Online Encyclopedia

RABBI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 767 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RABBI  , a

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Hebrew word meaning " my master," " my teacher." It is derived from the adjective
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rab (in Aramaic, and frequently also in Hebrew, "
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great "), which acquired in
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modern Hebrew the signification of "lord," in relation to servants or slaves, and of " teacher," " master," in relation to the
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disciple . The master was addressed by his pupils with the word rabbi (" my teacher "), or rabbenu (" our teacher ") . It became customary to speak of Moses as Moshe rabbenu (" our teacher Moses ") . Jesus makes it a reproach against the
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scribes that they cause themselves to be entitled by the
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people rabbi (pa/301, Matt.
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xxiii . 7): and He Himself is saluted by the disciples of John as rabbi (John i . 38, where the word is explained as
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equivalent to SLSaaKake) . As an honorary title of the scribes, with whose name it was constantly linked, " Rabbi " only came into use during the last decades of the second Temple .
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Hillel and
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Shammai, the contemporaries of Herod, were mentioned without any title . Gamaliel I., the grandson of Hillel, was the first to whose name the appellation Rabban (the same asrabbon, and also pronounced as ribbon, cf. pa(S(3ovvi, Mark x . 51; John xx . 16) was prefixed . This title, a higher distinction than that of rabbi, is in tradition borne only by the descendants of Gamaliel I., the last being Gamaliel III., the son of Jehuda I .

(Aboth ii . 2), and by Jolianan b . Zaccai, the founder of the school of

Jamnia (Jabneh) . Otherwise all Tannaites (see TANNA), the scholars of the Mishnah period, were distinguished by the title of " rabbi." The Jehuda I. mentioned above, the redactor of the Mishnah, was honoured as the " Rabbi " ear' E1 oxijv (" par excellence "), and in the tradition of the houses of learning, if it was necessary to speak of him or to cite his opinions and utterances, he was simply referred to as " Rabbi," without the mention of any name . Scholars who were not definitely ordained—and among these were men of high distinction—were simply mentioned by their names without the Rabbi-title . In the
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post-Talmudic age the Qaraites, who rejected the tradition of the
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Talmud, designated the Jews who adhered to that tradition as Rabbanites . Similarly the
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term Rabbins, or Rabbis, is applied to modern Jewish clergy . The plural rabbanim was employed to describe the later Jewish scholars (so, for example, in the historian Abraham
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Ibn Daud, 12th century) . By " rabbinical literature " is understood the post-Talmudic Jewish literature; in particular, so far as its subject is the literature of the tradition and its contents .

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