Yesodei haTorah – Chapter 9
Halachah 1 — The Torah Is Eternal and Cannot Be Changed
- The Torah explicitly states that its commandments are forever, with no possibility of change, addition, or subtraction.
- Verses such as “Do not add and do not subtract,” “For us and our children forever,” and “It is not in heaven” teach:
- The Torah must be fulfilled for all generations.
- No prophet may add new commandments or subtract any.
- Therefore, if anyone — Jew or gentile — performs miracles and claims:
- to add a mitzvah,
- to cancel a mitzvah,
- to reinterpret a mitzvah against the tradition from Moses, or
- that the Torah’s mitzvot were temporary,
he is a false prophet who denies Moses’ prophecy and is executed, because he claimed G-d said what He never said.
- G-d commanded Moses that the Torah’s laws are eternal, and G-d does not lie.
Halachah 2 — The Role of Prophets After Moses
- When the Torah says G-d will raise prophets, this does not mean they can establish new laws or a new religion.
- Their role is to command the people to keep the Torah and warn them against sin — like Malachi, the final prophet, who said: “Remember the Torah of Moses.”
- A prophet may also give non‑halachic instructions, such as:
- “Go to this place,”
- “Do not go there,”
- “Fight today,”
- “Do not fight,”
- “Build this,” or “Do not build.”
In such cases, it is a mitzvah to obey him.
- Anyone who violates a prophet’s instruction is liable to death at the hand of Heaven.
- Likewise:
- A prophet who disobeys his own prophecy, or
- A prophet who withholds prophecy when commanded to speak,
is punished by Heaven, as the Torah says about these three cases: “I will seek retribution from him.”
Halachah 3 — When a Prophet May Temporarily Suspend a Mitzvah
- A verified prophet may command the temporary suspension of any Torah commandment — whether light or severe — and for that limited time it is a mitzvah to obey him.
- Tradition teaches: “If a prophet instructs you to transgress a mitzvah temporarily — except idolatry — obey him.”
- Example: Elijah on Mount Carmel offered a sacrifice outside Jerusalem, even though that is normally a capital offense. Since G-d commanded him for that moment, he was obeyed.
- If asked how one could violate a Torah law, Elijah would explain:
- The prohibition applies only to permanent or unauthorized offerings.
- This situation was a one‑time command from G-d.
- Any other prophet giving a temporary command must likewise be obeyed.
- But if he says that a mitzvah is permanently nullified, he is a false prophet and is executed.
Halachah 4 — A Prophet May Not Override the Oral Tradition
- If a prophet claims to overrule:
- an oral‑law tradition, or
- a halachic decision based on the principles received from Moses,
saying, “G-d told me the law is such‑and‑such,” he is a false prophet, even if he performs miracles.
- The Torah already said: “It is not in heaven” — meaning halachah is not determined through prophecy.
- But if a prophet says that for a limited time a specific action should be taken, he must be obeyed.
Halachah 5 — No Prophet May Allow Idolatry, Even Temporarily
- The above rule applies to all mitzvot except idolatry.
- If a prophet instructs idolatry even temporarily, even if he performs great miracles, he must not be obeyed.
- The Torah commands:
- Even if the sign “comes true,”
- If he says, “Serve other G-ds,”
→ Do not listen; he has spoken falsely against G-d.
- Such a person is definitely a false prophet — his signs are sorcery — and he is executed.
