Region: | Jewish philosophy |
Era: | Medieval philosophy |
Obadiah ben Jacob Sforno | |
Birth Place: | Cesena, Italy |
Death Date: | 1549 |
Death Place: | Bologna, Italy |
Ovadia ben Jacob Sforno (Obadja Sforno, Hebrew: עובדיה ספורנו) was an Italian rabbi, Biblical commentator, philosopher and physician. A member of the Sforno family, he was born in Cesena about 1475 and died in Bologna in 1549.[1] [2] [3]
After acquiring in his native town a thorough knowledge of Hebrew, rabbinic literature, mathematics, and philosophy, he went to Rome to study medicine. There his learning won for him a prominent place among scholars; and when Reuchlin was at Rome (1498-1500) and desired to perfect his knowledge of Hebrew literature, Cardinal Domenico Grimani advised him to apply to Obadiah.
Equally high was Obadiah's reputation as a casuist. Meïr Katzenellenbogen consulted him on legal questions,[4] and Joseph Colon invoked his authority.[5] At the request of Israel ben Jehiel Ashkenazi, rabbi of Rome, Obadiah issued a decision in the case of Donina, daughter of Samuel Ẓdarfati, the renowned physician of the pope. About 1525 Obadiah left Rome and led for some time a wandering life. From several letters of that epoch addressed to his brother Hananeel at Bologna it would appear that Obadiah was in poor circumstances. Finally he settled at Bologna, where he founded a yeshiva (school of advanced Jewish studies) which he conducted until his death.
Obadiah was an indefatigable writer, chiefly in biblical exegesis. His exegetical work is characterized by respect for the text's literal meaning and a reluctance to entertain mystical interpretations.
He possessed well-known judgment in selecting explanations from earlier exegetes, such as Rashi, Abraham ibn Ezra, the Rashbam, and Nahmanides, and he very often gave original interpretations that showed extensive philological knowledge.
He wrote the following commentaries: on the Torah (1567); on Song of Songs and Ecclesiastes, with the latter being dedicated to Henry II of France; on the Psalms (1586); Mishpaṭ Ẓedeḳ, on the Book of Job (1589); on the books of Jonah, Habakkuk, and Zechariah, published with David ibn Hin's Likkute Shoshannim (1724). He also wrote Kavanat ha-Torah, which is prefixed to the Pentateuch commentary.
Obadiah was also active in religious philosophy. In a work entitled Or Ammim (Bologna, 1537), he endeavored to combat with biblical arguments the theories of Aristotle on the eternity of matter, on God's omniscience, and on the universality of the soul, as well as various other Aristotelian views that, in his view, conflicted with religion.
In the introduction, Obadiah says he was induced to write his work because even so great a man as Maimonides had expressed that all Aristotle's theories concerning the sublunary world are correct. Obadiah himself translated the Or Ammim into Latin and sent it to Henry II of France. It was published in 1548.