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Ger toshav
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Ger toshav (Hebrew: גר תושב, ger: "foreigner" or "alien" + toshav: "resident", lit. "resident alien")[5] is a halakhic term used in Judaism to designate the legal status of a Gentile (non-Jew) living in the Land of Israel who does not want to convert to Judaism but agrees to observe the Seven Laws of Noah,[7] a set of imperatives which, according to the Talmud, were given by God as a binding set of universal moral laws for the "sons of Noah"—that is, all of humanity.[15] A ger toshav, especially one who decides to follow the Noahic covenant out of religious belief rather than ethical reasoning, is commonly deemed a "Righteous Gentile" (Hebrew: חסיד אומות העולם, Chassid Umot ha-Olam: "Pious People of the World"),[18] and is assured of a place in the World to Come (Olam Ha-Ba).[9][12][17]

Definition

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A ger toshav ("resident alien") is a Gentile (non-Jew) living in the Land of Israel who agrees to follow the Seven Laws of Noah.[21] The theological basis for the seven commandments of the Noahic Covenant is said to be derived interpretatively from demands addressed to Adam[22] and to Noah,[23] who are believed to be the progenitors of humankind in Judaism, and therefore to be regarded as universal moral laws.[8][9] The seven commandments of the Noahic Covenant to which the ger toshav agrees to be bound are enumerated in the Babylonian Talmud (Avodah Zarah 8:4, Sanhedrin 56a-b):[24]

  1. Do not worship idols.[25]
  2. Do not curse God.[26]
  3. Do not murder.[27]
  4. Do not commit adultery or sexual immorality.[28]
  5. Do not steal.[29]
  6. Do not eat flesh torn from a living animal.[30]
  7. Establish courts of justice.[32]
The rainbow is the unofficial symbol of Noahidism, recalling the Genesis flood narrative in which a rainbow appears to Noah after the Flood; it represents God's promise to Noah to refrain from flooding the Earth and destroying all life again.[33]

The Encyclopedia Talmudit, edited by rabbi Shlomo Yosef Zevin, states that after the giving of the Torah, the Jewish people were no longer included in the category of the sons of Noah; however, Maimonides (Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot M'lakhim 9:1) indicates that the seven commandments are also part of the Torah, and the Babylonian Talmud (Sanhedrin 59a, see also Tosafot ad. loc.) states that Jews are obligated in all things that Gentiles are obligated in, albeit with some differences in the details.[13] According to the Encyclopedia Talmudit, most medieval Jewish authorities considered that all the seven commandments were given to Adam, although Maimonides (Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot M'lakhim 9:1) considered the dietary law to have been given to Noah.[13]

The term ger toshav may be used in a formal or informal sense. In the formal sense, a ger toshav is a Gentile who officially accepts the seven Noahide laws as binding upon themself in the presence of three haberim (men of authority),[4] or, according to the rabbinic tradition, before a beth din (Jewish rabbinical court).[16] In the Talmud there are two other, differing opinions (Avodah Zarah, 64b) that pertain to which commandments the ger toshav is required to follow:[34]

  1. To abstain from idolatrous practices of any kind (detailed in Exodus 20:2–4 and Deuteronomy 5:6–8).[4]
  2. To uphold all the 613 Jewish commandments in rabbinical enumeration,[4] except for the prohibition against eating kosher animals that died by means other than ritual slaughter, or possibly[16] (Meiri) any prohibition not involving kareth.

The accepted opinion is that the ger toshav must accept the Seven Laws of Noah before a rabbinical court of three.[4][16] They will receive certain legal protection and privileges from the community, the rules regarding Jewish-Gentile relations are modified, and there is an obligation to render him aid when in need. The restrictions on having a Gentile do work for a Jew on the Shabbat are also greater when the Gentile is a ger toshav.[16]

In the informal sense, a ger toshav is a Gentile who agrees to follow the seven Noahide laws on his own,[12] or alternatively, simply rejects idolatry[4][16] (the latter issue is in particular brought up regarding Muslims).[16] According to the rabbinic tradition, a Gentile who agrees to follow the seven Noahide laws, although not before a beth din, is still regarded as Chassid Umot ha-Olam ("Pious People of the World"),[35] and the observance of the Seven Laws of Noah grants them a place in the World to Come (Olam Ha-Ba).[36] There is a debate among the halakhic authorities as to whether the rules regarding a ger toshav would apply to the informal case.[4][16]

The procedure to officially recognize the legal status of ger toshav has been discontinued since the cessation of the year of Jubilee with the destruction of the Second Temple of Jerusalem;[2] hence, there are no formal gerim toshavim extant today.[2] However, it can be argued that a great deal are "informal" ones,[16] especially since it is possible to be a Chassid Umot ha-Olam even when the Jubilee year is not observed.

Modern times and views

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Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the Lubavitcher Rebbe, encouraged his followers on many occasions to preach the Seven Laws of Noah, devoting some of his addresses to the subtleties of this code.[37] Since the 1990s, Orthodox Jewish rabbis from Israel, most notably those affiliated to Chabad-Lubavitch and religious Zionist organizations,[38][39] including The Temple Institute,[38][39] have set up a modern Noahide movement.[38][39] These Noahide organizations, led by religious Zionist and Orthodox Jewish rabbis, are aimed at non-Jews in order to proselytize among them and commit them to follow the Noahide laws.[38][39] According to Rachel Z. Feldman,[38] American anthropologist and Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Dartmouth College, many of the Orthodox Jewish rabbis involved in mentoring Noahides are supporters of the Third Temple movement who believe that the messianic era shall begin with the establishment of a Jewish theocratic state in Israel, supported by communities of Noahides worldwide:[38]

Today, nearly 2,000 Filipinos consider themselves members of the "Children of Noah", a new Judaic faith that is growing into the tens of thousands worldwide as ex-Christians encounter forms of Jewish learning online. Under the tutelage of Orthodox Jewish rabbis, Filipino "Noahides", as they call themselves, study Torah, observe the Sabbath, and passionately support a form of messianic Zionism. Filipino Noahides believe that Jews are a racially superior people, with an innate ability to access divinity. According to their rabbi mentors, they are forbidden from performing Jewish rituals and even reading certain Jewish texts. These restrictions have necessitated the creation of new, distinctly Noahide ritual practices and prayers modeled after Jewish ones. Filipino Noahides are practicing a new faith that also affirms the superiority of Judaism and Jewish biblical right to the Land of Israel, in line with the aims of the growing messianic Third Temple Movement in Jerusalem.[38]

Feldman describes Noahidism as a "new world religion" that "carv[es] out a place for non-Jews in the messianic Zionist project" and "affirms the superiority of Judaism and Jewish biblical right to the Land of Israel, in line with the aims of the growing messianic Third Temple Movement in Jerusalem."[38] She characterizes Noahide ideology in the Philippines and elsewhere in the global south as having a "markedly racial dimension" constructed around "an essential categorical difference between Jews and Noahides".[38] David Novak, professor of Jewish theology and ethics at the University of Toronto, has denounced the modern Noahide movement by stating that "If Jews are telling Gentiles what to do, it’s a form of imperialism".[40]

According to the Jewish philosopher and professor Menachem Kellner's study on Maimonidean texts (1991), a ger toshav could be a transitional stage on the way to becoming a "righteous alien" (Hebrew: גר צדק, ger tzedek), i.e. a full convert to Judaism.[41] He conjectures that, according to Maimonides, only a full ger tzedek would be found during the Messianic era.[41] Furthermore, Kellner criticizes the assumption within Orthodox Judaism that there is an "ontological divide between Jews and Gentiles",[42] which he believes is contrary to what Maimonides thought and the Torah teaches,[42] stating that "Gentiles as well as Jews are fully created in the image of God".[42]

According to Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the status of ger toshav will continue to exist, even in the Messianic era. This is based on the statement in Hilkhot M'lakhim 12:5 that lit. “all the world (kol ha'olam) will be nothing but to know G‑d." In its plain meaning, he asserts, kol ha'olam also includes Gentiles. As proof, he cites 11:4, which deals with the Messianic era, and the similar term ha'olam kulo, "the world in its entirety", refers to Gentiles. Continuing the text in Hilkhot M'lakhim 12:5, Maimonides explicitly changes the topic to Jews by using the term Yisra'el, explaining that "Therefore, the Jews will be great sages and know the hidden matters, grasping the knowledge of their Creator according to the full extent of human potential", indicating that Jews and Gentiles will co-exist in the time of the Messiah.[43] In any case, even when there is a Jewish king and a Sanhedrin, and all the twelve tribes live in the Land of Israel, Jewish law does not permit forcing someone to convert and become a ger tzedek against his will.[44]

High Council of Bnei Noah

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A "High Council of Bnei Noah", set up to represent Noahide communities around the world, was endorsed by a group that claimed to be the new Sanhedrin.[45] The High Council of Bnei Noah consists of a group of Noahides who, at the request of the nascent Sanhedrin, gathered in Jerusalem on 10 January 2006 to be recognized as an international Noahide organization for the purpose of serving as a bridge between the nascent Sanhedrin and Noahides worldwide.[46] There were ten initial members who flew to Israel and pledged to uphold the Seven Laws of Noah and to conduct themselves under the authority of the Noahide beth din (religious court) of the nascent Sanhedrin.[46]

Non-necessity of conversion

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According to Christine Hayes, an American scholar of ancient Judaism and early Christianity serving as the Sterling Professor of Religious Studies in Classical Judaica at Yale University, the gerim were not necessarily Gentile converts in the Hebrew Bible, whether in the modern or rabbinic sense.[47] Nonetheless, they were granted many rights and privileges when they lived in the Land of Israel.[47] For example, they could offer sacrifices, actively participate in Israelite politics, keep their distinct ethnic identity for many generations, inherit tribal allotments, etc.[47]

See also

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A ger toshav (Hebrew: גֵּר תּוֹשָׁב, plural gerim toshavim) is a halakhic status in Jewish law for a non-Jew residing in the who formally accepts the seven Noahide laws—prohibitions against , , , , sexual immorality, eating the limb of a living animal, and the obligation to establish courts of —before a rabbinic court or authority figure, thereby forswearing idol worship and submitting to Jewish civil jurisdiction without undergoing full . This acceptance grants the ger toshav protections akin to those afforded resident aliens in biblical texts, including the right to sustenance from Jewish charity during sabbatical years and exemption from certain sacrificial requirements, while imposing restrictions such as residence dependency on Jewish sovereignty in Israel. The concept originates in Torah verses referencing temporary or resident strangers (ger toshav) who dwell among Israelites, such as in Leviticus 25:40 and Exodus 12:45, where they are distinguished from full proselytes (ger tzedek) by their non-circumcision and lack of full ritual obligations. Rabbinic literature, including the Talmud and Maimonides' Mishneh Torah, codifies the status as operative only under a reconstituted Sanhedrin or during periods of Jewish political control over the entire Land of Israel, conditions unmet since antiquity, rendering it practically inapplicable in contemporary times despite occasional theoretical discussions of adaptation for non-Jews in modern Israel. Distinguished from mere Noahides living outside Israel, the ger toshav embodies a framework for limited gentile integration into Jewish society, emphasizing moral universality via Noahide compliance while preserving Jewish particularity, with no recorded prominent historical exemplars but serving as a model for ethical coexistence under halakhic supremacy.

Terminology and Etymology

Linguistic Origins

The Hebrew term ger toshav (גֵּר תּוֹשָׁב) combines two distinct words rooted in biblical lexicon, each carrying connotations of transience and settlement that together describe a non-native resident. The word ger derives from the Semitic triliteral root g-w-r (ג-ו-ר), which fundamentally denotes "to sojourn," "to dwell temporarily," or "to turn aside" as a guest or seeking temporary refuge. In Genesis 15:13, ger describes Abraham's descendants as temporary residents or sojourners in a foreign land (Egypt), where they would be vulnerable, enslaved, and mistreated for 400 years. In biblical Hebrew, ger refers to a non-native resident living among another people, often without full rights (e.g., land ownership), but entitled to protection. This reflects the Israelites' historical experience in Egypt, which motivates later commands to treat gerim kindly (e.g., Exodus 22:21; Leviticus 19:34). In the ancient Near East context, similar concepts of protected foreigners or resident aliens appear in texts like the Code of Hammurabi (protecting vulnerable groups) and Hittite instructions (providing for strangers), but the Hebrew Bible uniquely emphasizes the ger as a distinct category requiring equal legal treatment, provision, and love, often unparalleled in other ANE legal traditions. This etymology, as analyzed by 19th-century Hebrew lexicographer , reflects a nomadic or migratory connotation, distinguishing the ger from permanent natives by emphasizing impermanence and dependence on . In biblical contexts, ger appears over 90 times, often paired with qualifiers like "in your gates" to specify a foreigner integrated into Israelite without full tribal affiliation. In contrast, toshav stems from the root y-sh-b (י-ש-ב), meaning "to sit," "to dwell," or "to settle," implying a more established or seated presence in a location. This root appears frequently in Hebrew scriptures to denote inhabitants or dwellers, evolving in post-biblical usage to signify residency without inherent ownership or rights. Modern Hebrew retains toshav for "resident" in legal or civic senses, underscoring its association with fixed abode over mere passage. The juxtaposition in ger toshav thus forms an apparent —transient stranger versus settled inhabitant—highlighting the hybrid status of a who dwells semi-permanently among while retaining outsider identity. This linguistic construction first emerges explicitly in Leviticus 25:47, where it modifies ger to denote a resident alien in economic and social relations. The ger toshav (resident alien) is distinct from the ger tzedek (righteous convert), who undergoes formal , including ritual for males, immersion in a , and acceptance of the full 613 mitzvot as eternally binding obligations. In contrast, the ger toshav retains status, obligating adherence solely to the seven Noahide laws—prohibitions against , , , , sexual immorality, eating flesh from a living animal, and the mandate to establish courts—without adopting Jewish ritual practices such as observance or kosher dietary laws beyond Noahide limits. Biblical references to ger (stranger or sojourner) primarily denote a resident non-Israelite without implying full religious conversion, aligning more closely with the ger toshav concept of a protected resident who dwells among Israelites but maintains separate identity and customs. Rabbinic literature, however, bifurcates the term: the Torah's ger encompasses sojourners protected under laws like not oppressing the stranger (Exodus 22:20), whereas post-biblical ger tzedek specifies proselytes, and ger toshav refines the resident category to require explicit renunciation of idolatry before a Jewish court of three chaverim. This evolution clarifies that the biblical ger lacks the Talmudic ger toshav's formal oath, though both emphasize residency and ethical coexistence. Unlike the nochri (unrestricted foreigner or typical ), who faces broader halakhic restrictions such as liability for returning lost property or liability for , the ger toshav earns partial integration through Noahide commitment, gaining protections like aid from funds and exemption from certain prohibitions applicable to idolaters. The ger toshav also differs from a general Noahide (ben Noach), as the latter need not reside in the or submit to a Jewish court's authority, rendering the ger toshav status territorially and jurisdictionally specific. In the absence of a since antiquity, rules the formal ger toshav status inoperative today, though the conceptual distinctions persist in halakhic discourse.

Biblical and Talmudic Foundations

Torah References to the Ger

The Torah employs the term ger (גֵּר), typically rendered as "stranger," "sojourner," or "resident alien," in numerous contexts to describe non-Israelites dwelling among the , particularly in the , who are afforded specific protections and integrated into certain communal laws while retaining their distinct identity. This usage appears over 90 times across the Pentateuch, emphasizing ethical treatment rooted in Israel's historical experience of sojourning in , without explicitly delineating later rabbinic categories like ger tzedek (full convert) or ger toshav (resident alien accepting Noahide laws). Central commandments prohibit oppression of the ger and mandate equitable treatment. Exodus 22:20 states, "You shall not wrong a stranger or oppress him, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt," reiterated in Exodus 23:9 to underscore empathy derived from national memory. Leviticus 19:33-34 extends this to active benevolence: "When a stranger sojourns with you in your land, you shall not do him wrong. The stranger who sojourns with you shall be to you as one of your people, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt." Deuteronomy 24:17-18 and 24:14 further prohibit perverting justice for the ger or withholding wages, linking these duties to the Exodus narrative. The ger is also included in agricultural and festive provisions to ensure economic sustenance. Leviticus 19:9-10 and 23:22 command leaving gleanings, forgotten sheaves, and harvest corners for the ger, poor, and orphan, promoting communal welfare. Deuteronomy 16:11 and 16:14 require rejoicing with the ger during Shavuot and Sukkot festivals, integrating them into Israelite celebrations without full ritual status. Legal parity is mandated in select areas, signaling partial assimilation. Exodus 12:48-49 permits a ger to participate in Passover via circumcision, declaring "one law shall be to him that is homeborn, and unto the stranger who sojourns among you." Leviticus 24:22 and Numbers 15:15-16 affirm "one law" for the native and ger in blasphemy penalties and offerings, respectively, though exclusions apply to core covenantal rites like certain sacrifices. Deuteronomy 10:18-19 portrays God as executing justice for the ger, widow, and orphan, modeling divine precedent for human conduct. These references establish the ger as a protected yet distinct figure under Israelite , laying groundwork for post-biblical elaborations on residency conditions, though the itself does not condition status on explicit rejection of or oath to Noahide principles.

Distinction Between Ger Types

In Jewish , the term ger (stranger or sojourner) delineates distinct legal categories based on the individual's religious commitment and integration into the Jewish community, primarily the ger tzedek (righteous convert) and the ger toshav (resident stranger). The ger tzedek undergoes full conversion, entailing ritual immersion, for males, and acceptance of all 613 mitzvot (commandments) under rabbinic , thereby attaining complete Jewish status with inheritance rights, marital eligibility within the community, and full ritual obligations. This process transforms the individual from to Jew, as codified by in , where conversion equates to rebirth into the covenant. The ger toshav, by contrast, remains a gentile who pledges adherence solely to the seven Noahide laws—prohibitions against , , , , sexual immorality, , and failure to establish courts—typically under the auspices of or court during biblical eras, without circumcision or immersion required for full conversion. This status permits residence in the under Jewish sovereignty, granting protections like charity and judicial equity, but imposes restrictions such as ineligibility for priesthood, certain land ownership, and intermarriage, while obligating observance of kosher slaughter but not full dietary laws. Talmudic sources, such as 64b, debate the precise scope, with one view requiring acceptance of all commandments except neveilah (carcass consumption), though narrows it to the Noahide framework. A less formalized category, sometimes termed ger ur (raw or unconverted stranger), applies to gentiles dwelling among without explicit Noahide commitment, lacking the ger toshav's protections and facing potential expulsion or subjugation in wartime, as inferred from verses distinguishing by covenant adherence. These distinctions underscore halakha's emphasis on graded assimilation: full conversion for spiritual equality versus limited residency for ethical coexistence, with the ger toshav viable only in prophetic times per Rambam (Hilchot Melachim 10:10).

Talmudic Elaboration

The Talmud primarily elaborates the concept of the ger toshav in tractate Avodah Zarah 64b, where a baraita defines it as a non-Jew who accepts specific obligations in the presence of three ḥaverim (associates or scholars acting as a rudimentary court). Rabbi Meir holds that acceptance consists solely of committing not to engage in idolatry, while the Sages maintain it requires pledging to observe the seven Noahide commandments—prohibitions against idolatry, blasphemy, murder, illicit sexual relations, theft, eating flesh from a living animal, and the establishment of courts of justice. This dispute underscores the Talmud's extension of biblical residency protections to those aligning with universal moral laws, distinguishing the ger toshav from unrestricted idolaters (ovdei kokhavim) who face expulsion or harsher treatment during conquests or sabbatical years. The in Avodah Zarah further probes the practical implications, linking ger toshav status to ritual leniencies unavailable to full , such as permission to consume nevelah (carcasses not properly slaughtered) under the Sages' view, though certain unfit carcasses remain prohibited even for them. This reflects a broader Talmudic framework integrating the ger toshav into Jewish communal life while upholding separations from ; for instance, 65a reaffirms the acceptance process amid discussions of gentile festivals, emphasizing to ensure genuine of pagan practices. Elsewhere, tractates like 61a extend obligations such as providing charity and support to impoverished ger toshavim, equating their needs to those of Jewish poor in certain contexts, thereby elaborating biblical calls to sustain the resident stranger (ger). Talmudic texts also address distinctions from the ger tzedek (full convert), noting the ger toshav's incomplete assimilation—no or immersion required beyond Noahide adherence—and limitations like exclusion from certain sacrifices or Temple entry. These elaborations, rooted in post-biblical interpretive debates, condition the ger toshav's protections (e.g., against sale into or during ) on judicial oversight, effectively tying residency to ethical alignment under Jewish authority rather than mere territorial presence. The prevailing halakhic resolution favors the Sages' stringent view, as codified later, but the preserves the minority opinion to highlight interpretive tensions in applying laws to non-Jews.

Halakhic Requirements

Acceptance of Noahide Laws

A ger toshav, or resident alien, attains this status through formal acceptance of the seven Noahide laws, which constitute the core ethical and monotheistic obligations incumbent upon all humanity under Jewish halakhah. These laws encompass prohibitions against idolatry, blasphemy (cursing God), murder, illicit sexual relations (including adultery, incest, and bestiality), theft, and eating flesh torn from a living animal, alongside the positive commandment to establish courts of justice for societal governance. This acceptance serves to align the non-Jew with fundamental Torah principles, distinguishing the ger toshav from idolaters or uncommitted foreigners and enabling protected residency in the Land of Israel during biblical and talmudic eras. The process demands a verbal oath before a beit din (rabbinical court) comprising at least three observant Jewish men of authority, wherein the individual affirms adherence to these laws not merely as rational ethics but as divinely ordained commandments revealed at Sinai. codifies this in , defining the ger toshav as "one who has accepted the seven commandments upon himself," emphasizing their transmission through Mosaic authority to ensure rejection of pagan practices and commitment to . Talmudic sources, such as 64b, elaborate that mere renunciation of idolatry suffices in some views for basic residency, but the prevailing halakhic consensus, as articulated by medieval authorities like , requires affirmation of all seven to confer full ger toshav protections, including eligibility for sustenance from the tithe for the poor and exemption from expulsion during the Sabbatical year. Rabbinic debate centers on the stringency of this acceptance: while interprets it primarily as desisting from idolatry to avoid ritual impurity, and subsequent decisors extend it to all Noahide prohibitions, viewing partial observance as insufficient for communal integration. This formal undertaking underscores causal realism in halakhah, linking ethical compliance to societal stability and divine covenant, thereby permitting economic interactions like produce consumption while barring items like the ger toshav's wine due to lingering idolatrous associations. In practice, the absence of a reconstituted since antiquity renders new acceptances halakhically unfeasible according to many authorities, confining ger toshav status to historical contexts unless rabbinic courts adapt the requirement to declarative intent alone.

Necessity of Oath and Authority

The designation of ger toshav necessitates a formal acceptance (kabbalah) of the seven Noahide laws before a rabbinic court (beit din), comprising at least three observant Jewish men qualified to render halakhic decisions. This procedure distinguishes the ger toshav from a righteous (chasid umot ha'olam) who observes the laws independently without such validation, as the formal endorsement by authority confers specific legal protections and obligations under Jewish law, including exemption from obligatory wars against non-idolaters and eligibility for certain forms of charity in the . Maimonides codifies this requirement in Mishneh Torah, stating that a gentile who accepts the Noahide laws "in a place where a court administers them to him" attains the status of ger toshav universally, implying a supervised verbal commitment akin to an oath of fidelity to these commandments. Talmudic sources, such as Avodah Zarah 64b, elaborate that the acceptance occurs before "three chaverim" (associates or lay scholars), underscoring the need for witnessed affirmation to bind the individual and enable communal recognition of their status. This oath-like process ensures the gentile's renunciation of idolatry and commitment to ethical monotheism, preventing opportunistic declarations without accountability. The authority of the beit din derives from its role in authenticating the acceptance, as post-Temple rabbinic consensus holds that without oversight—available only in eras of prophetic or authority—the status may still be conferred by qualified local courts, per ' allowance for three observers. Disputes exist among medieval authorities; for instance, ( 64b) restrict full ger toshav status to years under the Great , limiting it otherwise to basic Noahide observance without the titular protections. Nonetheless, the formal before authority remains essential for invoking halakhic privileges, such as the prohibition against oppressing the ger toshav (, Hilchot Melachim 10:12).

Residence in the Land of Israel

The status of ger toshav is defined by halakhic authorities as applying specifically to non-Jews who establish residence within the territorial boundaries of Eretz Yisrael and formally accept the seven Noahide laws—prohibitions against idolatry, blasphemy, murder, theft, sexual immorality, eating the limb of a living animal, and the obligation to establish courts of justice—before a Jewish court or prophetic authority. The term toshav, denoting a "resident" or "sojourner," etymologically and contextually ties the designation to physical dwelling in the Land, where the gentile comes under Jewish communal oversight and gains protections unavailable to non-residents. Maimonides specifies in Mishneh Torah (Hilchot Avodat Kokhavim 10:6) that such acceptance as a ger toshav is valid only during periods when the year (yovel) is in effect, a condition linked to Jewish sovereignty and the Sanhedrin's operation in , thereby reinforcing the residency requirement as integral to the framework of biblical land laws (Leviticus 25). Outside Eretz Yisrael, a non-Jew observing the Noahide laws merits the title of chasid umot ha'olam (righteous ) with eschatological reward (Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Melachim 8:11), but lacks the ger toshav's exemptions from expulsion (lo tenagenu, Deuteronomy 7:2 interpreted restrictively) and entitlements to sustenance from communal charity ( 61a). Talmudic sources, such as Avodah Zarah 64b, elaborate that the ger toshav's residency enables enforcement of Noahide compliance through Jewish courts, distinguishing it from transient visitors or idolaters, whom the Torah prohibits settling permanently in the Land to preserve monotheistic integrity (Exodus 23:32–33). This residency-based status historically allowed vetted non-Jews to own property indirectly, engage in trade, and receive welfare (tzedakah) equivalent to poor Jews (Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Matnot Aniyim 7:7, cross-referenced), but revoked privileges upon relocation or violation, such as reverting to idolatry. In the absence of Jubilee observance since the Second Temple's destruction (circa 70 CE), rules no formal ger toshav acceptance occurs today, rendering the status inoperative despite ongoing non-Jewish residency in ; nonetheless, the classical model informs rabbinic discussions on under Jewish rule.

Rights and Obligations

Protections Under Jewish Law

Jewish law provides the ger toshav with robust protections against harm, exploitation, and injustice, reflecting the Torah's repeated injunctions against oppressing the resident stranger (Exodus 22:20; Leviticus 19:33). These safeguards extend to physical safety, where murder of a ger toshav is treated as a capital offense, akin to the killing of a Jew, since the ger toshav upholds the Noahide laws prohibiting bloodshed. Judicial protections ensure the ger toshav receives fair adjudication in Jewish courts for civil disputes, whether against or other ger toshav. codifies that courts must hear claims involving a ger toshav, applying law to resolve monetary or verbal wrongs, distinguishing them from unprotected idolaters. The Talmud in 64b defines the ger toshav as one who accepts core Noahide prohibitions before a rabbinic , thereby gaining this and community oversight to prevent or expulsion. Economically, Jews are forbidden from robbing, defrauding, or deceiving the ger toshav in transactions, with such acts incurring the same penalties as against coreligionists. The ger toshav also benefits from communal welfare, including access to poor tithes, gleanings (Leviticus 19:9-10), and sustenance if indigent, as an extension of the duty to support resident aliens for the sake of peace (Leviticus 25:35; Gittin 61a). These measures affirm the ger toshav's status as a protected minority, integrated yet distinct, under the sovereign Jewish authority.

Limitations and Prohibitions

The ger toshav, defined in halakhic sources as a non-Jew who formally accepts the seven Noahide laws before a Jewish court, is granted residence in the but remains subject to restrictions distinguishing their status from that of or full converts (ger tzedek). These limitations preserve the covenantal boundaries of Jewish and ritual sanctity, as articulated in ' Mishneh Torah. For instance, a ger toshav is prohibited from studying the beyond the specific commandments of the Noahide code, with ruling that any engaging in broader incurs the death penalty, as the constitutes "our " exclusively (Hilchot Melachim uMilchamot 10:9). This restriction underscores the non-universal applicability of Jewish law to non-converts, even those integrated into the community. Marriage between a ger toshav and a Jew is strictly forbidden under Jewish law, as the ger toshav has not undergone the full conversion process involving circumcision (for males), immersion, and acceptance of all 613 commandments. Rabbinic authorities maintain that intermarriage with a ger toshav violates the biblical prohibition against mixing seed or peoples, retaining the ger toshav's non-Jewish status despite their observance of Noahide obligations. Similarly, the ger toshav is excluded from consuming sacred foods reserved for Jews, including terumah, ma'aser sheni, and portions of sacrificial offerings; Maimonides specifies that any Jew providing such items to a ger toshav receives lashes for violating this boundary (Hilchot Melachim uMilchamot 10:7-8). Property rights for the ger toshav are limited to temporary leases or usufruct rather than perpetual ownership of land in Israel, reflecting the Jubilee year's reversion of tribal allotments to original Israelite inheritors (Leviticus 25:23-28). Halakhic texts prohibit transferring heritable land titles to non-Jews, including ger toshav, to prevent dilution of Jewish national holdings; sales to them function as rentals expiring at Jubilee, ensuring land remains under Israelite control. Non-Jews, including ger toshav, are also barred from the Temple's inner courts and certain ritual acts, such as offering korbanot on the altar, per biblical demarcations of holiness (Numbers 18:7). These prohibitions apply even in the ger toshav's protected status, as their acceptance binds them solely to Noahide laws without extending ritual privileges. In the post-Temple era, absent a reconstituted and observance of cycles, formal acceptance of new ger toshav is inoperative, though some authorities extend partial protections to non-idolatrous gentiles observing Noahide principles (Hilchot Avodat Kochavim 10:10). This temporal limitation curtails broader application, emphasizing the conditional nature of the status tied to Israel's sovereign halakhic framework.

Economic and Social Integration

The ger toshav was permitted to engage in economic activities such as , , and ownership within Jewish communities in the , provided adherence to the seven Noahide laws and avoidance of . This integration facilitated their self-sufficiency, though transactions with were governed by halakhic restrictions, including limits on interest-bearing loans extended solely for the lender's basic livelihood rather than profit. During economic hardship, the ger toshav received sustenance from Jewish charitable obligations, including the ma'aser ani (tithes for the poor), positioning them equivalently to destitute for welfare support. Socially, the ger toshav resided among Jews as protected residents, entitled to judicial recourse in Jewish courts for violations of Noahide laws and shielded from oppression or theft, reflecting biblical mandates to "love the stranger" extended to compliant non-Jews. Maimonides codified that Jews must provide for their needs, treat them with kindness, and afford respect comparable to that given to impoverished Israelites, fostering coexistence without full assimilation. However, their status remained distinct: intermarriage with Jews was strictly prohibited, religious participation limited to non-sacred rites, and they could not inherit or hold positions requiring Jewish lineage, preserving communal boundaries while enabling practical integration. This framework balanced hospitality with preservation of Jewish identity, applicable primarily during eras of Jubilee observance when such acceptance was halakhically viable.

Historical Practice

Biblical and Second Temple Periods

In the Biblical period, the Torah designates the ger as a resident alien or sojourner, referring to non-Israelites who settled permanently among the Israelite population, often as laborers or dependents on Israelite patrons. These individuals were distinguished from temporary foreigners (zarim or nokhrim), who were not bound by ritual laws and maintained greater separation. The ger was required to uphold core Israelite laws, including Sabbath observance (Exodus 20:10), participation in festivals (Deuteronomy 16:11,14), ritual purity (Numbers 19:2–10), and circumcision to partake in the Passover sacrifice (Exodus 12:48–49). Dietary prohibitions extended to the ger, such as abstaining from blood (Leviticus 17:10–16) and nevelah (unslaughtered meat; Deuteronomy 14:21). Loyalty to YHWH was mandatory, with idolatry punishable by death (Leviticus 20:2). Protections for the ger emphasized equitable treatment, mandating one law for both native-born and resident alien in judicial matters (Numbers 15:15–16; Leviticus 24:22). Israelites were repeatedly commanded not to oppress or wrong the ger, citing their own experience as strangers in Egypt (Exodus 22:20; 23:9; Leviticus 19:33–34; Deuteronomy 10:19). Economic rights included access to gleanings from harvests (Leviticus 19:9–10; 23:22), tithes (Deuteronomy 14:28–29; 26:12), and sabbatical-year produce (Leviticus 25:6), alongside eligibility for cities of refuge (Numbers 35:15). The ger could offer sacrifices if adhering to purity laws (Numbers 15:14), reflecting partial integration while retaining foreign status. The formalized rabbinic category of ger toshav—a non-Jew accepting Noahide laws under Jewish —builds on this biblical framework but lacks explicit attestation in the , where ger denotes a sojourner under Israelite without full conversion. During the Second Temple period (c. 516 BCE–70 CE), resident gentiles persisted in , with biblical precedents informing their status amid Persian, Hellenistic, and Roman rule. The term ger increasingly overlapped with proselytes, as records strangers being admitted to Jewish religious fellowship and cultic participation. However, direct historical evidence for the ger toshav as a distinct legal-political , requiring acceptance before a prophetic or court, remains sparse; scholars note limited implementation beyond informal residency, with formalization emerging more prominently in post-Temple rabbinic texts. The destruction of the Temple in 70 CE rendered the status practically obsolete, as it presupposed a sovereign Jewish court absent in the .

Post-Temple Developments

Following the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, the formal status of ger toshav could no longer be conferred, as its acceptance required adjudication by a during an era of observance, conditions absent since the Babylonian exile after the First Temple's fall in 586 BCE. codified this in his , stating that "a ger toshav may be accepted only in the era when the laws of the Year are observed," and in the absence thereof—as prevailed post-Temple—no such acceptance occurs, rendering the institution inoperative. This shift reflected the loss of Jewish sovereignty in the and the dissolution of the , which had authority over formal oaths and protections tied to the status. Rabbinic literature from the Talmudic period (circa 200–500 CE) preserved theoretical discussions of ger toshav laws, distinguishing them from full converts (ger tzedek) and outlining obligations like refraining from idolatry while residing among Jews. For instance, the Babylonian Talmud in tractate Avodah Zarah defines a ger toshav as a non-Jew who accepts the seven Noahide commandments, particularly prohibiting idol worship, yet these rulings emphasized hypothetical applications rather than practical conferral, given the exile and foreign rule. Similarly, protections against wronging such residents—rooted in biblical mandates—extended broadly to non-idolatrous gentiles, but without the specific ger toshav designation conferring economic aid or judicial autonomy. Under subsequent dispersions and minority status in diaspora communities, the category remained dormant, with halakhic focus shifting to universal Noahide ethics applicable to all righteous gentiles, independent of residency in . further clarified in Hilchot Issurei Biah that while a ger toshav commits to Noahide laws excluding blood consumption from living animals, the absence of Temple-era mechanisms precluded any operative distinction from general non-Jews observing these precepts. This evolution underscored a transition from a land-specific to broader ethical imperatives, sustained in theory but not in practice until potential messianic restoration.

Modern Interpretations

Traditional Orthodox Views

In traditional Orthodox halakhic sources, the ger toshav is defined as a who accepts upon himself the seven Noahide commandments before a rabbinic court of three judges and resides in the under Jewish sovereignty. This acceptance grants the individual certain protections, such as exemption from being sold into slavery and the right to remain in the land without forced expulsion during conquests, provided they abstain from and adhere to the universal moral laws. codifies this status in the , specifying that the ger toshav commits to refraining from idol worship and upholding the other Noahide precepts, distinguishing it from a full convert (ger tzedek) who immerses and circumcises to join the Jewish people. The formal establishment of ger toshav status requires observation of the Jubilee (yovel) cycle, which presupposes the ingathering of all Jewish tribes, a functioning , and prophetic authority to enforce land laws. In eras without yovel, such as the present, rules that courts accept only a partial commitment from gentiles—abstention from —without conferring the full legal designation of ger toshav, thereby limiting associated privileges like perpetual residency or immunity in obligatory wars. The Shulchan Aruch aligns with this framework, defining the ger toshav as one who pledges the seven mitzvot but applying it conditionally within the same historical constraints. Orthodox authorities emphasize that without a Sanhedrin, contemporary non-Jews in cannot achieve ger toshav status, though those observing Noahide laws qualify as righteous gentiles entitled to spiritual reward in . This view underscores a distinction between ethical and halakhic-legal integration, prohibiting land sales to such individuals on equal terms with and barring them from judicial or priestly roles to preserve national sovereignty. Traditional poskim like the critique narrower definitions (e.g., ' exclusion of certain dietary abstentions), advocating broader acceptance of all Noahide laws except ritual impurity rules, yet concur on the inapplicability amid exile-like conditions. Thus, Orthodox thought prioritizes full conversion for deeper assimilation, viewing ger toshav as a provisional biblical category tied to messianic restoration rather than current demographic realities.

Contemporary Proposals and Debates

In recent decades, Jewish thinkers have debated the revival of the ger toshav status amid Israel's diverse population, including Arab citizens, , and foreign workers, proposing it as a framework for non-Jews who accept Noahide laws and Jewish sovereignty without pursuing full conversion. Rabbi David Novak, a Conservative scholar, has advocated reinstating the category to address the "conversion crisis" and enable ethical integration of gentiles in the , arguing it aligns with talmudic precedents for resident aliens who renounce and observe minimal ethical norms in exchange for residence rights. Similarly, in Orthodox circles, Rabbi Eliezer Melamed of Yeshivat Har Bracha outlined in 2018 how the ger toshav could morally guide treatment of non-hostile minorities, citing Chief Rabbi Isaac Herzog's 1948 assessment that observing Noahide laws qualify if they acknowledge Jewish rule, as echoed in ' commentary allowing protections for such residents. Obstacles to persist, rooted in halakhic requirements for formal before a beit din and the absence of a reconstituted or year, rendering the status inoperative since antiquity per authorities like Rambam, Ritva, and Netziv. Proponents counter that darchei (paths of peace) and avoiding chilul (desecration of God's name) compel humane policies, such as recognizing Druze loyalty—evidenced by their military service—as de facto ger toshav fulfillment, while international norms and Israel's geopolitical dependencies preclude mass expulsion of non-idolatrous residents. Some political theologians have speculated on extending the status to , potentially granting land purchase rights, though this remains theoretical and contested amid demographic concerns. In diaspora communities, particularly among non-Orthodox Jews facing high intermarriage rates—71% of non-Orthodox prioritizing personal relationships over per 2013 Pew data—innovative adaptations have emerged, such as Amichai Lau-Lavie's 2017 "Joy Proposal," which reclaims ger toshav for non-Jewish spouses embracing Jewish practices, enabling Conservative rabbis to officiate unions after a preparatory period. This approach draws on historical models like yirei (God-fearers) but explicitly acknowledges classical prohibitions against Jewish-ger toshav and the status's dormancy, framing it as a flexible ethic rather than binding . Orthodox responses, however, reject such expansions, insisting on conversion for marital eligibility and viewing ger toshav as irrelevant to modern or without prophetic restoration. Debates underscore tensions between inclusivity and Jewish continuity: revivalists argue it fosters causal realism in multicultural by incentivizing Noahide adherence—potentially via policies tying benefits to service—while critics, including haredi and Religious Zionist authorities, contend it risks diluting without enforceable limitations on non-Jew rights, as seen in unaddressed cases of 350,000–400,000 non-halakhically Jewish . Empirical challenges, like verifying Noahide observance amid , further complicate application, with proposals often prioritizing moral aspirations over legal enforceability.

Connection to Noahide Movement

The ger toshav status in Jewish law requires acceptance of Noahide laws—prohibitions against , , , theft, sexual immorality, eating flesh from a living animal, and the obligation to establish courts of justice—as a condition for a non-Jew to reside peacefully in the and receive protections such as exemption from certain tithes and the right to rest. This acceptance, formalized before a rabbinic court or equivalent authority in biblical and Talmudic eras, aligned the resident alien's conduct with universal moral imperatives derived from Genesis 9, ensuring societal harmony without necessitating full . In contemporary contexts, the Noahide Movement, which gained prominence through rabbinic outreach efforts in the late 20th century, promotes voluntary adherence to these same seven laws among non-Jews worldwide, often framing it as a path to righteousness for Gentiles without geographic restriction to . Proponents, including organizations like AskNoah International, view modern Noahides as spiritual successors to the ger toshav, emphasizing shared observance of the laws while noting the absence of a functioning precludes formal ger toshav designation today; , for instance, ruled that such status lapsed without prophetic or Jubilee-era institutions. This parallel fosters , with events such as the 2018 Noahide vow ceremony on the explicitly invoking ger toshav precedents to symbolize non-Jewish allegiance to biblical covenants. Rabbinic interpretations vary on the movement's alignment with traditional ger toshav requirements: Orthodox authorities like those in the affirm the laws' universality but caution that informal Noahide commitment lacks the binding force or privileges of historical ger toshav acceptance, which demanded public renunciation of before witnesses. Critics within traditional circles argue the movement risks diluting distinctions between and non-Jews by encouraging selective rabbinic commandments beyond laws, though supporters counter that it upholds causal realism in by grounding non-Jewish in Torah-derived principles without . Empirical data from Noahide communities, estimated in the thousands globally by 2020, indicate growing adoption, particularly in the U.S. and , yet halakhic consensus holds that full ger toshav protections remain inapplicable absent restored Temple-era .

References

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