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{{short description|Belief that Menachem Mendel Schneerson is the Jewish messiah}}
{{Main|Chabad}}
{{Expand Hebrew|topic=cult|date=December 2022}}
{{Chabad}}
'''Chabad messianism''', or '''Lubavitch messianism''',<ref>also: Habad messianism, Lubavitcher messianism, mishichism, meshichism.</ref> is a term used to describe a spectrum of beliefs within the ] ] movement regarding their late leader Rabbi ] and his purported position as the ].<ref>Another 'Second Coming'? The Jewish Community at Odds Over a New Form of Lubavitch Messianism, George Wilkes (2002). ''Reviews in Religion & Theology'' 9 (4), 285–289.</ref> While some believe that he died but will return as the messiah,<ref name="chabad"/> others believe that he is merely "hidden." Most negate the idea that he is the revealed messiah. The prevalence of these views within the movement is disputed.<ref name="berber">"Messianic Excess", David Berger, ''The Jewish Week'', June 25, 2004</ref><ref name="ppp"/><ref name="qweer"/><ref>''The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad-Lubavitch'' by Sue Fishkoff, p. 274.</ref><ref>http://www.thejewishweek.com/news/newscontent.php3?artid=7839</ref>.


{{Chabad sidebar}}
The belief that Schneerson is the messiah can be traced to the 1950s;<ref name="pariz"/> it picked up momentum during the decade preceding Schneerson's death in 1994<ref>See section "Before Schneerson's Death".</ref>. The response of the wider ] and ] leadership has been almost universally antagonistic to the movement, the issue remains controversial within the Jewish world.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref>
] (1902–1994)]]
'''Messianism in Chabad'''<ref name="meshichists">Referred to as Chabad messianism, Lubavitch messianism, or ''meshichism''.</ref> refers to the belief within the ] community—a prominent group within ]—regarding the ] (]: מָשִׁיחַ, ''mashiach'' or ''moshiach''). Central to this belief is the conviction that Rabbi ], the seventh ] of the Chabad-Lubavitch ], is the awaited Messiah who is leading the Jewish people into the Messianic era.<ref>Susan Handelman (July 1, 2014), , ''Tablet Magazine''.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.commentarymagazine.com/article/the-rebbe-twenty-years-after/|author=Ruth R. Wisse|date=2014|title=The Rebbe Twenty Years After|website=Commentary Magazine|access-date=30 December 2014}}</ref><ref name=steinsaltz1>Steinsaltz, Adin. (2014). ''My Rebbe''. Jerusalem: Maggid.</ref>{{rp|24}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Dein |first1=Simon |last2=Dawson |first2=Lorne L. |date=May 6, 2008 |title=The 'Scandal' of the Lubavitch Rebbe: Messianism as a Response to Failed Prophecy |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13537900802024550 |journal=Journal of Contemporary Religion |language=en |volume=23 |issue=2 |pages=163–180 |doi=10.1080/13537900802024550 |s2cid=143927244 |issn=1353-7903}}</ref>


The concept of the messiah is a basic tenet of the Jewish religion. The belief among Hasidic Jews that the leader of their dynasty could be the Jewish messiah is traced to the ]—<nowiki/>the founder of Hasidism.<ref>Elliot R. Wolfson. Open Secret: Postmessianic Messianism and the Mystical Revision of Menahem Mendel Schneerson. Page 19.</ref><ref name="chabad.org">{{cite web|website=Chabad.org|title=The Personality of Mashiach|url=http://www.chabad.org/library/moshiach/article_cdo/aid/101679/jewish/The-Personality-of-Mashiach.htm}}</ref> During Schneerson's life, the mainstream of Chabad hoped that he would be the messiah; the idea gained great attention during the last years of his life.<ref name=josephtelushkin>{{cite book |last=Telushkin |first=Joseph |title=Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History |publisher=Harper Collins |year=2014 |isbn=978-0-06-231900-5 }}</ref>{{rp|413}}<ref name="nytimes_messiah">{{cite news|last=Bruni|first=Frank|title=To Some, Messiah Is the Message;Media Campaign for Late Rabbi Divides Lubavitch Movement|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1996/02/25/nyregion/some-messiah-message-media-campaign-for-late-rabbi-divides-lubavitch-movement.html|date=February 25, 1996|newspaper=]|access-date=February 26, 2015}}</ref><ref name="scribd.com">{{cite web|url=https://www.scribd.com/doc/111005773/Rav-Aharon-Lichtenstein-s-Hesped-for-the-Lubavitcher-Rebbe-English|title=Rav Aharon Lichtenstein's Hesped for the Lubavitcher Rebbe – English|access-date=23 December 2014}}</ref><ref>''The Messiah of Brooklyn: Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present'', M. Avrum Ehrlich, ch.9 notes, KTAV Publishing, {{ISBN|0-88125-836-9}}</ref> A few years before Schneerson's death, members of the Chabad movement expressed their belief that Menachem Mendel Schneerson was the foretold messiah. Those subscribing to the beliefs have been termed ''mishichists'' (messianists). A typical statement of belief for Chabad messianists is the song and chant known as ''yechi adoneinu'' ("long live our master", {{langx|he|יחי אדונינו}}).<ref>The full text is ''Yechi adoneinu moreinu v'rabbeinu melech ha-moshiach l'olam vo'ed'' ("Long live our master, our teacher, and our rabbi, King Messiah, for ever and ever).</ref> Customs vary among messianists as to when the phrase is recited.
==History of Messianism==
]
In 1984 some Lubavitcher hasidim sang a song that referred to him as "our righteous messiah" who will "come and redeem us", but Schneerson put an abrupt stop to it. In 1991 a different song began to spread among hasidim, this one proclaiming ''"Long live our master, our teacher and our rabbi, King Messiah for ever and ever"''. After his debilitating stroke in 1992 this song was routinely sung in his presence.


Since Schneerson's death in 1994, some followers of Chabad have persisted in the belief in him as the messiah.<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|last=Newfield|first=Joseph|date=Spring–Summer 2021|title=After The Death of Chabad's Messiah|url=https://bulletin.hds.harvard.edu/after-the-death-of-chabads-messiah/|url-status=live|website=Harvard Divinity Bulletin|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210526140948/https://bulletin.hds.harvard.edu/after-the-death-of-chabads-messiah/ |archive-date=2021-05-26 }}</ref> Chabad messianists either believe Schneerson will be ] from the dead to be revealed as the messiah, or go further and profess the belief that Schneerson never died in 1994 and is waiting to be revealed as messiah. The Chabad messianic phenomenon has been met mostly with public concerns or opposition from Chabad leadership as well as non-Chabad Jewish leaders.<ref name=NYT>{{cite web |title=Lubavitchers Mark 10 Years Since Death of Revered Rabbi |first=Corey |last=Kilgannon |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/20/nyregion/lubavitchers-mark-10-years-since-death-of-revered-rabbi.html |work=] |date=20 June 2004 |access-date=19 January 2010}}</ref>
During the later years of his life Rabbi Schneerson's teachings were interpreted by many to mean that he was claiming to be the ]. His death in 1994 did not quell the messianist fervor, as believers found rationales to explain the belief that Schneerson was the Messiah despite having passed on. Some argued that he had in fact not died at all and was still physically present, but in a concealed state. Others argued that even though he had died, proofs existed within Judaism that legitimize the Messiah returning from the dead.


After Schneerson's death, a later ] ruling from some affiliated rabbis said that it was "incumbent on every single Jew to heed the Rebbe's words and believe that he is indeed ], who will be revealed imminently".<ref name="DVED-250">{{cite web|last1=Berger|first1=Rabbi Prof. Dr. David|title=On the Spectrum of Messianic Belief in Contemporary Lubavitch Chassidism|url=http://chareidi.org/archives5766/pinchos/olubavtchpnc66.htm|publisher=Shema Yisrael Torah Network|access-date=3 July 2016}}</ref><ref name=Psak2>{{cite web|work=Psak Din|title=Halachic Ruling|url=http://www.psakdin.net/en/|access-date=22 March 2014}}</ref> Outside of Chabad messianism, both in mainstream Chabad as well as in broader Judaism, these claims are rejected.<ref name="LubavitcherFalseMessiahs" /><ref name="MS-HabadMinuth" />
The development of this messianism and its impact on Chabad in particular &mdash; and ] in general &mdash; has been the subject of much discussion in the Jewish press, as well as within the pages of peer-reviewed journals.


{{Main|Messiah in Judaism}}
===Early developments===
The concept of a Jewish messiah as a leader who would be revealed and mark the end of ] is a traditional Jewish belief. Additionally, it was not uncommon to attribute this messianic identity to various historic Jewish leaders.<ref name=tablet/> An early example of this type of belief is found in the ], where various living sages are considered to be the messiah.<ref name="Sanhedrin 98b">Sanhedrin 98b</ref>
One of the earliest proponents of the idea of Schneerson as the messiah was Rabbi Avraham Parizh. As early as 1952 Parizh printed a poster proclaiming him as the messiah. When word reached the United States that the poster had been seen around ], Schneerson forbade its distribution.<ref name="pariz">Ehrlich, ch.9 notes</ref>


Treatment of this topic in ] is not common to Jewish legal texts with the exception of the writings of ]. Maimonides delineated rabbinic criteria for identifying the Jewish messiah as a leader who studies ], observes the ], compels the Jews to observe the Torah, and fights the Wars of God. Additionally, the status of messiah may be determined first through a presumptive status (''b'chezkat mashiach'') and later a verified status (''mashiach vadai'').<ref name="Rambam">Mishneh Torah, Law of Kings, 9:4, Maimonides</ref><ref name="Davidson">{{cite book |last1=Davidson |first1=Herbert A. |title=Moses Maimonides: The Man and His Works |date=2005 |publisher=Oxford University Press, USA |isbn=9780195173215 |page=492 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qnw8DwAAQBAJ&q=Maimonides+criteria+for+identifying+the+mashiach&pg=PA492}}</ref>
===During Schneerson's life===
According to research by ], the expectations that the Rebbe was the messiah built slowly through the 1980s. While she argues that the messianism of Chabad can be traced back to the 1950s and the previous Lubavitcher Rebbe, she cites evidence that the 1980s saw a upsurge in messianism. People would write letters addressed to Moshiach instead of the Rebbe, conversations centering around the Rebbe's true identity became more prevalent, and as the Rebbe spoke more and more frequently on the issue of Moshiach, the fervor grew. Elior argues that the development of Chabad Messianism was in response to the holocaust and constituted an attempt by Schneerson to offer an explanation and purpose in the face of such destruction offered "eschatological certainty and messianic purpose - what appeared to be the only rational response from a theological point of view."<ref>"The Lubavitch Messianic Resurgence: The Historical and Mystical Background 1939-1996", Rachel Elior in ''Toward the Millennium: Messianic Expectations from the Bible to Waco'' ed. Peter Schäfer and Mark Cohen, 383-408. (Leiden: Brill, 1998)</ref>


The concept of the messiah is also prominent in Hasidism. In a notable incident, the founder of Hasidism, Rabbi ], recounts a vision of an encounter with the messiah who relates to him how the messiah's arrival may be hastened.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/1600969/jewish/Chassidut.htm|website=Chabad.org |title=What is Chassidut? |first=Tzvi |last=Friedman |access-date=17 September 2016}}</ref> ] records in his book ''Otzer Yisrael'' that followers of Hasidic ]s will sometimes express hope that their leader will be revealed as the awaited messiah.<ref name="EncyclopediaOY">{{cite book|title=Otzer Yisroel|first=Yehuda|last=Eisenstein|date=1907}}</ref>{{page needed|date=September 2015}} According to research by Israeli scholar ], there was a focus on ] in Chabad during the lifetime of the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, ], the father-in-law of Menachem Schneerson. The upsurge in messianic belief among Chabad adherents begins in the 1980s, when followers of Menachem Schneerson began believing that he would be the messiah, a hope that was initially kept quiet until the early 1990s.<ref>"The Lubavitch Messianic Resurgence: The Historical and Mystical Background 1939–1996", Rachel Elior in ''Toward the Millennium: Messianic Expectations from the Bible to Waco'' ed. Peter Schäfer and Mark Cohen, 383–408. (Leiden: Brill, 1998)</ref> Additionally, the hope for the leader to be the awaited messiah also involved Menachem Schneerson, who spoke of his deceased father-in-law as the awaited messiah.<ref name="scribd.com"/><ref name="LubavitcherFalseMessiahs">{{cite web|last1=Bar-Hayim|first1=David|title=The False Mashiah of Lubavitch-Habad|url=http://machonshilo.org/en/eng/list-ask-the-rav/31-general/424-the-false-mashiah-of-lubavitch-habad|publisher=Machon Shilo (Shilo Institute)|access-date=17 June 2016|archive-date=25 February 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110225055436/http://machonshilo.org/en/eng/list-ask-the-rav/31-general/424-the-false-mashiah-of-lubavitch-habad|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="MS-HabadMinuth">{{cite web|last1=Bar-Hayim|first1=David|title=Habad and Jewish Messianism (audio)|url=http://machonshilo.org/en/eng/list-audio-shiurim/41-audiohalakha/475-habad-and-jewish-messianism|publisher=Machon Shilo (Shilo Institute)|access-date=17 June 2016|archive-date=9 January 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150109015103/http://machonshilo.org/en/eng/list-audio-shiurim/41-audiohalakha/475-habad-and-jewish-messianism|url-status=dead}}</ref>
According to Paul R. Carlson, Schneerson became more direct about the messianic age during the ] of 1991. Schneerson was quoted in the ] as telling his followers that it would "herald the coming of the Messiah" quoting from the ] ]: "Humble ones, the time of your redemption has arrived." This message was immediately taken up by the followers with full page advertisements<Ref></ref> in the press declaring that the messianic age has arrived. Other evidence for this included the fall of communism and the mass immigration of Russian Jews to Israel. Carlson cites Rabbi Chaim Bergstein in the '']'' as saying "I'm not saying he is or isn't Mashiach, but there is no one as learned ...in this generation."<ref>''Christianity After Auschwitz: Evangelicals Encounter Judaism in the New Millennium'' by Paul R. Carlson, Xlibris, 2000, p43</ref>


== Schneerson's positions and responses==
] wrote in 1991 that "...the fact that he has no children and has never groomed a successor... renders the issue of continuity in the Chabad dynasty a threatening question. The messianic response is virtually the only one capable of allaying these fears."<ref name="xxxx">Menachem Friedman, "Habad as Messianic Fundamentalism", in Marty, ''Accounting For Fundamentalism'', U of Chicago Press, 1994</ref> He added: "...the spread of belief in the Rebbe as the messiah is facilitated by the total absence of checks and balances in Chabad Hasidism. There is no-one ...to offer a word of criticism. Many who surround him are financially dependent on him and consider him a super-human being. Is it any wonder that they are tempted to believe he is the messiah?"<ref name="xxxx"/>
]]]


Beginning with his very first '']'' as Rebbe, Schneerson spoke of this generation's mission to complete the '']'', and urged everyone to do all within their power to help the world reach its ultimate state of perfection, when ] and goodness will be naturally apparent and prevalent, with the final redemption.<ref name=steinsaltz1/>{{rp|173}} Schneerson would finish almost every public talk of his with a prayer for the imminent arrival of the messiah. As early as the 1970s, he sought to raise awareness of the ] by encouraging people to learn and become knowledgeable in the laws of the ], laws that will be applicable only when the messiah actually comes.{{citation needed|date=December 2021}} Schneerson would frequently quote the many sages who stated that this generation was the last generation of the exile and would be the first generation of redemption and would quote ] (Chofetz Chaim) and others, who stated that actively asking for the messiah's coming is crucial.<ref name=steinsaltz1/>{{rp|178}}
During the late 1980s Chabad rabbis across the United States not only declared the coming of the messiah as imminent, but said that it would be Schneerson. for example, one Rabbi Asher Zeilingold told the press that he "expect the messiah to come at any moment" and that Schneerson "soon will be recognized by God as the saviour."<ref>"Lubavitch Sect expects saviour at Yom Kippur", Clark Morphew, ''St. Paul Pioneer Press'', September 21, 1988</ref>


Early efforts by Chabad Hasidim to refer to Schneerson as the Jewish messiah resulted in strong opposition from Schneerson. In 1965, in what is likely the first record of Chabad Hasidim referring to Schneerson in messianic terms, a Hasid in Israel named Avraham Parizh printed and distributed letters that spoke of Schneerson as the Jewish messiah. In response, Schneerson reportedly telegrammed Parizh in Israel stating that he strongly objected to the disseminated letter and requested that Parizh cease its distribution. Schneerson also reportedly instructed Parizh to recover all the distributed copies of the letter and confirm its collection.<ref>Echad Hoyo Avrohom Page 160</ref>
Rabbi ] brought up the issue in 1984 by publishing a booklet declaring Schneerson to be the Messiah.<ref>''The Revelation of Melech HaMashiach (King Messiah), "Yechi HaMelech"'', Sholom Ber Wolpo, "The Committee for Fulfilling the Rebbe's Directives"</ref> Schneerson responded by writing "It has come to pass that because of his activities ... hundreds of Jews have stopped learning Chassidus, and now oppose the Baal Shem Tov and his teachings in actuality."


In 1984, another Israeli Hasid, ], raised the issue publicly by publishing a booklet identifying Schneerson as the messiah. Schneerson reportedly responded by banning the publication and forbidding Wolpo from involvement with any related efforts.<ref>''The Revelation of Melech HaMashiach (King Messiah), "Yechi HaMelech"'', Sholom Ber Wolpo, "The Committee for Fulfilling the Rebbe's Directives"</ref> Schneerson publicly denounced these actions several times, saying that those involved in such publications were creating new opposition to the Chabad movement, and that he wished to never have to speak about the topic again. On Shabbat Bereshit,{{when|date=August 2021}} when Wolpo began singing a song that had become popular in Chabad which referred to Schneerson as the messiah, Schneerson abruptly stopped the singing and ordered that it never be sung again.<ref>''Sefer Hisva'aduyos'' 5745, Vol. 1, p. 465</ref> Wolpo would later argue that despite the Rebbe's strong opposition, all Chabad Hasidim must still consider and proclaim the Rebbe as the Jewish messiah, arguing that the rebbe also declined to be called 'rebbe' in earlier years, only accepting the title later, because the time had not yet come.
Anthropologist ] spent the year of Schneerson's death living among women in the Chabad congregation in ], ]. She writes that: "Before his death most of the women I encountered said they believed--or at least hoped--that their Rebbe would not die, but would rather emerge - 'rise up' was the expression they used--as the Messiah. In the streets outside 770, I was told, women danced through the night with their tambourines, singing to greet the Rebbe as Messiah, despite his physical death."<ref>"Waiting for the Messiah, a Tambourine in Her Hand", Ochs, Vanessa L., ''Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues'' - Number 9, Spring 5765/2005, pp. 144-169</ref>


Eventually the rebbe appeared to reverse his ban, and soon after began encouraging publicly a song identifying him as the messiah, going so far as to authorize one of Wolpo's articles to be translated and published in a newspaper.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Chaim|first=Shmuel|title=פולמוס המשיחיות בחב"ד|url=http://chabadpedia.co.il/index.php/%D7%9E%D7%A9%D7%AA%D7%9E%D7%A9:%D7%A9%D7%9E%D7%95%D7%90%D7%9C_%D7%97%D7%99%D7%99%D7%9D/%D7%A4%D7%95%D7%9C%D7%9E%D7%95%D7%A1_%D7%94%D7%9E%D7%A9%D7%99%D7%97%D7%99%D7%95%D7%AA_%D7%91%D7%97%D7%91%22%D7%93|url-status=live|website=Chabadpedia|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220116075336/http://chabadpedia.co.il/index.php/%D7%9E%D7%A9%D7%AA%D7%9E%D7%A9:%D7%A9%D7%9E%D7%95%D7%90%D7%9C_%D7%97%D7%99%D7%99%D7%9D/%D7%A4%D7%95%D7%9C%D7%9E%D7%95%D7%A1_%D7%94%D7%9E%D7%A9%D7%99%D7%97%D7%99%D7%95%D7%AA_%D7%91%D7%97%D7%91%22%D7%93 |archive-date=2022-01-16 }}</ref> Wolpo would argue that the precept of the acceptance of the Jewish messiah is an act that must be performed by the Jewish people and not by the messiah himself.<ref name="josephtelushkin" />{{rp|429}}
By 1992 Chabad Messianism was gaining wide publicity. As the health of their leader deteriorated some Chabad followers became more vocal and explicit in their messianism. '']'' magazine journalist ] reported on the issue that year, noting that the followers in ] were expecting Schneerson to reveal himself as the Messiah imminently. She reported that Rabbi ] had openly declared that Schneerson should reveal himself as such, and arguing that even if he were to die "the leader's death would not disprove his Messianic potential."<ref>]'', ], ], ]]</ref>


In 1988, after Schneerson called for Chabad rabbis to issue a Jewish legal ruling ('']'') to declare that the Jewish Messianic Era must commence, a Hasid named ] issued a ruling stating that Schneerson was the rightful Jewish messiah. In response to the ruling, Schneerson didn't protest and actually stated that "Hendel is competent rabbi who knows what he's talking about"{{dubious|date=February 2022}}<ref>Cheshbono shel Olom page 56.</ref>{{Citation needed|date=August 2021}} It was not until April 1991 that Schneerson began openly encouraging the 'yechi' song identifying him as the messiah.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Touger|first=Eliyahu|title=I Await His Coming Every Day|publisher="KEHOT" PUBLICATION SOCIETY|year=1992|isbn=0-8266-0483-8|location=Brooklyn New York |pages=10}}</ref>
A group of Chabad hasidim led by Rabbi Shlomo Ezagui took their message to the streets of ] with ten billboards declaring, "Now!! 1900 Years Waiting. It's Here-Messianic Era." Ezagui told the '']'' that "...we are declaring through the billboards that the time's about to happen."<ref>"Billboards hold a big message: the messiah is here", Michael Crook and David Hancock, ''Miami Herald'', April 15, 1992</ref>


In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Schneerson's talks became increasingly focused on the topic of Moshiach, that Moshiach was about to come, and what was needed to accomplish this. A statement of this kind by Schneerson was the view that the Jews living in the modern age were the last generation to live in exile ('']'') and the first generation of redemption ('']''). On one occasion,<ref>2 November 1991</ref> during the Rebbe's talk at the International Conference of ] (emissaries), he stated that their work had been completed and the only task that remained was to welcome the messiah.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Dvar Malchus – Menukad – Vol. I Bereshis – shemois|publisher=מרכז ההפצה בארץ הקודש – ממש|year=2020|location=Israel|pages=65|language=Hebrew}}</ref> In the early 1990s, Hasidim became more vocal about Schneerson being the Moshiach, even submitting a petition to him asking that he reveal himself as the long-awaited messiah. On one occasion in 1991, as the Rebbe was leaving the evening prayers when traditionally someone would start a song and the Rebbe would encourage it on his way out of the synagogue, some Hasidim began singing one of the Rebbe's favorite lively songs, adding the words of Yechi &ndash; "Long live our master, our teacher, our Rebbe, King Moshiach." A few months later, a few people did muster the courage to start singing at an intermission in a Shabbos ''farbrengen'' a less overt song that implied that the Rebbe was the messiah. Within a few seconds the Rebbe heard it and immediately became very grave and said: "Really, I should get up and leave . Even if some people consider it is not respectful that I need to , I don’t need to reckon with the views of a small number when is the opposite of reality. However, first of all, it will unfortunately not help anyway. Secondly, it will disrupt the ''shevet achim gam yachad'' (brethren to dwell together in unity), for if I were to leave, others will leave, too."<ref>Sichos Kodesh, Parshas Noach 5752</ref>
===="Coronation"====
By late 1992 a movement to crown Schneerson as "King Messiah" had gained prominence within the Chabad movement and a major rally was organised in Crown Heights where the Rebbe was to be crowned under the leadership of senior Chabad rabbi and youth movement director ].<ref name="but">, ] ], ] ]</ref> He organised the rally on ], ] that was billed as Schneerson's coronation ceremony.<ref>, Ari L. Goldman, ], ], '']''</ref> Before the rally Butman informed the press that "This will be the coronation of the rebbe as Melech haMashiach (King Messiah)."<ref>''Mashiach Madness reaches frenzy as lubavitch 'anoint' the Rebbe'', Debra Nussbaum Cohen, ] ], ]</ref><ref>''Rabbi to be anointed Messiah'', ''Press Telegram'', ], ]</ref> The rally was held on ], ] and was attended by 8,000 in New York and countless others via satellite link-ups around the world. Butman was forced to backtrack during the event, announcing that Schneerson's appearance did not represent his acceptance of the role of Messiah. He told the 8,000 assembled followers (plus many more around the world watching via satellite) that the event "is not to be interpreted as a coronation."<ref>"Rabbi's appearance fails to reveal messiah", '']'', ], ]</ref>


In 1992, a journalist from Israel said to the Rebbe, "We appreciate you very much, we want to see you in Israel; you said soon you will be in Israel, so when will you come?" The Rebbe responded: "I also want to be in Israel." The journalist insisted, "So when, when will you come?" The Rebbe responded, "That depends on the Moshiach, not on me." The journalist persisted, "You are the Moshiach!" to which the Rebbe responded, "I am not."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://azure.org.il/include/print.php?id=549|title=Chabad's Messianism and Israeli Radicals|access-date=23 December 2014}}</ref> In 1991,<ref>20 April</ref> Rabbi Dovid Nachshon received a bottle of vodka from the Rebbe for his effort of getting people to sign a declaration accepting the Rebbe's kingship. After Rabbi Nachshon announced (as customary) what the bottle was for, he announced the words of 'Yechi' declaring the rebbe "]" three times. The Rebbe responded by saying "]".<ref>{{Cite book|title=Linear Mishpotim 5752|publisher=Living Moshiach Publication Society|year=2017|isbn=9781981382026|pages=49–50}}</ref>
====Death====
As Schneerson lay dying in the ] of ], some 2,000 followers gathered outside in ]. Many could be seen singing and dancing - anticipating the ]. Others were prayerful, some could be seen stroking the wall of the hospital as though it was the ].<ref>"The Happy Vigil: As the Lubavitcher rebbe lies ill, his followers dance and sing and envision the end of days", Jonathan Mark, ''The Jewish Week'', ], ]</ref>


One explanation for the apparent contradictions in the Rebbe's responses is that the Rebbe only took issue when this idea was published, but made nothing of it when addressed to him in private.
===After Schneerson's death===
Schneerson's death led to a rethinking of the theology of messianism within Chabad. While the funeral was attended by a few dozen extreme messianists who danced throughout the procession and argued that his death was a ''required'' part of the process of him returning as Messiah - most messianists were taken aback.<ref>"What Really Happens When Prophecy Fails: The Case of Lubavitch." Dein, Simon. ''Sociology of Religion'', 9/22/2001.</ref>
The '']'' reported from the funeral that the death had left Chabad stunned and in crisis:<ref name="ded">''Death of Lubavitcher Leader, Rabbi Schneerson, Stuns Followers '', Laurie Goodstein, Washington Post, June 13, 1994</ref> "Even as his pine coffin was placed in the hearse, a panicked crowd of Lubavitch faithful chanted prayers for Schneerson to rise and reveal himself to be the Messiah for whom Jews have waited since time immemorial."<ref name="ded"/>


However, in 1993, after the Rebbe was no longer speaking following his stroke, the Rebbe responded to the "Yechi" chant almost daily during the course of that year by nodding his head and moving his arm, including on live television in 1993.<ref>31 January</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Goldman|first=Ari L.|date=1 February 1993|title=Rebbe, But Not The Messiah, As Lubavitchers Compromise|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1993/02/01/nyregion/rebbe-but-not-the-messiah-as-lubavitchers-compromise.html}}</ref> In addition, the Rebbe allowed himself to be referred to as "The Rebbe King Moshiach, May He Live Forever" for the first time, in a book titled "Besurat HaGeulah" that was first published in 1993.<ref>{{Cite book|title=B'suras Ha'geulah|publisher=Vaad L'hafotzas Sichos|year=2010|isbn=978-1932883770|pages=V-VII|language=Hebrew}}</ref>
Within three days of Schneerson's death '']'' was reporting that the movement was splitting over the death with some claiming that he was alive and some claiming that he would be resurrected: "There are some in Crown Heights who say they don’t believe the Rebbe is dead, and others who say that his resurrection is imminent. Some of these resurrectionists, who critics within the movement say are straying far from traditional Judaism, have even taken to sleeping near the Rebbe’s grave in a Queens cemetery, hoping to be the first to see their Messiah rise from the dead."<ref name="bait">"Battle Among Lubavitch Erupts Over Rebbe’s Will", Jeffrey Goldberg, '']'', ], ]</ref>


Many Hasidim felt that Menachem Mendel Schneerson is the ''mashiach'' of the generation, even though he never said so himself.<ref name="ReferenceA">Chabad's Messianism and Israeli Radicals. Azure no. 41.</ref> As the years went on, and descriptions of Schneerson as being toweringly unique, a Rebbe of truly unprecedented and universally recognized stature, spread ever further, this messianic speculation spread to greater numbers and higher volume than in previous generations. The Hasidim became vocal of their hope that Schneerson would be the messiah.<ref name="scribd.com"/> As Schneerson's passion about the need for messiah became more well-known, criticism also built up. In 1980, a group of children from a Chabad summer camp composed a song with the words "am yisrael have no fear, Moshiach will be here this year, we want Moshiach now, we don’t want to wait." Schneerson seems to have received great satisfaction from the children's initiative, and encouraged their song.<ref name=josephtelushkin/>{{rp|431}} According to a report in '']'' magazine, Rabbi ] said he wished that Schneerson should be revealed as the messiah.<ref>" — An Ultra-Orthodox sect says the Redeemer is due to arrive any day now — and he might be an American" '']'' magazine, Lisa Beyer, March 23, 1992] (paywalled).</ref> According to a 1988 '']'' report: Rabbi ] speculated that Schneerson was the most suitable candidate for Jewish messiah.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1988/09/05/nyregion/hasidic-group-expands-amid-debate-on-future.html|title=Hasidic Group Expands Amid Debate on Future|newspaper=The New York Times|date=5 September 1988|access-date=23 December 2014|last1=Goldman|first1=Ari L.}}</ref> Some Chabad Hasidim took their message to the streets with billboards declaring that it was time for the messiah to come and bring the redemption.<ref>"Billboards hold a big message: the messiah is here", Michael Crook and David Hancock, ''Miami Herald'', April 15, 1992</ref>
Schneerson's will proved to be a blow to the messianists as the sole executor was arch anti-messianist Rabbi ].<ref name="bait">"Battle Among Lubavitch Erupts Over Rebbe’s Will", Jeffrey Goldberg, '']'', ], ]</ref>
The witness to the will was Rabbi ] an open messianist. While the sums involved in the will were quite small it gave Krinsky custody of many of the important organisations within the Chabad movement and was a bitter blow to Groner.<ref name="bait"/>


In light of some criticism about the insistent tone of these words, on one occasion Schneerson explained:
The appointment of a successor failed to achieve momentum - no individual was designated in the will and Krinsky refused the mantle answering "heaven forbid" when asked if he would accept it; rumors that Rabbi ] was named as a successor in a secret second will came to nought.<ref name="bait"/>
{{blockquote|This has always been the hope and yearning of the Jewish people – that the Messiah should come now, immediately. Therefore it is inappropriate for someone to say that he does not want, or that he does not agree, or that he is not comfortable that people are imploring 'we want moshiach now.' Each Jew clearly prays and pleads three times a day in the amida, while standing before the Al-mighty (at that time a person is certainly speaking the truth, and saying what he means) ''et tzemach David avdecha me’hera tatzmiach'' , and then continues ''ki lishuatcha kivinu kol hayom'', that he hopes for this the entire day!<ref>Likutei Sichot vol. 20 pp. 458-459</ref>}} Schneerson urged and talked about purifying all parts of the world through Torah and ] (commandments) in order to bring mashiach. Many times he would weep publicly about the deep slumber and exile we are in, and how urgent it is that God redeem us, both for our sake as well as even for His own.<ref name=steinsaltz1/>{{rp|174}} Nevertheless, criticism of his passion about the coming of the Messiah and his urging people to do all they could to bring about the redemption by adding in the observance of Torah and mitzvot, was something that was known to him. On one occasion he even remarked "I have merited that the complaint people have against me is that I am passionate about the Mashiach."<ref name=josephtelushkin/>{{rp|431}}


==Schneerson's illness and death==
===Chabad regroups===
On March 2, 1992, while praying at the ], the burial site of his father-in-law, Schneerson suffered a massive stroke.<ref name="Toward">Peter Schäfer, Mark R. Cohen, Editors (1998) '''' BRILL, {{ISBN|9789004110373}}, p. 399</ref> That very evening, while he was being treated for his stroke and Chabad Hasidim around the world gathered for prayer, some of the messianists broke out in song and dance. It was during this period of illness and inability to communicate that the messianic movement reached its greatest fervor, and became more vocal of their hope that Schneerson would soon be the ''mashiach''. This also troubled many people who felt that it was being imposed upon Schneerson as something he had no control over.<ref name=steinsaltz1/>{{rp|173}}
Within months however, messianism had regrouped and soon became one of the two major forces within the Chabad movement. Many Chabad followers preferred to refer to Schneerson's passing as a mere transition. In time Schneerson's passing began to be known as "]" - the Hebrew date of his death.<ref>"Still waiting for the messiah." '']'' 6790, ] ].</ref><ref>, Gaby Wenig, ''The Jewish Journal'', ], ]</ref>


By late 1992, a movement to formally crown Schneerson as messiah gained prominence. ] announced his plan to crown the Rebbe.<ref name="but"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071001044919/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/access/72107696.html?dids=72107696%3A72107696&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS%3AFT&date=FEB+022C+1993&author=Malcolm+Gladwell&pub=The+Washington+Post&desc=LETTER+FROM+CROWN+HEIGHTS%3B+A+Community%27s+Day+of+Mystery+and+Faith&pqatl=google |date=2007-10-01 }}, ] February 2, 1993 ]</ref><ref>''Mashiach Madness reaches frenzy as Lubavitch 'anoint' the Rebbe'', Debra Nussbaum Cohen, Jewish Telegraphic Agency January 28, 1993</ref> The Rebbe, who had been paralyzed and speechless since March the previous year, would join the daily prayers on a special balcony that was built for him to easily be wheeled. Butman planned to crown the Rebbe on January 30, 1993, after the evening prayers. However, when the Rebbe was nudged by Krinsky not to attend the planned event, he communicated to his secretaries Leibel Groner and Yudel Krinsky that he would only attend for the usual evening service. Both Groner and Krinsky, then followed by Butman, announced that the event was actually not a coronation and should not be intended as such.<ref>"Rabbi's appearance fails to reveal messiah", '']'', February 1, 1993</ref>
Schneerson's collected speeches from the last two years of his life were collected into pamphlets and published during his life under the title ''Besuras Hageula''. These especially were distributed by the messianists after his death to bolster the case that he was still the Messiah. These contained some of the strongest comments by Schneerson that the messianic age was imminent. Such evidence - along with other sources and a rabbinic decision declaring Rabbi Schneerson to be the messiah signed by over 250 rabbis - was used to bolster the case for belief in his return.


] messianist faction that emerged shortly before Schneerson's death. The Hebrew word is ''mashiach'' (]).]]
In his later years, the rebbe repeatedly returned to the millenarian theme that had begun to envelope his writing. For example a US-Russia agreement on ] lead to the Rebbe declaring that this was linked to the biblical prophecy "they shall beat their swords into plowshares and spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore". (] 2:4)<ref>''Besuras Hageula'', Schneerson compendium. p. 173</ref>


On 3 Tammuz (12 June) 1994, more than two years after the stroke that took away his ability to speak, the Rebbe died. His death left the Chabad community, much of the Jewish world, and even beyond, in mourning.<ref name="ded">''Death of Lubavitcher Leader, Rabbi Schneerson, Stuns Followers '', Laurie Goodstein, Washington Post, June 13, 1994</ref> From all over the world, people streamed to New York to participate in the funeral. The New York Times placed six articles about the Rebbe in the paper that week. Television devoted many hours of broadcast time to Schneerson's death.
A group of messianists took out a full-page ad in the '']'' in 1996 entitled "The Third of Tammuz is not the Rebbe's Yahrzeit";<ref name="keller"/> in 1998 another ''Times'' ad proclaimed that Schneerson "...was born to change the world in which we live and lead it to the ultimate redemption as predicted by the prophet... Moshiach’s presence and achievements are already manifest. The complete redemption and transformation of the world is imminent."<ref>Full-page Lubavitch ad for Rebbe Schneerson’s birthday, appearing in ''The New York Times'', ], ], p. A18</ref>
'']'' reported from the funeral that the death had left many Jews stunned: "Not all of Rabbi Schneerson's followers were Hasidim. Conservative and Reform Jews were among his greatest supporters."<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/06/13/nyregion/rabbi-schneerson-led-a-small-hasidic-sect-to-world-prominence.html?src=pm&pagewanted=2|title=Rabbi Schneerson Led A Small Hasidic Sect To World Prominence|newspaper=The New York Times|date=13 June 1994|access-date=23 December 2014|last1=Goldman|first1=Ari L.}}</ref> However, his view was not shared by all. Some of the messianists were so caught up with their hope, that they interpreted each new erosion in the Rebbe's health, and ultimately his very death, as stages in the messianic process. They cited various midrashic statements to fuel their ecstasy as to the imminent revelation of the messiah, and some of them drank and toasted l’chaim and danced before and during the funeral – an act that shocked many admirers of Schneerson across the Jewish world. In the days after Schneerson's death, many journalists and pundits wrote that they expected the end of the movement.<ref>"What Really Happens When Prophecy Fails: The Case of Lubavitch." Dein, Simon. ''Sociology of Religion'', 9/22/2001.</ref> For many Chabad followers, the death of the Rebbe was extremely painful. He was laid to rest next to his father-in-law, at the ], at the Montefiore cemetery in Queens. In Jewish tradition, significant dates are frequently referred to by their Hebrew characters. Chabad (like other Jewish movements) dating back to their first Rebbe, ], dates of all their Rebbes' deaths by Hebrew dates. Thus, in the case of Schneerson, the anniversary of his death became known as ] (the third of Tammuz). In the week after the Rebbe's death, the ''Wisconsin Chronicle'' editorialized and wrote how many Jews now find it difficult to believe that messiah will ever come: "Most modern Jews can't help but shrug at some claims that Schneerson is, or was, the most likely candidate in our time to be the Messiah, the King David-descended redeemer who according to tradition will inaugurate the final age of world peace and plenty. But when the Messiah does come, that personality likely will have much in common with Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson."{{cn|date=December 2024}}


==Chabad messianism after Schneerson's death==
A messianist publication elucidated the theology as early as 1995: "Since the Third of Tammuz, we are no longer able to physically see the Rebbe King Moshiach. The Rebbe remains physically alive just as before, it is only to our eyes that he is concealed. Therefore, we call this a day of concealment, and many refer to this as the "last test." Just as we know that there is a G-d though we may not see him, so too the Rebbe King Moshiach is here even though we do not see him."<ref name="keller"/>
{{Original research section|discuss=Talk:Chabad Messianism#Resurrection of Mashiach in Judaic tradition|date=March 2015}}
For many hopeful, often vocal, followers, Schneerson's death did not rule out the hope that he could still be the ''mashiach''. There are Talmudic and ''halakhic'' sources that speak of the possibility that a righteous Jewish leader could be resurrected to become the ''mashiach''. These positions, although not well-known, figure quite prominently and early in authentic Judaic sources. The Babylonian Talmud states: "If he is among the dead, he is someone like Daniel."<ref name="Sanhedrin 98b"/> In fact, the most well-known deceased figure identified as being able to be the messiah in rabbinic literature is King David. The Jerusalem Talmud states: "The Rabbis say, who is King Messiah? If he is from the living, David is his name, if he is from the deceased, David is still his name." According to ], a commentator on the Jerusalem Talmud known as the Pnei Moshe, the Talmud rules that: "If he is among the living, David will be his name, and if he is from among the dead, he is David himself".<ref>Brachot 2:4</ref>


Some object to the notion that ''mashiach'' will be someone who had once lived, died and was then resurrected, based on what Maimonides writes: "Even if one is worthy of being Mashiach, if he is killed it is certain that he is not Mashiach."<ref name="davidberger">{{cite book|last1=Berger|first1=David|title=The Rebbe, the Messiah, and the scandal of orthodox indifference|date=2008|publisher=Littman Library of Jewish Civilization|location=London|isbn=978-1-904113-75-1|edition=1. pbk.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4VHdJwAACAAJ&q=The+Rebbe,+the+Messiah,+and+the+Scandal+of+Orthodox+Indifference|access-date=16 June 2016}}</ref><ref name="jaffe">{{cite web|last=Jaffe|first=Melech|title=A Brief History of Lubavitch Messianism|url=https://www.moshiachlisten.com/history.html|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060210002112/http://www.moshiachlisten.com/history.html |archive-date=2006-02-10 }}</ref> Messianists counter that Maimonides does not disagree with both sources in the Talmud, rather the Talmud speaks of one who has died a natural death, while Maimonides excludes only one who was killed. This can be evidenced in his deliberate wording "if he (the potential messiah) failed or was killed", while specifying the likes of Bar Kochba "was killed (in war) because of sins" and Yeshua of Nazareth who "was executed by the court".<ref>{{Cite web|title=Mishne Torah, Hilchot Melachim uMilchamot 11:3 & 4|url=https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/1188356/jewish/Melachim-uMilchamot-Chapter-11.htm|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140424085851/http://www.chabad.org:80/library/article_cdo/aid/1188356/jewish/Melachim-uMilchamot-Chapter-11.htm |archive-date=2014-04-24 }}</ref>
According to Rabbi Yeshvam Segal, a ] in Kfar Chabad, "We believe that Lubavitch is Jerusalem, the 'Babylonian House of our Teacher'<ref>Ezekiel (11:16) says that during the exile, "I will be to them as a little Temple in the countries where they shall come". The Talmud (Megillah 29a) applies this verse to "the house of our master (]) in Babylon". By extension, the Rebbe applies it here to 770.</ref> is the Temple, and the Rebbe is the Ark of the covenant standing on the ] (for 'the righteous are the foundation of the world'),<ref>Proverbs 10:25</ref> in which the divine being and essence rests and is revealed.<ref></ref>


==Positions within Chabad==
==Expressions of Messianism==
{{undue weight section|date=June 2021}}
There is a wide range of degrees of messianism within Chabad. There is considerable dispute regarding the relative strengths of the various factions which is discussed below.
{{POV section|date=June 2021}}
The view of Schneerson as messiah is not advocated in Chabad's centralized and official literature.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.thejewishweek.com/viewArticle/c36_a1031/News/New_York.html |title=Chabad Gathering: No Jew Left Behind |work=The Jewish Week |author=Jonathan Mark |date=November 14, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080309202908/http://www.thejewishweek.com/viewarticle/c36_a1031/news/new_york.html |archive-date=March 9, 2008}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |title=Chabad's Global Warming |journal=The Jewish Week |issue=December 2005 |author=Mark, Jonathan}}. An online version of this article can be found at {{Cite web |url=http://www.shabboshouse.com/CampusChabad/QQ/Dershowitz.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070507023910/http://www.shabboshouse.com/CampusChabad/QQ/Dershowitz.htm |archive-date=May 7, 2007 |title= Speeches said at and Articles about the International Conference of Chabad Lubavitch Emissaries, Address by Professor Alan Dershowitz, Harvard University}}</ref> According to a Chabad spokesman in 2014, Chabad-Lubavitch leaders have "repeatedly condemned them in the strongest possible terms".<ref>Jonathan Mark, Michael Kress, Editors. (June 18, 2004) ''The Jewish Week'' Retrieved 21 December 2014</ref> Journalist Sue Fishkoff notes that the idea that most Lubavitchers are messianist is "a claim that is patently absurd. Here everyone is treading on thin ice, for no one can know precisely how deep Chabad messianism goes. When Berger and other critics claim that it affects the majority of the Chabad movement, they have no greater statistical backing than do those who suggest it is on the decline.".<ref name=autogenerated1>''The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad-Lubavitch'' by Sue Fishkoff, p. 274.</ref>


]
==Primary Groupings==
In broad terms Chabad is divided into two camps, with a wide range of belief within each camp:


* '''Messianists''' &ndash; Subsequent to Schneerson's death, vocal messianists have continued to proclaim that Schneerson is still alive. Some of them argue that just as the Talmud states that "Jacob did not die", a teaching that carries great nuanced significance in ] thought, so too "Schneerson did not die".<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/7972/jewish/Epistle-27.htm|title=Epistle 27 – Iggeret HaKodesh}}</ref><ref>Dvar Malchut, Parashat Shoftim, 5751; Sefer Hisvaadiyus 1991 vol. 4 Page 204</ref><ref name="chabad">{{Cite web|url=http://www.chabad.org/parshah/article.asp?AID=2711|title=Life, Death and Reality – Chassidic Masters – Parshah}}</ref> Among religious Jews, reference to one who has died is followed by expressions such as ''alav hashalom'' or ''zechuto yagen alenu''. Messianists do not use such terms when writing of Schneerson.<ref name=josephtelushkin/>{{rp|429}} Some messianists have even continued to use terms that indicate that Schneerson is still alive such as ''shlita''.<ref name="davidberger"/>{{rp|42}} Many group members are vocal Israeli youth, particularly those educated in the city of Safed. There are also members of the messianic camp within the Crown Heights community and elsewhere who share these views. These individuals can usually be identified by the small yellow pin, known as the Moshiach flag, worn on their lapel (or hat), and the Hebrew words of "Yechi" emblazoned on their kippot.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Since Schneerson's death, ''Beis Moshiach magazine'' has been a major organ for views within this camp of the messianist. Between the years 1998–2004, the messianists have garnered support from rabbis to issue a rabbinic ruling supporting their messianic claims.<ref name="Psak2"/> These views have led to much controversy and condemnation.<ref name="davidberger"/><ref name=josephtelushkin/>{{rp|431}}<ref name="taylorandfrancis.metapress.com"> Simon Dein, ''Anthropology & Medicine'', Volume 9, Number 1/April 01, 2002</ref> Between the years 1998–2004, a rabbinic ruling supporting the messianic claim that the Rebbe is the ''mashiach'' was issued and signed by over 100 rabbis.<ref name="Psak2"/>
==="Meshichist"===
* '''Anti-Messianists''' &ndash; Regardless of Schneerson's death, the majority of Chabad Hasidim continue to see him as the most righteous Jewish leader of the time, the ], whose influence throughout the world remains very palpable.<ref name=josephtelushkin/>{{rp|423}} They acknowledge that he died, visit his grave and observe yahrtzeit.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://observer.com/2014/07/rebbe-to-the-city-and-the-world/|title=Rebbe to the City – And The World – New York Observer|author=<!--Not stated-->|work=New York Observer|date=8 July 2014|access-date=13 January 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/14/nyregion/jews-make-a-pilgrimage-to-a-grand-rebbes-grave.html?_r=3&|title=Jews Make a Pilgrimage to a Grand Rebbe's Grave|author=Sarah Maslin Nir|newspaper=The New York Times|date=13 September 2013|access-date=13 January 2015}}</ref> They tend to place little or no emphasis on whether or not the Schneerson will be ''mashiach''. Instead they focus on the practical aspects of Schneerson's vision of making the world a better place.<ref name=steinsaltz1/>{{rp|274}} They are aware of Schneerson's negative reactions when people tried making Messianic claims about him, and are acutely aware of how much Schneerson, their ''tzaddik ha'dor'' and their ''moshiach sh'b'dor'', expects of them to accomplish both in the realm of their own personal service of God, in helping to bring the beauty of Judaism to Jews, and to spread the beauty of monotheism to the world at large.<ref name="ReferenceA"/><ref name=steinsaltz1/>{{rp|274}} They hold that they have no way of knowing who will be the Moshiach, although they may wish it will be Schneerson.<ref name="ReferenceA"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/177352/lubavitcher-rebbe#undefined|title=Who Was the Lubavitcher Rebbe?|work=Tablet Magazine|date=July 2014 |access-date=13 January 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rabbi-shmuly-yanklowitz/rabbi-telushkins-newest-b_b_5407578.html|title=Rabbi Telushkin's Newest Book on the Lubavitcher Rebbe: A Testament to Greatness|work=The Huffington Post|date=30 May 2014|access-date=13 January 2015}}</ref>
One camp, loosely known as "meshichist", believe that the Rebbe's public words and actions in the early 1990s constituted an almost formal declaration of his messiahship, that he authorised the campaign to publicise this claim, and that this authorisation continues today. They believe that the only obstacle remaining before the final redemption is the fact that the Rebbe's messiahship remains unrecognised by most of the world, and therefore the most important task of all Chabad hassidim ought to be to spread the word and persuade people to accept the Rebbe as the "Anointed King". This group believes in reciting the Yechi slogan. ''Beis Moshiach'' magazine is a major organ for views within this camp.


]
People within this group differ widely in their attitude to the Rebbe's death.


* '''Other positions''' &ndash; According to some scholars, the messianist divisions in Chabad can be identified by various subtler factions of those who claim the Rebbe is not the messiah but could have been as he had all the qualities of a messiah prior to his death, whether the Rebbe was the messiah and will be messiah again once resurrected, whether the Rebbe is believed not to have died.<ref>Dein, Simon, and Lorne L. Dawson. "The 'scandal’of the Lubavitch Rebbe: messianism as a response to failed prophecy." ''Journal of Contemporary Religion'' 23, no. 2 (2008): 163-180.</ref>
===="Yaacov Avinu did not die"====
Some meshichists insist that despite appearances the Rebbe did not in fact die on ] ]. They argue that just as, according to the Talmud, the patriarch ] did not die,<ref>Taanit 5b</ref> nor did the Rebbe. He therefore remains the messiah just as he was before 1994. These believers refuse to put the typical honorifics for the dead (e.g. '']'' or ''zecher tzaddik livrocho'', "may the memory of the righteous be for a blessing") after Rabbi Schneerson's name. They do not visit his grave, or mark his ]. They rely upon the Rebbe's statement that the world has entered a new period in its history and that, contrary to what has happened in the past, the leader of the generation will not be hidden "even through burial", but that he would remain alive until the revelation of the Messiah.<ref>Dvar Malchut, Parashat Shoftim, 5751; Sefer Hisvaadiyus 1991 vol. 4 Page 204</ref>


==Responses==
=====Some Sources of Dispute=====
{{undue weight section|date=June 2021}}
There are many sources that seem to support the idea that a ]'s life does not end with his physical demise. In addition to the Talmud's statement about the patriarch Jacob, in the blessing of the new moon, Jews say, "] the King of Israel is alive and well". There is also the ]'s explanation<ref></ref> of the Zoharic statement (III, 71b), "When a tzaddik departs he is to be found in all the worlds more than during his lifetime". The Alter Rebbe explains that the tzaddik's life is "not a physical life, but a spiritual life", and therefore physical death does not affect this state of living.<ref name=tolany>{{cite web |url=http://moshiachtalk.tripod.com/tolany.html |title=On False Messianism |author=Stephen M. Tolany}}</ref>
{{POV section|date=June 2021}}


===Support===
===="Messiah from the dead"====
In 1998, a group of rabbis signed a Jewish legal ordinance (''psak din'') declaring Menachem Schneerson the Jewish messiah. Its signatories include several non-Habad Orthodox and Hasidic rabbis such as ] (affiliated with ]), Aaron Leifer (the late Rabbi of ]-Safed), Eliyahu Shmuel Schmerler (Rosh Yeshiva of ] and member of the ''Mif'al Hashas''), Ahron Rosenfeld of ] and Yaakov Menachem Rabinowitz of ].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.ksol.org/image.asp?f=psak_large.pdf&d=11 |title=פסק דין |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303205907/http://www.ksol.org/image.asp?f=psak_large.pdf&d=11 |archive-date=March 3, 2016}}</ref>
Others in this camp accept that the Rebbe did indeed die in 1994, but still believe that he will return as the messiah. They point to various sources in Jewish tradition that can be interpreted as allowing for such a possibility.<ref>e.g. the Talmud's suggestion (Sanhedrin 98b) that ] could be the messiah.</ref> They also emphasize the belief that the classic meaning of death does not apply to a truly righteous person.<ref name="chabad"></ref> In this view Schneerson never "died" spiritually despite him physical death, and is still alive in some way that ordinary humans cannot perceive. Thus they believe that while Schneerson is dead he will later return to be revealed as Messiah.<ref>Rabbi Levi Yitzchak Ginsberg, formerly of Kfar Chabad Yeshiva, in his book ''Mashiach Akhshav'', volume IV, 1996</ref>


===Opposition===
=====Some Sources of Dispute=====
The reaction of Torah scholars to the idea that Schneerson could be the messiah varied. During his life, numerous rabbis and Jewish leaders expressed their views that Menachem Mendel Schneerson had the potential to be the messiah of the generation. There has been a general decline in that view since his death.<ref name=tablet>{{cite web|author=Susan Handelman |date=1 July 2014 |url=http://tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/177352/lubavitcher-rebbe|title=Who Was the Lubavitcher Rebbe?|work=Tablet Magazine|access-date=23 December 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.commentarymagazine.com/article/the-rebbe-twenty-years-after/|title=Article « The Rebbe Twenty Years After «Commentary Magazine|date=June 2014|access-date=23 December 2014}}</ref>
Folio 98 of tractate Sanhedrin has a strong focus on Moshiach and the Messianic era. Lubavitchers of this camp most commonly cite Sanhedrin 98b as a source of support for the idea of a Moshiach that returns from the dead. Here Rav Nachman says, “If Moshiach will be from the living he is someone like me”, the word "if" seems to imply that Moshiach could also come from the dead. In the next sentence, Rav opines, “If Moshiach will be from the living, then he will be like Rabbeinu Hakadosh, if he will be from the dead he will be like Daniel”, again implying that a belief in a Moshiach that returns from the dead is not antithetical to Judaism. Rabbi ], in a 2003 ruling argues that Rabbi Schneerson never attained a stature comparable to Daniel.<ref name="bel"> See also Rabbi Feldman's letter to David Berger: http://www.stevens.edu/golem/llevine/feldman_berger_sm_2.jpg</ref> Feldman, as well as Rabbi ],<ref>http://www.rabbileff.net/shiurim/ask/index.htm, Question #1174 </ref>are of the belief that in the Mishneh Torah, the only halachic work on the idea of the Moshiach, the Rambam rejects the idea of a potential Moshiach being killed only to return to complete his work.<ref name=tolany /> However Lubavitchers clearly hold their Rebbe to have been comparable to Daniel in righteousness<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.ajn.com.au/news/news.asp?pgID=199 |title=The Rebbe’s man downunder |work=Australian Jewisn News |author=Dan Goldberg |date=] ]}}</ref> and also differentiate between Moshiach dying or being killed.<ref name=tolany />


Long time critics of Schneerson from ] in Israel have been the most vocal in their criticism of Schneerson and Chabad.<ref name="davidberger"/>{{rp|7}} The most notable of these critics was ], the rosh yeshiva of the ]. Shach was a known critic of Schneerson and the Chabad movement. He repeatedly attacked Schneerson and his followers on a number of issues, including messianism. When people became more vocal about the possibility of Schneerson being the messiah, Shach advocated a complete boycott of Chabad.<ref name="Fate pg. 340">Faith and Fate: The Story of the Jewish People in the 20th century, Berel Wein, 2001 by Shaar Press. pg. 340</ref><ref>''The Messiah of Brooklyn: Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present'', M. Avrum Ehrlich, Chapter 10, notes, KTAV Publishing, {{ISBN|0-88125-836-9}}</ref> Other Bnei Brak leaders, including ], the former av bet din of the She'erit Yisrael Kashrut organization of Bnei Brak, and ], a rosh yeshiva of ], have also spoken negatively of those who wish Schneerson would be the messiah.<ref name="davidberger"/>{{rp|105}}
In a letter addressed to Professor ], Feldman points out that included in the ]'s qualifications for the Messiah is that he "forces all of Israel to go in the way of ...and fights the wars of Hashem...", and Feldman states that Schneerson has not fufilled these credentials.<ref>http://www.stevens.edu/golem/llevine/feldman_berger_sm_2.jpg</ref>


In America, numerous ] leaning rabbanim have also spoken negatively of this form of messianism, including ], ], ], ] and ], who all issued harsh criticism.<ref name="davidberger"/>{{rp|85}} Feldman, quoting Maimonides, states that "Even someone who is worthy of being Mashiach, if he is killed, it is certain that he is not Mashiach."<ref></ref> Feldman claims that anyone that can believe that the last Lubavitcher Rebbe is worthy of being the messiah has a "compromised judgment" and is "ignorant of Torah."<ref name="bel"> See also Rabbi Feldman's letter to David Berger: http://www.stevens.edu/golem/llevine/feldman_berger_sm_2.jpg</ref>
===="Tsefatim"====
Some elements within the Meshichist camp go further still, and insist that in order for the Rebbe to be revealed everybody must acknowledge his messiahhood. Those who oppose public declarations of this belief are seen as deliberately delaying his revelation, and therefore must be dealt with forcefully and sometimes even violently. They are known for vandalising any sign or publication that refers to the Rebbe in the past tense. This group is most common in ], and is associated with the Chabad yeshiva in that city. This group also has a presence in Crown Heights and has more or less free rein at the main synagogue at ]. The group are known loosely as the '''Tsefatim'''<ref name="jewek"></ref> and sometimes with the pejorative "the Taliban" by their detractors.<ref name="latimes"></ref><ref>''Lubavitch's Open Wound At 770'' Debora Nussbaum Cohen, The Jewish Week, July 1, 2005</ref>


Other American Torah authorities, such as the Ungvarer Rav ], Moshe Heinemann, ], ] and ] argue that while there may be sources for messianism, it is a ''shtut'' (foolishness) that should not be followed.<ref>''Can the Rebbe Be Moshiach?: Proofs from Gemara, Midrash, and Rambam That the Rebbe Cannot Be'' Gil Student, Universal-Publishers, 2002</ref><ref>The Professor, Messiah, & Scandal of Calumnies</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.chabadtalk.com/forum/attachment.php3?s=2ebda757c70c43b0a446c55ac559fac5&attachmentid=2&d=1009095431 |title=Archived copy |access-date=2014-04-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140424233408/http://www.chabadtalk.com/forum/attachment.php3?s=2ebda757c70c43b0a446c55ac559fac5&attachmentid=2&d=1009095431 |archive-date=2014-04-24 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Soloveichik's own written statements on the issue have themselves been the focus of controversy. A 1996 letter signed by Soloveichik states that "Before the passing of the Rebbe, I included myself among those who believe that the Rebbe was worthy of being Moshiach. And I strongly believe that had we, particularly the Orthodox community, been united, we would have merited to see the complete Redemption. Insofar as the belief . . . that the Rebbe can still be Moshiach, in light of the Gemara in Sanhedrin, the Zohar, Abarbanel, Kisvei Arizal, S’dei Chemed, and other sources, it cannot be dismissed."<ref name="davidberger"/>{{rp|70}} Soloveichik adds that "any cynical attempt at utilizing a legitimate disagreement of interpretation concerning this matter in order to besmirch and to damage the Lubavitch movement that was, and continues to be, at the forefront of those who are battling the missionaries, assimilation, and indifference, can only contribute to the regrettable discord that already plagues the Jewish community, and particularly the Torah community."<ref name="davidberger"/>{{rp|70}} In a letter from 2000, Soloveichik states that there have been those who have "persisted in stating that I validate their belief that a Jewish Messiah may be resurrected from the dead. I completely reject and vigorously deny any such claim. As I have already stated publicly. . . My intent in signing the original letter . . . was merely to express my opinion that we should not label subscribers to these beliefs as heretics."<ref>HaRebbi Melech HaMoshiach, David Berger, Urim Publications, 2005. p.75, note 7.</ref>
==="Anti-meshichist"===
Another camp, loosely called "anti-meshichist", is strongly opposed to all public claims that the Rebbe is the messiah. All major Chabad organisations, including ] and ], take this position. ''Kfar Chabad'' magazine is a major organ for views within this camp.


From the Progressive streams of Judaism, responses include: ] who expressed his concern about the developing messianism early on, while Schneerson was still alive, saying that "the outpouring of Messianic fervor is always a very disturbing development."<ref>''Expecting the messiah'', Lisa Beyer, ''Time'' magazine, March 23, 1992</ref> Senior ] rabbi and humanitarian activist ] was also critical of the messianist trends within the Chabad movement describing the organisation as having a "cult like" atmosphere.<ref>''Jewish Arguments and Counterarguments: Essays and Addresses'', Steven Bayme, KTAV Publishing, 2002. p260</ref>
There is a range of views within this camp too:


===="No longer viable"==== ===Other===
], during a eulogy for the Rebbe at ], spoke of the fact that people hoped that Schneerson could be the ''mashiach'', by saying how "it never occurred to anyone to declare that Rabbi ], Rabbi ], or the ] (the Rav) was the messiah. And did they not have followers? Did they not have a tradition? Were they not part of a long dynasty? They certainly did." Lichtenstein continued and said that it seemed to him that "at the root of the matter, the concept of Messianism attached itself to the Rebbe because of his image and status – their positive aspects. The Rebbe embodied – and in a powerful way – a certain combination in which one who wished to could see the reflection of a reflection of the Messiah King."<ref name="scribd.com"/>
Some "anti-meshichists" believe that Schneerson was the best candidate for the Messiah in his generation, and he would have been the messiah had God brought the redemption at that time, but it was not to be. Now that he is dead, they say, that claim is no longer viable, and there is now a new "potential messiah" whose identity remains unknown. Notable exponents of this position include ]{{Fact|date=January 2008}} and ].{{Fact|date=January 2008}}


] said of Schneerson that "If believe the Rebbe could have been Moshiach, fine, I agree... He had a far better chance than most."<ref>The Rebbe’s Army page 268</ref> Although once the Rebbe died, he did not see that as a possibility.<ref name=josephtelushkin/>{{rp|474}} Lamm also argued that messianists had misinterpreted Schneerson's statements to create a "distortion" leading to "moral nihilism."<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061120073526/http://www.thejewishweek.com/news/newscontent.php3?artid=11649# |date=2006-11-20 }} '']'', Debra Nussbaum Cohen</ref> According to Lamm, open efforts to declare Schneerson the messiah were not tolerated before his death: "When he was alive, no one would have dared to discuss this. But now it is easy for the messianically-oriented to distort the Rebbe's teachings".<ref>Conference Weighs Rabbi's Legacy" The Forward, Steven I. Weiss, November 11, 2005</ref>
===="Anti-publicity"====
A larger group within the anti-meshichist camp still believe that the Rebbe will be the messiah, but accept that this is difficult to understand, let alone to explain. They therefore revert to what was Chabad's official policy until the late 1980s, at the Rebbe's direct orders, which was to increase public awareness and anticipation of the messiah while strictly avoiding any speculation as to who the messiah might be.


===Israeli Chief Rabbinate===
Two incidents concern the ] and the topic of Chabad messianism:
* 2000 pronouncement &ndash; In January 2000, the Chief Rabbinate of Israel released a statement regarding the issue of Schneerson being worthy of being the ''mashiach'', and declarations made by messianists, saying that such declarations "confuse and mislead simple people". The statement continued to mention that the Chief Rabbinate " no intention, God forbid, of diminishing the greatness and the global activities of the Rebbe of blessed memory."<ref>''Hatzofeh'', 11 Shevat 5760 (18 Jan. 2000), 5. ''The Rebbe, the Messiah, and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference by David Berger'', 2001, published by the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization of Portland. Page 128–129.</ref>
* 2007 conversion case &ndash; A conversion case in 2007 of a man educated by Chabad messianists who wished to convert led to controversy, with two Israeli rabbis saying the messianic views were "beyond the pale of normative Judaism" and the man should therefore not be allowed to convert. The Chief Rabbinate ruled in favor of the conversion.<ref name="noc">{{Cite news|url=http://www.nrg.co.il/online/1/ART1/675/999.html |title= Rabbinical Conversion Court refuses to convert Chabad messianist |language= he |author=Avishai ben Hayiim |newspaper= ] |date= December 26, 2007 |access-date=December 21, 2014}}</ref>


===Position of Chabad organizational leadership===
A 1996 statement from ] said:
{{blockquote|With regard to some recent statements and declarations by individuals and groups concerning the matter of Moshiach and the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of sainted memory, let it be known that the views expressed in these notices are in no way a reflection of the movement's position. While we do not intend to preclude expressions of individual opinion, they are, in fact, misleading and a grave offense to the dignity and expressed desires of the Rebbe. The statement reads that "The Rebbe clearly inspired a heightened consciousness of Moshiach, one of Judaism's principles of faith, and towards this end, encouraged the study of the traditional sources concerning belief in Moshiach, the Redemption and its imminent fulfillment, as well as an increase in activities of goodness and kindness. This should be perpetuated by all, as we strive for a more perfect world and the fulfillment of the Rebbe's vision.}}


It continues:
==Prevalence of Messianism==
{{blockquote|Unfortunately, the Rebbe's words are now being distorted and quoted out of context by a numbered few. This reckless behavior, even if well intentioned, is antithetical in the extreme to all that Lubavitch represents as defined by the Rebbe. The Rebbe explicitly and emphatically advocated a thoughtful, respectful and responsible approach in this and related matters, and resolutely opposed such distorted pronouncements time after time, both publicly and privately.<ref>The New York Times, Feb 9, 1996.</ref>}}
].]]The prevalence of the various views listed above amongst Chabad supporters is disputed. According to ] in his book '']'' and other observers, very few Chabad adherents will say that "the Rebbe was/is not the Messiah". Some will say that "he might be", but a very large number will say that he certainly is the Messiah. Indeed this appears to most observers to be the mainstream position - the difference between the Messianists and the anti-Messianists being over whether Schneerson is dead or not. Berger argues that: "...the major institutions in the three primary population centers of Crown Heights, Kfar Chabad, and Safed are either dominated by overt believers in the Rebbe's Messiahship or suffused by that belief." He notes that in the movement's largest Yeshiva ''Oholei Menachem'', the administration ordered that ''Yechi'' be recited. He said that the chief rabbi of Kfar Chabad was "one of the first signatories of a 1998 halachic ruling requiring belief in the Rebbe's Messiahship" as did 250 other Chabad Rabbis.


A statement from ] said:
In a sworn affidavit, in a case regarding the control of ], Rabbi Sholom Kalmanson argued that while "most Lubavitchers believe that the rebbe is the messiah, others believe that while the scenario is possible, it should not be a public position. A very small minority have abandoned the notion that the rebbe is Moshiach."<ref name="ppp"></ref>
{{blockquote|Belief in the coming of Moshiach and awaiting his imminent arrival is a basic tenet of the Jewish faith. It is clear, however, that conjecture as to the possible identity of Moshiach is not part of the basic tenet of Judaism. The preoccupation with identifying the Rebbe (zatza"l) as Moshiach is clearly contrary to the Rebbe's wishes. Together with the whole of Klal Yisrael we pray for the fulfillment of our collective yearning for Moshiach, in the spirit of the timeless Jewish declaration: "I await his (Moshiach's) coming each and every day".<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://moshiachtalk.tripod.com/kolkoreh.pdf|title=Chabad kol koreh}}</ref>}}


==Treatment in scholarship==
Berger notes in a recent article for '']'' that he is''"unfamiliar with a single public declaration formally affirming that Lubavitch chassidim should not accept the belief that the Rebbe is the Messiah."''<ref>], July 2006.]</ref>
Within ] and ], the Chabad identification of Schneerson as messiah can be analyzed in terms of ], a type of leadership developed by ]. The process of identification of Schneerson as the messiah may also be thought of as a contributing factor to the rationalization of the collective life of the Chabad community. Chabad messianism prompts community members to achieve the ] set by the seventh rebbe, and it likely supports the Chabad's success as a modern charismatic enterprise that operates within a competitive market of religious goods.<ref>Pace, E. (2007). Extreme messianism: the Chabad movement and the impasse of the charisma. ''Horizontes Antropológicos'', ''13''(27), 37-48.</ref> Chabad messianism is also a key factor to understanding the use of various digital and non-digital media by Chabad in religious outreach contexts. The group's use of digital media is described as an important ambition for its potential to reach global Jewish audiences, with the intention of rejuvenating religious observance among Jews around the world, itself a prerequisite for the Jewish messianic redemption.<ref>Rashi, T., & McCombs, M. (2015). Agenda setting, religion and new media: The Chabad case study. Journal of Religion, ''Media and Digital Culture'', ''4''(1), 126-145.</ref>


Opposition to Chabad messianism may stem from the discomfort that the ] would face if a free and meaningful Jewish life were declared inadequate without the coming of a messiah. However, the comming of Moshiach is basic to Judaism as Maimonadies writes explicitly in his 13 Principles of Faith. This opposition appears constrained by the Jewish community's lack of hegemony in the areas of belief and ], and by Chabad and Hasidism's prior neutralization of the messianic impulse by focusing on individual spiritual fulfilment and redemption. Despite the controversy, Chabad messianism, whether it is deemed as heretical or not, does not appear to have resulted in the type of trauma or damage to the Jewish people as with the ].<ref>Magid, S. "The Divine/Human Messiah and Religious Deviance: Rethinking Chabad Messianism." ''Rethinking the Messianic Idea in Judaism'', 316-351.</ref>
A Chabad rabbi in ] cited by ] argued in a messianist publication that "everyone knows that all Lubavitch Chassidim, despite the differing opinions, believe that the Rebbe is ''Melech HaMoshiach''. This is the most open secret of the last decade."<ref name="qweer"></ref>


Opposition to Chabad messianism on theological grounds may also be traced to a tension within the Jewish tradition over the definition of Judaism as either a religion or an ethnicity. ] polemics that challenge Chabad messianism on these grounds may be understood as an effort to revive the self-definition of Judaism as a religion and to impose a theological approach that emphasizes the categories of ] and heresy. While these efforts attempt to strengthen the border around Jewish identity, it is likely that once the initial phase passes, characterized by acute anxiety, the ]tic formulations will begin to dissipate and the Jewish community returns to defining itself as something between a religion and an ethnicity.<ref>Dillon, R. (2010). ''We Know What We’re Not: David Berger, Chabad Messianism, and Theological Self-Definition in Judaism'' (Doctoral dissertation).</ref>
Schneerson's messianism or divinity is not advocated in any of Chabad's official literature.<ref>, The Jewish Week by Jonathan Mark
11/14/2007</ref><ref>Chabad's Global Warming The Jewish Week, December, 2005 by Mark, Jonathan. An online version of this article can be found at </ref>


==Notes==
According to ], director of the non-messianist website ] "People don't actually believe the Rebbe is the Messiah. They say they believe, but really they want, they hope, they pray. But believe this no."<ref> Liz Leyden, ''Washington Post'', ], ]</ref> Of those who agitate for the belief that the rebbe was or is the messiah, Rabbi Shmotkin, the Chabad spokesman, said Chabad-Lubavitch leaders have “repeatedly condemned them in the strongest possible terms.”<ref>http://www.thejewishweek.com/news/newscontent.php3?artid=9558</ref>
{{Reflist}}


== References ==
Journalist ] notes that the idea that most Lubavitchers are messianist is "a claim Lubavitchers say is patently absurd. Here everyone is treading on thin ice, for no one can know precisely how deep Chabad messianism goes. When Berger and other critics claim that it infects the majority of the Chabad movement, they have no greater statistical backing than do those who suggest it is on the decline."<ref>''The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad-Lubavitch'' by Sue Fishkoff, p. 274.</ref>


* , David Berger
The most senior openly anti-messianist rabbi is Yoel Kahn. In a 2003 proclamation by Kahn<ref>''Algemeiner Journal'', 19 Adar I, 5763</ref> "messianists" are condemned for saying Schneerson is alive. A pamphlet produced by the anti-messianist camp including Menachem Brod makes a similar point<ref>''HaNekudah haChabadit'' 1 Tishrei, 5764</ref>
* , Adam Dickter, Haddasah Magazine

* ''The Messiah of Brooklyn: Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present'', M. Avrum Ehrlich, KTAV Publishing, {{ISBN|0-88125-836-9}}
==Response to Chabad messianism==
* Dalfin, Chaim. ''Attack on Lubavitch: A Response'', Jewish Enrichment Press, February 2002 ({{ISBN|1-880880-66-0}})
=== Schneerson's response ===
* Fishkoff, Sue. ''The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad-Lubavitch'', Schocken, 2003 ({{ISBN|0-8052-4189-2}})
In 1984 Rabbi Sholom Dov Wolpo published a booklet declaring Schneerson to be the Messiah. Over the course of Sukkot 5745 (1984) Schneerson several times denounced actions that drove people away from Chabad and its message. On Simchat Torah and Shabbat Bereshit he returned to this theme, saying that those involved were starting a new war against Chabad (i.e., Lubavitch chassidism) and all its Rebbeim, even including the eventual messiah, and that he should never have to speak about it again.<ref>''Sefer Hisva'aduyos'' 5745, Vol. 1, p. 465</ref> On Shabbat Bereshit, when Wolpo began singing a song that had long been popular in Lubavitch, which referred to Schneerson as the messiah, he abruptly stopped the singing and ordered that it never be sung again.<ref>needs citation</ref>
*{{cite book |last=Telushkin |first=Joseph |title=Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History |publisher=Harper Collins |year=2014 |isbn=978-0062319005 }}

* , Joel Marcus
In 1985, a year later, Schneerson gave a long talk about ''moshiach'' in general and the leader of the generation being the moshiach. Stating "I will not be troubled if one will translate 'Moshiach' literally, i.e. the righteous Moshiach, since that is indeed the truth. The leader of the generation is in fact Moshiach of the generation."<ref>Eve of Simchas Torah 5746--October 27, 1985</ref> This, coupled with the Rebbe's frequent statement that ours is the "Last Generation of galut (exile) and it is the first generation of ], the redemption" is one of the arguments put forward that the Rebbe is the messiah. The logic behind this is that if the leader of the generation is the messiah, and this is the last generation, then it follows that he is the "final" redeemer.
* , ], ].

* , ], Neta Sela, 02.12.07
In the late 1980s and early 1990s the Rebbe's talks became increasingly focused on the topic of ''Moshiach'', that ''Moshiach'' was about to come, and what was needed to accomplish this. These talks would often take on a sense of urgency. On one occasion, during the rebbes talk at the International Conference of Shluchim, he stated "the work of the '']'' has already finished, and the only task left is to welcome ''Moshiach''".
* , ], Saul Sadka, 02.14.07

* {{Dead link|date=November 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, ''The New York Times'', Jonathan Mahler, 09.21.03
In the early 1990s Hasidim became more vocal about Schneerson being the '']'', even submitting a petition to him asking that he reveal himself as the long-awaited messiah.

In 1991 hasidim began singing a new song ("Yechi") proclaiming him to be the messiah. On at least one occasion, the Rebbe appeared to gesture his approval.<ref name=iyar15>] ]]</ref> But a few months later when some chassidim started to sing it, he said that it was strange that he should remain sitting there, and that the only reason he did not stand up and leave was his reluctance to disrupt the brotherly atmosphere of a ''farbrengen''.<ref>''Sichos Kodesh'', Parshas Noach 5752</ref>

After Schneeerson's ] in 1992, which left him partially paralyzed, it became customary for chassidim to recite the ''Yechi'' chant after ] and at general prayer gatherings for his recovery. Whenever he was present he encouraged this.

In the fall 1992, on ], Schneerson was brought to a window constructed on the upper level of the ] at ] overlooking the main sanctuary. Chassidim sang the full version of ''Yechi,'' and he made encouraging motions with his left hand (his right side had been paralyzed by the stroke). On certain occasions; the rebbe made increasingly big signs of encouragement such as on Rosh Chodesh Kislev 1992 (5753); when the rebbe moved his hand back and forth with extreme energy.

===Haredi response===
The response of haredi '']'' to messianism both before and after the death of Schneerson has been universally negative, though they differ on the appropriate response and remedy.



====Aharon Kotler====
Rabbi ] (1892-1962), founder of the Lakewood Yeshivah in New Jersey, was severely critical of Lubavich, in part because of the extreme emphasis on messianism evident even at that time.<ref>''The Rebbe, the Messiah, and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference'' by David Berger,
2001, published by the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization of Portland. Page 7. </ref>

====Aharon Feldman====
Rabbi ], dean of the ] penned a public response to a question from ] asking how orthodox Jews should relate to chabad messianists in 2003. He expresses wonderment at the fact that the "great halachic authorities" have not published rulings on this subject and reluctantly agrees to issue a ruling himself. He makes a clear distinction between what he terms the "Mishichists" and the "Elokists". He rules that it is forbidden to associate with Elokists under any circumstances due to their ] and they cannot be counted for a ]. He rules it is also forbidden to support the mishichists in any way that lends credence to their messianic beliefs though they are not strictly heretics. He argues that although there is a Talmudic source (Sanhedrin 98b) that the Jewish messiah may come from the dead, nevertheless that source indicates that this messianic candidate must be similar to the prophet Daniel; Rabbi Feldman rules that anyone that can believe that the last Lubavitcher Rebbe was similar to the prophet Daniel has entirely compromised judgment and should not be given any leadership position.<ref name="bel"> See also Rabbi Feldman's letter to David Berger: http://www.stevens.edu/golem/llevine/feldman_berger_sm_2.jpg</ref> "...it is clear that are ignorant of Torah, thus, it is impossible to rely on their decisions in Torah matters... One who believes that amongst all those who have ever lived, the late leader of the Chabad movement is the best candidate to be our redeemer shows that he lacks any understanding of Torah values. The rulings of such a man cannot be relied upon in any matter of Torah, and ''a fortiori'' he cannot serve as a leader or Rabbi."<ref name="bel"/>

In a letter addressed to Professor ], Feldman points out that included in the ]'s qualifications for the Messiah is that he "forces all of Israel to go in the way of ...and fights the wars of Hashem...", and Feldman states that Schneerson has not fufilled these credentials.<ref>http://www.stevens.edu/golem/llevine/feldman_berger_sm_2.jpg</ref>

====Shlomo Eliyahu Miller====
Rabbi ], a Rosh ] (dean) of the Kolel Avreichim institute for advanced ] study in Toronto and head of its ] (Rabbinical court), said in an interview, "The belief that Moshiach is in the embodiment of a deceased person is definitely assur (forbidden) and our mosdos must convey this issur to students as part of their education... However, I would not say the Mashichistim are pasul but rather they're very mistaken in an important part of Yiddishkeit. Perhaps, I won't accept such a person as a Rav (you can't be a Rav if your deluded), or to work as a shochet, but I won't say their shechitah is prohibited... " <ref> Mishpacha magazine April 2008 </ref>

====Moshe Heinemann====
Rabbi Moshe Heinemann, Rav of the Agudath Israel of Baltimore and the ] kashrus organization, said in an interview," It's a distortion to say the Rebbe is Mashiach and anything which is not the truth, we can not agree to, even though Chabad in general does many good things." <ref> Mishpacha magazine April 2008 </ref>

Dr. Avraham Pollack, president of the ] kashrus organization, was asked if the star-k would approve of a chabad messianist shochet. Dr. Pollack answered that we look for ‘Yerai Shomayim’ shoctim and chabad has many of them that are ‘Erlich’, however if one of the shochtim claim openly ‘Yechi Adoneinu Moreinu V’Rabbeinu Melech HaMoshiach’ that is definitely a red flag and will most likely not be hired by us.<ref> http://www.vosizneias.com/16376/2008/05/25/new-york-star-k-kosher-supervision-claiming-the-rebbi-is-moshiach-is-not-in-our-kosher-approved-shochet/ </ref>

====Elya Svei====
Rabbi ], one of the rosh yeshivas of the ], said in his eulogy for Rabbi ], "Another area in which Rav Shach took the sole initiative and responsibility was in the less than popular task of protesting Messianic proclivities within Lubavitch. Rav Shach assumed the responsibility of decrying this perversion. Rav Shach started to fight this battle alone. He illuminated the truth so that others could also see the posed threat and follow his lead."<ref></ref>

Rabbi Svei and others launched an effort to decertify ]/Oholai Menachem (a major Lubavitch yeshiva in which the messianist belief is proclaimed) from the ] (AARTS).<ref> ''The Rebbe, the Messiah, and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference by David Berger'', 2001, published by the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization of Portland. Page 85.</ref>

====Yehuda Henkin====
Senior American ], ] in a responsa to Gil Student ruled that messianists are merely foolish and need not be shunned but he was more stringent regarding the Elokists:<ref name="henk"></ref> "However anyone who has even a spark of confusion about the boundaries between his Rebbe and God...is an apostate. His ] cannot be consumed, he cannot be counted for a ] and his testimony ]] and his rabbinic judgement is unsound."<ref name="henk"/>

====Zev Leff====
Rabbi ] was asked if the Lubavitcher Rebbe is Moshiach. Rabbi Leff answered, "The Lubavitcher Rebbe is no longer alive. The Rambam says very clearly that if someone claims to be Moshiach and he dies before he builds the Temple and brings all Jews back to Eretz Yisrael, then it is clear that he was not Moshiach. So according to the Rambam the Lubavitcher Rebbe cannot be Moshiach... Also, even if people will claim to have found sources that seem to say that Moshiach can be somebody who died and will come back from the dead to become Moshiach, those sources are not obviously what the
sources means because for 2,000 years one of our objections to Christianity across the board was that the concept of a dead Moshiach who comes back to be Messiah is not a Jewish concept." (it is very questionable what he meant because the Rambam says that one is not moshiach only if he was killed as one can see in the source and it's a clear Gemara in Sanhedrin (which he must hold of) that moshiach can come either from the living or from thew dead) ,<ref> http://www.rabbileff.net/shiurim/ask/index.htm #413 See also #229, 236, 448, 541, 726, 880, and 1174</ref>

Rabbi Leff was also asked the following: "May one eat in a restaurant whose proprietor feels that the Lubavitcher Rebbe is the
moshiach, if it is under a widely accepted hashgacha? Furthermore, is it permitted for a person to daven in a shul where the majority of the congregants feel that the Rebbe zt"l is moshiach, and perhaps participate in the recitation of Yechi?"
He answered, "The restaurant really depends on who the supervision is and if it is a reliable supervision. Even if the proprietor is not Jewish, certainly if he is Jewish and has wrong ideas about Yiddishkeit, you can eat in that restaurant. On the other hand, to daven in a shul where the majority have crooked ideas about Yiddishkeit and recite things that have no place as part of the davening, better not to daven in a shul like that."<ref> http://www.rabbileff.net/shiurim/ask/index.htm #373 </ref>

====Satmar Rebbe====

According to anthropologist Robert Eisenberg who studied the relationships between the various Hasidic groups in New York ] Hassidim hold extremely hostile views towards the Lubavitchers in general viewing them as "damaged goods" and "idolaters" on account of their beliefs concerning Schneerson.<ref name="bob">Robert Eisenberg, ''Boychiks in the Hood: Travels in the Hasidic Underground'' (HarperCollins, 1995), pp. 14-15, 232.</ref> He notes that following Schneerson's death, the Rebbe of Satmar was said to have commented "Now we have to wait for the real Messiah."<ref name="bob"/>

Others have noted that any perceived hostility was between individual Satmar and Lubavitch hasidim and it was not a position tolerated by their leaderships.{{Fact|date=January 2008}}

====Chaim Dov Keller====
One of the first commentators to document the development of Elkoist thought was Rabbi ]. In a 1997 article he asks of the Lubavitch movement: ''"Will it be set back on a true course to reach out and bring Jews closer to HaShem and His mitzvos, or evolve into a huge messianic cult whose purpose is to propagate the divinity and worship of the Rebbe?"''<ref name="keller">''God Centered or Rebbe/Messiah - Centered'', Chaim Dov Keller, The Jewish Observer June 1997. Can be seen here: http://identifyingchabad.org/rabbikeller.html</ref>

====Yaakov Kaminetsky====
Rabbi ] expressed concern in the early 1980s that what he regarded as Lubavitch's nascent personality-centric thinking could morph into something more objectionable. He advised Bezalel Landau not to publish a few chapters in a book he had written on the ]<ref>''Ha-Gaon he-Hassid mi-Vilna'', Betzalel Landau.</ref> that dealt with his opposition to ] as such material could split families, pitting husband against wife. He noted that he should keep them in reserve in case "someone was to do an ugly thing" a reference that Kaminetsky's son says <ref>"He was referring to messianic fantasies simmering in a hasidic circle - in Israel, the adherents of that group had fomented a political feud along hasidic-misnagdic lines - and my father felt that the eventual publication of these chapters would help the general hasidic public shake off the messianics should their fantasy get out of hand. As it turned out, my father's concerns were well founded: a large segment of that hasidic cult did declare its leader to be the Messiah."</ref> refers to the Chabad movement.<ref>''The making of a Godol'', Nosson Kamenetsky, pp. xxvii-xxviii.</ref>

====Yaakov Weinberg====
Rabbi ], a rosh yeshiva of ], told an enquiring student (even before the Rebbe's death) that he should pray alone rather than in a Chabad synagogue because 'they pray to a different deity '.<ref>''The Rebbe, The Messiah, and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference'', David Berger, The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2001. pg 105.</ref>

===Modern Orthodox response===
====Rabbinical Council of America====
In 1996 the largest Orthodox rabbinic grouping in the ], the ] approved the following resolution. The resolution read: "In the light of disturbing developments which have recently arisen in the Jewish Community, the Rabbinical Council of America in convention assembled declares that there is not and has never been a place in Judaism for the belief that the Messiah will begin his mission only to experience death, burial and resurrection before completing it."<ref>''Christianity After Auschwitz: Evangelicals Encounter Judaism in the New Millennium'', Paul R. Carlson, Xlibris, 2000, p69.</ref> Berger felt that the RCA resolution was a very significant turning point for his cause, as he recounts in his book that after the resolution was approved, "the thunder-bolt struck."

====Ahron Soloveichik====
]In June 1996, '']'' published a paid advertisement comprising a letter with Rabbi ]'s signature. The letter included the assertion that Soloveitchik believed Schneerson to have been worthy of being Messiah, that the Chabad position that Schneerson was the Messiah could not be dismissed as ], and cited a number of sources to demonstrate that he could be the Messiah. The letter also attacked Chabad's critics, and praised Chabad's works.<ref></ref>

Many messianists believe that Soloveichik defended their position and bring him as a source to back up their arguments. Yet the letter caused confusion as this was a reversal of Soloveichik's previous position on the matter. In 1994, Soloveichik had told '']'' that Schneerson ''"can't be the Messiah - he is not living - a Messiah has to be living. A living Messiah, not a dead Messiah."'' He had also expressed shock at the idea that anyone could suggest that the Messiah could be from among the dead noting that ''"that could be possible in the Christian faith, but not Judaism"'' adding that this was ''"repugnant to everything Judaism represents."''<ref>"Rabbis Blast Lubavitcher Messianism, Warn Resurrection Talk Echoes Christian Themes", Lucette Lagnado, ''The Forward'', ], ]</ref>

Berger provides a letter from Soloveitchik to a friend in 2000, that resolves the contradiction between his two positions. Soloveichik writes: "To my great dismay...publications affiliated with the Lubavitch movement have persisted in stating that I validate their belief that a Jewish Messiah may be resurrected from the dead. I completely reject and vigorously deny any such claim. As I have already stated publicly...such a belief is repugnant to Judaism and is the antithesis of the truth. My intent in signing the original letter...was merely to express my opinion that we should not label subscribers to these beliefs as heretics. Any statements in that letter which imply an endorsement of their view were not shown to me at the time I signed and I once again repudiate any such ridiculous claim."<ref>''HaRebbi Melech HaMoshiach'', David Berger, Urim Publications, 2005. p.75, note 7. (The book is an expanded edition and translation into Hebrew of: ''The Rebbe, The Messiah, and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference'')</ref>

====Norman Lamm====
Other ] leaders have also responded to Chabad Messianism. The trend of messianism itself was criticized strongly by Rabbi ], chancellor and former president of ]. Lamm argues that Schneerson’s statements could be misinterpreted to create a "distortion" leading to "moral nihilism." Lamm further argued that such open efforts to declare Schneerson the messiah would not have been tolerated before his death: "When he was alive, no one would have dared to discuss this."<ref>"Conference Weighs Rabbi's Legacy" '']'', Steven I. Weiss, ], ]]</ref> On another occasion Lamm argued “I do not believe that the rebbe thought himself to be moshiach. But I do think he considered himself a possible candidate." Lamm decried the movement’s over-emphasis on messianism and belief that the rebbe is the messiah but simply concealed from view. "To continue this myth of his being moshiach is utter ridiculousness. It is easy for the messianically-oriented to distort the rebbe’s teachings and say “that the rebbe is part of the God-head. That is completely heretical and quite dangerous. I wonder if this distortion could and should have been avoided by responsible leadership of a movement that has not lost its vitality."<ref> '']'', Debra Nussbaum Cohen</ref>

====Tzvi Hersh Weinreb====
The Executive Vice President of the ], Rabbi ] commented on the fragmentaion of the Chabad movement since the Rebbe's death in a July 2007 comment piece for the '']'':<ref name="wine"></ref> He bemoaned the fact that "...the Rebbe's great piety, scholarship, and love of Israel should be sullied by such an unacceptable heresy is a grievous tragedy."<ref name="wine"/> "In the absence of a leader, there has been a messianic reaction. Based on fragmentary remarks by the Rebbe himself, many of his followers believe that he is the Messiah, and that he will return from the dead to once again lead his followers, and not only his followers, but all the world, into the Messianic era. The belief is certainly not mainstream Judaism, and in the eyes of many is a blasphemy to Judaism no different from the messianic beliefs of Christianity."<ref name="wine"/>

====Gil Student====
Rabbi ] an orthodox writer and publisher has written and self published a book examining and rebutting the theological claims made by Chabad messianists.<ref>''Can the Rebbe Be Moshiach?: Proofs from Gemara, Midrash, and Rambam That the Rebbe Cannot Be'' Gil Student, Universal-Publishers, 2002</ref>
In 2002, ] published a book called "Can The Rebbe Be Moshiach? Proofs from Gemara, Midrash, and Rambam that the Rebbe zt"l cannot be Moshiach."<ref name="kol"> Details about this book can be seen at http://moshiachtalk.tripod.com/ </ref> A synopsis of the book goes as follows: "During his lifetime, the Lubavitcher Rebbe...was declared by many of his followers to be the ]... His death in 1994 should have dashed those hopes. However, many of his followers have advanced the position that even today the Rebbe can still be Moshiach... This book is an analysis of this position within the Jewish tradition. This work demonstrates from dozens of texts that according to the authentic Jewish tradition the Rebbe unfortunately cannot be Moshiach."<ref name="kol"/>
In 2003, "Can't the Rebbe be Moshiach? Disproofs from Gemara, Midrash, and Rambam that the Rebbe cannot be Moshiach", a critique of Student's book, was published online by Rabbi Melech Jaffe.<ref> http://www.moshiachlisten.com/frontpage.html Student's responses to these critiques can be seen at http://moshiachtalk.tripod.com/response.html , and Jaffe's subsequent responses can be seen here at http://www.moshiachlisten.com/critique.html</ref>

===Israeli Rabbinate announcement===
In January 2000, the Chief Rabbinate of Israel released the following announcement:

At the meeting of the Council of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel held on 10 Shevat 5760 , a discussion was held regarding the newspaper advertisement signed by many rabbi ''shlita'' requiring that one obey the words of a prophet including the assertion that he is the King Messiah. By agreement of the Chief Rabbis of Israel and the members of the Council of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel, the following decision was adopted unanimously:

In recent days announcements and declarations are being publicized that can confuse and mislead simple people with messianic propaganda that a certain hassidc rabbi is the King Messiah and one should call to him with various proclamations.

We have no intention, God forbid, of diminishing the greatness and the global activities of the Rebbe of blessed memory, but because we are dealing with the foundations of the faith and there is danger in this propaganda, it is necessary to warn against this approach. It is concerning such matters that the Sages said,' Wise men, be careful with your words.'

Individuals who are undesirable in the eyes of rabbinic scholars are exploiting the signatures of Rabbis and turning the simple faith in the coming of the Messiah into propaganda whose end cannot be foreseen. One must be careful and warn people that one must believe in the straightforward faith that the Messiah will come as our Rabbis have taught us, and anyone who adds diminishes.<ref> ''Hatzofeh'', 11 Shevat 5760 (18 Jan. 200), 5. ''The Rebbe, the Messiah, and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference by David Berger'', 2001, published by the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization of Portland. Page 128-129. </ref>

===Progressive response===
Senior ] Rabbi and humanitarian activist ] was also scathing about the messianist trends within the Chabad movement describing the organisation as having a "cult like" atmosphere.<ref>''Jewish Arguments and Counterarguments: Essays and Addresses'', Steven Bayme, KTAV Publishing, 2002. p260</ref>

Philosopher Rabbi ] expressed his concern about the developing messianism early on, while Schneerson was still alive, saying that "the outpouring of Messianic fervor is always a very disturbing development."<ref>''Expecting the messiah'', Lisa Beyer, ''Time'' magazine, ], ]</ref>

===1998 letter===
The actions of a Chabad rabbi who was active in the community of ex-patriot ] in ], by the name of Alexander Milchstein lead to the publication of a response by about 30 Chabad rabbis.<ref name="wis"></ref>

Milchstein had been hired by Yaakov Elman, as a Russian speaking rabbi to assist him with the influx of Russian-language immigrants, after Milchstein's views became public, his views were denounced by the local orthodox rabbinate in the November 20, 1998 edition of the '']''.<ref name="wis"/>

In response to the furore, a group of some 30 Chabad affiliated rabbis calling themselves the "Central Committee of Chabad-Lubavitch Rabbis in US and Canada"<ref>Note: No other record of any activity can be found for this group beyond this letter.</ref> sent a letter to the local newspaper addressed "To the Jewish Community of Milwaukee, Wisconsin",<ref name="wis"/> arguing that Chabad should not be preoccupied with the idea that Schneerson is the Messiah, (but as Berger points out falling short of arguing that Schneerson cannot be the Messiah): "The deification of any human being is contrary to the core and foundation of the Jewish faith. The various ]ic, ]ic and other sources which seem to ascribe superhuman spiritual attributes to certain righteous people, were never meant to be deification and great care must be taken when quoting them. Belief in the coming of Moshiach and awaiting his imminent arrival is a basic tenet of the Jewish faith. It is clear, however, that conjecture as to the possible identity of Moshiach is not part of the basic tenet of Judaism. The preoccupation with identifying the Rebbe as the Moshiach is clearly contrary to the Rebbe's wishes."<ref>[http://moshiachtalk.tripod.com/kolkoreh.pdf Chabad kol koreh</ref>

===Anthropology===
Some scholars of religion have made comparison with the development of early ]:<ref name="eli"></ref> Anthropologist Joel Marcus writes: "The recent history of the modern Chabad (Lubavitcher) movement of Hasidic Judaism provides insight into the development of early Christianity. In both movements successful eschatological prophecies have increased belief in the leader's authority, and there is a mixture of ‘already’ and ‘not yet’ elements. Similar genres of literature are used to spread the good news (e.g. miracle catenae and collections of originally independent sayings). Both leaders tacitly accepted the messianic faith of their followers but were reticent about acclaiming their messiahship directly. The cataclysm of the Messiah's death has led to belief in his continued existence and even resurrection."<ref>''Messianism and Christianity'', Joel Marcus, Boston University School of Theology Studies, 2001 - Cambridge Univ. Press.</ref> Such comparisons are something which makes many Orthodox Jews uncomfortable. Scholar Mark Winer has noted that "The Lubavitcher movement's suggestions that their late rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneerson is the Messiah, reflect Christian millenarianism"<ref>"Be Ready When the Great Day Comes", Mark L. Winer; ''European Judaism'', Vol. 37, 2004]</ref>

Anthropologist Simon Dein has noted: "Lubavitchers held that the Rebbe was more powerful in the spiritual realm without the hindrance of a physical body. However some have now claimed that he never died. Several even state that the Rebbe is God. This is a significant finding. It is unknown in the history of Judaism to hold that the religious leader is God and to this extent the group is unique. There are certain Christian elements which apparently inform the messianic ideas of this group."<ref> Simon Dein, ''Anthropology & Medicine'', Volume 9, Number 1/], ]</ref>

Some have gone so far as to describe Chabad messianism as ''halachic Christianity''. Judaism scholar ] writes: "A substantial majority of a highly significant Orthodox movement called Lubavitch or Chabad Hasidism affirms that the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, who was laid to rest in 1994 without leaving a successor...will soon return to complete the redemption in his capacity as the Messiah. Hasidim who proclaim this belief hold significant religious positions sanctioned by major Orthodox authorities with no relationship to their movement."<ref> Jacob Neusner, ], ], ]</ref>

===Defence of Messianism===
Some Jewish sources have argued that chabad messianism - at least in the moderate forms - is not anathematic to ]. David Singer, of the ], argued that: "The appearance on the Jewish scene of hasidim espousing a version of Second Coming theology is bizarre and disorienting. Still, under current conditions, the religious tremors it has set off may prove a boon for Orthodox belief... the messianic fervor of the Lubavitchers...is a welcome indication that the religious juices continue to flow in Orthodox Judaism."<ref></ref>

Moshe Idel argues that Judaism historically has accommodated the idea of a messiah who rises from the dead. Idel, however, does not promote the belief that the Rebbe is the Jewish Messiah. Directly commenting on Chabad's messianic ideologies, he states that having continued "messianic hopes and speculations ushered in by his predecessor, R. Joseph Baer, which were formulated during and perhaps even triggered by the Holocaust, R. Menachem Mendel developed a rhetoric of more acute messianism, which inspired many of his followers to worship him as the Messiah, even after his death. The depth and breadth of messianic expectations and propaganda at the beginning of this decade stemming from Habad Hasidic circles had no precedence since Sabbateanism, even though their effects on the actual religious behavior of the believers seem, at least for the time being, to be minor."<ref>"Messianic Mystics" on page 243</ref>

===Breakaway movement===
In protest at Chabad messianism, Rabbi ] started a split-off group known as Chabad-Liozna. Deutsch has a synagogue and a few hundred followers in the ] district of ].<ref>Jolkovsky, Binyamin L., "The "Messiah Wars" heat up: Online gets out-of-line", ''Jewish World Review'', ], ]</ref><ref>"Dissidents Name 'Rebbe'," ''The Forward'', ], ]</ref> His actions have made him an unpopular figure within the mainstream Chabad community.<ref>Heinon, Herb, "Bigger than Death," ''Jerusalem Post'', ], ]</ref>

===Support===
A few non-Chabad Jewish figures have expressed their concurrence with the belief that Schneerson is indeed the messiah. Yaakov Yosef, (son of Rabbi ]) and Aaron Leifer, Rabbi of ]-Safed, both signed a 1998 halachic decree ruling that the Lubavitcher Rebbe is the Messiah.

==The "Yechi" statement==
'''''"Yechi Adoneinu Moreinu v'Rabbeinu Melech haMoshiach l'olam vo'ed!"''''' (יחי אדוננו מורנו ורבינו מלך המשיח לעולם ועד) is a phrase used by many Chabad ] to pray and proclaim that the seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe, ] will be the ]. It means "Long Live our Master, our Teacher, and our Rabbi, King Messiah, for ever and ever." The phrase can be seen printed in various settings, notably on pamphlets, posters and small prayer cards. It is chanted by many people at the end of daily communal prayers in Lubavitch congregations, including the main Lubavitch synagogue in Crown Heights, "]". ''Yechi'' has a complex and controversial history dating back to the mid-1980s and is often viewed as a ] to differentiate the messiansits from the anti-messianists or non-messianists.

''Yechi'' began as the phrase ''"Yechi Adoneinu Moreinu Verabbeinu,"'' ("Long Live our master, teacher and Rebbe!") to which the response was a shout of ''"Yechi"'' ("May he live!"). It appears to be based on the statement made by ], the wife of ] ''"Yehi adoni hamelech David le'olam,"'' ("May my lord ] live forever!") (] 1:31). When used by Lubavitcher Hassidim, it was originally recited in the presence of Rabbi Schneerson after twelve special verses known as "the Twelve ''Pesukim''" whose recitation the Rebbe encouraged in his teachings.

A child honored with reciting the last verse of the Twelve Pesukim would call out the phrase, to which everyone would respond. This was repeated three times. The response would be accented on the second syllable. After three calls, everyone would chant the word ''Yechi'' together in a 2-3-2-3 pattern. This was followed by singing ''"We Want Moshiach Now".

In 1988 Rabbi Schneerson spoke of the importance of declaring the ancient Jewish cry<ref> A History of the Jews by Paul Johnson pg.399</ref> of ''Yechi Hamelech'' ("May the king live") as a prayer to express their desire that the ] should come.<ref>Sicha 2 Nissan 5748</ref> Later on, many of his followers began to consider this term synonymous with the above ''Yechi'', using it to refer to Rabbi Schneerson himself.

==See also==
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==Notes==
{{reflist}}

==References==
*<span class="plainlinks">]'']</span>
*<span class="plainlinks"></span>
*''The Messiah of Brooklyn: Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present'', M. Avrum Ehrlich, KTAV Publishing, ISBN 0881258369
*<span class="plainlinks">Dalfin, Chaim. ''Attack on Lubavitch: A Response'', Jewish Enrichment Press, February 2002 (ISBN 1-880880-66-0)</span>
*<span class="plainlinks">Fishkoff, Sue. ''The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad-Lubavitch'', Schocken, 2003 (ISBN 0-8052-4189-2)</span>
*<span class="plainlinks"></span>
*<span class="plainlinks">], ].]</span>
*<span class="plainlinks">], Neta Sela, 02.12.07]</span>
*<span class="plainlinks">], Saul Sadka, 02.14.07]</span>
*<span class="plainlinks">], Jonathan Mahler, 09.21.03]</span>


==Further reading== ==Further reading==
*''The Jewish Messiahs: From the Galilee to Crown Heights'', Harris Lenowitz, University of Utah, 2nd ed. (Oxford, 2001). * ''The Jewish Messiahs: From the Galilee to Crown Heights'', Harris Lenowitz, University of Utah, 2nd ed. (Oxford, 2001).
*''Salvation or Destruction? The Meaning and Consequences of Lubavitch Messianism'', Kraut, B., Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies - Volume 20, Number 4, Summer 2002, pp. 96-108. * ''Salvation or Destruction? The Meaning and Consequences of Lubavitch Messianism'', Kraut, B., ], Volume 20, Number 4, Summer 2002, pp.&nbsp;96–108.
*''Jewish Messianism Lubavitch-Style - an interim report'', William Shaffir, Jewish Journal of Sociology 35 (1993) 115-128. * ''Jewish Messianism Lubavitch-Style an interim report'', William Shaffir, Jewish Journal of Sociology 35 (1993) 115–128.
*''The Messiah Problem: Berger, the Angel and the Scandal of Reckless Indiscrimination'', Rabbi Chaim Rapoport (Ilford, 2002) * ''The Rebbe The Messiah and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference'', David Berger (The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2008 )
* ''The Messiah Problem: Berger, the Angel and the Scandal of Reckless Indiscrimination'', Rabbi Chaim Rapoport (Ilford, 2002)


==External links== ==External links==
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Latest revision as of 03:19, 20 December 2024

Belief that Menachem Mendel Schneerson is the Jewish messiah
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Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902–1994)

Messianism in Chabad refers to the belief within the Chabad-Lubavitch community—a prominent group within Hasidic Judaism—regarding the Jewish messiah (Hebrew: מָשִׁיחַ, mashiach or moshiach). Central to this belief is the conviction that Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh Rebbe of the Chabad-Lubavitch dynasty, is the awaited Messiah who is leading the Jewish people into the Messianic era.

The concept of the messiah is a basic tenet of the Jewish religion. The belief among Hasidic Jews that the leader of their dynasty could be the Jewish messiah is traced to the Baal Shem Tov—the founder of Hasidism. During Schneerson's life, the mainstream of Chabad hoped that he would be the messiah; the idea gained great attention during the last years of his life. A few years before Schneerson's death, members of the Chabad movement expressed their belief that Menachem Mendel Schneerson was the foretold messiah. Those subscribing to the beliefs have been termed mishichists (messianists). A typical statement of belief for Chabad messianists is the song and chant known as yechi adoneinu ("long live our master", Hebrew: יחי אדונינו). Customs vary among messianists as to when the phrase is recited.

Since Schneerson's death in 1994, some followers of Chabad have persisted in the belief in him as the messiah. Chabad messianists either believe Schneerson will be resurrected from the dead to be revealed as the messiah, or go further and profess the belief that Schneerson never died in 1994 and is waiting to be revealed as messiah. The Chabad messianic phenomenon has been met mostly with public concerns or opposition from Chabad leadership as well as non-Chabad Jewish leaders.

After Schneerson's death, a later Halachic ruling from some affiliated rabbis said that it was "incumbent on every single Jew to heed the Rebbe's words and believe that he is indeed King Moshiach, who will be revealed imminently". Outside of Chabad messianism, both in mainstream Chabad as well as in broader Judaism, these claims are rejected.

Main article: Messiah in Judaism

The concept of a Jewish messiah as a leader who would be revealed and mark the end of Jewish exile is a traditional Jewish belief. Additionally, it was not uncommon to attribute this messianic identity to various historic Jewish leaders. An early example of this type of belief is found in the Talmud, where various living sages are considered to be the messiah.

Treatment of this topic in Jewish law is not common to Jewish legal texts with the exception of the writings of Maimonides. Maimonides delineated rabbinic criteria for identifying the Jewish messiah as a leader who studies Torah, observes the mitzvot, compels the Jews to observe the Torah, and fights the Wars of God. Additionally, the status of messiah may be determined first through a presumptive status (b'chezkat mashiach) and later a verified status (mashiach vadai).

The concept of the messiah is also prominent in Hasidism. In a notable incident, the founder of Hasidism, Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov, recounts a vision of an encounter with the messiah who relates to him how the messiah's arrival may be hastened. Yehuda Eisenstein records in his book Otzer Yisrael that followers of Hasidic Rebbes will sometimes express hope that their leader will be revealed as the awaited messiah. According to research by Israeli scholar Rachel Elior, there was a focus on messianism in Chabad during the lifetime of the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, the father-in-law of Menachem Schneerson. The upsurge in messianic belief among Chabad adherents begins in the 1980s, when followers of Menachem Schneerson began believing that he would be the messiah, a hope that was initially kept quiet until the early 1990s. Additionally, the hope for the leader to be the awaited messiah also involved Menachem Schneerson, who spoke of his deceased father-in-law as the awaited messiah.

Schneerson's positions and responses

A sign welcoming the Moshiach in Crown Heights

Beginning with his very first farbrengen as Rebbe, Schneerson spoke of this generation's mission to complete the Dira Betachtonim, and urged everyone to do all within their power to help the world reach its ultimate state of perfection, when godliness and goodness will be naturally apparent and prevalent, with the final redemption. Schneerson would finish almost every public talk of his with a prayer for the imminent arrival of the messiah. As early as the 1970s, he sought to raise awareness of the Messianic Age by encouraging people to learn and become knowledgeable in the laws of the Holy Temple, laws that will be applicable only when the messiah actually comes. Schneerson would frequently quote the many sages who stated that this generation was the last generation of the exile and would be the first generation of redemption and would quote Yisrael Meir Kagan (Chofetz Chaim) and others, who stated that actively asking for the messiah's coming is crucial.

Early efforts by Chabad Hasidim to refer to Schneerson as the Jewish messiah resulted in strong opposition from Schneerson. In 1965, in what is likely the first record of Chabad Hasidim referring to Schneerson in messianic terms, a Hasid in Israel named Avraham Parizh printed and distributed letters that spoke of Schneerson as the Jewish messiah. In response, Schneerson reportedly telegrammed Parizh in Israel stating that he strongly objected to the disseminated letter and requested that Parizh cease its distribution. Schneerson also reportedly instructed Parizh to recover all the distributed copies of the letter and confirm its collection.

In 1984, another Israeli Hasid, Shalom Dov Wolpo, raised the issue publicly by publishing a booklet identifying Schneerson as the messiah. Schneerson reportedly responded by banning the publication and forbidding Wolpo from involvement with any related efforts. Schneerson publicly denounced these actions several times, saying that those involved in such publications were creating new opposition to the Chabad movement, and that he wished to never have to speak about the topic again. On Shabbat Bereshit, when Wolpo began singing a song that had become popular in Chabad which referred to Schneerson as the messiah, Schneerson abruptly stopped the singing and ordered that it never be sung again. Wolpo would later argue that despite the Rebbe's strong opposition, all Chabad Hasidim must still consider and proclaim the Rebbe as the Jewish messiah, arguing that the rebbe also declined to be called 'rebbe' in earlier years, only accepting the title later, because the time had not yet come.

Eventually the rebbe appeared to reverse his ban, and soon after began encouraging publicly a song identifying him as the messiah, going so far as to authorize one of Wolpo's articles to be translated and published in a newspaper. Wolpo would argue that the precept of the acceptance of the Jewish messiah is an act that must be performed by the Jewish people and not by the messiah himself.

In 1988, after Schneerson called for Chabad rabbis to issue a Jewish legal ruling (psak din) to declare that the Jewish Messianic Era must commence, a Hasid named Yitzchak Hendel issued a ruling stating that Schneerson was the rightful Jewish messiah. In response to the ruling, Schneerson didn't protest and actually stated that "Hendel is competent rabbi who knows what he's talking about" It was not until April 1991 that Schneerson began openly encouraging the 'yechi' song identifying him as the messiah.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Schneerson's talks became increasingly focused on the topic of Moshiach, that Moshiach was about to come, and what was needed to accomplish this. A statement of this kind by Schneerson was the view that the Jews living in the modern age were the last generation to live in exile (galut) and the first generation of redemption (geulah). On one occasion, during the Rebbe's talk at the International Conference of Shluchim (emissaries), he stated that their work had been completed and the only task that remained was to welcome the messiah. In the early 1990s, Hasidim became more vocal about Schneerson being the Moshiach, even submitting a petition to him asking that he reveal himself as the long-awaited messiah. On one occasion in 1991, as the Rebbe was leaving the evening prayers when traditionally someone would start a song and the Rebbe would encourage it on his way out of the synagogue, some Hasidim began singing one of the Rebbe's favorite lively songs, adding the words of Yechi – "Long live our master, our teacher, our Rebbe, King Moshiach." A few months later, a few people did muster the courage to start singing at an intermission in a Shabbos farbrengen a less overt song that implied that the Rebbe was the messiah. Within a few seconds the Rebbe heard it and immediately became very grave and said: "Really, I should get up and leave . Even if some people consider it is not respectful that I need to , I don’t need to reckon with the views of a small number when is the opposite of reality. However, first of all, it will unfortunately not help anyway. Secondly, it will disrupt the shevet achim gam yachad (brethren to dwell together in unity), for if I were to leave, others will leave, too."

In 1992, a journalist from Israel said to the Rebbe, "We appreciate you very much, we want to see you in Israel; you said soon you will be in Israel, so when will you come?" The Rebbe responded: "I also want to be in Israel." The journalist insisted, "So when, when will you come?" The Rebbe responded, "That depends on the Moshiach, not on me." The journalist persisted, "You are the Moshiach!" to which the Rebbe responded, "I am not." In 1991, Rabbi Dovid Nachshon received a bottle of vodka from the Rebbe for his effort of getting people to sign a declaration accepting the Rebbe's kingship. After Rabbi Nachshon announced (as customary) what the bottle was for, he announced the words of 'Yechi' declaring the rebbe "King Moshiach" three times. The Rebbe responded by saying "Amen".

One explanation for the apparent contradictions in the Rebbe's responses is that the Rebbe only took issue when this idea was published, but made nothing of it when addressed to him in private.

However, in 1993, after the Rebbe was no longer speaking following his stroke, the Rebbe responded to the "Yechi" chant almost daily during the course of that year by nodding his head and moving his arm, including on live television in 1993. In addition, the Rebbe allowed himself to be referred to as "The Rebbe King Moshiach, May He Live Forever" for the first time, in a book titled "Besurat HaGeulah" that was first published in 1993.

Many Hasidim felt that Menachem Mendel Schneerson is the mashiach of the generation, even though he never said so himself. As the years went on, and descriptions of Schneerson as being toweringly unique, a Rebbe of truly unprecedented and universally recognized stature, spread ever further, this messianic speculation spread to greater numbers and higher volume than in previous generations. The Hasidim became vocal of their hope that Schneerson would be the messiah. As Schneerson's passion about the need for messiah became more well-known, criticism also built up. In 1980, a group of children from a Chabad summer camp composed a song with the words "am yisrael have no fear, Moshiach will be here this year, we want Moshiach now, we don’t want to wait." Schneerson seems to have received great satisfaction from the children's initiative, and encouraged their song. According to a report in Time magazine, Rabbi Adin Even-Yisrael said he wished that Schneerson should be revealed as the messiah. According to a 1988 The New York Times report: Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky speculated that Schneerson was the most suitable candidate for Jewish messiah. Some Chabad Hasidim took their message to the streets with billboards declaring that it was time for the messiah to come and bring the redemption.

In light of some criticism about the insistent tone of these words, on one occasion Schneerson explained:

This has always been the hope and yearning of the Jewish people – that the Messiah should come now, immediately. Therefore it is inappropriate for someone to say that he does not want, or that he does not agree, or that he is not comfortable that people are imploring 'we want moshiach now.' Each Jew clearly prays and pleads three times a day in the amida, while standing before the Al-mighty (at that time a person is certainly speaking the truth, and saying what he means) et tzemach David avdecha me’hera tatzmiach , and then continues ki lishuatcha kivinu kol hayom, that he hopes for this the entire day!

Schneerson urged and talked about purifying all parts of the world through Torah and mitzvot (commandments) in order to bring mashiach. Many times he would weep publicly about the deep slumber and exile we are in, and how urgent it is that God redeem us, both for our sake as well as even for His own. Nevertheless, criticism of his passion about the coming of the Messiah and his urging people to do all they could to bring about the redemption by adding in the observance of Torah and mitzvot, was something that was known to him. On one occasion he even remarked "I have merited that the complaint people have against me is that I am passionate about the Mashiach."

Schneerson's illness and death

On March 2, 1992, while praying at the Ohel, the burial site of his father-in-law, Schneerson suffered a massive stroke. That very evening, while he was being treated for his stroke and Chabad Hasidim around the world gathered for prayer, some of the messianists broke out in song and dance. It was during this period of illness and inability to communicate that the messianic movement reached its greatest fervor, and became more vocal of their hope that Schneerson would soon be the mashiach. This also troubled many people who felt that it was being imposed upon Schneerson as something he had no control over.

By late 1992, a movement to formally crown Schneerson as messiah gained prominence. Shmuel Butman announced his plan to crown the Rebbe. The Rebbe, who had been paralyzed and speechless since March the previous year, would join the daily prayers on a special balcony that was built for him to easily be wheeled. Butman planned to crown the Rebbe on January 30, 1993, after the evening prayers. However, when the Rebbe was nudged by Krinsky not to attend the planned event, he communicated to his secretaries Leibel Groner and Yudel Krinsky that he would only attend for the usual evening service. Both Groner and Krinsky, then followed by Butman, announced that the event was actually not a coronation and should not be intended as such.

The flag representing the Chabad messianist faction that emerged shortly before Schneerson's death. The Hebrew word is mashiach (messiah).

On 3 Tammuz (12 June) 1994, more than two years after the stroke that took away his ability to speak, the Rebbe died. His death left the Chabad community, much of the Jewish world, and even beyond, in mourning. From all over the world, people streamed to New York to participate in the funeral. The New York Times placed six articles about the Rebbe in the paper that week. Television devoted many hours of broadcast time to Schneerson's death. The New York Times reported from the funeral that the death had left many Jews stunned: "Not all of Rabbi Schneerson's followers were Hasidim. Conservative and Reform Jews were among his greatest supporters." However, his view was not shared by all. Some of the messianists were so caught up with their hope, that they interpreted each new erosion in the Rebbe's health, and ultimately his very death, as stages in the messianic process. They cited various midrashic statements to fuel their ecstasy as to the imminent revelation of the messiah, and some of them drank and toasted l’chaim and danced before and during the funeral – an act that shocked many admirers of Schneerson across the Jewish world. In the days after Schneerson's death, many journalists and pundits wrote that they expected the end of the movement. For many Chabad followers, the death of the Rebbe was extremely painful. He was laid to rest next to his father-in-law, at the Ohel, at the Montefiore cemetery in Queens. In Jewish tradition, significant dates are frequently referred to by their Hebrew characters. Chabad (like other Jewish movements) dating back to their first Rebbe, Shneur Zalman of Liadi, dates of all their Rebbes' deaths by Hebrew dates. Thus, in the case of Schneerson, the anniversary of his death became known as Gimmel Tammuz (the third of Tammuz). In the week after the Rebbe's death, the Wisconsin Chronicle editorialized and wrote how many Jews now find it difficult to believe that messiah will ever come: "Most modern Jews can't help but shrug at some claims that Schneerson is, or was, the most likely candidate in our time to be the Messiah, the King David-descended redeemer who according to tradition will inaugurate the final age of world peace and plenty. But when the Messiah does come, that personality likely will have much in common with Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson."

Chabad messianism after Schneerson's death

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For many hopeful, often vocal, followers, Schneerson's death did not rule out the hope that he could still be the mashiach. There are Talmudic and halakhic sources that speak of the possibility that a righteous Jewish leader could be resurrected to become the mashiach. These positions, although not well-known, figure quite prominently and early in authentic Judaic sources. The Babylonian Talmud states: "If he is among the dead, he is someone like Daniel." In fact, the most well-known deceased figure identified as being able to be the messiah in rabbinic literature is King David. The Jerusalem Talmud states: "The Rabbis say, who is King Messiah? If he is from the living, David is his name, if he is from the deceased, David is still his name." According to Moses Margolies, a commentator on the Jerusalem Talmud known as the Pnei Moshe, the Talmud rules that: "If he is among the living, David will be his name, and if he is from among the dead, he is David himself".

Some object to the notion that mashiach will be someone who had once lived, died and was then resurrected, based on what Maimonides writes: "Even if one is worthy of being Mashiach, if he is killed it is certain that he is not Mashiach." Messianists counter that Maimonides does not disagree with both sources in the Talmud, rather the Talmud speaks of one who has died a natural death, while Maimonides excludes only one who was killed. This can be evidenced in his deliberate wording "if he (the potential messiah) failed or was killed", while specifying the likes of Bar Kochba "was killed (in war) because of sins" and Yeshua of Nazareth who "was executed by the court".

Positions within Chabad

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The view of Schneerson as messiah is not advocated in Chabad's centralized and official literature. According to a Chabad spokesman in 2014, Chabad-Lubavitch leaders have "repeatedly condemned them in the strongest possible terms". Journalist Sue Fishkoff notes that the idea that most Lubavitchers are messianist is "a claim that is patently absurd. Here everyone is treading on thin ice, for no one can know precisely how deep Chabad messianism goes. When Berger and other critics claim that it affects the majority of the Chabad movement, they have no greater statistical backing than do those who suggest it is on the decline.".

Ruling signed by over 100 rabbis declaring the Lubavitcher Rebbe to be Moshiach
  • Messianists – Subsequent to Schneerson's death, vocal messianists have continued to proclaim that Schneerson is still alive. Some of them argue that just as the Talmud states that "Jacob did not die", a teaching that carries great nuanced significance in kabbalistic thought, so too "Schneerson did not die". Among religious Jews, reference to one who has died is followed by expressions such as alav hashalom or zechuto yagen alenu. Messianists do not use such terms when writing of Schneerson. Some messianists have even continued to use terms that indicate that Schneerson is still alive such as shlita. Many group members are vocal Israeli youth, particularly those educated in the city of Safed. There are also members of the messianic camp within the Crown Heights community and elsewhere who share these views. These individuals can usually be identified by the small yellow pin, known as the Moshiach flag, worn on their lapel (or hat), and the Hebrew words of "Yechi" emblazoned on their kippot. Since Schneerson's death, Beis Moshiach magazine has been a major organ for views within this camp of the messianist. Between the years 1998–2004, the messianists have garnered support from rabbis to issue a rabbinic ruling supporting their messianic claims. These views have led to much controversy and condemnation. Between the years 1998–2004, a rabbinic ruling supporting the messianic claim that the Rebbe is the mashiach was issued and signed by over 100 rabbis.
  • Anti-Messianists – Regardless of Schneerson's death, the majority of Chabad Hasidim continue to see him as the most righteous Jewish leader of the time, the nasi hador, whose influence throughout the world remains very palpable. They acknowledge that he died, visit his grave and observe yahrtzeit. They tend to place little or no emphasis on whether or not the Schneerson will be mashiach. Instead they focus on the practical aspects of Schneerson's vision of making the world a better place. They are aware of Schneerson's negative reactions when people tried making Messianic claims about him, and are acutely aware of how much Schneerson, their tzaddik ha'dor and their moshiach sh'b'dor, expects of them to accomplish both in the realm of their own personal service of God, in helping to bring the beauty of Judaism to Jews, and to spread the beauty of monotheism to the world at large. They hold that they have no way of knowing who will be the Moshiach, although they may wish it will be Schneerson.
The Messianist flag in Jerusalem
  • Other positions – According to some scholars, the messianist divisions in Chabad can be identified by various subtler factions of those who claim the Rebbe is not the messiah but could have been as he had all the qualities of a messiah prior to his death, whether the Rebbe was the messiah and will be messiah again once resurrected, whether the Rebbe is believed not to have died.

Responses

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Support

In 1998, a group of rabbis signed a Jewish legal ordinance (psak din) declaring Menachem Schneerson the Jewish messiah. Its signatories include several non-Habad Orthodox and Hasidic rabbis such as Ya'akov Yosef (affiliated with Shas), Aaron Leifer (the late Rabbi of Nadvorna-Safed), Eliyahu Shmuel Schmerler (Rosh Yeshiva of Sanz and member of the Mif'al Hashas), Ahron Rosenfeld of Pinsk-Karlin and Yaakov Menachem Rabinowitz of Biala.

Opposition

The reaction of Torah scholars to the idea that Schneerson could be the messiah varied. During his life, numerous rabbis and Jewish leaders expressed their views that Menachem Mendel Schneerson had the potential to be the messiah of the generation. There has been a general decline in that view since his death.

Long time critics of Schneerson from Bnei Brak in Israel have been the most vocal in their criticism of Schneerson and Chabad. The most notable of these critics was Elazar Shach, the rosh yeshiva of the Ponevezh yeshiva. Shach was a known critic of Schneerson and the Chabad movement. He repeatedly attacked Schneerson and his followers on a number of issues, including messianism. When people became more vocal about the possibility of Schneerson being the messiah, Shach advocated a complete boycott of Chabad. Other Bnei Brak leaders, including Chaim Shaul Karelitz, the former av bet din of the She'erit Yisrael Kashrut organization of Bnei Brak, and Yaakov Weinberg, a rosh yeshiva of Yeshivas Ner Yisroel, have also spoken negatively of those who wish Schneerson would be the messiah.

In America, numerous Litvish leaning rabbanim have also spoken negatively of this form of messianism, including Elya Svei, Aharon Feldman, Shlomo Miller, Moshe Heinemann and Chaim Dov Keller, who all issued harsh criticism. Feldman, quoting Maimonides, states that "Even someone who is worthy of being Mashiach, if he is killed, it is certain that he is not Mashiach." Feldman claims that anyone that can believe that the last Lubavitcher Rebbe is worthy of being the messiah has a "compromised judgment" and is "ignorant of Torah."

Other American Torah authorities, such as the Ungvarer Rav Menashe Klein, Moshe Heinemann, Yehuda Henkin, Chaim Brovender and Ahron Soloveichik argue that while there may be sources for messianism, it is a shtut (foolishness) that should not be followed. Soloveichik's own written statements on the issue have themselves been the focus of controversy. A 1996 letter signed by Soloveichik states that "Before the passing of the Rebbe, I included myself among those who believe that the Rebbe was worthy of being Moshiach. And I strongly believe that had we, particularly the Orthodox community, been united, we would have merited to see the complete Redemption. Insofar as the belief . . . that the Rebbe can still be Moshiach, in light of the Gemara in Sanhedrin, the Zohar, Abarbanel, Kisvei Arizal, S’dei Chemed, and other sources, it cannot be dismissed." Soloveichik adds that "any cynical attempt at utilizing a legitimate disagreement of interpretation concerning this matter in order to besmirch and to damage the Lubavitch movement that was, and continues to be, at the forefront of those who are battling the missionaries, assimilation, and indifference, can only contribute to the regrettable discord that already plagues the Jewish community, and particularly the Torah community." In a letter from 2000, Soloveichik states that there have been those who have "persisted in stating that I validate their belief that a Jewish Messiah may be resurrected from the dead. I completely reject and vigorously deny any such claim. As I have already stated publicly. . . My intent in signing the original letter . . . was merely to express my opinion that we should not label subscribers to these beliefs as heretics."

From the Progressive streams of Judaism, responses include: David Hartman who expressed his concern about the developing messianism early on, while Schneerson was still alive, saying that "the outpouring of Messianic fervor is always a very disturbing development." Senior Reform rabbi and humanitarian activist Arthur Lelyveld was also critical of the messianist trends within the Chabad movement describing the organisation as having a "cult like" atmosphere.

Other

Aharon Lichtenstein, during a eulogy for the Rebbe at Yeshivat Har Etzion, spoke of the fact that people hoped that Schneerson could be the mashiach, by saying how "it never occurred to anyone to declare that Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, Rabbi Aharon Kotler, or the Joseph B. Soloveitchik (the Rav) was the messiah. And did they not have followers? Did they not have a tradition? Were they not part of a long dynasty? They certainly did." Lichtenstein continued and said that it seemed to him that "at the root of the matter, the concept of Messianism attached itself to the Rebbe because of his image and status – their positive aspects. The Rebbe embodied – and in a powerful way – a certain combination in which one who wished to could see the reflection of a reflection of the Messiah King."

Norman Lamm said of Schneerson that "If believe the Rebbe could have been Moshiach, fine, I agree... He had a far better chance than most." Although once the Rebbe died, he did not see that as a possibility. Lamm also argued that messianists had misinterpreted Schneerson's statements to create a "distortion" leading to "moral nihilism." According to Lamm, open efforts to declare Schneerson the messiah were not tolerated before his death: "When he was alive, no one would have dared to discuss this. But now it is easy for the messianically-oriented to distort the Rebbe's teachings".

Israeli Chief Rabbinate

Two incidents concern the Chief Rabbinate of Israel and the topic of Chabad messianism:

  • 2000 pronouncement – In January 2000, the Chief Rabbinate of Israel released a statement regarding the issue of Schneerson being worthy of being the mashiach, and declarations made by messianists, saying that such declarations "confuse and mislead simple people". The statement continued to mention that the Chief Rabbinate " no intention, God forbid, of diminishing the greatness and the global activities of the Rebbe of blessed memory."
  • 2007 conversion case – A conversion case in 2007 of a man educated by Chabad messianists who wished to convert led to controversy, with two Israeli rabbis saying the messianic views were "beyond the pale of normative Judaism" and the man should therefore not be allowed to convert. The Chief Rabbinate ruled in favor of the conversion.

Position of Chabad organizational leadership

A 1996 statement from Agudas Chasidei Chabad said:

With regard to some recent statements and declarations by individuals and groups concerning the matter of Moshiach and the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of sainted memory, let it be known that the views expressed in these notices are in no way a reflection of the movement's position. While we do not intend to preclude expressions of individual opinion, they are, in fact, misleading and a grave offense to the dignity and expressed desires of the Rebbe. The statement reads that "The Rebbe clearly inspired a heightened consciousness of Moshiach, one of Judaism's principles of faith, and towards this end, encouraged the study of the traditional sources concerning belief in Moshiach, the Redemption and its imminent fulfillment, as well as an increase in activities of goodness and kindness. This should be perpetuated by all, as we strive for a more perfect world and the fulfillment of the Rebbe's vision.

It continues:

Unfortunately, the Rebbe's words are now being distorted and quoted out of context by a numbered few. This reckless behavior, even if well intentioned, is antithetical in the extreme to all that Lubavitch represents as defined by the Rebbe. The Rebbe explicitly and emphatically advocated a thoughtful, respectful and responsible approach in this and related matters, and resolutely opposed such distorted pronouncements time after time, both publicly and privately.

A statement from Vaad Rabonei Lubavitch said:

Belief in the coming of Moshiach and awaiting his imminent arrival is a basic tenet of the Jewish faith. It is clear, however, that conjecture as to the possible identity of Moshiach is not part of the basic tenet of Judaism. The preoccupation with identifying the Rebbe (zatza"l) as Moshiach is clearly contrary to the Rebbe's wishes. Together with the whole of Klal Yisrael we pray for the fulfillment of our collective yearning for Moshiach, in the spirit of the timeless Jewish declaration: "I await his (Moshiach's) coming each and every day".

Treatment in scholarship

Within sociology and anthropology, the Chabad identification of Schneerson as messiah can be analyzed in terms of charismatic authority, a type of leadership developed by Max Weber. The process of identification of Schneerson as the messiah may also be thought of as a contributing factor to the rationalization of the collective life of the Chabad community. Chabad messianism prompts community members to achieve the outreach goals set by the seventh rebbe, and it likely supports the Chabad's success as a modern charismatic enterprise that operates within a competitive market of religious goods. Chabad messianism is also a key factor to understanding the use of various digital and non-digital media by Chabad in religious outreach contexts. The group's use of digital media is described as an important ambition for its potential to reach global Jewish audiences, with the intention of rejuvenating religious observance among Jews around the world, itself a prerequisite for the Jewish messianic redemption.

Opposition to Chabad messianism may stem from the discomfort that the Jewish diaspora would face if a free and meaningful Jewish life were declared inadequate without the coming of a messiah. However, the comming of Moshiach is basic to Judaism as Maimonadies writes explicitly in his 13 Principles of Faith. This opposition appears constrained by the Jewish community's lack of hegemony in the areas of belief and heresy, and by Chabad and Hasidism's prior neutralization of the messianic impulse by focusing on individual spiritual fulfilment and redemption. Despite the controversy, Chabad messianism, whether it is deemed as heretical or not, does not appear to have resulted in the type of trauma or damage to the Jewish people as with the Sabbatean movement.

Opposition to Chabad messianism on theological grounds may also be traced to a tension within the Jewish tradition over the definition of Judaism as either a religion or an ethnicity. Orthodox Jewish polemics that challenge Chabad messianism on these grounds may be understood as an effort to revive the self-definition of Judaism as a religion and to impose a theological approach that emphasizes the categories of orthodoxy and heresy. While these efforts attempt to strengthen the border around Jewish identity, it is likely that once the initial phase passes, characterized by acute anxiety, the dogmatic formulations will begin to dissipate and the Jewish community returns to defining itself as something between a religion and an ethnicity.

Notes

  1. Referred to as Chabad messianism, Lubavitch messianism, or meshichism.
  2. Susan Handelman (July 1, 2014), The Lubavitcher Rebbe Died 20 Years Ago Today. Who Was He?, Tablet Magazine.
  3. Ruth R. Wisse (2014). "The Rebbe Twenty Years After". Commentary Magazine. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  4. ^ Steinsaltz, Adin. (2014). My Rebbe. Jerusalem: Maggid.
  5. Dein, Simon; Dawson, Lorne L. (May 6, 2008). "The 'Scandal' of the Lubavitch Rebbe: Messianism as a Response to Failed Prophecy". Journal of Contemporary Religion. 23 (2): 163–180. doi:10.1080/13537900802024550. ISSN 1353-7903. S2CID 143927244.
  6. Elliot R. Wolfson. Open Secret: Postmessianic Messianism and the Mystical Revision of Menahem Mendel Schneerson. Page 19.
  7. "The Personality of Mashiach". Chabad.org.
  8. ^ Telushkin, Joseph (2014). Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-06-231900-5.
  9. Bruni, Frank (February 25, 1996). "To Some, Messiah Is the Message;Media Campaign for Late Rabbi Divides Lubavitch Movement". The New York Times. Retrieved February 26, 2015.
  10. ^ "Rav Aharon Lichtenstein's Hesped for the Lubavitcher Rebbe – English". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  11. The Messiah of Brooklyn: Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present, M. Avrum Ehrlich, ch.9 notes, KTAV Publishing, ISBN 0-88125-836-9
  12. The full text is Yechi adoneinu moreinu v'rabbeinu melech ha-moshiach l'olam vo'ed ("Long live our master, our teacher, and our rabbi, King Messiah, for ever and ever).
  13. Newfield, Joseph (Spring–Summer 2021). "After The Death of Chabad's Messiah". Harvard Divinity Bulletin. Archived from the original on 2021-05-26.
  14. Kilgannon, Corey (20 June 2004). "Lubavitchers Mark 10 Years Since Death of Revered Rabbi". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 January 2010.
  15. Berger, Rabbi Prof. Dr. David. "On the Spectrum of Messianic Belief in Contemporary Lubavitch Chassidism". Shema Yisrael Torah Network. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  16. ^ "Halachic Ruling". Psak Din. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  17. ^ Bar-Hayim, David. "The False Mashiah of Lubavitch-Habad". Machon Shilo (Shilo Institute). Archived from the original on 25 February 2011. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  18. ^ Bar-Hayim, David. "Habad and Jewish Messianism (audio)". Machon Shilo (Shilo Institute). Archived from the original on 9 January 2015. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  19. ^ Susan Handelman (1 July 2014). "Who Was the Lubavitcher Rebbe?". Tablet Magazine. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  20. ^ Sanhedrin 98b
  21. Mishneh Torah, Law of Kings, 9:4, Maimonides
  22. Davidson, Herbert A. (2005). Moses Maimonides: The Man and His Works. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 492. ISBN 9780195173215.
  23. Friedman, Tzvi. "What is Chassidut?". Chabad.org. Retrieved 17 September 2016.
  24. Eisenstein, Yehuda (1907). Otzer Yisroel.
  25. "The Lubavitch Messianic Resurgence: The Historical and Mystical Background 1939–1996", Rachel Elior in Toward the Millennium: Messianic Expectations from the Bible to Waco ed. Peter Schäfer and Mark Cohen, 383–408. (Leiden: Brill, 1998)
  26. Echad Hoyo Avrohom Page 160
  27. The Revelation of Melech HaMashiach (King Messiah), "Yechi HaMelech", Sholom Ber Wolpo, "The Committee for Fulfilling the Rebbe's Directives"
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  35. "Chabad's Messianism and Israeli Radicals". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
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  37. Linear Mishpotim 5752. Living Moshiach Publication Society. 2017. pp. 49–50. ISBN 9781981382026.
  38. 31 January
  39. Goldman, Ari L. (1 February 1993). "Rebbe, But Not The Messiah, As Lubavitchers Compromise". The New York Times.
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References

Further reading

  • The Jewish Messiahs: From the Galilee to Crown Heights, Harris Lenowitz, University of Utah, 2nd ed. (Oxford, 2001).
  • Salvation or Destruction? The Meaning and Consequences of Lubavitch Messianism, Kraut, B., Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies, Volume 20, Number 4, Summer 2002, pp. 96–108.
  • Jewish Messianism Lubavitch-Style – an interim report, William Shaffir, Jewish Journal of Sociology 35 (1993) 115–128.
  • The Rebbe The Messiah and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference, David Berger (The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2008 )
  • The Messiah Problem: Berger, the Angel and the Scandal of Reckless Indiscrimination, Rabbi Chaim Rapoport (Ilford, 2002)

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