Everything about The Tosefta totally explained
The
Tosefta, Hebrew תוספתא, is a secondary compilation of the
Jewish oral law from the period of the
Mishnah.
Overview
In many ways, the Tosefta acts as a supplement to the Mishnah (
tosefta means "supplement"). The
Mishnah is the basic compilation of the
Oral law of
Judaism; it was compiled around
200 CE. The Tosefta is a
Halakhic work which corresponds in structure almost exactly to the Mishnah, with the same divisions for
sedarim ("orders") and
masekhot ("tractates"). It is mainly written in
Mishnaic Hebrew, with some
Aramaic.
According to rabbinic tradition, the Mishnah was redacted by
Judah haNasi in consultation with members of his
yeshiva ("academy"), while the Tosefta was edited by Rabbis
Chiya and
Oshaiah on their own, thus the Tosefta is considered less authoritative. (
Rashi in his commentary on
Talmud Sanhedrin 33a).
At times, the text of the Tosefta agrees nearly verbatim with the Mishnah, sometimes,however, in some places however, significant differences exist. The Tosefta attributes laws that are anonymous in the Mishnah to named Tannaim; It also augments the Mishnah with additional glosses and discussions. The Tosefta as we've it today functions like a commentary on unquoted Mishnaic material; It offers additional
aggadic and
midrashic material, and it sometimes contradicts the Mishnah in the ruling of Halakha (Jewish law), or in declaring in whose name a law was given.
Origins
The traditional view is that the Tosefta should be dated to a period concurrent with or shortly after the redaction of the
Mishnah. This view pre-supposes that the Tosefta was produced in order to record variant material not included in the Mishnah.
Modern scholarship can be roughly divided into two camps. Some, such as Jacob N. Epstein theorize that the Tosefta as we've it developed from a proto-Tosefta recension which formed much of the basis for later Amoraic debate. Others, such as Hanokh Albeck, theorize that the Tosefta is a later compendium of several baraitot collections which were in use during the Amoraic period.
More recent scholarship, such as that of Yaakov Elman, concludes that since the Tosefta, as we know it, must be dated linguistically as an example of Middle Hebrew 1, was most likely compiled in early amoraic times from oral transmission of baraitot., "Babylonian Baraitot in Tosefta and the `Dialectology' of Middle Hebrew," Association for Jewish Studies Review 16 (1991), 1-29. Professor
Shamma Friedman, has found that the Tosefta draws on relatively early tannaitic source material and that parts of the Tosefta predate the Mishnah.
Alberdina Houtman and colleagues theorize that the
Mishnah was compiled in order to establish an authoritative text on halakhic tradition. However, a more conservative party opposed the exclusion of the rest of tradition and produced the Tosefta to avoid the impression that the written Mishnah was equivalent to the entire oral Torah. The original intention was that the two texts would be viewed on equal standing, but the succinctness of the Mishnah and the power and influence of Yehuda Ha-Nassi made it more popular among most students of tradition.
Ultimately, the state of the source material is such to allow divergent opinions to exist. These opinions serve to show the difficulties in establishing a clear picture of the origins of the Tosefta.
Commentary editions
Orthodox scholars
The definitive commentary on the Tosefta is by Rabbi
Yehezkel Abramsky:
Hazon Yehezkel (24 volumes,
1925-
1975 in
Hebrew).
Saul Lieberman's Tosefta Kifshuta is widely considered the authoritative critical edition of the Tosefta.
Non-Orthodox scholars
The Tosefta has been translated into English by Rabbi
Jacob Neusner and his students. They have also produced a commentary on Seder Zeraim.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Tosefta'.
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