Who Is Rich
Who Is Rich
Who Is Rich
INTRODUCTION
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and Tosefta, which took shape in Roman Palestine in the early third century C.E., devote entire tractates to instructions on how one ought to assist
the needy. Mishnah Peah and Tosefta Peah discuss allocations of produce
for the poor at the time of the harvest, such as peah (the produce in the
corner of a field) and gleanings (produce that fell during the reaping), as well as the tithe for the poor, and charity.2 To illuminate rabbinic
Judaisms foundational discourses on this topic, it is crucial to examine
cal Survey of Jewish Philanthropy: From the Earliest Times to the Nineteenth Century
(New York, 1924), 43124; Gregg E. Gardner, Giving to the Poor in Early
Rabbinic Judaism; Gardner, Charity Wounds: Gifts to the Poor in Early Rabbinic Judaism, in The Gift in Antiquity, ed. M. L. Satlow (Malden, Mass., 2013),
17388; Gardner, Cornering Poverty: Mishnah Peah, Tosefta Peah, and the
Reimagination of Society in Late Antiquity, in Envisioning Judaism: Studies in
Honor of Peter Schafer on the Occasion of his Seventieth Birthday, ed. R. S. Boustan, et
al. (Tubingen, 2013), 1:20516; Alyssa M. Gray, The Formerly Wealthy Poor:
From Empathy to Ambivalence in Rabbinic Literature of Late Antiquity, AJS
Review 33 (2009): 10133; Gray, Redemptive Almsgiving and the Rabbis of Late
Antiquity, Jewish Studies Quarterly 18 (2011): 14484; Gildas H. Hamel, Poverty
and Charity, in The Oxford Handbook of Jewish Daily Life in Roman Palestine, ed. C.
Hezser (Oxford, 2010), 30824; Hamel, Poverty and Charity in Roman Palestine,
First Three Centuries C.E. (Berkeley, Calif., 1990); Michael Hellinger, Charity in
Talmudic and Rabbinic Literature: A Legal, Literary, and Historical Analysis
(Hebrew; Ph.D. diss.; Bar-Ilan University, 1999), 1936; Samuel Krauss, Talmudische Archaologie (3 vols.; Leipzig, 191012), 3:6374; Lee I. Levine, The Rabbinic Class of Roman Palestine in Late Antiquity (Jerusalem, 1989), 16267; Eduard
Lohse and Gunter Mayer, Die Tosefta, Seder I: Zeraim, 1.1: BerakotPea, ed. G.
Kittel et al. (Stuttgart, 1999); George Foot Moore, Judaism in the First Centuries of
the Christian Era (Cambridge, Mass., 1962), 2:16279; Tzvi Novick, Charity and
the Scapegoat: On Structures of Exchange in Some Rabbinic Texts, transformingviolence.nd.edu/assets/23011/novickabstract.pdf (2010; accessed April 30,
2013); Novick, Charity and Reciprocity: Structures of Benevolence in Rabbinic
Literature, Harvard Theological Review 105 (2012): 3352; Ben Zion Rosenfeld
and Haim Perlmutter, Foundations of Charitable Organizations in Judea at the
End of the Second Temple Period according to Tannaitic Sources (Hebrew),
Judea and Samaria Research Studies: Proceedings of the 20th Annual Meeting 20 (2011):
4962; Zeev Safrai, The Jewish Community in the Talmudic Period (Hebrew; Jerusalem, 1995), 6276; Michael L. Satlow, Fruit and the Fruit of Fruit: Charity
and Piety in Late Antique Judaism, JQR 100 (2010): 24477; Seth Schwartz,
Imperialism and Jewish Society, 200 B.C.E. to 640 C.E (Princeton, N.J., 2001),
22730; Seth Schwartz, Were the Jews a Mediterranean Society? Reciprocity and Solidarity in Ancient Judaism (Princeton, N.J., 2010); Ephraim Urbach, Political and
Social Tendencies in Talmudic Concepts of Charity (Hebrew), Zion 16 (1951):
127. For useful collections of rabbinic texts on charity, see Robert Branan Becknell, Almsgiving, the Jewish Legacy of Justice and Mercy (Ph.D. diss.; Miami
University of Ohio, 2000), 472585; C. G. Montefiore and H. M. J. Loewe, eds.,
A Rabbinic Anthology (Cleveland, 1963), 41239.
2. On these allocations, see Gardner, Giving to the Poor, 1641.
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WHO IS RICH?GARDNER
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The early rabbinic movement exhibited a great deal of economic diversity, in both the sources and extent of its members income and accumu3. On the tannaim as wealthy, see Shaye J. D. Cohen, The Rabbi in SecondCentury Jewish Society, in The Cambridge History of Judaism, vol. 3, The Early
Roman Period, ed. W. Horbury et al. (Cambridge, 1999), 93132; and Gray, Formerly Wealthy Poor, 122. On the tannaim as poor, see Adolf Buchler, The Political and the Social Leaders of the Jewish Community of Sepphoris in the Second and Third
Centuries (London, 1909), 6678; Martin Goodman, State and Society, A.D. 132212
(London, 2000), 93. Hezser follows Urbach in concluding that the rabbis were
socially and economically diverse, but he does not distinguish between the tannaim and amoraim or explore how this influenced rabbinic discourses on poverty;
see Catherine Hezser, The Social Structure of the Rabbinic Movement in Roman Palestine (Tubingen, 1997), 266; Efraim E. Urbach, The Talmudic SageCharacter
and Authority, Journal of World History 11 (1968): 11647.
4. Following Goodman, State and Society in Roman Galilee, 89, I have excluded
tannaitic traditions that are preserved only in later rabbinic texts, such as the
Talmuds, which are more likely to reflect the interests of the redactors of the
compilations in which they are found than those in which they are not. Thus, I
focus on the Mishnah, Tosefta, Mekhilta of Rabbi Ishmael, Sifra, Sifre Numbers,
and Sifre Deuteronomy. For a similar approach, see Shaye J. D. Cohen, The
Place of the Rabbi in Jewish Society of the Second Century, in The Galilee in
Late Antiquity, ed. L. I. Levine (New York, 1992), 15758; Cohen, The Rabbi in
Second-Century Jewish Society, 925, n.12; Jordan D. Rosenblum, Food and
Identity in Early Rabbinic Judaism (New York, 2010), 1314. On the problematic
authenticity of tannaitic traditions preserved only in post-tannaitic works, see
H. L. Strack and Gunter Stemberger, Introduction to the Talmud and Midrash, trans.
M. N. A. Bockmuehl (Minneapolis, Minn., 1996), 104, 17778, 19899.
5. See Christine Hayes, The Other in Rabbinic Literature, in The Cambridge Companion to the Talmud and Rabbinic Literature, ed. C. E. Fonrobert and
M. S. Jaffee (New York, 2007), 243.
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liel is said to have owned slaves, who symbolized their masters prestige.
The texts in which Gamaliel and his slave Tabi appear together, moreover, are authored from the perspective of the masternot that of the
slave or a disinterested third party.25 Gamaliels landholdings afforded
him banquets as lavish as any symposium in the Roman worldguests
relaxed on furniture while being served food prepared with exotic
spices.26 Landownership, wealth, and status were closely intertwined in
the ancient world and Gamaliel stood at the pinnacle, as he possessed
unmatched amounts of all three, a rabbi-of-leisure if ever there was one.27
Not all rabbis, however, were necessarily wealthy. Indeed, early rabbinic texts include perspectives of those who were smallholders, who cultivated their plots with their own hands.28 Although an occupation does
not determine the extent of ones holdings, the incomes of craftsmen and
merchants tended to be modest.29 The Mekhilta uses the term tekhakhim
to indicate men of medium wealth, of some means.30 Here, individuals
who live at middling economic levels are distinguished from the affluent
on one hand and the poor on the other.31 The inclusion of middle-income
merly Wealthy Poor, 12223. On the image of Akiva in rabbinic literature, see
Azzan Yadin, Rabbi Akivas Youth, JQR 100 (2010): 57397.
25. On Gamaliel and Tabi, see mBer 2.7; mSuk 2.1; mPes 7.2; tPes 2.15. See
also tMK 2.16.
26. tBes 2.1314, 2.1617; SifreDt 38; on spices as a luxury, see tAZ 4.1.
27. Rabbi Judah Ha-Nasi was also legendary for his wealth, though these
depictions are only found in later, amoraic texts; see Lee I. Levine, Tekufato shel
rabbi yehudah ha-nasi, in Eretz Israel from the Destruction of the Second Temple to
the Muslim Conquest, ed. Z. Baras and Y. Tsafrir (Hebrew; Jerusalem, 1982),
1:100102.
28. E.g., mPeah 4.1011.
29. mKid 4.14.
30. Mekhilta, Amalek 4; H. S. Horovitz and I. A. Rabin, eds., Mechilta dRabbi
Ismael (2d., 1931; repr. Jerusalem, 1997), 201. For the development of the term,
see Ludwig Kohler et al., The Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament
(Leiden, 1994), s.v. tokh; Marcus Jastrow, A Dictionary of the Targumim, the Talmud
Babli and Yerushalmi, and the Midrashic Literature (London, 1903), 1668.
31. That some rabbis are part of a provincial middle strata is also suggested
in passing by Schwartz, Were the Jews a Mediterranean Society, 142. Ben Zion
Rosenfeld and Haim Perlmutter, in Landowners in Roman Palestine, 100300
C.E.: A Distinct Social Group, Journal of Ancient Judaism 2 (2011): 32752,
employ a maximalist approach to rabbinic texts (see esp. pp. 33536) to argue
for the existence of an extensive population of middling individuals in Jewish
society in Roman Palestine in the first to third centuries C.E. (p. 327). By contrast, my critical reading of the sources finds that the authors and redactors of these
texts included individuals who lived at middling levels. That is, the sources can-
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individuals within the rabbinic movement had heretofore been highlighted only in later, amoraic texts.32 But the Mekilta passage suggests
that the binary of rich and poor, so frequently mentioned in tannaitic
texts, needs to be nuanced.33
The awareness of a middling economic standing should be viewed
against the background of recent scholarship on the economy of the
ancient world. Walter Scheidel and others have undermined the old paradigm depicting the Roman world as a super-rich few and the indigent
masses.34 Instead, there seem to have been a significant number of individuals living at middle levels and an overall socioeconomic structure
characterized by a gradual continuum from rich to poor.35 Modern scholnot be used to draw conclusionsas Rosenfeld and Perlmutter doabout Jewish society at large. Rather, they can be used to better understand the small group
of one hundred or so individuals who comprised the early rabbinic movement
and how this played a role in the way that these texts were shaped.
32. Levine, Rabbinic Class, 69.
33. For the binary of rich and poor, see, for example, mBB 10.7, mKet 6.6,
mNeg 14.11, mEruv 4.9. One way to harmonize the problem is to suggest that
the rabbis had an expansive view that rich includes those with middling
incomes. Rich and poor function largely as legal categories. The reality
behind this seemingly simple binary, however, is rather complex. A similar conclusion on the meaning of these terms is reached by Rosenfeld and Perlmutter,
Landowners in Roman Palestine, 32752. To be sure, the language of rich
and poor could be a useful rhetorical tool, as it allowed the authors and redactors to position themselves at different points along the spectrum according to
the point that they wish to make at any particular moment. As I will show, in
mPeah 8.5 and tPeah 4.17 the tannaim align themselves with those of middling
means to demonstrate how they can fulfill certain religious obligations. Similarly,
the rhetoric of rich/poor would also be used by later Christian writers, albeit
for different purposes. Following pagan writers, Christian writers employed this
rhetoric in part as a means to invoke pity and guilt in order to excite generosity
and giving through the charitable institutions controlled by the bishops; see Cam
Grey, Constructing Communities in the Late Roman Countryside (Cambridge, 2011),
1013, 12829. Using the poor to raise money for charitable institutions that
the authors themselves claimed to control would only emerge in the rabbinic
tradition in the amoraic age.
34. Finley, to name one prominent example, held that there was no middle
class (Finley, Ancient Economy, 49); on the reception of Finleys position, see
Andreau, Twenty Years, 45.
35. Bruce W. Longenecker, Remember the Poor: Paul, Poverty, and the GrecoRoman World (Grand Rapids, Mich., 2010), 4459; Scheidel, Stratification, Deprivation and Quality of Life, in Poverty in the Roman World, ed. M. Atkins and R.
Osborne (Cambridge, 2006), 4059; Walter Scheidel and Steven J. Friesen,
The Size of the Economy and the Distribution of Income in the Roman Empire,
Journal of Roman Studies 99 (2009): 6191. See also Geza Alfoldy, The Social His-
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Likewise, the tannaim put forward a way for those of middling economic levels to fulfill the obligation to give charity:
a. [If] he said that he [would] give (charity to the poor) and [then]
gave, [then] he is given a sakhar (pay or wage) for saying and
a sakhar for doing.
b. [If] he said that he [would] give, but [then] did not have enough in
his hand to give, [then] he is given a sakhar for saying that is equivalent to a sakhar for doing.
c. [If] he did not say that he [would] give, but said to others, Give!
[then] he is given a sakhar for this, as it is said: for on this account
(dbr)39 the Lord your God will bless you (Dt 15.10).
d. [If] he did not say to others Give! but he eases him [i.e., the poor
man] with kind words (dbr), [then] from where [do we know]
that he is given a sakhar for this?
e. As it is said: for on this account (dbr). (tPeah 4.17)40
In this pericope, lemma (b) addresses a scenario in which an individual
does not have enough in hand to give in charity.41 It is extraordinary that
the subject is rewarded for his words, as sakhar (pay or wage) is
usually reserved for deeds in tannaitic literature.42 A tannaitic exegesis on
Ex 13.2, for example, repeatedly emphasizes earning a sakhar for fulfilling
or doing commandments related to the consecration of the first born, the
sacrificial cult of the Jerusalem Temple, and, more generally, Gods will.43
Likewise, Mekhilta on Ex 12.6 reads, For one cannot obtain rewards
39. dbr can be rendered as either account or word. It should be noted
that the Erfurt manuscript omits the text from this point to end of the pericope.
See the variants in Saul Lieberman, The Tosefta: According to Codex Vienna, with
Variants from Codex Erfurt, Genizah Mss. and Editio Princeps [Venice 1521] (Hebrew;
New York, 195588), 1:5960. On the preference of the Vienna manuscript (as
transcribed in Liebermans edition) over the Erfurt manuscript, see Paul Mandel,
The Tosefta, in The Cambridge History of Judaism, vol. 4, The Late Roman-Rabbinic
Period, ed. S. T. Katz (Cambridge, 2006), 33133, and notes there.
40. Cf. the parallel in SifreDt 117. The translation of tPeah 4.17 is my own
and is based on the Hebrew text of Lieberman, The Tosefta, 1:5960.
41. A similar scenario is explored by Augustine, though there the giver is
clearly wealthy (Enarrations on the Psalms 39.28).
42. On sakhar, see Morton Smith, Tannaitic Parallels to the Gospels (Philadelphia, 1951), 54. For sakhar in biblical literature, see E. Lipinski, sakar, in Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament, ed. G. J. Botterweck and H. Ringgren
(Grand Rapids, Mich., 1974), 14:12935.
43. Mekhilta, Pish.a 16 (ed. Horovitz and Rabin, 5859).
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Among the tannaim were the wealthy and individuals of modest means
not one tanna, however, is depicted in tannaitic compilations as poor.49
While some Hellenistic Jewish and Roman writers self-identify as poor,
the tannaim do not.50 Rather, the economic attributes of early rabbinic
identity, as we will see, are circumscribed and defined in opposition to
what they are not. They are pointedly not poor. The poor are portrayed
as an undifferentiated mass characterized solely by their failure to reach
certain thresholds. Instructive is mPeah 8.89, the locus classicus of tannaitic discussions of the poor and poverty:51
He who has two hundred zuz [ denar]52 may not take gleanings, forgotten things,53 or peah or the poor mans tithe.
a piece of bread to the soup kitchen (tamh.ui). This passage then goes on to
instruct the charity supervisor on how to handle such small contributions. That
is, it is notable that tPeah 4.10 is written from the perspective of the nonpoor
and for an audience of charity supervisorswho are also not poor. While the
issue of whether the poor should give charity may be nonsensical to modern
sensibilities, in rabbinic texts giving charity was an obligation incumbent upon
everyone. Indeed, the question of whether or not the poor themselves must give
continued to be addressed and debated in later rabbinic texts (e.g., bGit 7ab).
49. Cohen, The Rabbi in Second-Century Jewish Society, 93132; Gray,
Formerly Wealthy Poor, 122; cf. Buchler, Political and the Social Leaders, 6678,
whose conclusion that the tannaim were mostly poor is based on their portrayal
in later, post-tannaitic compilations such as the Talmuds.
50. See, for example, those designating themselves or their audience as poor
in the Epistle of Enoch (1 Enoch 91105) and in the Dead Sea Scrolls (e.g., Hymns
of Thanksgiving, 4QInstruction). On these texts, see Samuel L. Adams, Poverty
and Otherness in Second Temple Instructions, in The Other in Second Temple
Judaism: Essays in Honor of John J. Collins, ed. D. C. Harlow et al. (Grand Rapids,
Mich., 2011), 189203; Hamel, Poverty and Charity in Roman Palestine, 17786;
Catherine M. Murphy, Wealth in the Dead Sea Scrolls and in the Qumran Community
(Leiden, 2002), 3445. There are also rare instances of ancient writers of elite
status who find rhetorical advantages to present themselves as poor (e.g., Martial;
Philo); see Finley, Ancient Economy, 37; Longenecker, Remember the Poor, 39; Greg
Woolf, Writing Poverty in Rome, in Poverty in the Roman World, 9799.
51. This passage is the foundation of approaches to the poor and poverty in
subsequent Jewish texts, from the Middle Ages through the modern era; see
Michael Hellinger, The Emerging Definition of the Poverty Line in Jewish
Law, Jewish Law Association Studies 14 (2004): 12739.
52. A zuz is a denar, a Roman coin.
53. Forgotten things are sheaves and other items that are left in a field after
the harvest; see mPeah, tPeah and the discussion in Gardner, Giving to the
Poor, 1641.
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[If] he had two hundred less one denar, even if they [later] give him a
thousand [denars] at once, he may take [gleanings, forgotten things,
peah, and the poor mans tithe].
[If] they were pledged in his wifes marriage contract or to a creditor,
he may take [gleanings, peah, and the poor mans tithe].
They may not obligate him to sell his dwelling or the tools of his trade.
(mPeah 8.8)
He who has fifty zuz, [and] he takes and gives [i.e., deals, transacts]
with them, he may not take [gleanings, forgotten things, peah, and the
poor mans tithe].
And he who does not need to take but does take will not die of old
age54 until he is in need of [support from other] men.
And he who needs to take but does not take will not die of old age
until he supports others from that which is his.
On this it is written: Blessed is he [who trusts in the Lord, whose trust is the
Lord] (Jer 17.7). (mPeah 8.9)55
The overarching principle of these passages is that one may collect gleanings, forgotten things, peah, or the poor mans tithe if their annual income
falls below a certain threshold amount, 200 zuz or denaran amount
understood in rabbinic texts as that needed to acquire basic necessities
for one year.56 The Mishnah goes on to clarify and refine this position.
54. In printed editions, expire from the world; see Hanoch Albeck, Shishah
Sidre Mishnah The Mishnah (Hebrew; 6 vols.; Jerusalem, 195258 [repr.
1988]), 1:66; Gregor Buss, Die Mischna: Textkritische Ausgabe mit deutscher Ubersetzung und Kommentar, Pea (Feldecke) (Jerusalem, 2008), 49; N. Sacks, ed. The Mishnah with Variant Readings Collected from Manuscripts, Fragments of the Genizah and
Early Printed Editions and Collated with Quotations from the Mishnah in Early Rabbinic
Literature as well as with Bertinoros Commentary from Manuscripts: Order Zeraim I
(Jerusalem, 1972), 1:163.
55. The translation, except for the quotation of Jer 17.7 ( NJPS), is my
own. I follow the Hebrew text of the Kauffman manuscript, particularly the
manuscripts earlier hand. For later emendations to the text of mPeah 8.9, including the pericopes permutations in printed editions, see Walter Bauer, Pea (Vom
Ackerwinkel): Text, Ubersetzung und Erklarung, ed. G. Beer and O. Holtzmann
(Giessen, 1914), 71; Brooks, Support for the Poor, 151; Buss, Pea (Feldecke), 49, 51;
Sacks, Mishnah with Variant ReadingsZeraim I, 1:16566. On the multiple hands
detected in the Kaufmann manuscript, see Michael Krupp, Manuscripts of the
Mishna, in The Literature of the Sages: First Part: Oral Tora, Halakha, Mishna,
Tosefta, Talmud, External Tractates, ed. S. Safrai (Assen, 1987), 253.
56. On mPeah 8.89, see also the commentary in Albeck, Shishah Sidre Mishnah, 1:6566; Bauer, Pea, 6063; Brooks, Support for the Poor, 15052; Hellinger,
Emerging Definition of the Poverty Line, 12830. Scholars have calculated
that ones basic caloric requirements (approximately 2,000 calories per day)
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The poors eligibility for these entitlements does not change if they later
receive additional income (even 1,000 zuz) that would elevate them above
the 200zuz threshold. The 200 zuz must also be readily available, liquid,
and free from liens or other commitments, such as assets pledged in a
marriage contract or as collateral to a creditor. One cannot be compelled
to sell his dwelling or the tools he needs for earning a living in order to
reach the 200zuz minimum. If one has only 50 zuz, but gives and takes
with ituses it, that is, for trade or commercial purposesthen he is
probably not truly in need.
The Mishnah (mPeah 8.9) then warns that those who misrepresent
themselves will later be subject to punishment, measure-for-measure:
anyone who unnecessarily takes the entitlements will one day become
truly dependent upon others. Here mPeah 8.9 reflects a suspicion, widespread throughout the ancient world, that many people who claimed to
be poor were imposters seeking to sponge off of others.57 The passage
then promises a measure-for-measure reward for those who are eligible for
aid but refuse to accept it, lauding their economic independence. In a
reversal of fortune, needy individuals who avoid subordinating themselves into positions of dependency will one day be wealthy enough to
support others. The rewards and punishments are dealt out in this
worldand not the world to comeplacing mPeah 8.9 in line with what
we find in sapiential texts such as Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Wisdom
could be satisfied with 490600 grams of bread per day; see Willem M. Jongman,
The Early Roman Empire: Consumption, in Cambridge Economic History (Cambridge, 2007), 59899, which is based on findings from developmental economics,
particularly Colin Clark and Margaret Rosary Haswell, The Economics of Subsistence Agriculture (London, 1967); Arye Ben-David, Talmudische Okonomie: Die Wirtschaft des judischen Palastina zur Zeit der Mischna und des Talmud (Hildesheim, 1974),
1:30610; Hamel, Poverty and Charity in Roman Palestine, 3942, 24348. It is
unclear how these real figures relate to the numbers presented in rabbinic texts,
which tend to be highly problematic, as they are both internally inconsistent and
difficult to convert into modern units; see Ben-David, Talmudische Okonomie,
1:33143; Magen Broshi, Bread, Wine, Walls and Scrolls (London, 2001), 12122;
David Kraemer, Food, Eating, and Meals, in The Oxford Handbook of Jewish
Daily Life in Roman Palestine, ed. C. Hezser (Oxford, 2010), 4045. Indeed, the
figure of 200 zuz appears to be a stock figure used in rabbinic texts to indicate a
minimum amount of income for a year (e.g., mKet 5.1). Similarly, rabbinic texts
prescribe that one requires a minimum of two meals per day (mPeah 8.7; mEruv
8.2; mKel 17.11) but do not indicate precisely what those meals should include.
57. For suspicion of imposters, see also tPeah 4. 14 and generally Whittaker,
Poor in the City of Rome, 2; Codex Theodosianus 14.18.1; Cam Grey and Anneliese Parkin, Controlling the Urban Mob: The colonatus perpetuus of CTh 14.18.1,
Phoenix 57 (2003): 28499.
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of Ben Sira.58 Note that the passage measures poverty by ones level of
income. This is consistent with the rabbis penchant for quantification
and reflects the monetization of the Greco-Roman world in which they
lived.59
The literary context of these passages is significant, as they constitute
the final pericopae of mPeah, a tractate devoted to the expansion of biblical laws on agricultural entitlements for aliens, orphans, widows, and the
poor (as Lev 19.910; Lev 23.22; Dt 24.1921). Stated only briefly in the
Hebrew Bible, mPeah (as well as its parallels in tPeah 1.14.7) amplifies
these laws, concluding with the above-quoted discussions on who is eligible to receive these entitlements. These laws divide all parties into two
categories: those who allocate Gods share of the produce and those eligible to collect it. Indeed, mPeah 8.89 defines the poor solely for the sake
of identifying to whom these entitlements should be allocated. They are
objectified as mere vessels through which householders fulfill religious
obligations that require the participation of the poor.60 While it is common for the rabbis to flesh out concepts by posing questions such as
What are gleanings? and, famously, Who is rich?61 no tannaitic text
asks, Who is poor? That is, the tannaim are uninterested in the poor as
58. See Adams, Poverty and Otherness, 189203.
59. For an overview of the monetization of the Roman imperial economy, see
Elio Lo Cascio, The Early Roman Empire: The State and the Economy, in
Cambridge Economic History (Cambridge, 2007), 62730. For the portrayal of a
monetized economy in classical rabbinic texts, see the sources in Rosenfeld and
Menirav, Markets and Marketing; Daniel Sperber, Roman Palestine, 200400: Money
and Prices (Ramat-Gan, 1991). On the rabbinic penchant for quantification and
measurement, see Yitzhak D. Gilat, Studies in the Development of the Halakha
(Hebrew; Ramat Gan, 1992), 6371; Aharon Shemesh, Things That Have
Required Quantities (Hebrew), Tarbiz 73 (2004): 387405; Shemesh, The History of the Creation of Measurements: Between Qumran and the Mishnah, in
Rabbinic Perspectives: Rabbinic Literature and the Dead Sea Scrolls, ed. S. D. Fraade et
al. (Boston, 2006), 14773.
60. While there are certainly collective aspects of these laws (e.g., everyone
either leaves these items for the poor or is entitled to collect them), a sense of
a clearly delineated community is more prevalent in the discourses on charity
institutions in tPeah 4.815. These laws foster a greater sense of community,
whereby residents of a particular town have a heightened responsibility to support the poor of their own town; see the discussions in Gardner, Giving to the
Poor in Early Rabbinic Judaism, 4295; Gardner, Cornering Poverty, 1:205
16. These institutions can be seen in line with efforts elsewhere in the Roman
world to manage social and subsistence risks in rural communities; see Grey,
Constructing Communities, 3.
61. mPeah 4.10; mAvot 4.1.
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the tannaitic aversion to evyona term common in the Hebrew Bible but
nearly absent from the tannaitic corpusand use of ani as a blanket term
for various levels and kinds of poverty could be motivated by similar goals.
Indeed, this is supported by Grays findings that tannaitic texts express
greater empathy for the poor than do amoraic works.70
There are a number of possible reasons why the poor are set up as
boundary markers to define economic attributes of early rabbinic group
identity. Poverty presumes dependency, which is anathema to the selfimage of a tanna as an economically independent householder who provides for and supports the members of his household.71 Historical developments may have also been a factor, as leading figures such as Gamaliel
emerged from wealthy circles of Jewish society.72 The nature of the subject also plays a role. Charity and initiatives that aim to relieve poverty
(such as peah and gleanings) divide all parties into two categories: givers
and recipients.73 In this binary structure, when the authors take the perspective of the benefactor, the beneficiaries are others by necessity.
The alterity of the poor is also related to the early rabbinic movements
internal cultural preoccupations, most notably the study of Torah. The
rabbis are an intellectual elite, as literacy, education, and wealth are
closely intertwined. Moreover, Torah study requires time away from tending to the necessities of life, such as procuring food, clothing, and shelter
for oneself and ones household.74 Tannaitic literature, significantly, does
not discuss material support for rabbis and their students. Only in later,
post-tannaitic texts do we begin to find discussions of financial support
for rabbis and their disciples.75
70. Gray, Formerly Wealthy Poor, 10133. Hamel, Poverty and Charity,
31516; Hamel, Poverty and Charity in Roman Palestine, 167, 172, calls the near
absence of evyon in tannaitic texts striking and puzzling though he does not
elaborate.
71. On the rabbis as householders, see Hayim Lapin, The Construction of
Households in the Mishnah, in The Mishnah in Contemporary Perspective, ed. A. J.
Avery-Peck and J. Neusner (Leiden, 2006), 5580; Neusner, Economics of the
Mishnah, 5071; Michael L. Satlow, Jewish Marriage in Antiquity (Princeton, N.J.,
2001), 341; Alexei Sivertsev, Households, Sects, and the Origins of Rabbinic Judaism
(Leiden, 2005); Sivertsev, The Household Economy, in The Oxford Handbook of
Jewish Daily Life in Roman Palestine, ed. C. Hezser (Oxford, 2010), 22945.
72. On the prominence of the Gamaliel line, see the overview in Emil Schurer
et al., The History of the Jewish People in the Age of Jesus Christ (175 B.C.A.D. 135)
(3 vols.; Edinburgh, 197387), 2:36769, 37276.
73. Novick. Charity and the Scapegoat.
74. Cohen, The Rabbi in Second-Century Jewish Society, 93334.
75. Ibid., 935. For later amoraic texts in which charity is directed toward the
rabbis, see Richard L. Kalmin, The Sage in Jewish Society in Late Antiquity (London,
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conflate various categories of needy individuals and dependents and present them as an undifferentiated mass defined solely by their failure to reach
a minimum income level.84 Indeed, in this sense, the tannaim follow the
sapiential tradition (especially Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Wisdom of
Ben Sira) which expresses sympathy and pity for the poorfrom the perspective of those who are not. In early rabbinic literature, the poor can be
identified as internal others or non-rabbinic Jewsas opposed to external others who are gentiles. Such internal others serve as boundary markers against those whom the rabbis define themselves and shape their
collective identity. Likewise, the poor demarcate the limits of rabbinic economic diversity. A few tannaim are very wealthy and many are well off or
middling, but to be poor is incompatible with being a tanna.
The texts focus more on the benefactors obligations than the beneficiaries rights or needs. Likewise, in late antique Christian writings, the
poor are often presented and defined as a passive and anonymous group,
as the recipients of gifts and the objects of protection.85 For the rabbis,
the poor serve instrumental purposes. They constitute the individuals to
whom one must leave peah, gleanings, forgotten things, and the poor mans
tithe, and give charity: those through whom one fulfills certain religious
obligations.86 The rabbis did not seek to erase economic inequalities. The
existence of the poor was necessary in order to properly fulfill certain
religious obligations.87 Thus, it was of utmost importance to keep the poor
detects a desire by Babylonian rabbis to avoid direct encounters with lowly nonrabbis; see Kalmin, Sage in Jewish Society, 43.
84. Another possible reason for understanding the poor as an undifferentiated
mass is that it enabled the tannaim to cope with the problem of poverty that may
have seemed as too massive and overwhelming to comprehend. The tannaim were
surely familiar with the sentiment in Dt 15.11 that there will always be some in
need (cf. Matt. 26.11). To be sure, the sense that poverty was everywhere would
become more acute in amoraic texts, which, as Gray and Goodman have noted,
are the earliest rabbinic texts that reflect the third-century economic crisis; see
Goodman, State and Society, 60; Gray, Formerly Wealthy Poor, 118, n. 62.
85. Peter Brown, Poverty and Leadership in the Later Roman Empire (Hanover,
N.H., 2002), 14.
86. On the poor as instruments who enable the well off to discharge their
religious obligations, see Satlow, Fruit and the Fruit of Fruit, 25058. Likewise, the poor enable the rich to achieve merit; see Gary A. Anderson, Sin: A
History (New Haven, Conn., 2009), 151.
87. On the Mishnahs preservation of economic inequalities, see also Calvin
Goldscheider, Inequality, Stratification, and Exclusion in the Mishnah: An
Exploratory Social Science Analysis, in Gazing on the Deep: Ancient Near Eastern
and Other Studies in Honor of Tsvi Abusch, ed. J. Stackert et al. (Bethesda, Md.,
2011), 56583.
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alive but, as SifreDt 116 instructs, you are not commanded to make
him rich.88 The rabbis approach, rather, is profitably likened to John
Rawlss difference principle, which accepts income inequalities so long
as the least advantaged are made better off than they would be otherwise.89
In light of my findings, it is illuminating to take a fresh look at a classic
tannaitic text on attitudes toward wealth. In mAvot 4.1, Ben Zoma asks:
Who is rich? He who rejoices in his lot. As it is said, You shall enjoy the
fruit of your labors; you shall be happy and you shall prosper (Ps 128.2).
This text is often read as a demonstration of contentment and an exhortation to forgo the pursuit of material pleasures. What is often overlooked,
however, is that such sentiments are more likely to be expressed by and
for those who did not want for food, clothing, or shelter than those who
were hungry and cold.
88. Cf. Urbach, Political and Social Tendencies, 18, who upholds the apologetic stance that the rabbis aimed to lift the poor out of poverty.
89. John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (Cambridge, Mass., 1999), 6573, 13.
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