Yoreh De'ah (Hebrew: יורה דעה) is a section of Rabbi Jacob ben Asher's compilation of halakha (Jewish law), the Arba'ah Turim, written around 1300.[1] This section treats all aspects of Jewish law not pertinent to the Hebrew calendar, finance, torts, marriage, divorce, or sexual conduct. (Nevertheless there exists occasional overlap into the excluded areas). Yoreh De'ah is therefore the most diversified area of Jewish law. Later, Rabbi Yosef Karo modeled the framework of his own compilation of practical Jewish law, the Shulchan Aruch, after the Arba'ah Turim. Many later commentators used this framework, as well. Thus, Yoreh De'ah in common usage may refer to an area of halakha, non-specific to Rabbi Jacob ben Asher's compilation.
Topics include, but are not limited to:
- Permitted and forbidden foods,
- Circumcision,
- Gentiles,
- Foreign worship,
- Prohibition against charging interest,
- Oaths,
- Converts,
- Honoring parents,
- Honoring scholars and the elderly,
- Charity,
- Torah study,
- Torah scrolls,
- Mezuzah scrolls,
- Sending away the mother bird to take the young,
- Eating new grain,
- Forbidden mixtures (such as shatnez).
- Redeeming the firstborn,
- Excommunication,
- Visiting the sick,
- Mourning,
- Priestly tithes,
- Prohibition against tattooing.
Legacy
editThe Yoreh De'ah was a major influence of Ha-Agur (The Collection) by Jacob ben Judah Landau that presented the halacha without supporting arguments.[2]
See also
edit- 613 mitzvot
- The other three sections of Arba'ah Turim and other works borrowing its organizational scheme are:
References
edit- ^ Levy, B. Barry (2001). Fixing God's Torah: The Accuracy of the Hebrew Bible Text in Jewish Law. Oxford University Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-19-514113-9.
- ^ Eisenberg, Ronald L. (2014-03-20). Essential Figures in Jewish Scholarship. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-7657-0995-0.