Moses ha-Kohen de Tordesillas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moses ha-Kohen de Tordesillas was a Spanish Jewish controversialist of the fourteenth century.
An attempt was made to convert him to Christianity by force. Despite persecution, he remained true to his convictions, although he was robbed of his possessions and reduced to poverty. He was chosen rabbi by the community of Avila.
He was compelled to carry on a religious debate, about 1372, with the convert John of Valladolid, in the presence of Christians and Muslims. Moses was acquainted with the Christian sources, and refute in four debates the arguments of his opponent, who tried to prove the Christian dogmas from the Scriptures.
Soon afterward he was obliged to enter upon a new contest with a disciple of the convert Abner of Burgos, with whose writings, especially with his Mostrador de Jeosticia, Moses was thoroughly acquainted. In 1374, at the desire of the members of his community, he wrote, in the form of a dialogue between a Jew and a Christian, the main substance of his debates, which treated of the Trinity, of the virginity of Mary, of sacrifice, of the alleged new teachings of Jesus and of the New Testament, of the seven weeks of Daniel, and of similar matters. His book, which is divided into seventeen chapters, dealing with 125 passages emphasized by Christian controversialists, is entitled "'Ezer ha-Emunah" (The Support of Faith). It was sent by its author to David ibn Ya'ish at Toledo, and manuscripts of it are found at Oxford, Berlin, Parma, Breslau, and elsewhere.
[edit] References of Jewish Encyclopedia
- De Rossi-Hamberger, Hist. Wörterb. pp. 317 et seq.;
- Heinrich Grätz, Gesch. 3d ed., viii. 20-21;
- Adolf Neubauer, Jewish Interpretations of the Fifty-third Chapter of Isaiah, p. 10;
- Moritz Steinschneider, Verzeichnis der Hebräischen Handschriften der Königlichen Bibliothek zu Berlin, p. 51;
- idem, Hebr. Bibl. ii. 85, note 10.
[edit] External links
This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.