The laws of capital crimes elucidated in Sanhedrin and elsewhere make conviction very unlikely. Makkot 1:10 famously tells us that a court that executes once in seven years is considered "destructive", R. Eliezer b. Azariah ups this to once in seventy years, and R. Tarfon and R. Akiva said, "If we were on the Sanhedrin, nobody would have ever been executed".
My question: how many times did rabbinic courts carry out executions?
Answer
In Tanach I find the following cases (there may be others I've missed):
- Moshe's court executing the blasphemer (Lev. 24:23)
- ...and the Shabbos violator (Num. 15:36)
- Yehoshua's court executing Achan for taking from the spoils of Jericho (Josh. 7:25)
- Navos being executed by the court of Jezreel on charges of blasphemy and cursing the king (I Kings 21:13). The charges were trumped up at Jezebel's orders, and the court itself was corrupt, but they did follow the technical protocols for his trial.
In the Talmud we have the following cases that I know of. Three of them are in the era of Yehudah ben Tabbai and Shimon ben Shatach (early 1st century BCE).
Yehudah ben Tabbai and his court executing a false witness whose testimony was impeached (huzam) (Chagigah 16b and Makkos 5b)
Shimon ben Shatach and his court executing eighty women for practicing witchcraft (Sanhedrin 45b, and more details in Rashi ibid. 45b, from Yerushalmi Chagigah 2:2 and Sanhedrin 6:6)
...and then having his own son convicted (based on false testimony) and executed (Rashi ibid. 44b, from Yerushalmi Sanhedrin 6:3)
Someone being executed "in the days of the Greeks" for riding a horse on Shabbos (Yevamos 90b, Sanhedrin 46a)
Yeshu Hanotzri, also known as Ben Stada and Ben Pandira, who was executed on Erev Pesach (Sanhedrin 43a and 67b, uncensored editions). A lot of ink has been spilled on the question of whether this person is identical with the founder of Christianity.
None of these are really typical cases, though - each of them is mentioned because of some unusual feature. There may have been many other cases where people were executed judicially, which are not recorded because nothing out of the ordinary happened.
- The first three were at Hashem's direct command.
- The case of Navos was instigated by Jezebel (and she and Ahab were duly punished for it).
- Yehudah ben Tabbai was trying to make a point against the Sadduccees (to demonstrate the halachah that false witnesses are punished only if their intended victim had not yet received his punishment), but it turned out to be a mistake on his part (false witnesses are not supposed to be killed unless both of them are impeached, and here only one was).
- Shimon ben Shatach executed eighty women on the same day, where normally a court is not supposed to carry out more than one death penalty at a time.
- The witnesses who testified against his son eventually recanted their testimony, but it was too late.
- Riding a horse on Shabbos is not normally punishable by death, because it is prohibited only by Rabbinic law. In this case he was executed "because the times required it" (Rashi: it was a time of Greek persecution and people were being careless with mitzvos).
- Announcements of Yeshu's impending execution were made forty days in advance, to give people a chance to come forward in his defense, "because he was close to the government."
No comments:
Post a Comment