Hayim ben Bezalel
Ḥayim ben Beẓalel was a German rabbi and Talmudist and the elder brother of Judah Loew ben Bezalel of Prague.
He was the eldest of the four sons of Beẓalel ben Ḥayim, and spent his youth at Posen, the native city of the family. He and Moses Isserles studied with Shalom Shachna, whose methods of teaching he adopted largely. He began his literary activity at Worms, where he had gone in 1549; and, apparently, he succeeded his uncle Jakob ben Chajim as rabbi in that city, after Jakob's death in 1563. He subsequently went as rabbi to Friedberg; in 1578 this district was ravaged by a terrible plague, which caused the death of one of Ḥayim's servants. In consequence of this occurrence Ḥayim and his family were quarantined in his house for two months. During this time he wrote his ethical work "Sefer ha-Ḥayim", consisting of five books.
Ḥayim carried on a heated controversy with his former schoolfellow Moses Isserles, also indirectly aiming at Joseph Karo. He did not approve of their attempts to collect the laws found in the Talmud and other authoritative works in a book suitable for the general public. The reasons for his objections he set forth in the introduction to his "Mayim Ḥayim", which includes a criticism of Moses Isserles' "Torat ha-Ḥaṭṭot". Ḥayim held that through such codices the study of the Talmud would be neglected and the standing of the rabbis injured, since every layman could turn to these books for the solution of difficult questions. Moreover, the writer of such codes would gain too much authority over other teachers, whereas every rabbi ought to arrive at his decisions independently. Such codes, moreover, could not take into account the minhagim of all countries; and this, again, would lead to constraint in matters of conscience, since every one would have to observe the minhagim obtaining in the place where the author of the code in question was living.
Ḥayim died at Friedberg on the Shavuot festival, 1588.
Works
Ḥayim's works include:- "Sefer ha-Ḥayim", Kraków, 1593; Amsterdam, 1713; Lemberg, 1887;
- "Mayim Ḥayim", Amsterdam, 1711; Lemberg, without introduction;
- "Iggeret ha-Tiyyul", Scriptural comments in alphabetical order, Prague, 1605, and Offenbach, 1717;
- "
' Eẓ ha-Ḥayim" ; - "Be'er Mayim Ḥayim", supercommentary to Rashi's commentary on the Torah.