Rabbinic Stories about Hillel and Shammai

3rd–6th Centuries
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Hillel and Shammai were contemporaries who lived during the first century BCE and are often contrasted with each other. While Hillel expressed a deep concern for the individual and exemplified tolerance, Shammai took a more rigid stance in the interpretation and application of Jewish law. Each had followers who adhered to their viewpoints and attitudes vis-à-vis the law and its interpretation, and the debates between the later schools of Hillel and Shammai were central to the development of Jewish law and practice. The stories that follow exemplify the vastly different approaches of Hillel and Shammai and their legacies in the rabbinic tradition.

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Hillel and Shammai: Sacred Debate in the Talmud

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In b. Eruvin 13b, a divine voice declares both Hillel and Shammai correct, revealing how the Talmud sanctifies disagreement and pluralism in law.

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The Patience of Hillel

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The sages taught [in a baraita]: A person should always be patient like Hillel and not impatient like Shammai. [There was] an incident [involving] two people who wagered with each other [and] said,…

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