Joseph Caro
Medieval lawyer
and mystic
By Louis Jacobs
This article is
reprinted with permission from The
Jewish Religion: A Companion,
published by Oxford University Press.
Caro the Lawyer
Joseph Caro (1488-1575) [was an] outstanding lawyer and
mystic. Caro was probably born in Toledo but, after the expulsion of the Jews
from Spain in 1492, his family settled in Turkey where Caro lived for around
forty years, acquiring a great reputation as an authority on Jewish law. In
1536 he left Turkey for Safed, serving there until his death as a rabbi and
head of a yeshivah. In Safed he became closely associated with the mystical
circle that flourished there.
Caro wrote a commentary, entitled Kesef Mishnah, to Maimonides’ code and another commentary, his
greatest work, on the Tur of Jacob
ben Asher, to which he gave the title Bet
Yosef (House of Joseph), because in it he provided a home for all of the
legal opinions held by the jurists of the past.
In his introduction to
Bet Yosef, Caro remarks that he was moved to compile it because there was
so much uncertainty about the actual law in practice, each Jewish community
seeming to have its own “Torah.” The Tur, he thought, is the best starting
point for the task he had set himself, since in this work, too, many different
opinions are recorded. But Caro seeks to go further than the Tur in an analysis
of the law as it develops from Talmudic times down to his own day. The Bet Yosef is probably the keenest work
of legal analysis in the history of Jewish law.
Caro recorded the decisions in every branch of practical law
at which he had arrived in his digest, the Shulhan
Arukh [“Set Table”], which together with the glosses of Isserles, became
the standard code for all Orthodox Jews. [Moses Isserles (d.1572) was a Polish
rabbi who authored several works on Jewish law. His claim to fame, however, was
his glosses to Caro’s Shulhan Arukh.
Caro meant to provide a clear ruling on all matters of halacha, according to
Sephardic teachings. Isserles brought Ashkenazi opinions and customs to the
“table.” Isserles titled his collection of additions, Mappah (tablecloth). From 1569 the Shulhan Arukh has included Isserles’ additions.]
Caro the Mystic
It is highly interesting that Caro, evidently in
compensation for his powerful concentration throughout his life on acute legal
subtleties, had strong mystical tendencies, believing himself to be the
recipient of a heavenly mentor. This phenomenon was not uncommon among the
kabbalists, who called the spirit who brought the revelation a Maggid (“Preacher” or “Teller”). Caro
identified his Maggid with the spirit of the Mishnah and with the Shekhinah. The revelations of the Maggidwere sometimes in the form of automatic
speech coming out of Caro’s mouth.
Solomon Alkabetz (d. 1576), author of the (Sabbath) hymn
Lekhah Dodi, sent an eyewitness account of Caro’s visitation, in a letter from
Safed to the mystic brotherhood in Salonika. Here Alkabetz states that during a
mystic vigil on the eve of the festival of Shavuot the companions heard a voice
speaking out of Caro’s mouth. “It was a loud voice with letters clearly
enunciated. All the companions heard the voice but were unable to understand
what was said. It was an exceedingly pleasant voice becoming increasingly
strong. We all fell upon our faces and none of us had any spirit left in him
because of our great dread and awe.” Alkabetz then records what the voice said,
evidently able to decipher the message.
Caro kept a mystical diary for around forty years in which
he recorded the Maggid’srevelations.
This work, entitled, Maggid Mesharim
(Teller of Upright Words) was first published in Amsterdam in 1704. (The letter
of Alkabetz is printed as the introduction to the work) Followers of the
Haskalah, embarrassed that one of their heroes, with his keen logical mind
should have kept a mystical diary, denied that Caro was the author of the Maggid Mesharim. But its authenticity
has been demonstrated beyond doubt.
Students of religious psychology have found rich material
for their investigations in the Maggid
Mesharim, among other things that in its non-mystical sections the work
falls short of Caro’s own acute reasoning. As [Rabbi ] Zevi Ashkenazi
[1658-1718, served in Vilna, Budapest, Sarajevo, Amsterdam, London and Lemberg]
was reported to have said, “Caro was a far greater scholar than his Maggid.”
Another fascinating feature of the Maggid Mesharim is the manner in which the Maggidaddresses Caro, rebuking him for his
shortcomings an holding out to him promise of his future greatness and assuring
him that one day he would be worthy of suffering martyrdom for his religion.
Whatever one is to make of Caro’s mystical activities, the lie is given to the
notion that legalism in religion is incompatible with the mystical approach.
Louis Jacobs, founding
rabbi of the New London Synagogue, is a renowned scholar and lecturer.
c. Louis Jacobs, 1995.
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