Rambam In-Depth: Nazir vs. Kohein — Who Has Greater Kedushah?
In this shiur, Rabbi Heschel Greenberg explores a fascinating and nuanced halacha from the Rambam, Hilchos Nezirus Perek Zayin Halacha Yud Gimmel. The scenario: a Nazir and a Kohein both encounter a Meis Mitzvah — an unattended corpse with no one else to bury it. Both are obligated to act, but only one should become Tamei. Who goes first? • Read More, Watch
In this shiur, Rabbi Heschel Greenberg, we explore a fascinating and nuanced halacha from the Rambam, Hilchos Nezirus Perek Zayin Halacha Yud Gimmel.
The scenario: a Nazir and a Kohein both encounter a Meis Mitzvah — an unattended corpse with no one else to bury it. Both are obligated to act, but only one should become Tamei. Who goes first?
The Rambam rules: the Nazir — even though becoming Tamei causes him to lose all the days he has kept, start over, and bring a Korban Tumah.
The reason: a Nazir’s Kedushah is שעה קדושת — temporary — while a Kohein’s Kedushah is Kedushas Olam — eternal. But then the Rambam raises his own challenge: what if the Nazir took a vow to be a Nazir Olam — for his entire life? Now both have a lifelong Kedushah. So who wins?
In this shiur, Rabbi Greenberg walks through multiple answers from the Rishonim and Acharonim: The Lechem Mishneh & Tosafos: Since the minimum Nezirus is 30 days, it proves Nezirus is fundamentally non-intrinsic — even a Nazir Olam cannot elevate it to the level of intrinsic Kedushah. A second answer from the Lechem Mishneh (the Rambam’s preferred view): A Nazir Olam’s Kedushah only begins from the moment of the vow — not from birth. And unlike a Kohein, a Nazir can be Meishil (renounce his vow), proving his Kedushah can be neutralized. The Rashash: Kedushas Olam means the Kedushah is inherited — a Kohein’s child is also a Kohein, but a Nazir’s child is not a Nazir.
Then a deeper question arises from the Shaar HaMelech, based on the Ra’avad in the Ran:
In a Pikuach Nefesh situation, multiple prohibitions outweigh a single more stringent prohibition (e.g., you’d violate Shabbos rather than feed Neveilah, where each bite is a new Lav). But a Nazir has four Lavin — more than the Kohein’s one. So shouldn’t the Nazir be MORE stringent?
Three answers are presented:
- Shaar HaMelech: By a Nazir it’s one act with multiple Lavin — fundamentally different from Neveilah where the act is repeated each time, making each bite a new act of rebellion.
- Achi’ezer (based on Maharit): Nazirus is a Torah-granted status (not Issur Gavra or Issur Cheftza), and all the individual Lavin flow from one shared source — so the Meis Mitzvah heter removes the status entirely, making all Lavin irrelevant at once.
- The Ran leshitaso: For Pikuach Nefesh, the Torah is only Docheh the Issur (pushes it aside) — so you still minimize. But for Meis Mitzvah, it is Hutra entirely — there is no Issur at all. Whether it’s one Lav or four is therefore completely irrelevant.
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