R. Safra and the Minim

R. Abbahu would praise R. Safra to the heretics [by saying] that he is a great man. [Therefore,] they remitted [R. Safra’s obligation to pay] taxes for thirteen years. One day they found [R. Safra and] said to him, “It is written: You only have I known of all the families of the earth; therefore, I will visit upon you all your iniquities (Amos 3:2). One who has wrath, [does] he raise it against his beloved?” [R. Safra] was silent and did not say anything [in response] to them. They threw a scarf around his neck and tormented him.

R. Abbahu came [and] found them [doing this to R. Safra. R. Abbahu] said to them, “Why are you tormenting him?” They said to him, “And didn’t you say to us that he is a great man? But he did not [even] know [how] to tell us the explanation of this verse.” [R. Abbahu] said to them, “[You can] say that I said [this praise of R. Safra] to you [only] with regard to [the Oral Law and the statements of] tannaim, [but] did I say to you [that he is knowledgeable] with regard to the Bible?” They said to [R. Abbahu]: What is different [about] you [sages of Erets Yisrael], that you know [the Bible as well? R. Abbahu] said to them: We, who are situated among you [heretics and are forced to debate the meaning of verses], we impose upon ourselves [this obligation] and analyze [verses in depth. By contrast,] those [sages of Babylonia, who are not forced to debate you,] do not analyze [the Bible in such depth].

[The heretics] said to R. Abbahu: [In that case,] you should tell us [the meaning of this verse. R. Abbahu] said to them: I will relate a parable to you. To what is this matter comparable? [It is comparable] to a person who lends [money] to two people, one [of whom is] his beloved, and [the other] one [is] his enemy. [In the case of] his beloved, he collects [the debt] from him little [by] little, [whereas in the case of] his enemy he collects [the debt] from him all at once.

Translation adapted from the Noé Edition of the Koren Talmud Bavli.

Notes

Words in brackets appear in the original translation.

Credits

From Koren Talmud Bavli, Noé Edition, trans. Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz (Jerusalem: Koren Publishers Jerusalem, 2019). Accessed via the William Davidson digital edition, sefaria.org. Adapted with permission of Koren Publishers Ltd.

Published in: The Posen Library of Jewish Culture and Civilization, vol. 2: Emerging Judaism.

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A story in the Babylonian Talmud suggests that given their greater proximity to Christian communities, rabbis in the land of Israel had a more contentious relationship with their Christian neighbors than did rabbis in Babylonia.

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