Primer: Talmud
The Talmud discusses the meaning and application of the laws which govern
traditional Jewish life and invites each new generation to participate in that
discussion.
Talmud (literally, "study") is the generic
term for the documents that comment and expand upon the Mishnah (“repeating”),
the first work of rabbinic law, published around the year 200 CE by Rabbi Judah
the Patriarch in the land of Israel.
About the Talmud: Although Talmud is largely about
law, it should not be confused with either codes of law or with a commentary on
the legal sections of the Torah. Due to its spare and laconic style, the Talmud
is studied, not read. The difficulty of the intergenerational text has
necessitated and fostered the development of an institutional and communal
structure that supported the learning of Talmud and the establishment of
special schools where each generation is apprenticed into its study by the
previous generation.
The Mishnah: In the second century, Rabbi Judah the
Patriarch published a document in six primary sections, or orders, dealing with
agriculture, sacred times, women and personal status, damages, holy things, and
purity laws. By carefully laying out different opinions concerning Jewish law,
the Mishnah presents itself more as a case book of law. While the Mishnah
preserved the teachings of earlier rabbis, it also shows the signs of a unified
editing. Part of that editing process included selecting materials; many of the
traditions that did not “make it” into the Mishnah were collected in a
companion volume called the Tosefta (appendix, or supplement).
The Gemara ("learning"): After the
publication of the Mishnah, the sages of Israel, both in the land of Israel,
and in the largest diaspora community of Babylonia (modern day Iraq), began to
study the document. Their work consisted largely of working out the Mishnah’s
inner logic, trying to extract legal principles from the specific statements of
case law, searching out the derivations of the legal statements from Scripture,
and relating statements found in the Mishnah to traditions that were left out.
Each community produced its own Gemara which have been preserved as two
different multi-volume sets: the Talmud Yerushalmi includes the Mishnah and the
Gemara produced by the sages of the Land of Israel, and the Talmud Bavli
includes the Mishnah and the Gemara of the Babylonian Jewish sages.
Commentaries: In some ways, the Talmud was never
completed; the Tosafist commentators during the middle ages extended to the
whole of the Gemara the same kinds of analysis that the sages of the Gemara had
performed upon the Mishnah. Other commentators, like Rashi, sought to explain
the text in a sequential manner.
Modern Study: Many modern scholars have begun
applying the tools of literary and linguistic analysis to the text of the
Talmud. Some have used these tools to focus on the underlying uniformity and
consistency of the text, while others have done sophisticated analysis of the
sources and alleged history of the text. Still others have examined the
literary artistry of the Talmud. Many scholars have, with varying degrees of
success, tried to use the Talmud as a source for historical inquiry.