THE JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA
In the same sense as Christianity or Islam, Judaism can not be credited with the possession of Articles of Faith. Many attempts have indeed been made at systematizing and reducing to a fixed phraseology and sequence the contents Of the Jewish religion. But these have always lacked the one essential element: authoritative sanction on the part of a supreme ecclesiastical body. And for this reason they have not been recognized as final or regarded as of universally binding force. Though to a certain extent incorporated in the liturgy and utilized for purposes of instruction, these formulations of the cardinal tenets of Judaism car- ried no greater weight than that imparted to them by the fame and scholarship of their.respective authors. None of them had a character analogous to that given in the Church to its three great formulas (the so-called Apostles' Creed, the Nicene or Constantopolitan, and the Athanasian), or even to the Kalimat As-Shahadat of the Mohammedans. The recital of this "Kalimah" is the first of the five pillars of practical religion in Islam, and one converted to Islam must repeat it verbatim; so that among the conditions required of every believer with reference to confession is the duty to repeat it aloud at least once in a lifetime. None of the many summaries from the pens of Jewish philosophers) and rabbis has been invested with similar importance and prominence. The reasons for this relative absence of official and obligatory creeds are easily ascertained.
The remark of Leibnitz, in his preface to the "Essais de Theodicee," that the nations which filled the earth before the establishment of Christianity had ceremonies of devotion, sacrifices, libations, and a priesthood, but that they had no Articles of Fai th and no dogmatic theology, applies with slight modification to the Jews. Originally race -- or perhaps it is more correct to say nationality -- and religion were coextensive. Birth, not profession, admitted to the religio-national fellowship. As long as internal dissension or external attack did not necessitate for purposes of defense the formulation of the peculiar. and differentiating doctrines, the thought of paragraphing and fixing the contents of the religious consciousness could not insinuate itse lf into the mind of even the most faithful. Missionary or- proselytizing religions are driven to the definite declaration of their teachings. The admission of the neophyte hinges upon the profession and the acceptance of his part of the belief, and that t here may be no uncertainty about what is essential and what non-essential, it is incumbent on the proper authorities to determine and promulgate the cardinal tenets in a form that will facilitate repetition and memorizing. And the same necessity arises wh en the Church or religious fellowship is torn by internal heresies. Under the necessity of combating heresies of various degrees of perilousness and of stubborn insistence, the Church- and Islam, were forced to define and officially limit their respective ) theological concepts. Both of these provocations to creed-building were less intense in Judaism. The proselytizing zeal, though during certain periods more active than at others, was, on the whole, neutralized, partly by inherent disinclination and part ly by force of circumstances. Righteousness, according- to Jewish belief, was not conditioned of the acceptance of the Jewish religion. And the righteous among the nations that carried into practise the seven fundamental laws of the covenant with Noah and his descendants were declared to be participants in the felicity of the hereafter. This interpretation of the status of non-Jews precluded the development of a missionary attidude. Moreover, the regulations for the reception of proselytes, as developed i n course of time, prove the eminently practical, that is, the non-creedal character of Judaism. Compliance with certain rites -- baptism, circumcision, and sacrifice -- is the test of the would-be convert's faith. He is instructed in the details of the le gal practise that manifests the Jew's religiosity, while the profession of faith demanded is limited to the acknowledgement of the nity of God and the rejection of idolatry (Yorei De'ah, Gerim , 268, 2). Judah ha-Levi ("Cuzari," i. 115) puts the whole mat ter very strikingly when he says:
"We are not putting on an equality with us a person entering our religion through confession alone [Arabic original, bikalamati=by word]. We require deeds, including in that term self-restraint, purity, study of the Law, circuscision, and the performance of other duties demanded by the Torah."
For the preparation of the convert, therefore, no other method of instruction was employed than for the training of one born a Jew. The aim of teaching was to convey a knowledge of he Law, obedience to which manifested the acceptance of the underlying re ligious principes; namely, the existence of God and the holiness of Israel as the people of his covenant.
The controversy whether Judaism demands belief in dogma or inculcates obedience to practical laws alone, aas enlisted many competent scholars. Moses Mendelssohn, in his "Jerusalem," defended the non-dogmatic nature of Judaism, while Low, among others, (se e his "Gesammelte Schriften," i. 31-52, 433 et seq. 1871) took the opposite side. Low made it clear that the Mendelssohnian theory had been carried beyond its legitimate bounds. The meaning of the word for faithful and belief in Hebrew [emunah] had undoubtedly been strained too far to substantiate the Mendelssohnian thesis. Underlying the practise of the Law was assuredly the recognition of certain fundamental and decisive religious principles culminating in the belief in God and revelation, and li kewise in the doctrine of retributive divine justice.
The modern critical view of the development of the Pentateuch within the evolution of Israel's monotheism confirms this theory. The controversy of the Prophets hinges on the adoption by the people of Israel of the religion of YHVH, th at excluded froin the outset idolatry, or certainly the recognition of any other deity than YHVH as the legitimate Lord of Israel; that, in its progressive evolution, associated YHVH the concepts of holiness, ju stice, and righteousness; and that which culminated in the teaching of God's spirituality and universality. The historical books of the Bible, as recast in accordance with these latter religious ideas evince the force of a strong and clearly apprehended conviction concerning the providential purpose in the destinies of earth's inhabitants, and more especially in the guidance of Israel.
The Psalms and Wisdom books manifest the predominance, of definite religious beliefs. To say that Judaism is a barren legalistic convention, as Mendelssohn avers, is an unmistakable exaggeration. The modicum of truth in his theory is that throughout Bi blical Judaism, as in fact throught all later phases of Jewish religious thinking and practise, this doctrinal element remains always in solution. It is not crystallized into fixed phraseology or rigid dogma. And, moreover, the ethical and practical impli cations of the religion are never obscured. This is evidenced by the Biblical passages that, in the opinion of many, partake of the nature of Articles of Faith, or are of great value as showing what, in the opinion of their respective authors, constitutes the essence of religion. Among these the most noteworthy are Deut. vi. 4; Isa., xlv. 5-7; Micah vi. 8; Ps. xv. ; Isa. i. 16, 17; xxxiii. 15.
Whatever controversies may have agitated Israel during the centuries of the Prophets and the earlier postexilic period, they were not of a kind to induce the defining of Articles of Faith counteract the influences of heretical teaching. Dogmatic influe nces manifest themselves only after the Maccabean struggle for independence. But even these differences were not far-reaching enough to overcome the inherent aversion to dogmatic fixation of principles; for, with the Jews, acceptance of principles was not so much a matter of theoretical assent as of practical conduct. Though Josephus would have the divisions between the Pharisees and the Sadducees hinge on the formal acceptance or rejection of certain points of doctrine -- such as Providence, resurrectio n of the body, which for the Pharisees, was identical with future retribution -- it is the consensus of opinion among modern scholars that the differences between these two parties were rooted in their respective political programs, and implied in their respectively national and anti-national attitudes, rather than in their philosophical or religious dogmas.
If the words of Sirach (iii. 20-23) are to be taken as a criterion, the intensely pious of his days did not incline to speculations of what was beyond their powers to comprehend. They were content to perform their, religious duties in simplicity of fai th. The Mishnah (Hag. 11. 1) indorsed this view of Sirach, and in some degree, discountenanced theosophy and dogmatism. Among the recorded discussions in the schools of the Rabbis, dogmatic problems commanded only a very inferior degree of attention ('Er. 13b: controversy concerning the, value of human life; Hag. 12a: concerning the order of Creation). Nevertheless, in the earliest Mishnah is found the citation of Abtalion against heresy and unbelief (Ab. i. 11 [12]); and many a Baraita betrays the preva lence of religious differences (Ber. 12b; 'Ab. Zarah 17a). These controversies have left their impress upon the prayer-book and the liturgy. This is shown by the prominence given to the Shema'; to the Messianic predictions in the Shemoneh-'Esreh (the "Ei ghteen Benedictions"), which emphasized the belief in the Resurrection; and, finally, to the prominence given to the Decalogue -- though the latter was again omitted in order to counteract the belief that it alone had been revealed (Tamid v. 1; Yer. Ber. 6b; Bab. Ber. 12a). These expressions of belief are held to have originated in the desire to give definite utterance and impressiveness to the corresponding doctrines that were either rejected or attenuated by some of the heretical schools. But while the se portions of the daily liturgy are expressive of the doctrinal contents of the regnant party in the synagogue (see Landshuth, in Edelman's "Hegyon Leb"; and LITURGY), they were not cast into the form of catalogued Articles of Faith.
The first to make the attempt to formulate them was Philo
of Alexandria. The influence of Greek thought induced among the Jews of
Egypt the reflective mood. Discussion was undoubtedly active on the unsettled
points of speculative be lief; and such discussion led, as it nearly always
does, to a stricter definition of the doctrines. In his work "De Mundi
Opificio," lxi., Philo enumerates five articles as embracing the chief
tenets of Mosaism:
But among the Tannaim and Amoraim
this example of Philo found no followers, though many of their number were
drawn into controversies with both Jews and non-Jews, and had to fortify
their faith against the attacks of contemporaneous philosophy as well as
against rising Christianity. Only in a general way the Mishnah Sanh. xi.
1 excludes from the world to come the Epicureans and those who deny belief
in resurrection or in the divine origin of the Torah. R. Akiba would also
regard as heretical the readers o f Sefarim Hetsonim -- certain
extraneous writings (Apocrypha or Gospels) -- and such persons that would
heal through whispered formulas of magic. Abba Saul designated as under
suspicion of infidelity those that pronounce the ineffable name of the
D eity. By implication, the contrary doctrine and attitude may thus be
regarded as having been proclaimed as orthodox. On the other hand, Akiba
himself declares that the command to love one's neighbor the fundamental
the principle of the Law; while Ben Asa i assigns this distinction to the
Biblical verse, "This is the book of the generations of man "
(Gen. v. i.; Gen. R. xxiv). The definition of Hillel the Elder in his interview
with a would-be convert (Shab. 31a), embodies in the golden rule the one
fundam ental article of faith. A teacher of the third Christian century,
R. Simlai, traces the development of Jewish religious principles from Moses
with his 613 commands of prohibition and injunction, through David, who,
according to this rabbi, enumerates ele ven; through Isaiah, with six;
Micah, with three; to Habakkuk who simply but impressively sums up all
religious faith in the single phrase, " The pious lives in his faith"
(Mak., toward end). As the Halakhah enjoins that one should prefer death
to an act of idolatry, incest, unchastity, or murder, the inference is
plain that the corresponding positive principles were held to be fundamental
articles of Judaism.
From Philo down to late medieval and even modern writers, the Decalogue has been held to be in some way a summary of both the articles of the true faith and the duties derived from that faith. According to the Alexandrian philosopher (see "De Vita Mos is") the order of the Ten Words is not accidental. They divide readily into two groups: the first five summarizing man's relations to the Deity; the other five specifying man's dutics to his fellows. Ibn Ezra virtually adopts this view. He interprets the contents of the Decalogue, not merely in their legal-ritual bearing but as expressive of ethico-religious principles. But this view can be traced to other traditions. In Yer. Ber. 6b the Shema' is declared to be only an epitome of the Decalogue. That in the poetry of the synagogal ritual this thought often dominates is well known. No less a thinker than Saadia Gaon composed a liturgical production of this character (see AZHAROT) and R. Eliezer ben Nathan of Mayence enriched the pray er-book with a piyyut in which the six hundred and thirteen commands are rubricated in the order of and in connection with the Decalogue. The theory that the Decalogue was the foundation of Judaism, its article of faith, was advocated Isaac Abravanel (see his Commentary on Ex. xx. 1); and in recent years by Isaac M. Wise of Cincinnati in his "Catechism" and other writings.
The only confession of faith, however, which, though not so denominated, has found universal acceptance, forms a part of the daily liturgy, contained in all Jewish prayer-books. ln its original form it read somewhat as follows:
"True and established is this word for us forever. True it is that Thou art our God as Thou wast the God of our fathers; our King as [Thou wast] the King of our fathers; our Redeemer and the Redeemer of our fathers; our Creator and the Rock of our salvation; our Deliverer and Savior -- from eternity is Thy name, and there is no God besides Thee."
This statement dates probably from the days of the Hasmoneans (see Landshuth, in "Hegyon Leb").
In the stricter sense of the term, specifications in connected
sequence, and rational analysis of Articles of Faith, did not find favor
with the teachers and the faithful before the Arabic period. The polemics
with the Karaites on the one hand, and, on the other, the necessity of
defending their religion against the attacks of the philosophies current
among both Mohammedans and Jews, induced the leading thinkers to define
and formulate their beliefs. Saadia's "Emunot we-Deot" is in
reality one long ex position of the main tenets of the faithful. The plan
of the book discloses a systematization of the different religious doctrines
that, in the estimation of the author, constitute the sum total of his
faith. They are, in the order of ther treatment by hi m, the following:
Judah ha-Levi endeavored, in his "Cuzari," to determine the fundamentcals of Judaism on another basis. He rejects all appeal to speculative reason, repudiating the method of the Motekallamin. The miracles and traditions are, in their natural character, both the source and the evidence of the true faith. With them Judaism stands and falls. The book of Bahya ibn Pakuda ("Hobot ha-Lebabot"), while remarkable, as it is, for endeavoring to give religion its true setting as a spiritual force, contributed not hing of note to the exposition of the fundamental articles. It goes without saying that the unity of God, His government of the world,, the possibilities of leading a divine life -- which were never forfeited by man -- are expounded as essentials of Judai sm.
More interesting on this point is the work of R. Abraham
ibn Daud (1120) entitled " Emnah Ramah" (The High Faithful).
In the second division of his treatise he discourses on the principles
of faith and the Law. These principles are:
Less well known is the scheme of an African rabbi, Hananel
b. Hushiel, about a century earlier, according to whom Judaism's fundamental
articles number four:
The most widely spread and popular of all creeds is that
of Maimonides, embracing the thirteen articles. Why he chose this particular
number has been a subject of much discussion. Some have seen in the number
a reference to the thirteen attributes of God. Probably no meaning attaches
to the choice of the number. His articles are:
This creed Maimonides wrote while still a very young man;
it forms a part of his Mishnah Commentary, but he never referred to it
in his later works (See S/ Adler, "Tenets of Faith and Their Authority
in the Talmud," in his "Kobez 'al Yad," p. 92, wher e Yad
ha-Hazakah, Issure Biah, xiv, 2, is referred to as proof that Maimonides
in his advanced age regarded as fundamental of the faith only the unity
of God and the prohibition of idolatry). It did not meet universal acceptance;
but, as its phraseology is succinct, it has passed into the the prayer-book,
and is therefore familiar to almost all Jews of the Orthodox school. The
successors of Maimonides, from the thirteenth to the fifteeneth century
-- Nahmanides , Abba Mari ben Moses, Simon ben Zemah, Du ran, Albo, Isaac
Arama, and Joseph Jaabez -- reduced his thirteen articles to three:
Belief in
Others, like Crescas and David ben Samuel Estella, spoke of seven fundmental articles, laying stress on free-will. On the other hand, David ben Yom-Tob ibn Bilia, in his "Yesodot ha- Maskil" (Fundamentals of the Thinking Man), adds to the thirteen of M aimonides thirteen of his own -- a number which a contemporary of Albo (see "'Ikkarim," iii.) also chose for his fundamentals; while Jedaiah Penini, in the last chapter of his "Behinat ha-Dat," enumerated no less than thirty-five cardinal principles (see Low, "Judische Dogmen," in his "Gesammelte Werke," i. 156 et seq.; and Schechter, "Dogmas of Judaism," in "Studies of Judaism," pp. 147-181).
In the fourteenth century Asher ben Jehiel of Toledo raised his voice against the Maimonidean Articles of Faith, declaring them to be only temporary, and suggested that another be added to recognize that the Exile is a punishment for the sins of Israel . Isaac Abravanel, his "Rosh Amanah," took the same attitude towards Maimonides' creed. While defending Maimonides against Hasdai and Albo, he refused to accept dogmatic articles for Judaism, holding, with all the cabalists, that the 613 commandments of t he Law are all tantamount to Articles of Faith.
In liturgical poetry the Articles of Faith as evolved by philosophical speculation met with metrical presentation. The most noted of such metrical and rimed elaborations are the "Adon 'Olam," by an anonymous writer -- now used as an introduction to the morning services (by the Sephardim as the conclusion of the musaf or "additional" service), and of comparatively recent date; and the other known as the "Yigdal," according to Luzzatto, by R. Daniel b. Judah Dayyan.
The modern catechisms abound in formulated Articles of
Faith. These are generally intended to be recited by the candidates for
confirmation, or to be used for the reception of proselytes (See Dr. Einhorn's
"'Olat Tamid"). The Central Conference of America n Rabbis, in
devising a formula for the admission of proselytes, elaborated a set of
Articles of Faith. These modern schemes have not met with general favor
-- their authors being in almost all cases the only ones that have had
recourse to them in practis e. The points of agreement in these recent
productions consist in
The declaration of principles by the Pittsburgh Conference (1885) is to be classed, perhaps, with the many attempts to fix in a succinct enumeration the main principles of the modern Jewish religi ous consciousness.
The Karaites are not behind the Rabbinites in the elaboration
of Articles of Faith. The oldest instances of the existence of such articles
among them are found in the famous word by Judah ben Elijah Hadassi, "Eshkol
ha-Kofer." In the order there given these are the articles of the
Karaite:
The number ten here is not accidental. It is keeping with the scheme of the Decalogue. Judah Hadassi acknowledges that he had predecessors in this line, and mentions some of the works on which he bases his enumeration. The most succinct cataloguing of the Karaite faith in articles is that by Elijah Bashyatzi (died about 1490). His articles vary but little from those by Hadassi, but they are put with greater philosophical precision (see Jost, Geschichte des Judenthums," ii. 331).
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Schlesinger, German translation of 'Ikkarim (especially introduction and annotations), xvi-xliii. 620 et seq., 640 et seq.; Low, Gesammelte Werke, i. 31-52, 133-176; Jost, Gesh. des Judenthums und Seiner Sekten; Hamburger, Realencyclopadie, s.v. Dogmen; Rappoport, Biography of Hananel; Schechter, The Dogmas of Judaism, in Studies in Judaism, pp 147-181; J. Aub. Ueber die Glaubens-Symbole der Mosaischen Religion; Frankel's Zeitschrift fur die Religiosen Interessen des Judenthums, 1845, 409, 449; Creizenach, Grundlehren des Israelitischen Glaubens, in Geiger's Wissensch. Zeitschrift fur Jud. Theologie, i. 39 et seq., ii. 6 8, 255.