Israel Lipschitz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Israel Lifschitz

Israel Lifschitz (Hebrew: ישראל ליפשיץ (1782–1860) was a rabbi of the Acharonim era, first at Dessau and then at the Jewish Community of Danzig. He was the author of Tiferet Yisrael a well-known commentary on the Mishna. The edition of the Mishna containing this commentary is often referred to as "Mishnayot Yachin uBoaz". The commentary is divided into two parts, one more general and one more analytical, titled "Yachin" and "Boaz" respectively (after two large pillars in the Temple in Jerusalem). This is often considered to be one of the clearest and most useful commentaries on the Mishna. He also wrote Shevilei de'Rakiya, an introduction to the principles of Rabbinical astronomy, and Derush Ohr Ha-Hayyim (Homily on the Light of Life) which debates the eternity of the soul and the age of the universe. [references 1]

He led the life of an ascetic, frequently fasted three days in succession, and studied incessantly. His ethical will contains twenty-eight paragraphs, consisting chiefly of moral and ascetic precepts. He left in manuscript many notes ("derashot") to the Shulchan Aruch and to Maimonides' Mishneh Torah, a comprehensive treatise on the order Tohorot, and many responsa.

Jewish Encyclopedia

  1. Kaplan, Aryeh. Derush Or Ha-hayyim. p. 8. 
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.