism arises within
the tradition. You live with other people, and you have to look and see what
they are doing.
There are still judgements to be made, of course, and these will reflect
Jewish experience and values. But Jewish experience isn't the whole story;
Jewish values aren't the only ones. The arguments that I have canvassed here are
invitations to further argument, which will rightly be shaped, in the future as
in the past, by the ongoing, permanent engagement with other nations and
religions. Anyone who claims that this engagement is an imposition of Western
culture isn't being faithful to the Jewish (or, I suspect, to any other)
traditional way of life.
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