Hoshaiah Rabbah or Hoshaʻyā Rabbā () was an amoraim of the first generation in Rabbinic Judaism and a compiler of baraitot explaining the Mishnah and the Tosefta. He is known from tractates of the Jerusalem Talmud.
Hoshaiah's yeshiva was located at Sepphoris for many years, where pupils crowded to hear his lectures. Johanan bar Nappaha, one of his greatest disciples, declared that Hoshaiah in his generation was like Rabbi Meir in his: even his colleagues could not always grasp the profundity of his arguments according to Eruvin 53a. And The esteem in which Hoshaiah was held by his pupils may be gauged by the statement that, even after Johanan had himself become a great scholar and a famous teacher and no longer needed Hoshaiah's instruction, he continued visiting the master, who in the meantime had grown old and moved his school to Caesarea in the Jerusalem Talmud, Sanhedrin, Chapter 11, page 30b.
According to the Jerusalem Talmud, Peah, Chapter 8, page 21b, Hoshaiah's consideration for others is exemplified in his gracious apology to the blind teacher whom he had engaged for his son and whom he did not suffer to meet visitors at dinner for fear that he might be embarrassed.
Hoshaiah's authority must have been very powerful in his later years, when he successfully resisted the efforts of Gamaliel III, the son of Judah ha-Nasi, to introduce demai into Syria according to the Jerusalem Talmud, Ḥallah, Chapter 4, page 60a. It is also indicated by his remarkable interposition regarding the Mishnah, which declares that "a Gentile's testimony in the case of an agunah is allowed only if stated as a matter of fact and without any intention to testify" in the Jerusalem Talmud, Yebamot 16:5; and the Babylonian Talmud, Yebamot 121b.
There are more examples in the Talmud to justify the assertion that Hoshaiah, as the representative of Rabbinic Judaism, was in constant touch with early Christians at Caesarea Maritima, particularly with Origen, who was ordained presbyter (bishop) at Caesarea in 228 and who in 231 opened a philosophical and theological school attended by persons from all parts, anxious to hear his interpretation of the Bible. Origen died in 254 at Tyre, so his last twenty-five years were spent in the region where most of the Amoraim lived. The "philosopher" whom the latter mention as controverting Hoshaiah's exegesis was doubtless Origen himself or one of his students. The influence brought to bear by Hoshaiah and others probably induced Origen to formulate the doctrine of the different degrees of dignity in the Trinity, for which Origen was accused as a heretic.
Hoshaiah was very strict in requiring from a proselyte both circumcision and mikveh immersion in the presence of three rabbis according to Yevamot 46b; this was very likely directed against the free conversion of by Judaizing Christians. In a case of partition by heirs or partners, the Jerusalem Talmud, Bava Batra 1:5:6, records, "'But Holy Scripture they should not divide even if both of them want it.' Rebbi Hoshaia said, for example, Psalms and the Books of Chronicles. But Psalms and Psalms one may divide." It is explained that such an exchange would be considered as unequal and as giving the impression that one book is holier than another. This is more easily understood because Judaizing Christians exalted Psalms over the other books of the Hebrew Bible, especially the Books of Chronicles, in contrast with the Jewish view, which recognizes no preference between the various books.
Teachings
Halacha
Aggadah
Relations with Origen and Christianity
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