
The
Laws Concerning Moshiach
Chapters 11 & 12 of Hilchos Melachim from the Mishneh Torah of the
Rambam
Published by:
Sichos In English
PUBLISHER'S FOREWORD
Since the time of the Rambam
(1135-1204), it has been impossible to discuss the subject of Moshiach
and the Era of the Redemption without direct reference to the last two
chapters of his monumental halachic code, the Mishneh Torah.
These chapters conclude the
final section (Hilchos Melachim - "The Laws Concerning Kings") of the
final book (Sefer Shoftim - "The Book of Judges") of the Mishneh
Torah, and are sometimes referred to separately as Hilchos Melech
HaMoshiach - "The Laws Concerning King Moshiach."
The translation of this
classic text which Sichos In English presents herewith is not only new,
but - unlike almost all of the extant printed editions, even in the
Hebrew original - unexpurgated. All the passages suppressed by various
medieval Christian censors have been translated in full. They appear
here in the footnotes that are keyed to the exact positions from which
they were deleted.
It is hoped that this
publication will give more and more readers access to one of the major
primary sources on the subject of the coming of Moshiach.
Sichos In English
24 Sivan, 5751 [June 6, 1991]

CHAPTER ELEVEN
1.
In future time, the King Moshiach
[1]
will arise and renew the Davidic dynasty, restoring it to its initial
sovereignty. He will rebuild the [Beis Ha]Mikdash and gather in the
dispersed remnant of Israel. Then, in his days, all the statutes will be
reinstituted as in former times. We will offer sacrifices and observe
the Sabbatical and Jubilee years according to all their particulars set
forth in the Torah.
Whoever does not believe in
him, or does not await his coming, denies not only [the statements of]
the other prophets, but also [those of] the Torah and of Moshe, our
teacher, for the Torah attests to his coming, stating: [Devarim
30:3-5]
And the Lord your G-d will
bring back your captivity and have compassion upon you. He will return
and gather you [from among all the nations].... Even if your dispersed
ones are in the furthest reaches of the heavens, [from there will G-d
gather you in].... G-d will bring you [to the land]....
These explicit words of the
Torah include all that was said [on the subject] by all the prophets.
There is also a
reference [to Moshiach] in the passage concerning Bilaam, who prophesies
about the two anointed [kings]: the first anointed [king]
[2],
David, who saved Israel from her oppressors, and the final anointed
[king] who will arise from among his descendants and save Israel [at the
End of Days]
[3].
The following [quoted] phrases are from that passage: [Bamidbar
24:17-18]
"I see it, but not now" -
This refers to David; "I perceive it, but not in the near future" - This
refers to King Moshiach.
"A star shall go forth from
Yaakov" - This refers to David; "and a staff shall arise in Israel" -
This refers to King Moshiach.
"He shall crush all of
Moab's princes" - This refers to David, (as it is written [II Shmuel
8:2], "He smote Moab and measured them with a line"); "he shall
break down all of Seth's descendants" - This refers to King Moshiach,
(about whom it is written [Zechariah 9:10], "He will rule from
sea to sea").
"Edom will be demolished" -
This refers to David, (as it is written [Cf. II Shmuel 8:6 and 8:14],
"Edom became the servants of David"); "his enemy, Seir, will be
destroyed" - This refers to Moshiach, (as it is written [Ovadiah
1:21], "Saviors will ascend Mount Zion [to judge the mountain of
Esau....]").
2.
Similarly, in regard to the cities of refuge, it is stated [Devarim
19:8-9], "When G-d will expand your borders... you shall add three
more cities." This command has never been fulfilled. [Surely,] G-d did
not give this command in vain, [and thus the intent was that it be
fulfilled after the coming of Moshiach]. There is no need to cite
prooftexts on the concept [of the Moshiach] from the words of the
prophets, for all [their] books are filled with it.
3.
One should not entertain the notion that the King Moshiach must work
miracles and wonders, bring about new phenomena within the world,
resurrect the dead, or perform other similar deeds. This is [definitely]
not true.
[A proof can be brought from
the fact that] that Rabbi Akiva, one of the greatest Sages of the
Mishnah, was one of the supporters of King Ben Koziva, and would
describe him as the King Moshiach. He and all the Sages of his
generation considered him to be the King Moshiach until he was killed
because of [his] sins. Once he was killed, they realized that he was not
[the Moshiach]. The Sages did not ask him for any signs or wonders.
[Rather,] this is the
main thrust of the matter: This Torah, with its statutes and laws, is
everlasting. We may neither add to them nor detract from them.
[4]
4.
If a king will arise from the House of David who delves deeply into the
study of the Torah and, like David his ancestor, observes its mitzvos as
prescribed by the Written Law and the Oral Law; if he will compel all of
Israel to walk in [the way of the Torah] and repair the breaches [in its
observance]; and if he will fight the wars of G-d; - we may, with
assurance, consider him Moshiach.
If he succeeds in the
above, builds the [Beis Ha]Mikdash on its site, and gathers in the
dispersed remnant of Israel, he is definitely the Moshiach.
[5]
He will then perfect the
entire world, [motivating all the nations] to serve G-d together, as it
is written [Zephaniah, 3:9], "I will make the peoples pure of
speech so that they will all call upon the Name of G-d and serve Him
with one purpose."
CHAPTER TWELVE
1.
One should not entertain the notion that in the Era of Moshiach any
element of the natural order will be nullified, or that there will be
any innovation in the work of creation. Rather, the world will continue
according to its pattern.
Although Yeshayahu [Yeshayahu
11:6] states, "The wolf will dwell with the lamb, and the leopard
will lie down with the young goat," these [words] are an allegory and a
riddle. They mean that Israel will dwell securely together with the
wicked gentiles who are likened to wolves and leopards, as in the verse
[Yirmeyahu 5:6], "A wolf of the deserts despoils them, a leopard
watches over their cities." [In this era, all nations] will return to
the true faith and no longer plunder or destroy. Instead, at peace with
Israel, they will eat that which is permitted, as it is written [Yeshayahu
11:7], "The lion shall eat straw like the ox."
Similarly, other prophecies
of this nature concerning Moshiach are analogies. In the Era of the King
Moshiach, everyone will realize what was implied by these metaphors and
allusions.
2.
Our Sages taught: [Berachos 34b] "There will be no difference
between the current age and the Era of Moshiach except [our emancipation
from] subjugation to the [gentile] kingdoms."
The simple meaning of
the words of the prophets appears to imply that the war of Gog and Magog
[Yechezkal ch. 38] will take place at the beginning of the
Messianic age. Before the war of Gog and Magog, a prophet will arise to
rectify Israel's conduct and prepare their hearts [for the Redemption],
as it is written: [Malachi 3:23] "Behold, I am sending you
Eliyah(u)
[6]
[before the advent of the great and awesome Day of G-d]."
He will not come [in order]
to declare the pure, impure, nor to declare the impure, pure; nor [will
he come in order] to disqualify the lineage of those presumed to be of
flawless descent, nor to validate lineage which is presumed to be
blemished. Rather, [he will come in order] to establish peace in the
world; as [the above prophecy] continues [Malachi 3:24], "He will
bring back the hearts of the fathers to the children."
Some of the Sages say that
Eliyahu will appear [immediately] before the coming of Moshiach.
All these and similar
matters cannot be [clearly] known by man until they occur, for they are
undefined in the words of the prophets. Even the Sages have no
established tradition regarding these matters, beyond what is implied by
the verses; hence there is a divergence of opinion among them.
In any case, neither the
sequence of these events nor their precise details are among the
fundamental principles of the faith. One should not occupy himself at
length with the aggadot and midrashim that deal with these and similar
matters, nor should he deem them of prime importance, for they bring one
to neither the awe nor the love [of G-d].
Similarly, one should not
try to calculate the appointed time [for the coming of Moshiach]. Our
Sages declared: [Sanhedrin 97b] "May the spirits of those who
attempt to calculate the final time [of Mashiach's coming] expire!"
Rather, one should await [his coming] and believe in the general
conception of the matter, as we have explained.
3.
During the Era of the King Moshiach, once his kingdom has been
established and all of Israel has gathered around him, the entire
[nation's] line of descent will be established on the basis of his
words, through the prophetic spirit which will rest upon him. As it is
written [Loc. cit., v. 3], "He shall sit as a refiner and
purifier."
He will purify the lineage
of the Levites first, stating that "This one is a priest of defined
lineage" and "This one is a Levite of defined lineage." Those whose
lineage he does not recognize will be relegated to the status of
Israelites. This is implied by the following verse: [Ezra 2:63]
"The governor said to them, '[They shall not eat of the most holy
things] until a priest arises [who will wear] the Urim and Tumim.'" From
this verse one can infer that the genealogy of those presumed to be of
unquestioned [priestly and levitical] lineage will be traced by means of
the prophetic spirit, and those found to be of such lineage will be made
known.
He will define the lineage
of the Israelites according to their tribe alone; i.e., he will make
known each person's tribal origin, stating that "This one is from this
tribe" and "This one is from another tribe." However, concerning a
person who is presumed to be of unblemished lineage, he will not state
that "He is illegitimate," or "He is of slave lineage," for the law
rules that once a family has become intermingled [within the entire
Jewish people], they may remain intermingled.
4.
The Sages and prophets did not yearn for the Messianic Era in order that
[the Jewish people] rule over the entire world, nor in order that they
have dominion over the gentiles, nor that they be exalted by them, nor
in order that they eat, drink and celebrate. Rather, their aspiration
was that [the Jewish people] be free Ito involve themselves] in Torah
and its wisdom, without anyone to oppress or disturb them, and thus be
found worthy of life in the World to Come, as we explained in Hilchos
Teshuvah.
5.
In that Era there will be neither famine nor war, neither envy nor
competition, for good things will flow in abundance and all the delights
will be as freely available as dust. The occupation of the entire world
will be solely to know G-d. The Jews will therefore be great sages and
know the hidden matters, and will attain an understanding of their
Creator to the [full] extent of human potential; as it is written [Yeshayahu
11:9], "For the world will be filled with the knowledge of G-d as
the waters cover the ocean bed."
FOOTNOTES
1. In the original Hebrew, HaMelech
HaMoshiach (lit., "the anointed king"); i.e., the Messianic King.]
2. In the original Hebrew, the word here
translated "anointed [king]" is simply HaMoshiach (lit. "the anointed
one"); i.e., the Messiah. It is used interchangeably with the earlier
phrase.]
3. At this point, before being censored
by medieval Christian authorities, the Rambam's original text continued:
"...and save Israel from the hand's of Esav's descendants. This and two
other such deletions have been copied verbatim in these footnotes from
the celebrated Yemenite manuscript in the hands of Chacham Yosef Kapach
of Jerusalem. (See footnotes
4
and
5,
below.)]
4. At this point, the uncensored original
text continued as follows: "Whoever adds to [the mitzvoth] or detracts
from them, or misinterprets the the Torah, implying that the mitzvos are
not intended to be understood literally, is surely a wicked imposter and
a heretic."
5. The whole of the following passage was
deleted from most of the editions published since the Venice edition of
1574.
"If he did not succeed to
this degree or he was killed, he surely is not [the redeemer] promised
by the Torah. [Rather,] he should be considered as all the other proper
and legitimate kings of the Davidic dynasty who died. G-d only caused
him to arise in order to test the multitude. As it is written [Daniel
11:35], "Some of the wise men will stumble, to purge, to refine, and
to clarify, until the appointed time, for it is yet to come."
"Jesus of Nazareth who
aspired to be the Moshiach and was executed by the court was also spoken
of in Daniel's prophecies [Daniel 11:14], "The renegades among
your people shall exalt themselves in an attempt to fulfill the vision,
but they shall stumble."
"Can there be a greater
stumbling block than [Christianity]? All the prophets spoke of Moshiach
as the redeemer of Israel and their savior, who would gather their
dispersed ones and strengthen their [observance of] the mitzvos. In
contrast [the founder of Christianity] caused the Jews to be slain by
the sword, their remnants to be scattered and humiliated, the Torah to
be altered, and the majority of the world to err and serve a god other
than the L-rd."
"Nevertheless, the intent of
the Creator of the world is not within the power of man to comprehend,
for [to paraphrase Yeshayahu 55:8] His ways are not our ways, nor
are His thoughts our thoughts. [Ultimately,] all the deeds of Jesus of
Nazareth and that Ishmaelite [i.e. Mohammed] who arose after him will
only serve to pave the way for the coming of Moshiach and for the
improvement of the entire world, [motivating the nations] to serve G-d
together, as it is written [Zephaniah 3:9], "I will make the
peoples pure of speech so that they will all call upon the Name of G-d
and serve Him with one purpose."
"How will this come about?
The entire world has already become filled with talk of [the supposed]
Messiah, as well as of the Torah and the mitzvos. These matters have
been spread among many spiritually insensitive nations, who discuss
these matters as well as the mitzvos of the Torah. Some of them [i.e.
the Christians] say: "These commandments were true, but are not in force
in the present age; they are not applicable for all time." Others [i.e.
the Moslems] say: "Implied in the commandments are hidden concepts that
cannot be understood simply; the Messiah has already come and revealed
them."
"When the true Messiah king
will arise and prove successful, his [position becoming] exalted and
uplifted, they will all return and realize that their ancestors endowed
them with a false heritage; their prophets and ancestors cause them to
err."
-
The name of the prophet is occasionally
spelled, as in this verse, without the final letter vav.
Sichos In English
788 Eastern Parkway
Brooklyn, New York 11213
(718)778-5436; FAX: (718)735-4139
 |