The Babylonian Talmud on Amulets on the Sabbath

Nor [go out] with an amulet unless [ made] by an expert.

[Aramaic] R. Papa said: This does not imply that the man [who produced it] has to be an expert [for it to be an] expert amulet. Rather, if the man is an expert but the amulet is not expert [i.e., proven, one may go out with it].

But it is already explicitly stated [in the mishnah]: Nor with an amulet unless [made] by an expert. And it is not stated: “If it is not an expert [proven] amulet.”

Learn from this. The sages taught [in a baraita]: [Hebrew] What is an expert amulet? Any that has healed two or three times—whether it is a written amulet or an amulet with roots; whether [healing] a sick person in danger, or a sick person not in danger. Not [only] that [someone] has fallen [ill], but lest someone fall [ill]. Thus, one may tie and untie it even in the public sphere [on the Sabbath], but one may not tie [the amulet] to a bracelet or ring and go out into the public sphere, because of [its] “appearance” [misinterpreted as a transgression that is permissible].

But has it not been taught: What is an expert amulet? Any that has healed three people as one [and the same]. [There is] no difficulty [here]. This [case] is to prove the expertise of the man [who made it], and that [case] to prove the expertise of the amulet [itself]. R. Papa said: This is obvious to me. Three amulets for three people, each healing three times—thus, the man is proven, and the amulet is proven [effective]. Three amulets for three people [healing] each only one time—the man is proven, but the amulet is not proven [effective]. One amulet for [healing]—the amulet is proven [effective], but the man is [still] not proven [an expert].

[Aramaic] R. Papa raised a question: Three amulets for one person—what is the case? The amulet is certianly not proven [effective]. But is the man a proven expert or not? Shall we say: Did this [amulet] heal him, or was it just luck for this very man who received the writing [on the amulet]? Unresolved.

Translated by Markham J. Geller and Lennart Lehmhaus.

Credits

b. Shabbat 61a–b, trans. Markham J. Geller and Lennart Lehmhaus, publication forthcoming. Copyright Markham J. Geller and Lennart Lehmhaus. Used with permission of the translators.

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

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