Samuel held a position of authority in the academy; to him is ascribed the rule that during the heat of the day instruction should be suspended. Due to his fame as an aggadist, questions were addressed to him by such authorities as the patriarch
Judah II,
Simeon ben Jehozadak,
Rabbi Ammi,
Hanina ben Pappa, and
Helbo. Among the transmitters of Samuel's sayings were
Helbo,
Levi II,
Abbahu, and
Eleazar ben Pedat. Samuel ben Naḥman's decisions and sayings concern the study of dogma, prayer, and
Shabbat regulations; the history of Israel and the nations and empires; the laws regarding converts; Scripture; halakic exegesis; and Biblical characters and narratives. One concept conceived by Samuel b. Naḥman recorded in Midrash Tanchuma is known as
dirah betachtonim, which refers to the divine desire to manifest itself in the material world, later became a foundational concept in
Chabad philosophy. Other teachings of Samuel b. Naḥman refer to homiletics, to God and the world, and to
eschatology.
Dirges Especially noteworthy is Samuel b. Naḥman's description of the grief of the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and of Rachel, over the destruction of the
Temple. It is written in beautiful
Hebrew prose, and is accompanied by dramatic
dirges in
Aramaic. Then follow the dirges of all the Patriarchs, which they intone when Moses for the second time has communicated to them the sad tidings. Finally, Moses himself chants a lament, addressed partly to the sun and partly to the enemy. ==References==