The
Tannaim (rabbis of the
Mishnah) and the
Amoraim (rabbis of the
Talmud) applied the concept of
Kevod HaBriyot in their interpretations of and rulings on
halakhah (
Jewish law). The
Mishnah explains the importance of the concept as follows: :"Ben Zoma says: Who is honored (
mechubad)? He who honors (
mechabed) others (
habriyot), as it is said: 'For those who honor Me (
God) I will honor, and those who scorn Me shall be degraded' (
Samuel I 2:30)"
Mishnah (Avot 4:1) The Rabbis of the Talmud, when they enacted rabbinic decrees, sometimes limited the scope of those decrees to avoid situations when complying with them might lead to a situation they considered undignified and referred to the concept of
kevod habriyot as the basis for doing so. For example, carrying across a private property line is prohibited by a rabbinic prohibition (See
eruv), but the Talmud records that the Rabbis created an exception for carrying up to three small stones if needed for wiping oneself in a latrine on the basis of
kevod habriyot (Shabbat 81b, 94b). Similarly, the rabbis enacted a prohibition on a
Kohen from approaching a coffin or graveyard to ensure that the Biblical prohibition on contact with the dead would not be inadvertently violated, but permitted a
Kohen to violate this rabbinic prohibition in order to greet a king, again appealing to the principle of
kevod habriyot as the basis of this exception (
Berachot 19b). Tractate
Beitzah records that the rabbis created an exception of the rabbinic prohibition on creating even temporary structures on
Shabbat or major
Jewish holidays (to safeguard the Biblical prohibition against building permanent structures) to permit a person alone in a field to align stones to create a temporary latrine, because of
kevodo ("his dignity) (Beitzah 36b). Although the Rabbis of the Talmud created limited exceptions to their own enactments to prevent indignities, they held that they do not have authority to create exceptions to Divine law recorded in the written
Tanakh or received as
Oral law in the form of
Halakha LeMoshe MiSinai.
Berachot 19b records a discussion in which a
tradition that rabbis have such authority was explicitly considered but rejected. ==In the Shulkhan Arukh==