Troubling Texts or Troubling Troubles with Texts?

Pinchas Hayman was ordained at Yeshiva University and earned a PhD in Talmudics from the Revel Graduate School. Rabbi Dr. Hayman taught and conducted research at Bar-Ilan University’s departments of Talmud and Education, directed The Lookstein Center from 1994-1997, and is the founder and developer of the free-for-use www.talmudormeir.com website for the study of Talmud.
In the study of Biblical or Rabbinic texts, there are many cases of alternate versions in manuscripts. When variant readings are examined, one often may discern difficult readings (that is, readings which are unexpected or inconsistent with expected linguistic criteria) and more intelligible readings (that is, readings that are more contextual or more consistent with expected linguistic criteria). For instance, in Bereshit 22:13, we read:
וַיִּשָּׂ֨א אַבְרָהָ֜ם אֶת־עֵינָ֗יו וַיַּרְא֙ וְהִנֵּה־אַ֔יִל אַחַ֕ר נֶאֱחַ֥ז בַּסְּבַ֖ךְ בְּקַרְנָ֑יו
וַיֵּ֤לֶךְ אַבְרָהָם֙ וַיִּקַּ֣ח אֶת־הָאַ֔יִל וַיַּעֲלֵ֥הוּ לְעֹלָ֖ה תַּ֥חַת בְּנֽוֹ.
The word “אחר,” although well established as the authorized Masoretic reading, is unclear and inconsistent with the meaning of the verse. Other manuscripts, such as the Septuagint, read κριὸς εἷς = איל אחד, not איל אחר, and this reading is far more consistent with the simple meaning of the verse—Avraham saw a ram! What does the word אחר add as a modifier? What do we do? The guiding principle in such cases is the Latin statement: lectio difficilior, melior est, the more difficult reading is the better one. The logic behind this principle is that scribes would often change difficult readings into simpler ones, but they would never change simple readings into more difficult ones. Thus, the more difficult reading אחר is preferred as the original, and the challenge before us is to understand its meaning.
I propose that in a similar way, when there is an apparent conflict of values between Biblical or Rabbinic texts and student values, the more pointed and painful the conflict, the better. It is precisely the conflict—or the perception of a conflict—that points the way to value-clarification for teacher and student, and aids in the fulfillment of the overarching goal of Jewish identity clarification for students. It is the job of the teacher to help students understand clearly the apparent conflict in values and realize what can be learned from the conflict.
Example 1: Definitive or Pluralistic Faith
Since the Rambam’s summary of definitive, traditional Jewish faith, Jews throughout the ages and throughout the world have lived and died according to his Thirteen Principles. The nature of the Jewish belief in God, the principles of free choice and reward and punishment, and final redemption of the world and the world to come, all became touchstones of Jewish identity and Jewish values. Various movements attempted other definitions of one principle or the other, but such movements have faded into the footnotes of Jewish history. In modern times, Western faith and values either consecrate alternatives which are rooted in pagan conceptions of divinity or sanctify the absence of principles which limit individual choice or freedom in any way. Western society insists that all principles of faith and values are nothing more than personal narratives. No personal narrative carries objective truth and value, and all narratives are equally respectable and accepted.
When a teacher teaches passages from Shemot or Devarim which insist on faith in a single, eternal, non-corporeal but manifest God, they are, in effect, teaching rejection of Western faiths and the Western narratives approach. Conflict may arise in class: how can the Torah teach us that only one way is correct when “we know” that all narratives are equally respectable? The conflict is itself its own resolution: we do not belong to Western culture, we do not accept the Western “narratives” approach, and we assert the beliefs our forebears have passed on to us. A teacher dare not be equivocal or hesitant in the clarification and explanation of this conflict, as it is central to Jewish identity development.
Example 2: Conquest of the Land of Israel
Traditional Judaism places the Land of Israel in a central position. More than two-thirds of all mitzvot can only be observed in the Land of Israel, and some major Jewish scholars have gone so far as to say that keeping mitzvot in the diaspora is merely educational practice until we return to the Land. Conquest of the Land of Israel was the purpose of the exodus from Egypt, and the context for the Torah given at Sinai. There is no authentic halakhic system without the Land of Israel.
When a teacher teaches passages from Bemidbar or Devarim that stress the conquest of the Land of Israel, or the book of Yehoshua, which graphically describes the conquest and displacement of the peoples resident in Israel at the time, students may object and claim that this contradicts the rights of the residents of the Land. By what right does the People of Israel conquer and displace residents of the Land of Canaan in order to form their own national Torah culture? Here again, the conflict is itself its own resolution: we do not belong to Western culture; we do not accept the Western narratives approach—God’s command to conquer and displace the peoples of Canaan was for the purpose of establishing a national Torah culture. Teachers who feel uncomfortable with this, and do not feel confident responding with clarity and confidence to the conflict of values, best not speak of ”troubling texts” but rather of their own “troubling troubles” with the texts.
Proper teacher preparation for instruction of Biblical or Rabbinic texts should include the following steps:
- After careful, accurate understanding of the text and its simple meaning, clarify what faith or life value is reflected in the text.
- Ask: How embedded is this value in Jewish tradition? Is it reflected in both Torah Shebikhtav and Torah Shebe’al Peh, and in traditional Jewish halakhah or custom?
- Ask: what exactly is it in this value that conflicts with prevailing student values, attitudes or opinions?
- Ask: what is the source of the prevailing student values, attitudes, or opinions—Jewish culture or non-Jewish culture? What impact do the non-Jewish values have on the future of the students as Jews?
- What strategies may be employed in the classroom to clearly place the Jewish value opposite the non-Jewish value and challenge students to examine their own identities and loyalties as a result?
There are no troubling texts, only troubling temptations and inclinations to surrender to non-Jewish identity and values in Jewish schools, rendering the texts conflicting with prevailing assimilation. Through the conflict arising between the values of Jewish texts and values of assimilation, the solution is clear: back to the basics of Jewish faith and practice, back to Jewish values, and back to active and intentional teaching of Jewish values from Jewish texts by Jewish teachers to Jewish students.

Pinchas Hayman was ordained at Yeshiva University and earned a PhD in Talmudics from the Revel Graduate School. Rabbi Dr. Hayman taught and conducted research at Bar-Ilan University’s departments of Talmud and Education, directed The Lookstein Center from 1994-1997, and is the founder and developer of the free-for-use www.talmudormeir.com website for the study of Talmud.
From The Editor: Fall 2025
The year was 1982. I was studying in Jerusalem for the year and my roommate invited me to join him on one of his visits to an elderly recent immigrant from the Soviet Union now living in an absorption center. When we arrived, I was introduced to the elderly gentleman, who told me that his name was Mr. Morehdin (although I suspected that the name was not his original one). While he had a difficult life in the Soviet Union, having spent time in Siberia, he chose to share with us that day how he survived a Nazi concentration camp. One day a Nazi guard summoned him, having heard that he was Talmud scholar. The guard had been told that there were disparaging statements in the Talmud about gentiles, and even laws discriminating between gentiles and Jews in civil matters.
Deuteronomy and the Buddhas of Bamiyan
The Buddhas of Bamiyan were two giant Buddha statues, each well over 100 feet tall, that survived nearly 1500 years until they were obliterated by the Taliban in 2001. The explicit motive of the destruction was extreme Islamic iconoclasm. Almost as soon as the explosions were broadcast worldwide, I raised the obvious connections to Deuteronomy 12:You are to demolish, yes, demolish, all the [sacred] places where the nations that you are dispossessing served their gods, on the high hills and on the mountains and beneath every luxuriant tree; you are to wreck their altars, you are to smash their standing-pillars, their Asherot you are to burn with fire, and the carved-images of their gods, you are to cut-to-shreds—so that you cause their name to perish from that place!
Rebranding God
I’ve been teaching for forty years, mostly to day school graduates. And I’ve noticed something surprising: very few of them have had real educational experiences exploring who God is—or what kind of relationship we’re meant to have with Him. They’re taught about Judaism, Torah, Halakha—but not God.
I won’t explore why that’s the case here, but I do want to talk about the consequences.
We live in a world shaped by beliefs. Beliefs build our reality. They can uplift and energize us—or drain and depress us.
Tanakh’s Challenging Issues: Traditional and Modern Torah Perspectives in Dialogue
Many people view traditional religious and modern critical orientations to Tanakh study as mutually exclusive… Yet, presenting these two approaches as oppositional, with only one holding a claim to the “real” truth, forces students to choose between the curiosity of their minds and the yearnings of their souls, rather than cultivating and nourishing both aspects of their personhood as fully committed Jews living in the modern world. In its best form, Jewish education should involve teaching critical academic and traditional religious perspectives alongside one another, so that students can see the value of both approaches in uncovering the Tanakh’s multivalent meaningfulness and come to embrace the texts of their heritage “with all their hearts, minds, and souls.”
Engaging the Gemara Gap
In my mid to late teens, I became very attached to the study of Gemara. That passion continued for me until, as a twenty-something, I began teaching it to high school students. I soon came to the realization that I did not understand the Gemara in a way that allowed me to successfully transmit its meaning to others. My cultural and religious connection to Gemara had been strong, but not because its contents were fully clear to me. In fact, coming to this realization, I stopped teaching Gemara for a while.Years later, I fell in love with Gemara again. Now, I love learning difficult segments in the Gemara. These are not necessarily morally or ethically disturbing texts. For me, difficult texts are those where meaning-making is not simple; where, as a learner, I will ask: ”What is this Gemara trying to say and why is it here at all?”
A Conversation Across Contexts: A Case for Intertextual Jewish Education
Some Jewish texts are difficult to teach because they demand so much from us and, even more challengingly, our students. They present moral tensions, portray uncomfortable ideas, or raise questions about our faith that sit uneasily with younger thinkers trying to reconcile earlier voices with contemporary values when they feel most comfortable in a space of clear definition. Avoiding these texts can feel easier, but doing so undermines an opportunity for meaningful engagement. When we engage them honestly—balancing yirat shamayim and intellectual integrity—we offer them opportunities for deep learning, not just of content, but of character. I teach both English and Limudei Kodesh at a Modern Orthodox high school.
The King David Hotel Bombing: Eyewitness Accounts as Educational Tools
On 22 July 1946, a massive explosion ripped through the King David Hotel in Jerusalem, leaving 91 people dead, dozens injured, and significant damage to the building itself. Although all three paramilitary organizations operating in the Yishuv had known about this event beforehand, the Irgun was solely involved in planning and executing the attack. This bombing is a critical moment in the history of modern Israel, exemplifying the desperate lengths to which Jews in Palestine were willing to go to confront the British through increasingly military means. At the time, the bombing of the King David Hotel was condemned by many, including the international press and even prominent figures such as Chaim Weizmann.
Love, Gender, and Leviticus
For the final unit assessment of our 12th grade Jewish Studies elective called “Love, Gender, and Relationships,” students had to address the prohibition of same-sex intimacy found in Leviticus 18:22. They could either explore the inclusion of this text in the Yom Kippur Minha Torah reading or respond to a (fictional) friend’s request for advice regarding Jewish practice and same-sex relations. Gabby—a dedicated student who had never missed a deadline—requested an extension because she cried every time she sat down to write.
The Ephemeral Nature of Difficult Texts
This article is neither a record of success nor of unmitigated failure. It is a reflective description and evaluation of my experience, which I see as part of my own professional growth and which I share in the hope that it will be of help to other teachers. I should add the caveat that this reflection is happening much too soon for reliability. My standard line to students is that I judge my teaching by the condition of their souls ten years afterward (and I love it when they call to let me do that).Nearly three decades ago, I taught the book of Jeremiah in a Modern Orthodox high school. I identified ways that the text might challenge my students and planned my teaching around them.
Three Hashkafot, One Torah: Teaching Challenging Jewish Texts about Women
It is impossible to learn and teach Torah without encountering texts that relate to women in challenging ways. Contemporary conceptions of women’s roles and rights chafe against stories and laws in the Tanakh and Talmud, the historical development of halakha, normative prayer practices, and underlying assumptions in philosophical works. In this brief article, I do not attempt to soothe these tensions—that is far too great a task! Rather, I seek to offer the reader three conceptual frameworks—hashkafot, if you will—through which we tend to approach this tension in Orthodox day schools. Each hashkafa is described in the full-throated voice of a proponent of that lens. Then, I discuss some potential tradeoffs of using each conceptual framework in a Judaic studies classroom.
Using Context and Subtext to Unpack the Text
Teachers of Torah texts in the day school setting are bound to encounter a text that contains content that is difficult to teach. It can be especially difficult when the text seems to be working from a framework of values or interests that are distant from the current moment. Or, it may just be too heavy a lift to explain to students what a particular text or story was trying to accomplish when the students only notice a bothersome turn of phrase. With attention paid to context and subtext, a text that initially seems troubling may show depth that makes teaching it not only possible, but essential. An example of this can be found on Kiddushin 49a-b. The Gemara begins a discussion about how to make sure a man has fulfilled a condition he set regarding his own character traits in order to accomplish the transaction of kiddushin.
Shelo Asani… Navigating Prayer Practices in a Modern Orthodox School
Oakland Hebrew Day School is a Modern Orthodox school that draws from a wide range of religiously diverse families. With our enrollment coming from (and relying on) a diversity of affiliations, our commitment to maintaining our Modern Orthodox identity sometimes creates complications, particularly in the realm of our tefillah practices. Many parents don’t have personal prayer practices, and for parents who do, some use liturgy or have traditions from different denominations. Like many schools, we have a siddur ceremony in the 1st grade in which students receive their own siddurim. As an Orthodox school, we distribute Orthodox siddurim (we have been using the Koren Youth Siddur).
Utilizing Communities of Inquiry to Navigate Challenging Tanakh Texts
When addressing morally complex Tanakh texts, middle school educators face the dual challenge of maintaining textual integrity while fostering meaningful student engagement. To meet this challenge, we have introduced “Communities of Inquiry” (CoI), a pedagogical approach rooted in the Philosophy for Children (P4C) movement. These collaborative learning environments allow students and teachers to explore ideas, questions, and ethical dilemmas that arise from complex Tanakh passages. In this framework, students engage in “doing philosophy”—not as an academic discipline, but as a way of thinking that deepens their connection to Tanakh and to the broader human experience.This approach emphasizes philosophy as an active, practice-based discipline.
Struggling with Form and Feeling
Over a delectable meal during Hanukkah in 2012, Professor Gerald Bubis told me about a sermon he had heard at Valley Beth Shalom in Los Angeles. In it, Rabbi Harold Shulweis passionately insisted that kashrut practices must be rooted in ethical consciousness. “The Jewish theology of kashrut is not pots and pantheism,” Shulweis poetically preached from the bimah in 2009. Jerry spoke to me not only as a budding Jewish educator, but also as a future family member, encouraging me to balance halakhic rigor with spiritual depth. He railed against mechanical or performative acts, in all arenas. This was one of our earliest and most memorable conversations. Thirteen years later, while teaching a capstone course in modern Jewish thought to high school seniors at Rochelle Zell Jewish High School, I found myself reflecting on that encounter.
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