halachist

(redirected from Halakist)

halachist

,

halakhist

or

halakist

n
1. (Judaism) a person who contributed to the creation of the Halacha
2. (Judaism) a person who is knowledgeable in matters relating to the Halacha
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
It is the role of the halakist and posek to uphold the Jewish people's side of the agreement, fulfilling the covenantal pact by revealing new layers of Torah.
(40) His belief that the Torah is a Torah of life motivated all of Berkovits's actions as a halakist. As he so earnestly explained to his teacher, R.
He felt that halakah was still in exile in the state of Israel and that Israeli halakists still had a silted mentality, not that of a people living in a sovereign state.
The depiction Berkovits offers of the halakic process in regard to the obligations God and Jewish law impose upon the halakist is surely not incontestable within the Orthodox world.
Virtually every halakist who dealt with the State of Israel in terms of traditional Jewish thought conceptualized the government of Israel as the heir of the political and legal authority one of these medieval institutions.
Weinberg wrote an approbation to Berkovits's book in which he expressed his sympathy with Berkovits's approach and called upon leading halakists to examine Berkovits's arguments.
Here is where one finds the great divergence between Conservative halakists and Berkovits, despite what appear to be outward similarities.
Furthermore, as has already been mentioned and bears repeating, there is also a real distinction to be made between Berkovits's approach and that which is found among Conservative halakists. The latter believe in updating halakah due to changing values in wider society.
As Berkovits puts it, on the very last page of Not in Heaven, today's halakists
The contemporary halakists also do not know how to properly balance competing values.
He criticizes Fletcher's ethics in one way; he criticizes his fellow halakists the opposite way.