4

If I get a personal psak from "my" rabbi, then hear something--let's say from a dayan who is advising me on a different, but related matter--to indicate that "my" rabbi's psak was somehow flawed, what am I obligated to do? Must I return to "my" rabbi with the information I heard from the dayan? Must I seek a new psak from someone else? (Whom?) Or may I be willfully ignorant of the additional information because it was not offered in the context of a formal teshuva to the original shaylo I asked my rabbi?

Would the answer differ depending on whether the dayan's information made things stricter or more lenient?

SAH
  • 19,756
  • 4
  • 56
  • 165
  • Highly related: http://judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/1832/asking-another-rabbi – Yishai Nov 21 '16 at 22:58
  • You would go present the information that you were given to your Rabbi and ask if this makes a difference. However, unless he says that this "new" information makes a difference you would stay with his psak. – sabbahillel Nov 21 '16 at 23:13
  • @sabbahillel is this an halachic obligation or just "best practice"? – SAH Nov 21 '16 at 23:47
  • It may depend on what you mean by 'flawed'. If you mean that the 2nd Rav simply rules differently in a matter that is not universally agreed upon by Rabbonim, the answer to your question may be different than if you mean that the first Rabbi actually made an objective mistake. You might want to clarify this point in the question. – Jay Nov 21 '16 at 23:52
  • It is important to note a major distinction between two kinds of rabbinic guidance. A) Just the facts ma'am. B) A dynamic pesak. | In the former, the rabbi is just telling you what it says in some source. E.g. this is what it says in sefer ___. In the latter, the rabbi is independently coming to a conclusion, specifically regarding your case at hand. R. Moshe Feinstein was of the opinion, that the former does not have the associated rules governing pesak. | Accordingly, presumably, in our case, there would be no justification to rely on the first one, if his ruling was in category A. – mevaqesh Nov 22 '16 at 01:07
  • @mevaqesh Thanks. I think I'm talking about a situation where the first piece of guidance on some matter was in category B and the second was in category A (even though the latter was attendant to a category B in a different matter.) – SAH Nov 22 '16 at 02:15
  • @Jay I don't know which it was. When I told the 2nd rav about the first's psak, that the 2nd rav seemed to think there should be an additional stipulation in addition to those the 1st rav told me. But then again, he didn't hear the full details of that shailo. – SAH Nov 22 '16 at 02:17
  • This is a situation where the person being a rabbi, with a heter hora'ah, matters. And where the tire hits the road on the question of ordaining women. If the person does not have a heter hora'ah, you got bad advice, and it's like any other aveirah be'oneis (through error or compulsion). If they were an actual rabbi, the teshuvah -- including any qorbanos when possible -- would be his problem. – Micha Berger Nov 22 '16 at 17:33
  • @MichaBerger Why do you suppose that either of the people I asked does not have a heter hora'ah? Separately, does your last sentence imply that I don't need to follow up with the original rabbi? – SAH Nov 23 '16 at 03:52
  • @SAH: I am commenting about the question, not a particular case. I don't know if you need to follow up with the rabbi. It might depend on how egregious the error, if this rabbi would be too embarrassed to admit error, etc... And when you get that info, how are you to know whether he is following a unique opinion or one that is too idiosyncratic to be considered viable? There is a reason why I wrote a comment and not an answer -- I only wanted to give one issue to consider. – Micha Berger Nov 23 '16 at 15:55
  • @MichaBerger If only my question were so simple. ؟ – SAH Nov 23 '16 at 22:26
  • 1
    @SAH...if you feel like going over the issue with someone privately, feel free sending an e-mail to me at davidariel25@gmail.com. I would be humbly honored if I can be of help. :) – David Kenner Nov 24 '16 at 07:51
  • Related: https://judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/32146/if-your-rabbi-accidentally-tells-you-that-something-is-allowed-and-you-follow-h – SAH Jun 26 '17 at 16:55

1 Answers1

4

1) First you should approach a knowledgable Jew who is also someone you can trust enough to shmooze it over with.

This step is not asking for an actual "psak halachah" from a 2nd Rav. This is simply you getting an education on the Torah matter. Yes, you should not pretend ignorance when other information comes up. Rather, you should investigate it.

It is important here to mention a point. In general, No Jew "MUST" ask a Rabbi something. You are supposed to know the Torah yourself. You only ask a Rabbi when you have a doubt.(Devarim 17:8 "If a matter of judgment be hidden from you...") Therefore, nothing stops you from learning Torah! So, go ask 10 people their opinion. Only, do not ask it as a request from a Rav for a psak. You may ask a Rav (or many) for a theoretical opinion, without being bound. (Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach)

Also, did you in fact intend to go to the first Rabbi for a real psak? Did you ask with intent that his decision be legally binding upon you? Did the Rabbi understand that this was what you were doing as well and issue a psak in his intention? OR was it understood that the conversation was initially about serious advice and did not take the form of a formal psak Halachah? If the latter, then you are not bound at all.

2) Three Possibilities

Decide, (once you have fully understood the new info from the conversation with the Dayan, and how it applies to your situation) if your 1st Rabbi:

A) made an error that violates halachah, or goes against the "overwhelming" majority or mainstream accepted practice. OR his decision was based on a wrong presentation of the facts.

B) He didn't make an outright error, but you now believe strongly that you can present the case in a way that the 1st Rabbi will admit the whole thing should be reversed. OR you found enough mainstream opinions that say against him and you feel he will change his mind due to those opinions.

C) It is a question of basically equal balance and your Rabbi's opinion is perfectly valid, even if there are other conflicting opinions.

3) Three Outcomes

If it is A, then you should disregard the 1st Rabbi's decision.(or at least you have the right to disregard) It is invalid. You should still respect him, and may even ask him questions in the future. After all, we are all human. :) (Tosfos to Avodah Zara, 7a; Bechoros 28b)

If it is B, then you may bring the case back to him and ask him to re-examine the question in light of the new information. He is allowed to change his mind. (Shach to Yoreh Deah 242:58; Rosh Sanhedrin 4:6) Some say he may retract even if he doesn't believe he is proven to be in the wrong.(Levush 242:31, Aruch HaShulchan 242:60)

If it is C, then his decision stands. Some authorities rule that even if he changes his mind, it has no effect.(Shach) Others rule that you may ask him to change his mind and he may do so.(Levush, Aruch HaShulchan)

Of course, if you discover that the 1st Rabbi was right all along, then this whole question is moot. :)

However, in the first place, one should generally never approach a Rav for a psak. Rather, ask him to teach you Torah, give you "eytzah" advice, talk in learning, share his opinion on the subject, etc.

If and when you are freely ready to give up your will and want to accept his opinion as obligation, because you don't know the answer yourself and have no choice, then and only then, ask for a real Halachic psak. Then it is binding. Otherwise it is not; and all of the above wouldn't matter.

If you already asked for a psak, you are anyway only obligated to follow it for a one time event.(Rema 242:31) Example: If he forbids you to make ice cubes on Shabbos, then you can't make them this Shabbos. Next week you can ask another Rabbi. OR go learn the issue and pick a path for yourself. :)

If you did accept a psak, from a Rabbi, then there are two possible reasons why you must now listen to the psak. A) Asking a second Rabbi would be an insult to the honor of the first Rabbi (and by extension dishonoring the Halachic system).(Ran, Rosh) OR B) Once you knowingly ask a Rav for a psak, it is as if you vowed to forbid the object the Rabbi forbids, upon your own soul. "Shavya A'nafshey C'chatichah D'issurah". (Raavad, Ramban, Rashba, Shach, Gra)

So, if the psak was stringent, and now you seek to have a second Rabbi be lenient, then the self imposed vow applies. The second Rabbi cannot reverse it. But if the psak was lenient and now you want to ask a second Rabbi to be strict, its fine.

(BTW, according to this, if a psak is neither lenient nor stringent (ex: Do you need to repeat Shmoneh Esrei?) then the reasoning doesn't apply, and you may ask another Rabbi too.) Finding out if your question is stringent or lenient can be quite a trick. :) Multiple and equal stringencies and leniencies in the same question usually cancel out so that the question is considered neither stringent nor lenient.

But, if we are worried for the honor of the 1st Rabbi, then it doesn't matter if he was strict or lenient. A second Rabbi may not reverse it either way.

Some are worried for both opinions. (Rosh, Rema)

Either way, if you do ask a second Rabbi for a psak, you must explain to him that you already asked the first Rabbi and you are seeking his help to convince the first Rabbi to retract. (Tosfos to Avodah Zara, 7a)

I hope this helps. :)

David Kenner
  • 10,768
  • 19
  • 33
  • It is certainly a good idea to have a Rav that one goes to for Halachah and life guidance as Pirkei Avos says "Aseh lecho Rav". It is still a balancing act in life to know when to decide on your own and when to bring everything to your Rav. – David Kenner Nov 24 '16 at 15:31
  • "goes against the majority or mainstream accepted practice ... then you should disregard the 1st Rabbi's decision. It is invalid." This is wrong, invalid, and should be disregarded. Rabbis worth their salt can rule like minority opinions and their rulings are binding. Just because one opinion is more common doesn't make it the only valid opinion. Even if 99% of people practice one way, the other way is still a valid ruling if that's how the Posek feels. – Double AA Nov 24 '16 at 16:44
  • I changed it to "overwhelming", thanks. There certainly comes a point where a second Rav, upon hearing that a first Rav's psak is way out of the norm in his opinion, will simply tell the person that it is an error. The exact parameters of how much is considered an error, is way beyond the scope of this post, especially without specific cases in the OP. – David Kenner Nov 24 '16 at 16:58
  • I'm not sure "overwhelming" is sufficient, and indeed second Ravs are often too quick to call opinions which aren't theirs errors. Pesak is a powerful tool which can bind you to most any opinion; something is only an error if it's really a mistake. If a Rav couldn't go against the mainstream, we'd never have so many opinions out there. Sometimes a Rav must (halachically obligated to) go with his gut. – Double AA Nov 24 '16 at 16:59
  • I hear you. I (and you probably) have seen cases where Rabbis will disqualify other Rabbis rulings because it is considered too x or too much daas yachid. If they never did that, wouldn't the world be free of machlokes? :) Here however, the question is if the asker knew the Rav was so far out, would they agree to shavyah nafshei (or is the Rav's honor issue strong enough?). It is not simply if a Rav may hold a daas yachid. Rather, is the asker bound? – David Kenner Nov 24 '16 at 17:05
  • @DavidKenner Wow! This is fantastic! I am speechless and oh-so-grateful. ...I'm quite tempted to describe my (hypothetical...) specific situation a bit more and ask your help characterizing it according to the frameworks you describe. Would you mind? – SAH Nov 27 '16 at 10:23
  • It would be an honor and a pleasure to help IY"H. Davidariel25@gmail.com – David Kenner Nov 27 '16 at 10:32