Taking on Chumros

Home Forums Decaffeinated Coffee Taking on Chumros

Viewing 24 posts - 1 through 24 (of 24 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #603602
    Feif Un
    Participant

    I had told ZeesKite that after Shavuos, I’d try and post what I heard about chumros. I did attend the shiur, and did hear a lot about the issue.

    There is a Rabbeinu Yona and a Ramban that seem to say that chumros are a great thing, and taking them on is an admirable thing. There is a Rambam that appears to say differently, and says that taking on too many chumros is a sin. We are not supposed to deny ourselves that which is allowed. He cites the fact that a nazir had to bring a korban to atone for the fact that he denied himself certain things.

    So which is it? Good or bad?

    From various sources (I don’t remember all of them), he came out that chumros are good in certain circumstances. These are the ones that R’ Yona and the Ramban are talking about. The Rambam is talking about when the circumstances are not met.

    Here are the circumstances:

    [*] The chumrah should be to avoid sinning, not just to deny yourself something.

    [*] The person must be holding at the level of the chumrah, and not trying to reach for a level that is beyond them.

    [*] If the chumrah is not something that the general public holds of, then you shouldn’t do it publicly because of yuhara, or even a perception of yuhara.

    Regarding the last point, he quoted a teshuva from R’ Moshe, in the Igros, about blended whiskey. The letter was to R’ Mordechai Pinchas Teitz zt”l, who did not allow drinking mixed whiskey. R’ Moshe said that he allowed it, but was machmir for himself – in private. In public, he said he would purposely drink blended whiskey so it shouldn’t look like yuhara.

    When it comes to your chumros in regard to other people, he quoted a letter from R’ Shlomo Zalman Auerbach zt”l. A bachur in yeshiva in EY had asked R’ Shlomo Zalman about kashrus. He said that while in Israel, he had decided to be more machmir on his kashrus. His parents did not keep his new standard in their home, and he wanted to know what to do. R’ Shlomo Zalman told him that as long as they are kosher by the standards of their Rav, he should not keep his standard. R’ Shlomo Zalman made no mention of kibbud av v’em. He said that a person shouldn’t impose his chumros on others. He also brought others who said one also shouldn’t refrain from going to others who don’t keep their chumros.

    An interesting point from this would be that if someone who is makpid on Chalav Yisrael was invited for a dairy meal by someone who drinks chalav hacompanies, they should have no problem with the milk/cheese being used.

    Anyway, that was what I heard from the shiur.

    #877132
    MDG
    Participant

    “An interesting point from this would be that if someone who is makpid on Chalav Yisrael was invited for a dairy meal by someone who drinks chalav hacompanies, they should have no problem with the milk/cheese being used.”

    According to Rav Moshe, when one b’davka keeps C”Y 3 times, s/he is making a neder. That crosses the line from chumra to Torah law.

    #877133
    Naysberg
    Member

    According to many poskim (other than Rav Moshe), cholov stam is completely treif. Thus, cholov yisroel isn’t a chumra, but rather basic mandatory halacha. And you can ‘t even eat pareve food that was cooked in cholov stam keilim.

    #877134
    haifagirl
    Participant

    Whose shiur?

    #877135
    Rav Tuv
    Participant

    Naysberg-According to many poskim (other than Rav Moshe), cholov stam is completely treif.

    According to many poskim posting on the internet is treife. And please do tell the names of the many poskim that say chalav stam is treife and also cite the seforim they are mentioned in. I want sources. MANY sources for the many poskin. Make it 10 within the last 80 years.

    #877136
    Sam2
    Participant

    MZ: Those sources exist, though I don’t know if there are that many. Most Poskim realized that R’ Moshe was a Bar Hachi of being relied upon in this case. A few still called it completely Treif, though almost no one nowadays would say that against R’ Moshe.

    #877137
    oomis
    Participant

    Milk cannot be treif. Only a non-shechted tahor animal can be treif. Pig is not treif – it is not kosher. Kosher meat mixed with cholov Yisroel is not kosher, but it most certainly is not treif.

    Milk can be from a lo tahor source, but that type of milk is not sold in this country as USDA Grade A milk. I am tired of people calling things treif that cannot be treif, when they really mean “not kosher.” It’s like calling fruit glatt kosher.

    #877138
    popa_bar_abba
    Participant

    Well, what would you call milk that comes from a treifah? ??? ?????. That seems close enough to call it “treif” in the vernacular, seeing as an animal also cannot be “treif”, it can be a “treifah”.

    #877139
    ItcheSrulik
    Member

    popa: You can have a ???? ????? but not a ???? ??? because the noun is lashon n’kevah. If we conflate the two holy minhogei CR of ignoring grammar and being over the top about anything involving women, you can say ???? ??? .

    #877140
    Sam2
    Participant

    Oomis: Actually, only a properly-Schechted Kosher animal can be a Treifah (or, at least, Assur to eat Mishum T’reifah). And milk from a T’reifah is Assur.

    #877141
    Chulent
    Member

    How do you milk a schechted cow?

    #877142
    cherrybim
    Participant

    Our holy Rabbonim and Rosh Yeshivas and Bobbes and Zaidies in America years ago drank and ate cholov stam and non-glatt meat; but don’t you dare tell me that they were eating traif.

    #877143
    Sam2
    Participant

    Chulent: A) The same way you milk a living cow, and B) you slightly misread my post. That’s the point of Assur to eat Mishum T’reifah. It is a Treifah, but I don’t think that’s relevant if you eat it before it’s dead. I don’t think an Issur T’reifah is Chal on an Issur Basar Min Hachai.

    #877144
    oomis
    Participant

    Oomis: Actually, only a properly-Schechted Kosher animal can be a Treifah (or, at least, Assur to eat Mishum T’reifah). And milk from a T’reifah is Assur. ‘

    And how would you know the milked animal was a treifah until AFTER it was shechted? By that time, the milk was probably already drunk.

    #877145
    WolfishMusings
    Participant

    And how would you know the milked animal was a treifah until AFTER it was shechted? By that time, the milk was probably already drunk.

    At least some of the signs of a tereifah are external and visible while the animal is still alive.

    The Wolf

    #877146
    Sam2
    Participant

    Oomis: If you had no way to know then you’re Anus. These are all clear Halachos in Yoreh De’ah though. It’s not like they take any fancy logic or Lomdus. I think they’re even in the Kitzur Shulchan Aruch if you’re actually interested.

    #877147
    oomis
    Participant

    At least some of the signs of a tereifah are external and visible while the animal is still alive.”

    Ok, thanks for the information. Mikol melamdei hiskalti. 🙂

    #877149
    jbaldy22
    Member

    @Naysberg R’ Belski disagrees with you as does R’ Heineman

    I have personally spoken to many rabbonim and roshei yeshiva on this issue and not one agreed with you

    #877150
    Feif Un
    Participant

    This was not meant to be a discussion on chalav Yisrael – I merely made one point that occurred to me (and wasn’t said in the shiur).

    I had merely told ZeesKite that I’d post what was said in the shiur. There are more than enough threads about chalav Yisrael already.

    #877151
    zahavasdad
    Participant

    If Chalav Yisroel was TRIEF, then you could not eat in a pizza store that sells mostly Chalav Yisroel items, but has a few Chalav stam pre-packaed items

    #877152
    ZeesKite
    Participant

    I thank you for your information. Sorry I did not acknowledge earlier.

    #877153
    ItcheSrulik
    Member

    I don’t think an Issur T’reifah is Chal on an Issur Basar Min Hachai.

    –Sam2

    Obviously one issur isn’t chal on the other, but is the issur Basar Min Hachai chal in the first place if it’s a trefah? After all, the animal is considered practically dead.

    #877154
    yytz
    Participant

    I’ve always loved this quote from Rebbe Nachman of Breslov about chumros:

    Don’t follow excessive stringencies in your practice of the Torah. “God does not rule over His creatures with tyranny” ( Avodah Zarah 3a) – “The Torah was not given to ministering angels” ( Berachot 25b) .

    Our rabbis have taught that it is proper for each person to choose for himself one mitzvah to observe with particular care in all its fine details ( Shabbat 118b ). Yet even with your chosen mitzvah, you should not be excessively strict to the point of folly. Don’t let it make you depressed. Simply try to keep the mitzvah carefully in all its finer points, but without excessive punctiliousness.

    As for the other mitzvot, simply follow the essential laws without adding extra stringencies. If only we could keep all the mitzvot of the Torah according to the simple interpretation of the law without seeking to go beyond it!

    There is no need to look for extra stringencies: this is foolish and confusing. The essence of serving God is simplicity and sincerity. Pray much, study much Torah and carry out many good deeds without seeking out or inventing unnecessary restrictions. Simply follow the path of our forefathers. “The Torah was not given to ministering angels.”

    There is nothing that you absolutely must do or else. If you can, you can. But if you cannot: “God exempts a person under duress” (Bava Kama 28b) .

    Sichot Haran #235

    #2145702
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    When it comes to Cholov Stam, Rav Moshe justifies his heter based on mirtas, being afraid to mix in non kosher milk. If the government forbids it, then that creates mirtas.

Viewing 24 posts - 1 through 24 (of 24 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.